The Judas Strain - James Rollins [172]
He answered her, his eyes flicking to her briefly, then away. “The only way to find out is to get down into the foundations—then search for some access to that cavern.”
Nasser scowled. “But what can be so important about the cavern?”
“It could be the source of the Judas Strain,” Vigor said. “Maybe when they were excavating the temple, they broke into that cavern, released something that lay buried down there.”
Gray sighed, tired. “Many disease vectors have appeared in the world as mankind spread into regions normally unpopulated. Yellow fever, malaria, sleeping sickness. Even AIDS appeared when a road was being built through a remote region of Africa, exposing the world to a virus found only in a few monkeys. So perhaps when the Khmer cultivated and populated this region, something was released.”
Gray rubbed his neck. His eyes held a steady stare at Nasser.
Too steady.
Seichan sensed Gray was still holding something back. She studied again his stylized pictogram. The mountain and shell represented the tower and cave. So what else was here? Then she realized.
The turtle itself.
Of course…
Her eyes rose to Gray’s.
He must have felt her attention. He turned to her, casually, but the weight of his gaze was heavy. He knew she had realized what he’d left unspoken. He willed her to be quiet.
She stepped back, folded her arms.
He stared another breath—then away again.
Seichan felt a measure of satisfaction. More than she had been expecting.
Nasser breathed deeply through his nose, nodding. “We must find a way down there.”
Gray frowned. “I had hoped there would be some evidence of a secret passage.”
“Doesn’t matter,” Nasser said. “We’ll blow the entrance.”
“I’m not sure that’s wise,” Vigor said, aghast. “If this is the source of the Judas Strain, it may be horribly toxic down there.”
Nasser remained unperturbed. “That’s why I’ll be sending you all down first.”
To be canaries in a coal mine.
Seichan again matched gazes with Gray. He raised no objections. Like Seichan, he knew that there was something larger than just the source of the Judas Strain down there.
The turtle’s shell might represent the cavern—but the turtle itself represented the god Vishnu—suggesting more than just a cavern rested beneath the Bayon temple. Possibly something else waited for them down there, too.
Gray stepped toward Nasser. “Does that demonstrate enough cooperation to spare my mother for this hour?” he asked, his voice tight.
Nasser shrugged, agreeing. He moved to the shaft of light, seeking better reception for his cell phone.
“I should perhaps hurry, then,” Nasser said, flipping open his phone. “It’s already after the hour. Annishen has little patience. No telling what she might do.”
9:20 P.M.
Washington, D.C.
HARRIET REMAINED FROZEN on the landing.
The slathering dog leaped at Jack’s sprawled form on the stairs. It was impossible to tell the breed in the dark stairwell, only that it was large and muscled. Pit bull. Rottweiler. Jack rolled to his back and kicked out—but the dog was faster, attack-trained. With a growling snarl, it bit deep into his ankle.
Jack tugged at his knee and kicked out with his other leg, square in the dog’s chest.
The dog went flying down the stairs, bouncing hard, still latched on to her husband’s prosthetic leg. Jack had unstrapped the limb, freeing himself.
Harriet helped Jack up to the landing.
Below, the dog struck the wall and scrambled back to its paws. It refused to let go of the prosthetic leg, ripe with her husband’s scent. Angry, confused, it thrashed its head back and forth, tossing drool, shaking the captured limb.
Harriet drew Jack up the next set of stairs, passing the closed landing door. She glanced through its small window. Flashlights continued to search the top floor. That left Harriet and Jack only one way to go.
The roof.
Down the stairs, the dog continued savaging the captured limb, triumphant with its prize.
Jack leaned on her shoulder. He hopped and hauled his way to the roof door. They had already searched the exit and found