An Extra-Ordinary Beginning (The Adventures of Eric and Ursula Book 1)
Page 25
At the last major villa on the road, Alexander stopped Eric, and they both walked inside. It was called the House of Venus in the Sea Shell. There was a small group of Spanish tourists wandering around, but otherwise it was empty. Alexander led Eric to the rear of the house and stood in front of the beautiful mosaic which gave the house its name. They put the audio guides close to their ears, but they were not turned on and instead Alexander spoke.
“Behind this house is a field containing a few trees and bushes. This is where Ursula’s pod landed. Fourteen years ago this area was being excavated, and the archaeologists discovered a tunnel dug by Roman looters over nineteen hundred years ago. Ancient tunnels often mean all the best artefacts have already been removed, and it is my understanding that, after a hurried look, the archaeologists abandoned their excavations and moved on. Pompeii is a vast dig site and archaeologists are not as patient as is to be believed. As you already know, I pushed the pod down this hole and attempted to bury it. I covered the hole with timber that was laying around, covered this with mounds of dirt and then left. It is my sincerest hope that it has been left but...”
The Spanish group filed past the mosaic in front of them, and Alexander stopped talking.
When they had gone Eric asked, “Are we still going ahead with our plans?”
“Yes,” replied Alexander trying to sound confident. “Let’s go.”
It was almost eleven o’clock, and there were many tourists walking around. Alexander checked his phone to make sure none of them were OSS agents and then left the House of Venus in the Sea Shell. A group of German tourists talking loudly strolled past them, and they joined the back of their group toward the Sarno Gateway.
Eric was throwing his ball up in the air and catching it, waiting for the sign from Alexander.
“Throw the ball to me, son,” instructed Alexander jovially after a few seconds.
“Okay Dad, I’ll make it a big throw,” replied Eric, skipping to the other side of the road.
He looked at Alexander and threw him the ball, which sailed over Alexander’s head, over an ancient wall and into the field behind.
“Oh, Dad, my ball,” said Eric disappointed, bounding over to Alexander. “That’s my favourite one.”
“Don’t worry son, I’m sure we can find it.”
They both leap-frogged over the wall and into the field beyond.
After much thought, Ursula had decided that excavation was actually quite enjoyable. About twenty minutes earlier Molly had found a piece of ceramic. Normally, a bit of smashed plate would not have interested Ursula but this piece was different. This piece had been used by Romans, had experienced a volcanic eruption and had been buried under ash, pumice and earth for nearly two thousand years. Their tour guide, who was also an archaeologist and their dig manager, explained that it was indeed Roman and that there was sure to be more. The children’s enthusiasm for the dig increased tenfold with this comment.
As Ursula looked around her, she could see that all her classmates were busy chatting and digging, trying to find more pieces. Beyond them, roughly circling their group, were the six American tourists in loud Bermuda shirts. They seemed to have an unhealthy interest in the school group and one person in particular.
If they are here, thought Ursula, they are not with Eric and Alexander, and that’s perfect. She focused hard and sent this thought to Eric.
Eric smiled and told Alexander that the OSS were still with Ursula as the two of them continued to hunt for his ball. Nobody gave them a second glance. The tourists were far more interested in the historic sites than a father and son looking for a ball in an overgrown field.
After a quarter of an hour, a severe looking Pompeii guide asked them what they were doing. Alexander replied in bad Italian that his son had lost his ball. The guide relaxed, asked them not to be too long and walked away.
“Where did you bury it?” asked Eric. “We can’t spend much longer here; another guide will turn up and ask the same question.”
“I know,” replied Alexander, becoming tense, “but it was at night, and it was many years ago, and it was dark. A degree of patience would be appreciated.”
Another fifteen minutes passed and, apart from the ball, nothing else had been found. They decided that staying any longer in the field would make people suspicious and left.
As they walked back along Via dell’Abbondanza, Alexander said brightly, “Let us concentrate on the positives. Judging by the amount of vegetation I think it is safe to conclude that the area we have just searched has not been used for a number of years. If this is the case, then I think we can also rightly assume that the pod is still there, under the surface.”
“You’re right,” replied Eric gloomily, “but if we are realistic, we can say that Plan A has failed. Now we have to go with Plan B, and we both know that Plan B’s success is down to faith or luck and is more dangerous.”
“Needs must. Needs must.”
They walked on in silence. Alexander took his phone from his pocket and texted Andrea the letter ‘B.'
Deep in the pocket of her leather jacket, Andrea’s phone buzzed. She looked at the message. The time was eleven forty-three a.m., or seventeen minutes until Plan B could begin. She was sat on a bench near the dig area and beside her was one of the black hold-alls. Among the throng of children, Ursula was happily digging and chatting to Molly. A few children away Miss Evans was busily digging with the three other teachers, her face bright red with the effort.
“Miss Evans,” shouted Andrea.
“Yes dear,” she answered, pleased with the excuse to have a short break.
“It will be lunch soon.”
Even though she was talking with Molly, Ursula noticed the single letter in Andrea’s sentence.
“Oh yes,” replied Miss Evans, looking at her watch. “We’ll stop at twelve and then go to the restaurant.”
At twelve, as good as her word, Miss Evans brought the dig to a halt. She gathered the children around her and complimented them on their work. The six OSS agents took a step forward.
“Well done and good digging! Now it is time to go to the restaurant for some food.”
Ursula put her hand up, “But Miss Evans I’m filthy. I can’t go into a restaurant like this.”
“I really don’t think it matters that much, but I guess that it would be a good idea if we all went into the toilet block and freshened up.”
“But Miss Evans,” Ursula whined, “I’ll still be filthy. I can’t wash my clothes as well.”
Molly joined in, “We’ll be thrown out of the restaurant, and we’ll get dirt in our food. We should have bought some spare clothes.”
Some of the other children joined in, and soon most of the year group were grumbling.
“Boys and girls!” shouted Miss Evans above the ruckus. “The restaurant is quite used to dirty archaeologists and, to be fair, there really isn’t much else we can do about it.”
“Miss Evans,” said Andrea, walking towards the group with the hold-all, “maybe I can help. In his spare time, the late Mr Meyer liked to excavate. He always took spare clothes for lunch. When he became involved in this trip, he instructed me to have some spare clothes ready for all the children.”
From the hold-all, Andrea produced a brown, long-sleeved top, khaki trousers, sunglasses and a wide-brimmed khaki hat.
“There is one set of these for each child and each piece has the PAIS logo on it. They are a gift from the Meyer foundation. One size fits all.”
The children cheered, and Miss Evans thanked Andrea for her kindness before organizing the classes.
“Okay, Year 7, please form an orderly line and then go into the toilets to wash and change.”
Behind the toilet block, their backs against the wall and listening carefully, were Eric and Alexander. Eric had changed out of the Italian football shirt and cap. He was now wearing a bright red T-shirt with a colourful target painted on the front.
“Time to rumble,” announced Alexander, qu
ietly giving Eric a bunk up to the small toilet window into the boy’s section of the block.
“Good luck,” he wished as Eric disappeared from view. “I’ll see you later.”
“You had better,” whispered Eric from inside.
The Year 7 children had not formed an orderly line; in fact, they had stampeded like elephants towards Andrea. At the front of the queue was Ursula. After she had been given her bag of clothes and was walking towards the toilet block, Andrea appeared to have difficulty in removing the rest. Once Ursula was inside, the clothes came out of the hold-all easily and quickly. The children grabbed theirs and piled towards the block too. In just over a minute, all the children were inside getting changed.
Andrea motioned to the adults to join her. The four teachers stood in front of her with their backs to the toilet block while Andrea rummaged inside her hold-all, looking for the teacher’s T-shirts. All the time she had one eye on the outside of the toilets.
From the boy’s entrance, Eric stepped out and stood there looking around. He did a visual sweep of the area and made eye contact with each of the six OSS team members.
In his surveillance room back in the States, Agent Hoover almost fell out of the chair he was wedged into. He didn’t need to report the news to Agent Angel as the OSS chief was watching the same feed.
“It’s the boy!” roared Agent Angel, his voice booming down the tunnels. “It’s the boy! Take him out!”
Team Omega scrambled across the dig site towards Eric, who sprinted away like a one hundred metre champion but then they stopped.
Ursula could feel that Eric was scared as she climbed out of the toilet window. She did not feel too differently herself. Alexander was waiting for her and the moment her feet hit the ground he put Eric’s Italian football shirt and matching cap on her. She took his hand and together they walked quickly away.
The sudden appearance of Eric and his sprint away had confused Team Omega. Should they follow their order and stay with the girl or follow the boy? Rather than pursue him they stood, momentarily, wondering what to do. Their heads moved between the toilet block, where they knew Ursula was, and the fleeing boy.
Agent Angel brought an end to their indecision and roared down their earpieces, “What are you doing? Agents Alpha, Beta and Gamma - the boy! Go, go, go, damn it! Agents Delta, Ypsilon and Zeta stay with the other two suspects.” He then turned his attention to the operatives in front of him and Agent Hoover back in America. “When the girl comes out of that john make sure you keep every available camera and satellite on her and find me that boy too.”
By the time the teachers had their new T-shirts and had turned around, the toilet area had returned to calm. Eric was nowhere to be seen, and there were only three tourists left in Bermuda shirts. As the teachers entered the block themselves, thirty identically dressed children left and mingled outside. The long-sleeve tops were too long and covered the children’s hands; the hats flopped down to their shoulders, and the sunglasses were large. However, no one seemed to care.
Neither the three remaining agents, the operatives in the bunker nor Agent Hoover could work out which child was Ursula. Even as they followed the children to the restaurant they were unable to pinpoint her.
Andrea calmly picked up the hold-all. She followed the three agents and the children to the restaurant. The dig site was now empty, and as she walked across it, no one noticed her.
Down at the field, next to the House of Venus in the Sea Shell, Ursula and Alexander were busily searching for the pod. It had taken them twelve minutes to get there, and they thought they had only about another twelve minutes before the OSS realized that Ursula was missing.
“Just relax,” Alexander encouraged Ursula. “Walk around and see if you feel anything. If a diviner can use a stick to find water underground, why can’t you find your pod?”
“I’ll try,” she answered, “but I’m not feeling very relaxed.”
“Is Eric okay?”
Ursula focused her mind on Eric.
“Yes, he’s fine. He’s in the girl’s toilet at the restaurant. He lost the OSS.”
“Then there is nothing to worry about. Come on, concentrate on that pod.”
In rapidly decreasing circles, Ursula moved quickly across the field; Alexander walked behind her. Shortly after she had started, she stopped.
“It’s here, below me, I can feel it.”
Lifting his Nordic pole high above his head Alexander brought it down hard and fast into the ground. The point of the pole had been specially sharpened. It broke through the top soil with ease, pierced timber and then met no resistance. Alexander fell to his knees and dug around the pole with his hands. After twenty centimetres, he reached the wood.
“You’re right,” he said gleefully.
Quickly he refilled the hole and taking a small phial of liquid from his pocket, sprinkled its contents around the hole.
“What’s that?” asked Ursula.
“It will be seen by UV light. It will help us find the spot later. If you can’t find it again, that is. Come on, let’s go.”
They jogged to the wall, jumped over and walked out of Pompeii via the Sarno gateway.
About the same time as they were leaving, the three OSS agents in the restaurant realized that Ursula was not there. They were sat at a plastic table together drinking colas and watching the children.
Agent Delta put his finger to his ear and said, “The street kid has vanished. I repeat; the street kid has vanished.”
The three agents paid for their drinks and left.
Agents Alpha, Beta and Gamma had not fared any better. They had run after Eric but, by the time they began their pursuit, he had already disappeared. Since then they had run around half of Pompeii trying to locate him.
Agent Alpha put his finger to his ear and said, “The boy has vanished. He’s somewhere in Pompeii, but we don’t know where.”
Lunch had been eaten, and the children were eager to return to their digging. Miss Evans was sat on a table with Andrea and the other teachers. She stood up and, pointing at each child, counted. There were thirty children.
“Oh my goodness,” she said to the other teachers and Andrea, “we appear to be missing one.”
Looking up, Andrea said helpfully, “I saw Ursula going to the toilet. I will go and have a look.”
Eric was in the girl’s toilet, waiting in a cubicle and putting on the same outfit as the other children. The clothes had been hidden there, and Andrea knew exactly which cubicle to approach.
“Are you here, Eric?” asked Andrea as she entered.
“Yes,” he replied somewhat sulkily.
Andrea went back into the restaurant, where she found the children lining up and ready to leave. At the back of the line stood Miss Evans, and Andrea approached her.
“I am afraid that Ursula is not feeling well,” she explained, “I will take her back to the hotel.”
“Oh! What a shame. I’ll leave her with you then, thank you,” and Miss Evans told the children to go.
As the Year 7 children and teachers walked out of the restaurant, Eric came out of the girl’s toilet. His head was held low so no one could see his face under the floppy hat, and he clutched his stomach. Andrea put her arm around him, and they followed the PAIS tour group at a safe distance.
At a crossroads, the Year 7 children headed left towards the dig site. Eric and Andrea turned right and headed for the Marine gateway and out of Pompeii.
“How can we lose both our target and two suspects? How can we lose two kids?” roared Agent Angel at everybody.
No one dared respond.
“Run back all the video recordings we have,” he ordered. “I want to know how the hell this happened!”
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Chapter 27 - The Missing Pod
Pompeii was virtually silent. The ancient streets were empty; the tourists were all tucked up in bed, and the sleepy security guards were sat in their hut waiting for the next s
hift to arrive. High above Pompeii the full moon cast a ghostly light over the ruins. The city’s only permanent residents, rats, hid in the shadows, scuttling between buildings and looking for scraps of food. Vesuvius loomed menacingly on the horizon, a dark shadow on a grey night, but the rats ignored it. They had already survived one eruption and would live through a second when it came.
Not too far away from Vesuvius, past Pompeii and squashed against the coast, was the city of Naples. A yellow glow from the street lights hung warmly over the peaceful city and made it clearly visible to boats way out to sea. For now, its residents slept but in two to three hours’ time they would wake up and the city would come busily to life.
A Fiat, with a trailer attached, drove out of Naples towards Pompeii. The roads were empty, and it was not long before it came to a stop on a tiny lane near the east side of the ancient city. The silence made the noise of the engine louder, and the rats looked up until it was switched off.
Four people quietly got out of the car. In two rucksacks and a hold-all, they carried ropes, spades, pocket torches and other things they may need. All were dressed in black and wore climbing harnesses, but only one was dressed in leather.
“Let’s go,” whispered Alexander. “The security guards are changing shifts now. We have about one hour until their rounds take them to this spot and about one hour until sunrise.”
He led the way to the Sarno Gateway, followed by Eric, Ursula and lastly Andrea, who carried the hold-all. The gateway had barely survived the eruption and, despite being partly rebuilt by archaeologists, it still looked as if it was about to fall down. Broken and missing bricks made excellent hand holds. In a few seconds, they had all climbed over and were standing in Pompeii. Rats, lurking where sewage had once flowed in the streets, quickly fled into the doorways. Moonlight reflected off their eyes as they watched the four intruders walk along the Via dell’Abbondanza.