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Rise of the Beast: A Novel (The Patmos Conspiracy Book 1) Page 5


  “Welcome back Mr. Alexander.”

  “Thank you Reverend Garrison.” He paused by the battered front door. “You know you could build something completely new with the donations I have gifted you and your ministry.”

  Garrison looked over his shoulder at the structure and said, “It’s not fancy, but this is something my people and I have built with our own means and giving. We’re pretty proud of it. If we built from what you gave, it might not feel like we were trusting God to provide.”

  “But feelings can’t always be trusted, Reverend Garrison. I believe it was you who told me that. Perhaps God is indeed providing for you through me. You’ve said such things yourself. I recall a humorous story you told me about a drowning man being offered a row boat and, I believe, a helicopter as well, both of which he refused.”

  “Your point is well taken, Mr. Alexander, but I just haven’t found peace on taking your money. Believe me I’ve prayed and will keep praying.”

  “When you do feel peace, I cannot wait to see what you build,” Alexander said, thinking again that Garrison’s refusal to access the account would make things simpler.

  Actually this would be the last time he planned for the two of them to meet in person or otherwise. He had just a few final questions left to ask. One of them was already embedded within the question of how God provides. Could it be that if God actually existed, he might have been waiting for such a man as Alexander to begin a great purge to cleanse the world? Was he the helicopter sent to save a dying world from the swirling waters of brutality and ignorance?

  “It’s mighty tempting to wire a check to the Wells Fargo Bank just to see the expression on the teller’s face when I ask her to confirm that a million dollars has been deposited in the church account.”

  “Only one million?”

  Garrison reddened and mustered a forced laugh.

  The man’s earnestness was truly inspiring. He was the right man to bestow the blessing.

  “If you have a change of heart, if you find your peace, please tell me if her expression measures up to your picture of it,” Alexander said.

  Garrison just shrugged awkwardly. He actually looked a little embarrassed. He had been praying about the money, Alexander thought.

  Alexander looked at the ugly brick rectangle. As he drove for his first visit to where the man pastored a small flock of believers, he had pictured a charming white clapboard country church set on a rise with stately trees as backdrop. No matter. He liked the man. He always felt a rare peace after meeting with Garrison. He really didn’t expect Garrison to be able to answer his questions. Garrison still didn’t seem to grasp the questions behind his questions.

  He is much too earnest for his own good.

  Garrison was no Oracle of Delphi. He would not make Alexander drag him to the town square for a beating before bestowing his blessing.

  “Let’s go on inside, sir. We can meet in my office.”

  As Alexander stepped over the threshold, he reached into the breast pocket of his cashmere jacket and froze.

  9

  The Isle of Patmos

  ALMOST SHOW TIME FOR MARIAMA. At least the curtain for Act I was about to be drawn back. Dr. Claire Stevens looked at the azure sky and black rippling waters of the Aegean Sea as she went through the thought process of their target location one more time.

  Sana’a, Yemen, according to legend was founded by Shem, one of Noah’s sons. Along with Jericho and Damascus, it was one of the three oldest continuously inhabited cities in the world, people having called it home for at least 2,500 years if archeologists and historians could be believed. The Prophet Mohammed visited the land now known as Yemen. Great Imams taught there. Architectural evidence proved that Solomon’s lover, the Queen of Sheba, was from the land. She was important to Muslims even if she lived more than one thousand years before the rise of Islam—and even if she was a woman.

  Was Sana’a a major power center? No. But it was symbolically important. That was a good start. Fomenting religious fervor and violence was a major part of the planning.

  But violence was unpredictable if you wanted to kill people— millions—no billions—of people. More was needed and she was certain Mariama would do her deadly work well.

  Most of the twenty-three million Yemenis were Arab, but originally it was a Semitic culture—and once a nominally Christian nation under Ethiopian rule. The roots of Islamic Yemen were tied to the Zaydi Order of Shia Islam, founded by the Twelfth Great Imam, Al al-Hadi in the 9th Century. A small majority of Yemenis belonged to the Shafi’I order of Sunni Islam.

  For nearly three decades, Yemen was the only democratic republic on the Arabian Peninsula; all other nations were kingdoms or emirates. What was Yemen now? Hard to tell. After the coup by the Ansar Allah—“supporters of Allah”—there was the political chaos created by two seats of government. Yemen had a long history of civil war and would again, she was sure. Sooner than later.

  If there really was a God, why would he need supporters? Jews. Christians. Muslims. Buddhists. They all make the same ontological mistake of turning wish into reality.

  Yemeni law and the official stance of the Islamic Clergy still guaranteed religious freedom, which accounted for the 3,500 Christians, 40 Hindu, and 500 indigenous Jews that lived and worshipped there, and which was often cited as proof of the nation’s religious tolerance. Claire laughed and shook her head at the irony. Forty Hindu? Why had they stayed? It was just the type of nuanced ridiculousness her parents would lap up as they railed against the notion of God. That religious freedom, however, did not extend to proselytizing Muslims— nor allowing Muslims to convert.

  Freedom is a fluid concept.

  The unemployment rate in Yemen was 35 percent. The illiteracy rate was nearly 60 percent. It wasn’t hard to figure out why. Only seven books were published in the country each year, all dealing with Islam.

  Seven books? Really?

  With a divided government putting the country on the verge of a new civil war, historical grievances between the north and south, and unemployment comes unrest and the growth of a radicalism that was already rooted in the nation’s psyche. Yemen was a fascinating mix of progressive and conservative Islamic thought. It was one of the reasons that Jordan had been eliminated from consideration for the Mariama beta. That country was just too moderate—the radicals they needed to mobilize would probably applaud anything that happened to King Abdullah and his country.

  The fact that Yemen bordered Saudi Arabia made it strategically essential to disrupting the wealthy but sleepy peninsula.

  Claire argued for releasing a kiss from Mariama in the Al Saleh Mosque in Sana’a. It was Yemen’s largest and most modern mosque. Forty-five thousand men could gather in the 220 thousand square foot hall, with room for almost 2,000 women in the upstairs gallery—another proof of their moderate nature, in this case, for how they treated women. Claire snorted. Dedicated in 2008, Al Saleh was located in the southern outskirts of a city with more than one hundred mosques. It was named for the nation’s first elected president. The Yemen government—or more accurately governments—ostensibly tolerated no religiously motivated violence, but it was well known that the Al Saleh Mosque, despite being a major tourist attraction, despite being in the center of a country where even Sunnis worked hard to curtail Sunni and Shia radicalism, was a center for Al-Qaeda recruiting, training, and planning.

  That made it too big and too obvious for the beta test.

  That wasn’t her opinion. But she lost the argument. Her face burned at the thought of the man who had recruited her speaking to her as if she was a child.

  “Just trust those of us with a little more experience in the Middle East than you,” Dr. Rodger Patton said to assuage her hurt feelings. His condescension had the opposite effect.

  Just trust you? Not likely.

  Patton was a paternalistic prick … even if he was right in this instance. The group consensus was the mosque was too young to be beloved and too radical to be p
erceived as innocent. The goal of the beta test, she was pointedly reminded, wasn’t the amount of immediate carnage but achieving something noticeable enough to gauge efficacy—and just as importantly to measure the response generated. It was hoped what they were doing would induce a strong response, a violent response.

  They still don’t believe Mariama will accomplish more than their guns and bombs. Let’s see if they feel that way when she is introduced in Beijing and Moscow and Mexico City and Buenos Aires. She’ll make traditional mass warfare a quaint obsolescence.

  So Claire had gone back to the drawing board and presented the Great Mosque in the Old City, home of the oldest extant copies of the Quran. The ancient mosque was built in 634 A.D. by most accounts. Some claimed it was planned and ordered by the Prophet himself. Some claimed it was pre-Islamic and built by the Byzantines, first as a pagan Roman temple and then a Catholic cathedral. Some claimed it was largely a work from the 8th Century Abbasid period. What no one disputed was that it was the center of religious life in Yemen, characterized as devout but not radical. Not radical being relative, of course.

  Like the city itself, the mosque was burned into the consciousness and identity of Muslims in all forms and locations.

  The group was right.

  I get it. I agree. Just don’t talk to me like I’m a child.

  That made the Great Mosque the perfect choice. The response to the beta would ostensibly be much more powerful than the provocation itself. That was if the others were underestimating Mariama’s raw efficacy to kill.

  I believe they are.

  Dr. Claire Stevens shivered as the night breeze ruffled and lifted the edges of her nightdress. She slid the door behind her as she went inside her apartment. She wondered if Nicky was well or even alive. The man wore the souvenirs of his work on his body.

  She hoped everyone else was doing their job as well as she was.

  Mariama, I could not save you. But I will make sure your name lives forever.

  10

  Northern Yemen

  MALMAK NODDED TO YUSUF. YUSUF wedged the claw of the crowbar beneath the lid of the crate and pried it loose a couple inches. He repeated the process at various intervals and then popped the top off.

  Malmak’s eyes gleamed. Surely the Prophet was gracious to hear his prayers. How else could this abundant gift be his?

  Sheikh Malmak led a proud but poor tribe based in the Saudi Arabia city of Tarim on the border with Yemen. Most of his tribe lived in the northern hills of Yemen. With these weapons he would finally become a player, not a spectator; an initiator, not a reactor. He would now be remembered not only as a man of pure words, but also as a man of mighty deeds. He would fulfill the destiny of his exalted name.

  Hours earlier Malmak had ordered the death of Sulaymon Ibn Abd Allah’s son. But what could the man do about it? His hold on power was long overdue to crash and burn. He pompously had appropriated the name of a great historical leader who had fought to restore the tenets of true Islam, who had fought to destroy the corruption of the infidels, and who had struck terror and death into the heart of Christendom. Sulaymon was not fit for such a glorious name. He had compromised too freely. He must pay the price for the spiritual drift that infected so many of his subjects. His son’s death was an earnest payment.

  The exercise continued for hours. Each crate contained new delights. Lightweight Kalashnikov AK-47 rifles, RPG mortar launchers, and the ammunition to give teeth to the brand new assault jeeps, troop transports, and hybrid tanks that had already been delivered.

  The Greek had delivered everything he promised, including a Russian military veteran of the Chechen wars—an enemy of Allah— something he would have to overlook until the man was of no further use—to train his young warriors.

  The Greek had also saved him from the disaster of losing Allah’s gift to Sulaymon and his tribe of compromisers and collaborators with the enemies of Allah. He now had the means to do more than cut off the head of the sheikh’s beloved son.

  Malmak was a man of history. Full retribution for the Wahhabi invasion of Tarim two centuries earlier would come to full fruition now. The Wahhabi’s had slaughtered and burned the city of his fathers. To add insult to inglorious injury, they had redrawn the border to split his tribe between two countries, insuring their slow, steady, inglorious decline.

  Malmak spat a thick stream of qat.

  Death to those who destroyed the writings of true Islam and death to those who forget such crimes against the faithful.

  11

  Devil’s Den Hiking Trail,

  Ozark National Forest

  THE FOREST WAS PAULINE’S CATHEDRAL. She winded through gloomy arbors, an occasional burst of light piercing and caressing her troubled soul on the path.

  I don’t ever want to stop. Can I run until everything that has been done to me, everything I’ve done, is behind me?

  Everything Pauline had done the past six months had been a tortured and harrowing lie, except for what she was about to do now. She had always loved to run. Now she depended on her daily outing as a tenuous strand to sanity. Sleeping with a megalomaniacal billionaire could do that to you, she thought.

  She needed to run like she needed air. It reminded her that she was not the person she had become. Someday soon she would become her true self. She would not be a victim of her circumstances forever.

  She had reached the moment that would change her life, but she wondered how she had ever got here. She wanted to believe her life would work out, filled with happiness and wealth. But she had believed before to no avail.

  Running with long smooth strides, breathing hard but regular, she exhilarated in the rare, exquisite feeling of personal power—no one can touch me here—as she wended up and down the path of a lush forest path that Klaus had found for her.

  The second gleaming black Range Rover had brought her to the trailhead at Devil’s Den State Park, about an hour south of the airport. The driver would wait for her to circle back to the same beginning spot of the strenuous, fifteen-mile course—she told the driver she would be back in two hours; he figured it would be closer to three—and then take her to a local day spa where she would be pampered and prepped to look stunning for dinner at Per Se on Columbus Circle just south of Central Park. The flight would be less than two hours and she planned to look ravishing—beyond ravishing—which was, she knew, her only defense in the world of Jonathan Alexander and corporate espionage.

  The dress she selected magically wove together strands of provocative and revealing with tasteful and refined. Money might not buy everything but it came close.

  Maybe she had become the greedy superficial person she was pretending to be.

  Pauline wondered again about Burke, the man who hired her to spy on Jonathan Alexander, pretending to be the billionaire’s mistress. Actually, there was no pretending when she was with him. She was indeed a highly paid commodity in the service industry.

  Burke. Was that his first or last name? Strange time to be wondering that. What had he gotten her into? Who was he? She had spent months of preparation with him, but knew so little about him. He was an American. He was well put together physically. Six-three? Six-four? Maybe 200 pounds of muscle. Good teeth and hair. His deportment indicated he was prosperous, but in a non ostentatious way. No suits made from exotic fabrics, just jeans, a cotton oxford shirt open at the top of the chest, and a navy blue sport jacket.

  Was he rich? The money required for expensive logistics were no issue with him. She knew that he was working for someone else, someone else was paying the bills. That someone else might be working for yet another person up the food chain. But Burke was simple. He probably had a fortune squirrelled away.

  Pauline felt a pang of sadness as she thought again, Burke was a man I had almost come to believe was a good man. But a good man would not have put her where she was.

  The month-long training and briefing with Burke had been simple. Jonathan Alexander had begun to carry a small leather journal in h
is suit pocket. He had never previously been seen taking or keeping notes. Apparently Alexander had a prodigious memory and plenty of hired help to do something as menial as committing ink to paper. When something changed with a man as powerful as Alexander, even something as simple as starting to ink words on paper, people noticed and got very curious. Getting in on the right side of a Jonathan Alexander deal could make you a fortune or save you from financial disaster.

  Whoever was close enough to Alexander to observe the change reported the journal had to be important. It was never separated from the man unless it was locked up. When he returned to his estate near Geneva, the first thing he would do was go to his office and place it in his personal safe. Something big must be in it for him to add an extra layer of security to his already heavily guarded Swiss compound.

  How did Burke and whomever he was working for know this? She could only assume that whoever commissioned the assignment had someone reasonably close to the man. Klaus? Impossible to read him. Jules? Not smart enough. He was a jackhammer that bludgeoned Alexander’s problems. Nicky? He was blood related to Alexander. She doubted that Burke knew either. But there was obviously a rat in Alexander’s pantry.

  What did a billionaire write in his journal? That was the question for inquiring minds.

  “Maybe he writes gibberish,” Burke answered when she raised the question with him. “Maybe he draws cartoons. Maybe he has simply decided he wants to keep a diary. Maybe he is writing a novel.”

  She wanted to be taken seriously. So when she pouted at his cavalier joking, he said something that still haunted her: “It is quite possible that whatever he commits to the velum is what is most important to him. You don’t want to know what is in there. If you get the chance to look, close your eyes. Just take the pictures of the pages and make it appear as if it has never been disturbed. Curiosity killed the cat and I am afraid it will kill you, too. Pauline, do you understand what I am saying?”