Read Ultimate Thriller Box Set Online
Authors: Blake Crouch,Lee Goldberg,J. A. Konrath,Scott Nicholson
“Let's begin with your background,” Race said. He opened up the old book in his lap but didn't look at it. “You were found buried eighty feet in the ground in the Culebra Cut in Panama, one hundred years ago. How did you get there?”
Bub titled his head slightly and appeared to think about it, his elliptical eyes flicking left, then right.
“I was in a comaaaaaaa. My people thought I was deaaaaaad.”
“Who were your people?”
“The Kanjobal
á
n Mayaaaaaaa. We lived in a city called Coooooop
á
n.”
“Copán is in Honduras,” Andy said, surprising himself by talking—he’d wanted to remain neutral and simply observe. “That's eight hundred miles away from Panama. Why were you buried eight hundred miles from Mayan boundaries?”
“I do not knooooow.”
“How long were you with the Maya?” Race asked.
“Threeeeeee hundred years.
“And before that, you lived where?”
“Many plaaaaaces. Across the waaaaaater.”
“How did you travel from place to place?” Race said.
Bub’s wings unfurled behind him as if they were spring-loaded. They opened with the sound of a belt being snapped.
“I caaaaaan fly.”
“Over the oceans?” Sun asked. “Carrying your capsule?”
“I'm strooooong.”
Bub's pectoral muscles twitched and bounced. It reminded Andy of a body builder showing off.
“If you were in all of these places,” Race asked, “why isn't there any record of you?”
Bub grinned his crooked grin and folded his wings behind his back.
“There isssss,”
Bub said.
“Look at hisssstory. Many deeeeemons.”
“There are more of you?” Race asked.
“Yesssssss.”
“What happened to them?”
“I don't knoooooow.”
“Where did you come from,” Race said, “originally?”
Bub's eyes took on a far away cast.
“From liiiiiiiight,”
Bub said.
“From light, to darknessssssss.”
“What light?”
“Heavaaaaaaaaan. I was caaaaast out.”
“Cast into hell?” Father Thrist asked, his voice quavering. “Incredible.”
“Yeah, incredible,” Sun repeated. But she didn't sound convinced. Andy wasn’t sure if he was convinced either, but he forced himself to keep an open mind.
“Explain how the world began,” Race said.
“God created everything. He created angels to be messengers between Hiiiiim and maaaaankiiiind.”
“Why were you cast out?” Thrist asked.
“There was a... disagreeeeeeement.”
Rabbi Shotzen made a snorting sound. Andy guessed him to be skeptical as well.
“What about evolution?” Race asked.
“Evolution is like planting seeeeeeeeds. When there was enough growth, God added maaaaaan.”
“Like the garden of Eden,” Thrist said, looking up from his notes.
“What is your name?” Race asked, leaning closer to the Plexiglas. “Your true name?”
Bub seemed to grow. He stood up to his full height, stretched out his talons, swelled up his chest. When he spoke, it was deep and loud.
“I am the Prince of the Poooooower of Air. The Draaaagon of Dawn. Son of the Mooooorning and Bearer of Liiiiight. The naaame most know me by is Luuuuuuuucifer.”
He settled back down on his haunches. Andy realized he was clenching his fist so tightly his hand had fallen asleep. He shook it, wincing at the tingles of pain as the blood came back in.
“Were you the one who tempted Christ in the desert?” Thrist asked.
“I met him in the desert, Faaaaaather. But not to tempt. Only to warn him of his faaaaaate.”
Thrist's voice became a whisper. “Was Christ the son of God?”
“Yesssssss. God had sent him down on earth to dieeeeeee.”
“Fa!” Rabbi Shotzen threw up his hands in disgust. “I've had enough of this nonsense.”
Bub titled his head at Shotzen.
“Bad hangover, Raaaaaaabbi?”
The Rabbi stood up and pointed at the demon. “I don't know what you are, but Satan you are not.”
“Don’t you beleeeeeeeive me?”
“Do not allow yourself to be misled,” the Rabbi told the group. “He shows only what he wants you to see. You are being manipulated.”
“Foooooool,”
Bub said.
“Jews are not the chosen peeeeeeeople.”
Shotzen’s face lost all color. He turned and left the room, closing the door quietly behind him.
“You warned Christ?” Thrist asked, apparently unaffected by Shotzen's outburst.
“Wanted to saaaaave him.”
Bub leaned back, assuming his lotus position.
“God wanted him deaaaaaaad.”
Thrist shook his head. “Christ died for our sins. He wasn't being punished by God. He died so God would forgive us.”
“God was jealoussssss,”
Bub said.
“So he killed Hisssss son.”
Thrist shook his head. “It was for our sins. God forgave us.”
“God doesn’t caaaaare about yooooou.”
“What of the resurrection?” Thrist asked. “Christ rising from the dead?”
“Lieeeess.”
“It had to happen,” Thrist declared.
“His followers stole hissssss body from the tooooooomb.”
The priest shook his head. “No.”
“I saaaaaw them.”
“That simply isn't true.”
“It’s truuuuuuuuuue.”
Thrist deflated in his chair. There was a silence that stretched on for over a minute. Andy wasn’t sure if any of this were true, but he noticed that Father Thrist looked like he’d been beaten up.
“What of prayer?” Race asked finally. “Does God hear prayers?”
“God doesn’t caaaare.”
“I... I don't feel well,” Thrist said quietly.
“When we die, do we go to heaven?” Race asked.
Bub brought a talon up to his beard and scratched it.
“I don’t knoooooow.”
Race furrowed his brow. “You don’t know? Or you’re not telling?”
The demon’s face got so ugly Andy had to turn away.
“I. Doooooooooon’t. Knooooooooooooooow.”
“How about hell?” Sun asked.
Bub focused on Sun. The anger on his face vanished, replaced with a sly smile.
“Yooooooooou’ll seeeeeeeee.”
Andy looked at the others, wondering if they were as creeped out as he was. They were, except for Race, who appeared more impatient than scared.
“Did God give you the ability to bring back the dead?” Race asked.
“Yessssssss.”
“How about heal? Can you heal the sick?”
“Yesssssss. I can cuuuuuuuuure your wiiiiiiife.”
Race stood up suddenly, pressing his palms to the glass. “Helen?”
“Yessssssss.”
Bub touched the Plexiglas, placing his palm against Race’s.
“Bring her to meeeeeeee”
Race paused for a nanosecond, then headed for the door.
“General,” Sun warned. “That isn’t a wise idea.”
“We'll be right back.”
Race practically yanked Dr. Harker out of her chair and they exited as fast as he could pull her. Andy saw Father Thrist take Race’s place at the glass, both hands pressed against Bub’s.
“Is there no way to win heaven?” Thrist asked. There were tears in his eyes.
“Such sadnessssss,”
Bub said.
“God doesn't want you to be saaaaaaad. Maybe there is a waaaaaaaay.”
Thrist nodded several times. “Yes. Of course there’s a way. You just aren’t aware of it. You've never read the bible, have you?”
“Noooooooo.”
“I'll bring you mine. You shall have mine. I'll be right back.”
Thrist also hurried out of the room.
Andy looked around. “The ranks are thinning.”
“I have a few questions,” Sun moved to Race's seat. “You said you were in a coma. How did that happen?”
“I don’t knoooooow.”
“Did you get sick? Injured somehow?”
“I don’t knoooooow.”
“I have studied your physiology. You are immune to all disease. We've tried practically every bug known to man, nothing makes you sick.”
Bub stared impassively at Sun. His black tongue snaked out of his mouth and licked the mucus from his right nostril.
Andy flinched. Sun asked, “Ever hear the name Kukulcán?”
The demon's mouth twitched.
“Noooooo.”
“You’re lying,” Sun said. “How about that hot rock thing. What's it called?”
“Tuunich k'iinal,” Andy said.
“I don’t knoooooow.”
“But it's engraved in your capsule,” Sun said.
“I don’t knoooooow.”
Sun folded her arms. “And taken 800 miles away from your city, buried seventy feet deep with hand tools. It sounds like they feared you. Feared you even when you were dead.”
“Do you fear meeeeee? There’s nothing to feaaaaaar, but feaaaaaar itself.”
That and talking demons,
Andy thought.
But Sun stood her ground.
Why did you wake up now?” She asked. Her voice was getting louder. “What's special about now? Why not ninety years ago? What took so goddamn long?”
“I was waaaaaaaaiting.”
“For what?”
“The riiiiiiight time.”
“Where did you really come from, Bub? Tell me the truth. None of this bible thumping bullshit.”
The demon looked beyond them.
“Raaaaaace. Heeeeeeeeeelen.”
Race pushed Helen forward in her wheelchair, stopping to give Sun a stern look.
“Don't let Helen go in there,” Sun said. “You can’t trust him.”
“What happened to remaining united in our opinion?” Race asked brusquely.
“Bub has been lying. I bet everything he's said so far has been a lie.”
Race looked at Andy, a question in his eyes.
“She’s over-reacting,” Andy said, shrugging.
Sun clenched her fist and Andy thought for a moment that she was going to deck him. Instead she spun on her heels and stormed out.
“Sun doesn’t like meeeeeeeeee.”
“I like you,” Race said. “And I’ll like you even more if you cure my wife.”
Andy tapped Race on the shoulder and whispered.
“Do you think making a deal with the devil is wise, General?”
Race offered a clipped grin. “I asked the other guy, and he wasn’t listening. This is the only hope left.”
“But don’t you think...”
“There isn’t a single thing you could say or do to stop me, son. “
Andy watched Race and Harker wheel Helen over to the feeding door. As far as instincts went, Andy’s weren’t very good. Time and again he’d made the wrong decision, the bad call. But he couldn’t help feeling that everything was about to go horribly, irrevocably wrong.
He got up and went after Sun.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
Sun was punching in the code for the first gate when Andy caught up to her.
“Don't even,” she warned. The affection she felt for the linguist was gone, replaced by a sense of betrayal.
“Shh,” Andy put a finger in front of his lips. “Maybe he can still hear us.”
Sun swung the gate open, aiming for Andy's shoulder. She missed.
“Hey, hold on.”
Sun lengthened her stride.
“I agree with you,” he said, catching her arm.
“You what?”
He moved in front of Sun and faced her. “I agree with you!” Andy whispered. “Bub's lying.”
“Well, why did...”
“Shh! Keep it down. Do you remember when Bub said the only thing to fear is fear itself?”
“Yeah. So?”
“So that’s FDR. How has he heard that quote? I don't think it was on any of the phonics videos.”
Some of Sun’s anger evaporated. She pushed a strand of hair out of her face.
“Okay, we both know he's lying. So why didn't you back me up? Race is going to put his wife in there with him.”
“Race is going to do that no matter what we say. I think he made this decision a while ago. Calling Bub a liar isn't going to help the situation. We need to figure out why Bub is lying, and how can he know that quote.”
Sun nodded. Her affection for Andy returned. He’d played it smart, and she’d reacted without thinking things through.
“Has he been awake since he was brought here and faking it?” Sun said, thinking out loud. “Maybe he's been biding his time, listening to everything going on around him, taking it all in. Even if he didn't know English, if he has an eidetic memory, he could remember everything that had been said since his arrival and then translate it after he learned English. Maybe that's how he knows so much. Or maybe, like Shotzen said, he's always known English.”
“Possible, but I think that's reaching.”
“What's another explanation?”
“Someone's been coaching him,” Andy said.
“Who?”
“I don't know. But his habitat is always being video recorded, right?”
“Yeah. So we just need to watch the recordings and see who's been paying him visits.”
“Right. And in the meantime, let's just play along with him. We know he's lying, but we don't know why. Better to let him believe we’re on his side.”
It made sense to Sun.
“Okay. But I still think letting Bub near Helen is a bad idea.”
“I'm beginning to think,” Andy said, “that a lot about Samhain is a bad idea.”
Andy punched in the code for the gate and they returned to Red 14. Race had wheeled Helen over to the pneumatic door on the side of Bub's habitat. The sheep's hatch was open, and he was talking to the demon through it. Sun and Andy got close enough to hear the exchange.
“I do have the authority, and the ability, to terminate you if I consider you a threat,” Race said. “There are several safeguards, installed before we knew if you were hostile or not. I'm sure you understand.”
“I want to heeeeeeelp yooooooou.”
Race hesitated. Sun noticed that he had a large white object in his hand, the size of a baseball bat.