Voice by  voice, their song was dying.

'Stop him,' Cooper shouted at Sandwell. 'The bastard's killing off my  pack.' But it was too late.

Love  is duty.  He took in the crook of his arm his own son, as cold  as  a  pebble.  He  cried out the name of the messiah. Weeping, he made the cut and held his final  child  while  it bled down his breast.  At last he was free  to join his own blood with theirs.

BOOK THREE

GRACE

Inter Babiloniam et Jerusalem nulla pax est sed guerra continua....

Between Babylon and Jerusalem there is no peace, but continual war....

– ST BERNARD, The Sermons

21

MAROONED

The sea, 6,000 fathoms

No one had ever  dreamed such a place.

The   geologists   had   spoken   about   ancient    paleo-oceans    buried    beneath    the continents,  but  only  as  hypothetical  explanations  for  the  earth's  wandering  poles  and gravity  anomalies. The  paleo-oceans were  mathematical fancies. This was real. Abruptly  –  on  October  22  –  it  was  there,  motionless,  calm.  Men  and  women  who had been  racing  downriver  for  their  lives  stopped.  They  climbed  from  their  rafts  and joined  comrades  standing  agape  upon  the  pewter-colored  sand.  The  water  spread before  them,  an  enormous  flat  crescent.  The  slightest  of  waves  licked  at  the  shore. The  surface was smooth. Their  lights skimmed from it.

They  had  no  idea  the  shape  or  size  of  the  water  body.  They  sent  their  laser  beams pulsing upward, searching for  a  ceiling  that  finally  measured  a  half-mile  overhead.  As for  the  length  of  the  sea,  the  surface  bent.  All  they  could  say  with  certainty  was  that the  horizon  lay  twenty  miles  distant,  with  no  obstructions  in  between  and  no  end  in sight.

The  path split right and left  around  the  sea.  No  one  knew  which  led  where.  'There's

Walker's footprints,' someone said, and they  followed them.

Farther  down  the  beach,  they  found  their  fourth  cache.  Side  by  side,  the  three cylinders lay as neat as merchandise. Walker's men had  reached  the  site  hours  earlier and stockpiled the contents  within  a  makeshift  firebase.  Sand  had  been  heaped  into  a circular berm with entrenching shovels. Machine guns were  trained on fields of fire. The  scientists approached on foot. One of  the  mercenaries  came  out  and  put  a  hand up. 'That's close enough,' he said.

'But it's us,' a woman said.

Walker appeared. 'The depot is off limits,' he informed them.

'You can't do that,' someone shouted.

'We're in a state  of  high  alert,'  Walker  said.  'Our  highest  priority  is  the  protection  of food  and  supplies.  If  we  were  attacked  and  you  were  inside  our  perimeter,  there would  be  chaos.  This  is  the  wisest  course.  We've  located  a  campsite  for  you  on  the opposite  side  of  that  rock  fall  over  there.  The  quartermaster  has  issued  your  rations and mail.'

'I need to see the girl,' Ali said.

'Off limits, I'm afraid,' Walker said. 'She's been classified a military asset.'

The  way  he said it was odd, even  for Walker. 'Who's classified her?' Ali asked.

'Classified.' Walker blinked. 'She has valuable information about the terrain.'

'But she speaks  hadal dialect.'

'I plan to teach her English.'

'That will take  too  long.  We  can  help,  Ike  and  me.  I've  assembled  glossaries  before.' This was her chance to dig into the raw language.

'Thank you for your  enthusiasm, Sister.'

Walker  pointed  at  twenty  bubble-wrapped  bottles  lying  in  the  sand.  'Helios  sent whiskey.  Drink  it  or  pour  it  out.  Either  way,  it  stays  here.  We're  not  taking  liquid weight with us.'

Only  afterward  would  the  scientists  realize  the  whiskey  was  part  of  Walker's  plan. That  night  they  sulked  and  drank.  Their  estrangement  from  the  mercenaries  had been  building  for  months.  The  massacre  had  made  the  divide  even  wider.  Now  they were  two camps. The  bottles passed freely.

'We're ninety-eight-pound  weaklings down here,' someone complained.

'How much more can we take?'  a woman asked.

'By God, I'm ready  to go home,' Gitner announced.

Ali  saw  the  mood  and  decided  to  stay  clear  of  it.  The  group  was  pungent  with  fear and  grief  and  confusion.  She  went  looking  for  Ike  to  share  thoughts,  only  to  find  him propped  among  the  rocks  with  his  own  bottle.  Walker  had  turned  him  loose,  though without  his  guns.  She  was  mildly  disappointed  in  Ike.  Stripped  of  his  weapons,  he seemed  impotent,  more  dependent  on  his  ability  to  commit  mayhem  than  was  right.

'What are you drinking for?' she demanded. 'Tonight of all nights.'

'What's wrong with tonight?' he said.

'We're coming apart. Look around.'

In the distance, Walker's militia had set  up strobe  lights to defend  their  walls.  In  the foreground,  in  staccato  silhouette,  drunken  dancers  were  doing  dance  moves  and shedding  their  clothes.  But  there  was  no  music.  You  could  hear  arguing  and  despair and lovers  grinding each other into the hard sand. It  sounded like August in a ghetto.

'We were  too big to start  with,' Ike  commented. Ali stared  at him. 'You're not concerned?'

He  tipped  the  bottle,  wiped  his  mouth.  'Sometimes  you  just  have  to  go  with  it,'  he said.

'Don't give up on us, Ike.' He looked away.

Ali wandered to an isolated spot midway between  the two camps and went to sleep. In the middle of the night, she was awakened by  a hand clamped across her mouth.

'Sister,' a man whispered.

She felt a heavy  bundle thrust  into her hands.

'Hide it.'

He left before Ali could say  a word.

Ali laid the bundle beside her and unfolded it. She felt through  the  contents  with  her hands:  a  rifle  and  pistol,  three  knives,  a  sawed-off  shotgun  that  could  only  belong  to Ike,  and  boxes  of  ammunition.  Forbidden  fruit.  Her  visitor  could  only  have  been  a soldier,  and  she  felt  certain  it  was  one  of  the  burned  ones  Ike  had  brought  to  safety. But why  the guns?

Fearful that Walker was  putting  her  through  some  kind  of  test,  Ali  almost  returned the  bundle  of  weapons  to  the  fire  base.  She  went  to  ask  Ike's  opinion,  but  he  had passed out. Finally she buried the shadowy inheritance beneath a cliff wall.

Early in the morning, Ali woke to  a  phosphorescent  sea  fog  blanketing  the  beach.  In the  quiet,  she  felt,  rather  than  heard,  footsteps  padding  through  the  sand.  She  stood and made out figures stealing through the fog, specters  hauling  treasure.  As  one  came close,  she  saw  it  was  a  soldier,  who  gestured  for  her  to  be  quiet  and  sit  down.  She knew  him  slightly,  and  for  him  had  copied  a  short  verse  from  Saint  Teresa  of  Avila, her favorite  mystic. This morning he didn't meet  her eyes.

She  sat  down  and  stayed  mute  as  the  last  of  them  filed  past.  They  were  headed toward  the  water,  but  even  then  she  didn't  guess.  It  was  only  after  a  few  minutes, when no one else appeared, that she got up and  walked  to  the  shoreline  and  saw  their lights dwindling smoothly across the still black sea.

She  thought  Walker  must  have  sent  out  a  dawn  reconnaissance  of  some  kind.  But

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