Chapter 32

For once the rain had subsided a bit. It had been four days since Purdue and Agatha had assimilated the astronomical pointers with the spires of Venice’s ancient stone and brick treasures. They had, between them, utilized the locations of certain pinnacles aligned with constellations to draw a map that would take them to the supposed grave of the antique library. After all, it was a stroke of genius for the keepers of the literary mausoleum in the Middle Ages to hide it in the stars. Perpetually existent, it was the one map that could not be stolen or corrupted by any human.

Agatha and her brother arranged their diving gear and readied their waterproof flash lights for the journey into the submerged world under Venice. Another brilliant, although unintentional, security measure for the forbidden library was most certainly the condition of the water in the canals. It was extremely hazardous to be underwater for anyone who was not covered from head to toe in protective gear, due to the pollution and toxicity of the water. Purdue had assured that their diving gear was made of the sturdiest insulation material that would prevent any of Venice’s soiled substances from reaching their bodies.

One more step closer to the end of the world, but with a great weight off his shoulders, Purdue silently celebrated the technological aspects of the Longinus he had finally completed the night before. The stress of getting it done was interfering greatly with his focus on locating the hidden library to obtain, and ultimately alter, the information Meiner sought, thus warping his molecular terrorism so that it would never see any accomplishment.

Purdue could see his sister’s apprehension, but short of spiking her cookies, he did not know how to calm her. The thought of swimming under the dark and unfamiliar water where broken statues, debris, and, in some places, entire foundations rested was too much for her.

“Agatha,” he started to attempt an encouraging speech, but she closed her eyes, lolled her head, and held up her hand at him. Her gesture for him not to bother was typical. Agatha Purdue was not one for coaxing or swaying. She was the kind of woman who bit her lip and suffered inside and no amount of sweet talk was going to change her mind that her phobia was unavoidable. She was way too intelligent to allow even the emotional aspect of his efforts to penetrate her cynicism.

“Do you have the laser?” she asked plainly, effectively hiding her mounting anxiety.

“Yes, here,” he said gently and passed his sister his pen-sized laser cutter that converted into a thermo detector and radar device. She slipped it into the inlaid zipper pocket on her thigh, stretching tautly over her thermal suit. She had not gone on an illegal adventure with her brother since they scaled the fortress walls of the Brigade Apostate’s headquarters to steal the Longinus. And that risk of danger, armed men with precision marksmanship, was by far preferable to the silent darkness of the underwater populated channels.

They set off just short of midnight. Purdue still had not slept since he had to preside over the interment of Izaak Geldenhuys, the latest victim of a torrent of serial murders committed on members of the council. Purdue found the whole thing remarkably expedient. He was not amused by the manner in which the council dictated his existence now, how the members had cunningly made him the leader of the Black Sun to keep him from doing the organization harm under the protective eyes of his appointed counselors and staff. To him the deaths of the nefarious old bastards was quite expedient, actually, and he almost wished he was the one who thought up the splendid idea.

Yet he had to fulfill his duties as Renatus and attend each burial ceremony in the sunken chambers of the Black Sun house in Belgium. The lavish catacombs had been constructed especially for this purpose and featured niches for plaques and urns on the north side and inside the southern wall, tombs for coffins. It was still maintained in an old world way, with a healthy mix of technology and laser scanning for motion detection just to remind visitors that it was the twenty-first century after all.

“Much as I love the romantic Gothic setting of this city, I have to admit that it is a tad beyond my boundary for eccentricity with the water streets,” Agatha whispered as she walk-jogged to keep up with her determined brother’s strides. He was surprised at her plain eloquence of the complaint, but he found her timidity refreshing for a change. It made her seem almost… human.

“I think it is beautiful, old girl. You should forget about the water and take in the antiquity, the art of the city. Look at the gondolas, smell the cuisine, listen to the intricate classical sound of the music, my dear. Nowhere else in the world would you find this exact combination of sensations. It is something to be relished,” he smiled. She looked at Purdue. He almost looked like himself just then. That naughty countenance and the attitude of carefree invincibility simmered under his skin and much as she detested his mischievous flamboyancy sometimes, it was good to see him like this.

They passed along Rio dei Tolentini a few minutes later, using a small boat Purdue had secured from Thomas Carlos, a tour operator and gondola owner he had befriended a few days before. In the serene midnight air it was almost magical to see the fire-lit lamps swinging lazily over the gondolas and the soft lights illuminating the old stone courtyards where cheerful voices echoed between the three- and four-story buildings that flanked the water. The scent of jasmine and freshly baked bread permeated all around as Agatha and Dave Purdue neared their entry point on the tablet’s marker map.

“Look!” Agatha said, pointing at a building on their left. “It’s the Biblioteca. Would it not be ironic if the Library of Forbidden Books was located just there, under the actual library,” she marveled. Purdue nodded in agreement. It would have been some kind of fluke had it been so, but his mapping system was almost a 100 percent correct and it did not direct them to the actual library at all. In fact, they were to pass it by quite a distance yet.

Eventually the Ca’Foscari University main seat entrance came into view. By way of the last astronomical mapping diagram, Purdue’s tablet had calculated they were to go below just off the Sestiere of Dorsoduro, an architecturally beautiful structure in white stone, mirroring the white university building in its close proximity.

“Just look out for prying eyes. This is the darkest part of the bridge I can find, but we have to slowly submerge and try not to make any noise,” Purdue whispered. His sister nodded, casting a look toward the still blackness of the channel that would soon engulf her. “Agatha,” his voice pierced her fears and she shot a fearful gaze at her brother.

“David, do you realize that in the near future Venice might be the modern Atlantis?” she asked in a robotic tone that hinted at her rising apprehension about the dive. “It is as if the Adriatic is just waiting for the opportune moment to swallow it up and hide it forever. And people like you and Nina and Sam will be looking for it in a few thousand years.”

He placed a gentle hand on his sister’s shaking shoulders, “There is nothing that is going to confront you down there, all right? Trust me, I have seen the channels under water. It is just murk and muck and ancient bulks of petrified wood lodged in the clay to hold up the buildings,” he smiled, keeping his tone as tranquil and nonchalant as possible. “Now, we have to find the Library of Forbidden Books, my dear sibling, or else the entire world as we know it will be destroyed.”

Under cover of the bridge she stood unmoved, her eyes frozen in contemplation. In the faint light of the buildings nearby, Agatha looked like a death omen, her tall and skinny frame streamlined by black PVC and rubber and her blonde hair radiating wildly like a halo of insanity around her pallid face. Doom-like, her words came to Purdue as he started into the channel, breaking the surface with his feet.

“What a queer notion you have, David. In fact, if we do not go ahead with this plan the world would be perfectly safe. Yet you think it the other way round? If we leave the library where it is in its watery grave, unknown and lost in myth, Meiner will never have his compound to kill the world,” she recited evenly. Her eyes suddenly darted to him, “Why do you always have to amass power just because it is within your reach, David? All your quests for dangerous things and the power they promised, things you had eventually claimed, where did they bring you?”

“Now is hardly the time, Agatha,” he urged with a deepening scowl, anxious to disappear from the surface, yet he knew that she had to be convinced, at least answered. He knew his sister. She would stay put, indifferent to the idea of being arrested or seized, until she had received a satisfactory reason. And he was at the receiving end of her tenacity at the worst time. “We have to go. I shall explain later.”

“You will explain now.”

“Christ, Agatha!”

“Now, David.”

“If I have the formula Meiner needs, I will have leverage,” he admitted, uncharacteristically frantic at being possibly discovered.

“Leverage for what?” she asked.

“Anything that might befall us that we need to get out of, of course. Nothing specific,” he hissed impatiently. “Now come, let’s go!”

“If you had not set off to unearth evil things that needed to remain entombed, David, you would not be needing leverage for the lives of your associates, do you realize?” she contested.

“I am aware of that! But arguing about damage already done during a few years of bad judgment is redundant. We have to deal with our situation in the here and now, first and foremost. Let the blaming and “I told you so” come later, after I have gotten us all out of the trouble my excursions had dumped us into!” he implored, looking around for any sign of detection. “In effect, I need to retrieve something evil to destroy the ultimate evil, and I cannot do it without you.”

It was the truth. He could not gain access to the hidden knowledge of centuries without the help of the woman he had rescued from the claws of the council and its sick, twisted old brotherhood. His research had exposed much to him since he had spoken to Meiner, much as it pained him. The lore about the Library of Forbidden Books told of a custodian who had to be ever-present, a guardian who would not allow the knowledge to be perused by threat of death.

Not two days before did he learn why the sister he had liberated from Izaak Geldenhuys was not herself. Genetically and biologically she was, but the Agatha Purdue he had spent his infancy and early childhood was gone. Brainwashed by the Order of the Black Sun on the order of the council, she was resuscitated from brain death in the cellar of Bloem’s chamber of horrors. Barely alive, she was immediately introduced to the same vaccine that Dr. Alfred Meiner had been administering to the members of the council for decades.

It was a wondrous substance, all medical and molecular details aside, that managed to maintain synapse function even after cellular deterioration would normally shut down neural activity. The comatose woman was treated with Meiner’s mock immortality juice, but with an added ingredient — psychological alteration. By means of subliminal programming she was subjected to Nazi doctrine twenty-four hours per day, apart from her behavioral adjustment training. The latter had induced a nifty byproduct of the SS and its charm.

Agatha Purdue was ultimately stripped of her homicidal inhibitions.

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