129 Revelation chapter 29 first draft
29: Revelation
The Iraqi Air 737 touched down at Frankfurt International a little after 3 AM local time. Daniel, Jack and Susan grabbed what little they had and trudged down the central aisle. Daniel had the scroll and helmet in a carry-on gym bag, and fortunately airport security at Baghdad had been willing to accept a thousand dollars US to pretend they’d never seen the artifacts leave their country. Things in that country were getting better, but not very much. Corruption was still the rule of the day.
None of them had slept on the trip up, even though they were all beyond exhausted. They also hadn’t talked, even though they had adjoining seats. Any time one of them seemed to start, it was all too obvious that the most vociferous member of their team wasn’t with them. Daniel felt like he couldn’t even look Susan or Jack in the eye. But they had to go on, or Jeff’s sacrifice would be meaningless. They owed him that, to see this through.
As soon as Daniel stepped off the jetway, he saw a familiar face. The blond hair and high, Nordic cheekbones weren’t out of place here in Germany, nor was the expensive designer suit. But there was something about the way Uriel carried himself that set him apart anyway. He was still an archangel, even if he was wearing Armani.
Next to Uriel stood a dumpy guy with a scruffy beard and a “Frodo Lives” T-shirt. Daniel didn’t recognize him, but the guy was waving at them.
“Dante,” Jack said from behind Daniel, sounding both puzzled and relieved. “What the hell are you doing out here, kid?”
“Long story, sir,” Dante said. Uriel was leaning against a column in the terminal and still hadn’t moved or said a word. Daniel supposed he didn’t have to, he’d brought a human to do that for him.
“A story that has something to do with our friend, here, I guess,” Jack said, motioning to Uriel.
“Your friend,” Uriel said, “the good Mister Hicks, fell in with the wrong sort of people in Washington,” Uriel said.
“The kind of people who aren’t people?” Jack asked.
“Something like that,” Uriel said. “I thought, given all the service he’s provided to this endeavor, that I should keep an eye on him.”
The angel turned to address Daniel. “You have the artifacts, Mister Cho?”
Well, just get right down to it, Daniel thought. No how are you, or hey, what happened to the old guy that was with you. “Right here,” he said, hefting the gym bag.
“Unorthodox method of transporting such treasures, but any port in a storm, I suppose,” Uriel said. “And I trust you’ve seen their… capacity?”
“Yes,” Daniel said. They’d given the scroll a quick once over on the way to the airport, where Sandy had dropped them off. Given that it was written in a language none of them could read, there wasn’t much to do with it. And putting on the helmet again would have drawn too much attention. Once they got out of the tunnel several blocks away from the mosque, Sandy radioed for help and commandeered a Humvee to get them the hell out of Najaf as quickly as possible.
“Very well, then,” Uriel said. “Follow me.”
He strode away, and Daniel turned to look at Susan, give her a “can you believe this guy” look, but she was doing exactly as she was told, unquestioningly obedient. Daniel sighed and followed.
Uriel took them to a limo waiting outside, then to a hotel near the airport. They checked in under assumed names and took the elevator up to the penthouse suites, which the archangel had reserved for them. Daniel tossed the gym bag on the bed and headed for the shower. He had about a thousand years of dust and blood to wash off.
#
Daniel stepped out of the bathroom, toweling off his hair and wearing the new clothes that had been left for him. He felt more human, but he was still exhausted, an—
Susan was crying. She was sitting one of the couches, bawling her head off. The rest of them, except Uriel, looked suckerpunched. Daniel felt the same. He still couldn’t believe Jeff—
“Oh, Daniel!” Susan said as she saw him, ran up and crushed him in a hug. “I’m so sorry!”
Sorry? He gently disentangled himself. “Is this about Jeff?” he asked.
That just set off another round of crying, and Susan retreated to the couch. Uriel started to say something, but Jack waved him off.
“Daniel,” Jack said, “you better sit down.”
Daniel took a seat in the suite’s expansive living room. “What’s going on, Jack?”
“We got some bad news while you were in the shower. When Susan logged on to try to upload her video, we found out that the demons have hacked the website.”
“So this is about hacking?” Daniel was missing something here.
“No, Daniel.” Jack took a seat across from him. “They posted some videos of their own. We should have suspected this after they tried to kill Dante, it’s my fault we didn’t — “
“The attack on Mister Hicks was well after the events — “ Uriel said, but Jack cut him off again.
“Daniel, they posted video of how they tortured and killed Susan’s editor…” Jack trailed off, but Daniel could see he wasn’t done. “And your family. Your parents and sisters are dead. I’m sorry.”
Daniel felt like all the air disappeared out of the room. He couldn’t breathe. Everything was starting to go gray. It couldn’t be true, could it?
“I don’t recommend watching the video,” Jack said. “It’s pretty graphic. But we’ve verified that it’s real. They’re gone.”
“Gone.” The word tasted like ash.
“When they couldn’t find us, they went after anyone close to us,” Jack said. Susan and I don’t have living parents anymore, and I never got married. And you know what happened to Jeff’s wife and why he didn’t have any kids. Susan’s editor and your folks were all they could find.
“We’re going to get them, Daniel. You have my promise on that.”
“How?” Daniel said.
“Well, we’re going to finish — “
“We’re posting a video on the internet?” Daniel said. “That’s how we’re going to ‘get’ them? We’re going to take them down with fucking YouTube?”
“It’s a start,” Jack said.
“It’s a fucking joke!” Daniel said. “They’re d — dead, and it’s my fault. It’s my fault again. It’s my fault they’re dead…”
“Daniel, you know that’s not true,” Susan said.
“It is true!” Daniel said. “I couldn’t fucking let it go, and now they’re dead. My m — mom, dad, Leah and Mary, it’s all my fault.” He got up and stormed out of the room.
#
“Let him go,” Jack said. Susan couldn’t believe it.
“Let him go?” she said. “What if — “
“He won’t leave the building,” Uriel said. “I have security in place. And you, Miss Richardson, have a job to do.”
Susan nodded, and turned back to her laptop. “How am I supposed to post the final installment if I can’t log in?” she asked. They’d already discovered that not only had the demons killed Stan, but they’d also taken down the New American Century website.
“I might be able to do something about that,” Dante said. He opened his own laptop, signed into the hotel wifi and set to work.
For the next few hours, Susan poured everything she’d been through along with everything she knew about writing into telling the tale of what they’d uncovered in Iraq. She gave Jeff the hero’s treatment he deserved, and meticulously laid out the case for the existence of the immortals. Once they were home and save, she’d turn over the scroll and the helmet to academics who could verify their authenticity, but she wanted the story to stand on its own. And she thought it did.
“Okay,” Dante finally said. “I wasn’t able to regain control of the site, but I did the next best thing. I copied the site layout from a cached copy and built a new blog that looks just like it. I won’t have the archives, but it’s the same thing otherwise. Then I hacked the DNS to redirect newamericancentury.com from the old IP address to our new IP address. I’ve got you set up on the new blog, Susan, so give it a try.”
Susan wasn’t sure she understood all of what Dante just said, but she clicked the favorite to her blog upload panel anyway. To her surprise, it came up, and she was able to log in. As Dante said, there were no old posts, but she got to work anyway uploading the edited video and her story.
An hour later, it was done. The story was out.
#
The next morning a 767 landed at Reagan National Airport from Frankfurt. The first people off the jetway were Uriel, Jack, Dante, Susan and Daniel, followed by the rest of the first class passengers. Jack flashed his FBI badge to get them all past Customs, and they moved unaccosted out to a waiting limousine.
“This feels weird,” Daniel said. He was still stunned by the deaths of his family, but it had settled into more of a dull ache over the last twenty four hours. He’d passed a stress threshold, and just couldn’t feel much of anything anymore. But that didn’t stop the rational, logical side of his brain from asking questions.
“I know,” Susan said. “I still feel like a fugitive.”
“Totally unnecessary,” Uriel said as they piled into the limo. “You are under my protection. All charges against you have been dropped, and the government is even settling all the property damage claims out of court to keep things quiet.”
Daniel wasn’t nearly as surprised as Susan was about the reaction thus far to her story. While it had been a runaway hit with the media, video being rebroadcast on all the major cable networks both in the US and around the world, the US government had already declared it to be a hoax, insisting that there was no such thing as angels and demons, that it was all internet special effects. Daniel knew that was the only stance they really could take, if they wanted to preserve any authority at all, but Susan was crushed. She’d been hoping for real, lasting change.
Daniel knew that the only times things changed, it was for the worse.
Before he knew it, the limo slowed to a stop in front of Daniel’s apartment. “You will find things cleaner than you left them,” Uriel said. “The demons ransacked your apartment when you left the country, but I’ve had a cleaning crew restore everything to normal.”
“Thanks,” Daniel said, reaching for the door.
“What are you going to do, Daniel?” Susan said.
“I’m going to try to get my old life back,” Daniel said, and stepped out of the limo.

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