“I don’t think so, Mrs. Roodt,” he replied, paying fast attention to the fire he was stoking. At once the glass flew past his head and smashed violently against the edge of the stone fireplace. The flying slivers scattered all over, some lodging in Mark’s face, just missing his eyes. It infuriated him, but he was not allowed to hurt her… not until Jaap Roodt ordered him to. He turned to gift her with the deadliest look she had ever seen directed at her, and she sank back onto the couch with nail file in hand to buff her nails. For a brief moment she was quiet.
“I know what you are doing here!” she shouted like a teenage girl throwing a tantrum. “You are only here because he is going to kill me. I’m not as fucking stupid as I look, you know, Markus!”
“I have had no order to harm you, Mrs. Roodt. You are upset for nothing,” he assured her, calmly plucking the shards from his flesh as he spoke.
“You have to help me, Markus, please?” she suddenly begged, her voice soft and subdued, but still it maintained that aura of insanity she was known for. She approached him silently on bare feet. Before he could keep her at bay she walked over the shattered glass around him. Markus swallowed his words of warning about the glass as he watched her step into the sharp edges without even flinching at the pain. It amazed him how whatever drugs she was on could make her so uncaring for her own welfare. “Markus, please?”
“Nothing is wrong, Mrs. Roodt,” he insisted. They could hear Jaap in the bedroom, packing his clothing and locking the safe after removing his money.
“You know that is a lie,” she whispered. Streaks of smudged mascara tears rolled over her cheeks, “Are you going to save me or not? Are you going to help me or leave me to my own devices with this psychopath?”
Markus looked down the hallway and saw his employer’s shadow against the wall of the bedroom, still occupied. His deep-set gray eyes looked at her damaged face and her red eyes. Unable to word his response, he held her back with his hands on her shoulders and said quietly, “I’m sorry, Mrs. Roodt. But I cannot help you.”
Sniffling despondently she lifted her small, skinny frame off her knees in front of Markus and without another word she simply sank the nail file into his right eye socket, while slitting his throat with the broken rum bottle she crushed in the kitchen before entering the room.
“Then you are of absolutely no use to me.”
Unable to make a sound, the large bodyguard choked on his own blood while she skewered his brain before withdrawing and dropping him on the spot. Jaap came down the corridor with his travel case and coat, ready to leave in his small aircraft as soon as he made sure Katrina was dead.
“Why is it so quiet in here?” he pretended to joke, but in all sincerity he was concerned. Such silences only meant one thing where attractive men and women were left unsupervised. Hoping that he would not have to kill Markus for fucking his slutty wife, Jaap turned the corner to find his trusty assassin in a bloody heap on the carpet, staring at him through a bloody gouge in his empty eye socket.
“Jeeesusss!” Jaap shouted. His face was twisted in rage and disbelief as he swung around to look for the underhanded little lush. But a clanking sound outside behind the cabin drew his attention, right where his Cessna was locked in the makeshift hangar.
“You bitch! I have disengaged it. You can’t fly away now!” he started laughing at her idiotic sense of thinking. Now he was convinced that killing her was the best decision. This was going to be nothing short of a thrill. It was time to teach the alcoholic whore a lesson once and for all. He kicked over one of her favorite potted plants, and the pottery shattered to spill out all the soil and roots.
“Oh, I’m sorry! I did not see your precious plant there!” he laughed, trying to draw her out. She was fiercely defensive of her greenery, and he knew it pained her every time he ripped the leaves off a tree. As he advanced to the shed, he snapped her palms in half and in his stride his mockery grew louder, “Come on, sweetie! Pick up this messy heap of branches I just had to break to get through!” he could almost hear her fuming. Jaap Roodt had not had this much fun with her since their honeymoon. There was a liberating power in hunting humans, especially weaker ones.
His knees screamed in agony as a loud crack emanated from the impact of the shovel on his legs, inverting the joints out the back of the gossamer skin. Jaap fell to the ground, stunned by the excruciating pain that shot up past his hips into his back. There she stood in front of him, his wife, Katrina.
“Jeeesusss Christ!” he whined, crying like a child from the unbearable pain that whipped the breath from his diaphragm.
“Close,” she smiled, shovel in hand. “But here, my son, there is no salvation.”
Effortlessly the stone-cold sober waif with the beautiful face kicked him along the slight slant under the oak trees, rolling him downhill to the eight-foot ditch she had dug for him a few days before while she was gardening there. Every time his body rotated over on his shattered leg bones he screamed like one of the girls he used to brutalize in the back streets of Amsterdam. Finally he felt the ground give way under him as his body dropped into the cavernous muddy hole.
“You can’t kill me, you cu… ”
The first heap of wet compost fell on his face.
“Oh, but I can. The Brigade Apostate sends its regards, darling,” she smiled, and spat down on his face. “We know how your vaccine works, and so,” she sighed happily, “we also know that you fuckers have to be drowned or smothered to end your lives. And I must say, I like it. It is a nice and slow, terrifying demise for an abusive eunuch like you. You overstayed your years on this planet decades ago. Time for a dirt nap.”
Jaap Roodt, self-proclaimed next Renatus, could not protest as shovel after shovel of heavy dirt and worms fell on his face, allowing the insects and beetles to go to work on his nostrils and ears. In the black blindness of his covered face he shrieked in vain, knowing that it was only a matter of time before they would find the soft tissue of his eyeballs.
Chapter 40
On the rim of the hotel room’s bathtub filled halfway with cold water sat Nina, Gretchen, Sam, and Richard hand in hand in a circle, ready to test the Einstein-Rosen bridge theory after hours of preparation. It was the only way, according to the intact parts of the books he had studied, to reach the Library of Forbidden Books.
“Ready?” Richard asked the others, and they nodded reluctantly, even though they were not informed of the danger of such a journey. They could very well emerge on the other side and end up inside rock, under tree roots, or in the deepest crevices under the San Andreas Fault, but he deliberately neglected those details, lest they refuse to join him… and he needed them to obtain the missing information Meiner needed before Dave Purdue was to destroy it.
Sam’s cell phone sounded loudly, startling Nina next to him.
“Really?” she snapped with a frown.
“One moment, please,” Sam shrugged. “I’ll be quick.” He turned his back on the others as he answered the call, “Cleave.”
“This is Unit 13. Jaap Roodt — exterminated.”
“Thank you.”
He ended the call and shoved it back in his jeans pocket, suffering that well-known scowl from Nina. Sam shrugged, “Sorry. Okay, I’m ready.”
“Positive?” she asked without looking at him, fixing her rucksack before taking his hand again.
Richard murmured the words and in his bleeding hand, a sulfur stick was lit. With a small electrical wire attached to the top drain of the old porcelain bath they waited for the jolt to course through them, as the running tap pushed the rising water upward.
Nina pinched her eyes shut. Gretchen prayed to all the gods she had ever rejected. Sam wondered how his latest acolyte killed her husband. Suddenly they were all jerked viciously from their seats on the bath’s edge and not a moment later they woke in a dark hall with a burning buzz running through their veins.