~ Harbingers of the Apocalypse ~
by
Jason Leary
John sat at a table near the back of the clean
room in stunned disbelief. His digesting food churned in his stomach.
The end of the world,
John thought. It can’t be.
At first he was sure Zewail must have been
exaggerating to emphasize the importance of this operation, but when he pressed
him on it, Zewail verified that he was talking about the literal end of the
world. Despite his best efforts, John’s mind just couldn’t accept it; the whole
idea was preposterous.
It’s the thing of fairy tales,
like something you’d see at the movies. It’s the kind of thing those cheap
dime store horror novels make a killing off of. It’s not the kind of thing the
government of the United States of America spends millions of dollars on trying
to investigate and prevent. It’s just not.
Zewail saw the look of resignation in John’s
eyes and sat next to him. As he spoke he used soft, even tones, trying to put
the American as much at ease as was possible given the subject matter. “I know
it’s a shocking bit of information. I felt the same as you when I realized the
truth. You now know something that just thirty or forty people in the world
know, but I want you to understand. You were assigned here to try and stop the
apocalypse. The United States still thinks there’s hope.” Zewail took a slow,
deliberate sip of his coffee before continuing, “As do I.”
“What happened? What did you find?” Zewail
heard the manufactured steadiness in John’s voice. He had a lot of respect for
the man. He knew John had seen many things in his life. He had enjoyed a
distinguished career, and now he was being entrusted with what was, without a
doubt, the most important mission in the history of the Central Intelligence
Agency.
Also it helped that so far he had taken the
news much better than anyone had before.
Zewail chose his words with great care, trying
not to add to the overwhelming burden already on John’s shoulders. “A little
over three months ago, we made a discovery within this very cave. It wasn’t
much, just twenty or so Egyptian burial jars each filled with rolled up pieces
of delicate parchment containing ancient writing. Each of the jars was decorated
exquisitely. Each a beautiful piece in its own right, but that’s not what caught
our attention. What caught our attention was the writing. It was a language that
had died out long ago.”
“Ancient Egyptian, right? Hieroglyphics?” John
hazarded a guess.
Zewail shook his head slowly from side to side.
“No. Ancient Hebrew.”
“Hebrew?” John asked. Zewail could tell he was
very confused. “I didn’t think the ancient Egyptians spoke Hebrew.”
“They didn’t,” Zewail answered. “The Jewish
slaves did, but the Egyptians did not. But what concerned us most was when we
did the carbon dating on the parchment we discovered it’s not even from the
right time period. We’re not talking about Modern Hebrew here. We’re talking
about the original form of the language that was derived from a Phoenician
script, rather than the modern version, which evolved from writing known as
Proto-Hebrew or Early Aramaic. It is a language that’s been effectively dead for
more than five centuries, but according to our carbon dating, the parchment is
just one hundred to a hundred and fifty years old. To have hundred-year-old
parchment, containing writing of a language that hasn’t been used for more than
five hundred years, and buried in a room that has been undisturbed for five
thousand years, is not just surprising, it’s impossible.”
Zewail paused a moment allowing this new
information to sink in. “Nobody speaks this language anymore. Our computer
translators are even having problems with it. They’re averaging just three words
a second--that’s about a quarter as fast as it should be going. This language is
obsolete.”
John was beginning to lose his patience with
the man. “I get the point. What was written on the scrolls?”
“At first it appeared to be nothing important,”
Zewail continued. “Burial rites, ancient incantations, but those were just the
first few pieces of parchment we translated. After that, as we got deeper into
the documents, we made some chilling discoveries. Some of the parchments
contained texts from literature. There was some Shakespeare, some Plato,
Socrates, there was even some Mark Twain, but nothing could have compared to
what we found next.”
“What?” The hairs on John’s arms rose.
“A book titled, roughly translated, ‘The End of
All Things.’ At first we didn’t think much of it. We thought maybe it was just
another obscure work that none of us had ever heard of, but as we translated
further we discovered that this was something very different. It was just a
smaller portion of another larger book.”
“What book?” John asked, although he already
knew the answer.
“The Bible. Written in the same perfect Hebrew
the original pages of the Old Testament were written in.”
“So, basically this is just another Book of
Revelations.”
“No.” Zewail was obviously frustrated that John
wasn’t getting it. “No, it’s not. Revelations is full of symbolism. It is a
parable. Contrary to what many believe, it’s not meant to be taken literally.
Everything in it is symbolic of something else. It is possibly the most cryptic
work of literature ever created, but this new book isn’t like that. It’s very
straightforward, and it’s very detailed. It names the people, places, and dates
that will figure into the world’s destruction. No more symbolism. No more
guessing as to what it means.” Zewail paused, taking a moment to calm himself.
“As soon as we realized what it was, we asked the United States for help, and
they sent you.”
“Who are the people named in the text?” John
asked.
“Well, it speaks of many historical figures.”
Zewail spoke slowly, allowing John’s reeling mind an opportunity to catch up.
“The Pharaoh Ahmose I and Moses, Julius Caesar, Adolph Hitler, but then there
are others... People who are living in this age and have no idea the part they
will play in the destruction of the world.”
“Well, I can contact my people in Washington.
If nothing else at least we can keep an eye the ones living in our time period,”
John reasoned.
Zewail nodded. He was amazed at how John seemed
to take the information in stride and was already prepared to work.
“I just don’t understand what it is you’re
hoping I’ll be able to do,” John stated, frustrated and disappointed by his own
uncertainty.
“Actually, we were hoping you could tell us.” Zewail spoke cautiously. “You see, you are one of the people named in the text.”