to resist the fatal urge to tear the Frenchman's head off. He bided his time, knowing that he was in no position to take revenge.

'I saw your plane on the lake,' Austin said. 'It's a little cold for scuba diving.'

'Your concern is appreciated. The Morane-Saulnier was exactly where you said it would be.'

Austin glanced around the cavern. 'You went through a great deal of trouble to flood this place,' Austin said. 'Why drain it again?'

The smile dissolved into a frown. 'At the time, we wanted to keep Jules locked away from the prying eyes of the world.'

'What changed your mind?'

'My mother wanted Jules's body back.'

'I was unaware that the Fauchard family was so sentimental about its kinfolk.'

'There's a lot about us you don't know.'

'Glad I could make it to his coming-out party. How is the old boy?'

'See for yourself,' Emil said, and stepped aside.

A section of wall had been melted and chipped away to create a blue grotto. Jules Fauchard lay on the raised platform like a human sacrifice to the god of the glacier. The body was on its side, curled up in a fetal position. Jules was still wearing his heavy leather flying

coat and gloves, and his black boots were as shiny as if they had just been polished. He wore a parachute harness, but the actual parachute had been ripped off by powerful glacial forces. Although the corpse had been locked in the ice for nearly a century, the cold had kept it well preserved. The skin on the face and hands had a burnished copper look and the heavy handlebar mustache was coated with frost.

The hawk nose and firm jaw on the frozen face matched the features of the man in the Fauchard family gallery. Austin was especially interested in the hole that had punctured the fur-trimmed leather aviator's cap.

'Nice of your sentimental family to give Jules a going-away present,' Austin said.

'What are you talking about?'

Austin gestured toward the hole. 'The bullet in his head.'

Emil sneered. 'Jules was on his way to see the pope's emissary when he was shot out of the sky,' Emil said. 'He carried documents that would prove our family's complicity in starting the Great War. He also wanted to offer the world a scientific discovery that would be a boon to all mankind. He hoped to avert war with his actions.'

'Laudable and unusual goals for a Fauchard,' Austin said.

'He was a fool. This is where his altruism landed him.'

'What happened to the documents he carried with him?'

'They were useless, ruined by water.'

'Then it was all a big waste of time.'

'Not at all. Look. You are here. And you will wish that you were chained in the chateau catacombs when I am through.' Emil pointed to the ragged edge of ice that framed the opening to the grotto. 'See? The ice is already re- forming. In a few hours, the tomb will again be resealed. And this time you will be inside, keeping Jules company.'

Austin's mind was racing.

Where the hell was Zavala?

'I thought your mother wanted the body.'

'What do / care about the body? My mother won't always be in power. I intend to lead the Fauchards to their greatest achievements. Enough stalling. I'm not going to indulge your pathetic effort to forestall the inevitable, Austin. You stole my airplane and treated it shabbily, and have caused me a great deal of trouble. Get over there next to Jules.'

Austin stayed where he was. 'Your family didn't give a rat's ass about being blamed for the war. It was an open secret that you and the other arms merchants wanted the bullets to fly. It was something bigger than any war. Jules was carrying the formula for eternal youth.'

A startled expression flashed across Emil's face. 'What do you know?'

'I know that the Fauchards will destroy anyone who stands in the way of their goal of living forever.' He glanced at. the frozen corpse of Jules. 'Even a family member proved to be expendable when it came to the fountain of youth.'

Emil studied Austin's face. 'You're an intelligent man, Austin. Wouldn't you admit that the secret of eternal life is worth killing for?'

'Yes,' Austin said with a wolfish grin. 'If you're the one being killed.'

'Your civilized veneer is wearing thin,' Emil said with a chuckle. 'Think of the infinite possibilities. An elite group of immortals imbued with the wisdom of ages could rule the world. We'd be like gods to the life- deprived.'

Austin glanced at Emil's henchman. 'What about Sebastian over there? Does he fit in with your group of elites? Or will he join the rest of the 'life-deprived,' as you call them?'

The question caught Emil by surprise. 'Of course,' he said after a moment. 'Sebastian's loyalty will earn him a place in my pantheon. Will you join me, old friend?'

The hulking man opened his mouth to reply but said nothing. He had caught the hesitation in Emil's voice and there was confusion in his eyes.

Austin twisted the verbal knife. 'Don't count on living forever, Sebastian. Emil's mother wants you out of the picture.'

'He's lying,' Emil said.

'Why would I lie? Your boss here intends to kill me, no matter what I say. Madame Fauchard told me at the masquerade ball that she had ordered Emil to get rid of you. We both know Emil always does what his mother tells him to do.'

A doubtful expression came to the bland face. Emil saw himself losing control of the situation.

'Shoot him in the arms and legs,' he barked. 'Make sure you don't kill him. I want him to beg for death.'

Sebastian stood there, unmoving. 'Not yet,' he said. 'I want to hear more.'

Emil uttered a curse and snatched the gun from Sebastian's hand. He aimed at Austin's knee.

'You'll soon find that your life is all too long.'

Austin's ploy to turn Sebastian against Emil had bought him a little time, but it had failed, as he knew it would in the end. The master-and-servant bond between the two men was too strong to be dissolved by a few doubts. He braced himself for the shattering pain. But instead of a gunshot, he heard a sharp hissing sound from the passageway outside the ice cave. Then a hot cloud of steam surged into the chamber.

Emil had turned his head in reflex toward the source of the noise. Austin lunged forward in a low boxing stance and drove his right fist

into Fauchard's midsection. Fauchard let out an explosion of air and his legs buckled. The gun flew from his fingers.

Sebastian saw his master under attack, and he tried to grab Austin by the neck. Instead of trying to elude Sebastian, Austin bulled right at him, using his palm to straight-arm the big man under the chin. As Sebastian reeled from the attack, Austin shouldered him aside and then sprinted through the blinding steam.

He heard Zavala calling. 'Kurt, over here!'

Zavala stood in the passageway holding a cutoff section of hose that was spewing hot water onto the walls to create the cloud that rolled into the ice cavern. Zavala dropped the hose, grabbed Austin and led him through the steam cloud. They could hear Emil shouting in incoherent rage.

Gunfire raked the passageway. Austin and Zavala were racing down the stairs and the bullets went high. Hearing the gunfire, the rest of Fauchard's men emerged from the lab trailer. They saw Austin and Zavala and gave chase. As they made their way into the tunnel, Zavala got off two quick shots to give their pursuers something to think about. He was still limping, but managed a loping run, and they made it back to the sluice gate Sebastian had blown off. They plunged through the opening a second ahead of a hail of bullets.

Austin searched his pockets for the tunnel map. It was nowhere to be found. He remembered he had left it in the Citroen. They must get back to Fifi. He pictured the system in his mind. The flow in the system could be manipulated in the same way electricity pulses through the grid on a circuit board.

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