League Of Night And Fog - League of Night and Fog Part 66
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League of Night and Fog Part 66

PHONE CAN'T BE TRUSTED. ALL PROBLEMS SOLVED. OUR.

FATHERS SAFE. ARRIVE TOMORROW. MY TIME THREE P. M. MY ESTATE. HALLO.

WAY.

"And you believed this?" Halloway crushed the paper. "What was I supposed to do? Phone when you told me I shouldn't? Stay in Mexico when I hoped my father was here in Canada?"

"You stupid bastard, I received a telegram as well! The message was almost the same! My father was supposed to be here."

"Then you're as stupid as you think I am!"

"They did this!" Halloway pivoted toward the entrance to his estate.

"They set us up!"

"They?" Rosenberg's knees bent. "The Night and Fog?"

"Who else would... ? They must be watching us right now!"

Halloway and Rosenberg retreated toward the mansion. But Halloway pivoted again, hearing a car roar up the gravel lane. As guards rushed toward it, Halloway recognized Miller behind the steering wheel. "I told you not to come here!" Miller's car crunched to a halt on the gravel. The angry architect surged from his car. "And I told you I was coming! You knew what my father was! You knew what all the fathers were! I tried to convince myself I'd only be sinking to your level if I came here and strangled you. But God help me, even knowing my father's crime, I wanted him back! And then you sent me this telegram!

My father! You said he'd be here! Where is he?" Halloway grabbed the piece of paper with which Miller gestured in fury. The message was the same that Rosenberg had received. 'They're out there," Halloway cried.

"I know it I'm sure of it. They're out there."

"Out there?" Miller's anger rose. "What are you--? Out there? Who?"

"We've got to take cover. Quickly. Inside." Halloway scurried toward the front steps. He shouted orders to the captain of his guards. "Pull your men in from the perimeter! Protect the house!" But at once he spun again, hearing a car roar up the lane. Oh, Jesus, he thought. Not another one.

18.

It went on like that for the next two hours, cars rushing up to the mansion, men scrambling out, each clutching a telegram. From around the world, they'd been summoned. Prom Mexico, America, England, Prance,

Sweden, Egypt, and Italy, they'd rushed to be reunited with their fathers, only to learn of the trick that had brought them to Halloway's estate. Sheltered in his study while guards watched the mansion, they raised frightened angry voices. They shouted, accused, complained.

"I'm getting out of here!"

"But it isn't safe to leave!"

"It isn't safe to stay!"

"What's supposed to happen at three o'clock?"

"Why was that time specified in the telegram?"

"What if our fathers will be returned?"

"What if we'll be attacked" The appointed time passed. Halloway heard another vehicle enter the lane. He rushed outside, hoping he was wrong about the Night and Fog, praying this was Icicle and Seth. But instead of a car, he saw a truck. With wooden slats along its sides, a tarpaulin covering the top. It looked like... Halloway shivered... a cattle truck. God have mercy, he thought, filled with a sickening premonition. The threat was all the more horrifying because it was vague. But of this he was certain--the end had begun.

19.

"What's happening down there?" Saul asked. Crouched beside Erika,

Drew, and Arlene, he watched from the bluff as the truck approached the nine cars parked in front of the mansion. The man in the blue exercise suit gestured frantically to his guards, who raised their rifles toward the truck. Drew's voice was strained. "We have to get closer."

"Now. While the guards are distracted," Erika said. Beyond the bushes in which they hid, a waist-high barbed wire fence separated them from the lawn of the estate. Erika hurried toward it. There were no glass insulators on the posts; the wires weren't electrified. She didn't see any closed-circuit cameras. There might be hidden sound and pressure detectors, but need made her take the risk. She climbed a post, tumbled to the lawn, and crawled. To her right, a hundred yards away, she saw the man in the blue exercise suit shouting orders to Iris guards, who aimed toward the cattle truck. It reached the top of the lane, approaching the cars parked in front of the mansion. Impelled by a horrible foreboding, Erika crawled faster. She turned toward Saul, who was squirming through the grass in her direction. Drew and Arlene were farther to her left, spreading out so there'd be less chance of anyone seeing them. With the sun on her back, she hurried toward a garden plot filled with tall orange snapdragons that would give her more concealment on the way to the mansion. Abruptly she stopped. Two guards at the back of the mansion had scrambled toward the commotion in front They joined their counterparts and aimed at the cattle truck, which had turned so that its hatch was pointed toward the group in front of the mansion. She took advantage of the guards' preoccupation and hurried closer to the mansion. But on her left she saw a sentry.

She crouched behind a shrub. The sentry, rifle at the ready, approached a shed, only to lurch back as if struck. He plucked at something on the side of his neck and suddenly collapsed. Baffled, Erika watched two elderly men emerge from behind the shed. One of them held a gun whose distinctive shape she recognized--it was used to shoot tranquilizer darts. Despite their advanced age, the men worked with surprising speed, dragging the sentry into the shed. One shut the door while the other grabbed the sentry's rifle. They hurried toward the back of the mansion and disappeared. Erika's bewilderment increased when she looked to her right, toward the front of the mansion, and saw an elderly man get out of the passenger door of the truck. The man walked toward the truck's back hatch and joined another old man, who'd gotten out on the driver's side and unseen by Erika had walked to the back. They braced themselves in front of the guards' rifles. With a mixture of fear and dismay, Erika crawled faster. Her heart pounded. Her premonition worsened. The elderly man who'd just appeared from the blind side of the truck was her father.

20.

Rage had made him incapable of fear. Joseph Bernstein stopped at point-blank range from the rifles and turned toward Halloway. "Is this any way to welcome visitors?"

"Who are you?"

"I think you already know," Ephraim Avidan said. Standing next to

Joseph, he lifted his hand toward the tarpaulin that covered the truck's back hatch. 'Tell your guards to lower their guns." Ephraim yanked the tarpaulin to the side of the truck. The back hatch slammed down. A bearded elderly man sat in the truck, aiming a machine gun. "Since munitions are your business, you're no doubt aware I've pulled back the cocking bolt on this weapon," he said. "You also know the devastation rapid-feed thirty-caliber bullets can accomplish. Even if someone shot me right now, my nervous reflex would pull the trigger. I'm aiming directly at your chest Please do what my associate requested and order your guards to lower their rifles."

"If you need further incentive, look deeper into the truck," Joseph said. Lips parted with apprehension, Halloway squinted toward the ulterior. "Step closer. We want you to see every detail," Ephraim said.

Halloway took two nervous steps forward and paled when he saw what was in there. Dragged, ashen, hollow-cheeked, the fathers were chained together, eleven of them slumped on toe floor of the truck. An elderly man guarded the prisoners, pressing an Uzi against the forehead of

Halloway's father. "Dear God." Halloway clutched his stomach, as if he might vomit

"Tell your guards to put down their rifles or we'll shoot the prisoners," Joseph said. He pulled a Beretta from a windbreaker pocket

"Do it," Halloway said. The guards set their rifles on me lane.

Joseph searched them, found several handguns, and told the guards to lie facedown on the gravel.

"Why are you doing this?" Halloway asked. "What do you want?" 'Isn't it obvious by now?" Ephraim said. "We're here to discuss Nazi racial theories." The large front door to the mansion came open. One by one, me other members of Halloway's group stepped out their hands raised, their faces pinched with fear. Two elderly men holding just followed them. "Ah," Ephraim said, "the rest of our audience has consented to join us."

"I don't know what you think you're doing," one of Halloway's group shouted, "but--!"

"Mr. Miller," Joseph said, "please shut your mourn."

"You can't keep something like this a secret! You can't--"

Joseph struck him across the head with the Beretta. Miller fell to the gravel. He moaned, clutching his bleeding scalp. "Would anyone else like to say something?" Joseph asked. The group stared appalled at the blood streaming down Miller's face. "Very good," Joseph said. Other old men, aiming Uzis, appeared from each side of the house. "Did you restrain the rest of the guards?" Ephraim asked. "The perimeter's been secured. We searched every room in the house."

"In that case, it's time to begin." Ephraim stepped toward the truck.