The Tower A Novel (Sanctus)

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Cold neon tubes tinked into life in the visitors’ centre as Pierce held the door and Franklin and Shepherd hustled in out of the

weather. It was a big, rectangular space large enough to accommodate the busloads of school kids who came here every day to look

at the old rockets and dream of riding them to the moon. Shepherd had been one of them once.

‘In here, gentlemen,’ Pierce said, shrugging out of his rain slicker and punching a code into a door next to the ticket desk.

His office had none of the romance of the public areas. There were no pictures on the walls of man’s extraordinary exploration in

here, no forming galaxies or wonders of creation, just a framed photograph of Pierce in his State Trooper days wearing a dress

uniform and looking a little more lean and a lot more mean than he did now. A coffee pot sat in the corner. The heating plate was

turned off but the smell of burnt coffee still filled the room with a smoky aroma that twisted Shepherd’s gut. He hadn’t had

time to eat before leaving Quantico and they hadn’t stopped anywhere on the way. Franklin didn’t seem to need food.

Pierce fitted a small key into a large filing cabinet and heaved open the bottom drawer. ‘We get crank mail here all the time,

mostly reports of UFO sightings and/or conspiracy theorists and moon-landing deniers who think Hubble is NASA’s latest hoax and

all the images are done in Photoshop. Most of it comes in as email but we still get some the old-fashioned way.’ He lifted a

well-stuffed hanging divider out of the drawer and started sorting through it. ‘This past year it’s gone nuts. I don’t know if

it’s all this weird weather we’re having, or the business in Rome that knocked the Church on its ass or what it is but something

sure got the doom and damnation crowd all worked up. ’Bout eight months ago we started getting these.’ He took a clear plastic

wallet out of the divider and handed it to Franklin. It was full of postcards, all variations on the same theme – old-master

style paintings showing a monumental tower under construction. ‘They’re all pictures of the Tower of Babel. We got the first one

in May, then a new one on the first day of every month since. We date stamp everything when it comes in so you can see what order

they arrived.’

Franklin snapped his Nitrile gloves back on and carefully tipped the cards out onto the desktop. He picked one up, stared at the

strange painting for a second, one stone coil inside another corkscrewing up into the clouds, then flipped it over to read the

handwritten message on the back:

And the Lord came down to see the city and the tower,

which the children had builded.

The words transported Shepherd straight back to the oak-panelled horror of his school where his Latin master had started each term

by reading the same passage from a well-thumbed leather Bible. ‘The quote is from Genesis,’ he said, ‘the Tower of Babel story.



‘Yep, and they were all sent directly to Dr Kinderman,’ Pierce added. ‘The postmarks are from all over but the writing looks to

me like it’s the same person. I didn’t know what to make of them when they first started coming in but we keep everything on

file, just in case. Each month there was a different quote, always from Genesis and always referring to the Tower of Babel. Then

last month we got this.’ He pulled a single brown envelope from the file and handed it to Franklin. It too was addressed to Dr

Kinderman only this time with a printed label. Franklin shook out a single sheet of folded paper and opened it to reveal a typed

note:

Build not a tower into heaven for the glory of man.

Nor seek to gaze upon the face of God

For His judgement shall be upon you,

Thou Sodomite and member of the occult tribe,

And that right soon.

The servants of the Lord are watching.

You must destroy your tower

And avert your gaze from heaven

Lest your blasphemy bring destruction upon you

And upon all of the earth.

Sacrifice the tower or the faithful servants of the Lord

Shalt sacrifice you

And your blood shalt stand payment for your sins.

Novus Sancti

Franklin looked up at Pierce. ‘You report this to State PD?’

He nodded. ‘Fancy language aside it’s still a serious threat. There’s a crime reference number in the file.’

‘Novus Sancti,’ Franklin muttered. ‘Does that mean anything to you?’

‘It’s Latin,’ Shepherd said, ‘it means “new holy” but by the context I would say it’s being used here as a name.’

Franklin turned back to Pierce. ‘Did the State-ies follow this up at all?’

‘They registered the complaint, told Dr Kinderman to be extra vigilant, asked me to keep them updated on any new developments.’

‘That’ll be a “No” then.’

Pierce bristled. ‘There were over four hundred murders in this state last year; they’ve barely got the manpower to investigate

those, let alone divert resources to every crazy with an axe to grind.’

Franklin pointed to the fourth line. ‘What does that mean – Sodomite and member of the occult tribe – are they saying he’s a

devil worshipper?’

‘Not necessarily,’ Shepherd replied. ‘“Occult” actually just means “hidden” or “secret”. It could just as easily mean he

’s a freemason.’

‘What about “Sodomite”?’

Pierce cleared his throat. ‘Well that’s a reference to … Dr Kinderman was – I mean I don’t think he is now, but in the past

he had …’

‘Dr Kinderman is gay,’ Shepherd cut in to put Pierce out of his misery. ‘It’s no big secret, it’s mentioned in his Wikipedia

entry. When he was a student he apparently had a brief fling with some guy who outed him when his star began to rise. There was a

mild bit of tabloid interest at the time but it didn’t fly very far. Dr Kinderman just made a statement confirming it and saying

something like we all do foolish things when young. He also stated that for the past twenty years his only committed relationship

has been with his work.’

‘That true, do you think?’ Franklin addressed the question to Pierce.

‘Who can say? What Dr Kinderman did in his own time is nothing to do with me. He certainly spent a whole lot of time here. He was

always around – he practically lived here.’

‘Did he seem particularly concerned or surprised when this letter arrived?’

‘Like Merriweather said, Dr Kinderman wasn’t what you would call the conventional type. He didn’t seem scared or anything like

that. He listened to what the State Trooper had to say about being careful then got straight back to work.’

‘What about religion – is Kinderman a man of faith?’

‘No, at least not that that I’m aware of.’

‘And how many other people are working on this project?’

‘About forty or so.’

‘Yet they only targeted him.’

‘Dr Kinderman is the most high-profile and generally these kinds of stunts are for publicity, which is exactly why we try and

play them down.’

Franklin nodded. ‘We’re going to take these away with us and run them through our labs, see if the paper or the ink talk to us

at all. The guys in Kinderman’s office are also going to have to remove his hard drive so we can go through it and see if there’

s anything there. Any security codes you know of that will make it easier for us to gain access would be much appreciated.’

‘Of course.’

‘You said Dr Kinderman spent most of his time here. Does he have an apartment on site?’

‘No, but he has the next best thing. He has a house in Presley Park, just the other side of the road you came in on. You could

walk it in less than five minutes.’

Franklin glanced through the window at the rain-whipped night. ‘Thanks, Chief, but if it’s all the same to you I think we’ll

take the car.’





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