The Eden Prophecy Excerpt

The Eden ProphecyChapter 1
New York City (present day)

Claudia Gonzales flashed her ID badge at the security checkpoint outside the United Nations General Assembly Building.  There was no real need to do so, the guards knew her well and at this hour of the morning—just after 6:00am on the east coast—she was one of the few diplomats on scene.

They waved her through post haste.   The second ranked representative of the American delegation, the Assistant Ambassador to the United Nations, was not someone to kept waiting.

With a briefcase in one hand and a tall mocha latte in the other, Ms. Gonzales made her way to a secure elevator and up to the 11th floor of the iconic monolith of a building.

Reaching her office before any members of her staff was a habit the Assistant Ambassador had kept since graduating law school.  For one thing, it set a good example; it was difficult for her staff to slack or complain when the boss was working harder than anyone else.  It also had a practical purpose.  Not only did the early bird catch the worm, but for the busy people of the world, the early morning hours were often the only available moment to actually look for the proverbial morsel.

Within an hour the phones would start ringing.  Shortly after that, the appointments would begin and then the afternoon teleconferences, followed by press briefings and public hearings.  In the blink of an eye it would be closing time and the pile of work on her desk would look exactly as it had eight hours before.

To Claudia Gonzales, that was the equivalent of running in place.

She stepped into her office, set the latte down and turned her computer on.  As the machine booted up, she stepped outside, checking the items on her assistant’s desk that had come in during the night hours.  The world ran 24/7, even if government offices didn’t.

The Eden ProphecyThere was a report on the continuing blockade of Gaza, another on a human rights situation in East Timor and an internal use envelope that lay unopened.

It read ‘Diplomatic Materials, Private and Confidential’.  It was listed as coming from the Secretary General’s office, with her name scrawled in the recipient’s slot.  She grabbed all three items and returned to her office.

Fairly certain there were no earth shattering details in the two reports, she placed them in her inbox and proceeded to open the big manila package.

Inside was a legal sized envelope on the Secretary General’s stationary.  Intrigued, she took a sip of her latte, placed it down and used a letter opener to slice the top of the envelope.  There was an odd rubbery feel to the envelope, almost as if it were waterproof.  It made her wonder how much the Secretary General spent on his office supplies.

She pulled out a folded sheet of paper and began to read.

 

You will be punished.  You will all be punished.  We have waited and suffered too long.

 

Her mood instantly changed.  The UN got a hundred threats per week, mostly from crackpots and mentally unstable individuals who imagined the UN taking over the world with black helicopters.  What made these people think the UN wanted to, or was even remotely capable of, dominating the world boggled her mind.  In the best of times, they had trouble keeping the peace in remote, undeveloped areas.

She read on.

The Eden ProphecyYour efforts have not helped us.  You plunge us deeper into despair every day.  In the name of progress you enslave us, in the name of charity you starve us, in the name of peace you slaughter us.  We can no longer wait for your help, we will change the world ourselves.

 

Normally, Claudia took these threats with a grain of salt, but this letter had come to her internally.  Whoever had written it had access to things they should not have had access to.  Whoever had sent it had been inside the building.  She began to feel sick, her face and hands flushed and sweating.

 

In our pains we have grown.  And you have fed off us. You think you have beaten us, but he who overcomes by force, hath overcome but half his foe.

 We cannot reverse what you have done but we mete out your portion of suffering, we bring you down with us.  And it is you who will deliver the master stroke for us.  That is correct, Ambassador Gonzales, you are the method of our vengeance.  If you have read this far, you are carrying the plague already.

 

The Eden ProphecyHer heart went cold as she read the words.  With her hand shaking slightly she jabbed at the intercom switch on her phone to summon security.

“Security,” a voice said.

“This is…” she stopped midsentence, noticing some type of reddish liquid left behind on the phone key.  She glanced at her hand, turning her palm up. The tips of her fingers and her thumb were stained reddish-brown.

She noticed a strange smell and heard an almost inaudible sizzling sound.  Her left hand, still holding the sheet of paper felt as if it were burning.  She flung the letter to the ground with a shout, pushing her chair backwards.  She jumped up out of the seat, knocking the latte off her desk.

Her palm and fingers were red and bubbling with some type of crimson liquid. Her heart was pounding.

“Madam Ambassador?” the voice called over the phone.  “Are you okay?   Madam Ambassador?”

Unable to speak, she stared at the sheet of paper, watching as a strange red stain soaked through the page from the corners like blood or dye.  Despite this strange effect, the typed words remained clearly readable.  The last sentence in large bold font read:

Welcome to Hell.

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         Poisoned Pen