by Bob Mayer
“Better look at the last page of the report,” Duncan said.
Turcotte flipped the page. “Hell, the damn things are flying again,” he remarked as he noted the report on the strange flights of the three foo fighters. He reflexively looked out the small round window next to his seat, half expecting to see a foo fighter flying off the plane’s wing, but there was nothing but blue sky.
An officer stuck his head in the compartment.
“Ma’am, there’s been a reply from the Easter Island guardian to the message from Mars.”
“The text?” Duncan asked.
“The entire message was in the same cryptic format that we still haven’t been able to figure out from the first message,” the officer said. “No specific message for us. Humankind, I mean.”
“Great,” Turcotte muttered. “So now they’re talking to each other and we have no idea what they’re saying.”
Peter Nabinger was looking at the explosion of data the sensors ringing the rim of Rano Kau’s crater had just picked up from the guardian. This message was much longer in duration than the first one, almost a full three minutes of highly compressed data.
Nabinger paused as he reviewed the incomprehensible numbers and letters of the reply. They still hadn’t deciphered the first one yet. Nor had they been able to decipher the message sent from Mars, other than the binary part. Nabinger stared hard at the screen, scrolling through, looking for anything that might be familiar or indicate that the computers were using the high rune language.
After twenty minutes, he pushed back from his desk in disgust. This wasn’t his field and wasn’t what he should be doing. He felt like he was missing something important. He shoved his spiral notebook of high rune translations into his leather backpack and stood up. He walked out of the UNAOC operations center and went to the press tent, his mind a fog of swirling letters and numbers.
“Things seem to be jumping,” Kelly Reynolds greeted him as he came up to the entrance to the tent. The other reporters were at the UNAOC operations center, waiting to hear the official word if anything broke on the latest message. Kelly knew that any official word would come out of the UN in New York, so she’d stayed at the tent, hoping that Nabinger would show up.
She joined him and they walked toward the rim of the crater overlooking the Pacific. From their vantage point they could see the entire island. Roughly triangular in shape, Easter Island was less than fifteen miles across at its widest point. It had been given its English name by a Dutch explorer who happened to land there on Easter Day. Looking down, Kelly could see one of the ahus or stone burial platforms that supported a row of four of the large megaliths. Each was over thirty feet high and weighed over twenty tons. It had always been a great mystery not only how the statues had been moved to their locations from the sides of the volcano where they were carved, but why they were carved in the first place.
“Do you think the Airlia helped move the statues?” Kelly asked, sensing Nabinger’s dark mood.
“Huh?” Nabinger looked down. “No. It’s been proven that using trees as rollers and ropes and a system of pulleys, the early islanders could move them.”
“But they do represent the Airlia?”
“A legend of the Airlia,” Nabinger said vaguely. “You’ve seen the Mars message?” Nabinger asked, changing the subject.
“UNAOC just released it worldwide out of New York,” Kelly said.
“You know our guardian sent a reply a little while ago?”
“Yes, but UNAOC is controlling all information. Plus, there’s not much to report on that, is there?”
“No,” Nabinger agreed, “there isn’t.”
“What about the foo fighters flying again?” Kelly asked.
“Two of the flights I can figure out,” Nabinger said.
“What do you mean?”
“Their flight paths. One checked out the Great Pyramid at Giza where the rebels left the nuclear weapon, and the other overflew Temiltepec where the rebels left their computer. The guardian is taking a look-see at where the rebels once were.”
“What about the third flight over China?”
“I don’t know about that,” Nabinger said. “There may be something hidden there we haven’t uncovered yet. I’ve tried correlating those two specific sites with the general area in China against the Airlia ‘coordinates’ I have, but it doesn’t work. I need a specific site in China to be able to do it.” Nabinger rubbed a tired hand along the stubble on his chin. “What’s the reaction in the outside world?” he asked. “I’ve been so busy in the op center, I haven’t had a chance to see or hear anything.”
“Mixed,” Kelly said. “On one hand people are happy about the peace thing, on the other they’re disappointed that it just appears to be an old recording by a machine on Mars.”
“It’s not an old recording,” Nabinger said.
Kelly perked up. “Why do you say that?”
“Because it was in binary that we understand with our present technology,” he said. “That message was directed toward humans. My best guess is that our guardian here sent the first message to Mars four days ago, including information it had gathered about us. The computer on Mars analyzed the information and sent a reply back to us and the guardian.”
“Guardian Two is what they’re calling the one on Mars,” Kelly noted.
“Hmm, yes,” Nabinger said, but his attention was obviously elsewhere.
Kelly considered calling in to the wire service that the message wasn’t old, but she realized someone else had to have figured that out already and it would hardly be news.
“Hey,” Kelly said, tapping him on the arm. “What’s the matter?”
“Huh? Nothing.”
“You’ve been wandering around in a fog for the past couple of days. Something’s up.”
Nabinger shrugged. “I don’t know. I’m just bothered by...” He paused as they saw several people running toward the press tent.
“Something’s happening,” Kelly said. The two of them ran toward the green canvas tent. They pushed their way in behind the other people staring at the small TV set. A broadcast of CNN relayed from the American naval task force offshore was playing. They caught the broadcaster breathlessly repeating her news:
“This just released from UNAOC in New York City. There has been a second message from the Guardian Two computer on Mars. The entire text of this new message is in the binary form that part of the first was in. We are waiting on the translation of the message that has been promised us by a UNAOC spokeswoman. It will...” The announcer paused. “Yes, it is coming in now. We will put it up on the screen for you to read as we get it.”
In bold black letters, words began to scroll up the screen.
GREETINGS
WE ARE OF PEACE
WE HAVE WAITED LONG FOR THIS
BUT NOW WE CAN COME BACK
NOW THAT YOU ARE READY
TO JOIN US
WE WILL AWAKE
AND COME BACK TO YOUR PLANET
ASPASIA
END
“Oh, my God,” Kelly muttered as the inside of the tent broke out in bedlam. She staggered outside with Nabinger. “They’re up there,” she said, looking into the sky. “They’ve been up there all this time. That’s where they went!”
“Those are the statues of the sixty-one foreign ambassadors and rulers who attended the funeral of Gao-zong,” Che Lu said as they slowly drove down the wide dirt road that led to Qian-Ling.
“How come their heads are gone, Mother-Professor?” Ki asked, staring at the large stone figures that stood in rows at the side of the road.
“No one knows,” she said. Her attention was focused on what lay directly ahead. Rising up in front of them, over three thousand feet high, lay the mountain that was Qian-Ling. It was the largest tomb in the world, dwarfing even the pyramids of Egypt and the large dirt mounds in the Americas. The sides of the mountain were covered in trees and bushes, but it was easy to see that it was not a natural formation,
as the sides had a uniform slope leading up to a rounded top.
They were traveling down the same road the funeral procession for Emperor Gao-zong had taken so many years ago. Che Lu felt the familiar tingle of touching the past, the feeling that had determined her destiny so many years ago when she’d first passed through the Great Wall in the company of Mao.
Her attention was distracted from the massive hill, though, by the sight of several trucks and tanks parked across the road a kilometer ahead. She could make out the men in the green uniforms and the guns in their hands clustered around the vehicles.
“What should I do?” Ki asked, slowing the Jeep.
“Go up to them. We have permission,” Che Lu said. The immediate area for several kilometers around was unpopulated, being designated a historic district. She could think of no reason why the army would be here unless someone in Beijing had wised up. If that were the case she knew from hard experience it would be better to face this head-on than run.
But as she slowly stepped out of the Jeep and met the soldiers, she noticed that they seemed as surprised by her presence as she was by theirs. The officer in charge of the checkpoint carefully read the letter from the Ministry of Antiquities giving Che Lu permission to be here.
“Will you be entering the tomb?” he asked.
Che Lu shook her head. “We will be doing some measurements on the outside. That is all.”
The officer frowned but the letter had the proper signatures and seals. “Be careful. There are bandits in the area. I take no responsibility for your safety on the mountain.”
“Bandits?” Ki asked. They drove away from the checkpoint, beginning their ascent up the side of the mountain toward the entrance, leaving the soldiers behind and out of sight as they went around the western shoulder.
“Anyone the government does not like is a bandit,” Che Lu said. “I was a bandit once myself.” She smiled. “And there is one now,” she added, pointing at a wizened old man who had just materialized on the road in front of them, standing as still as one of the statues.
He wore a faded blue shirt and black pants. He carried an AK-47 in his gnarled hands and battered army-issue pack on his back.
“My dead friend, Lo Fa!” Che Lu cried out as Ki stopped the Jeep.
“Ah, you old hag,” Lo Fa spat into the dirt.
“You old goat,” Che Lu returned as she hugged him. She looked past him, where the road disappeared between two large boulders. “Are we ready?”
“I have removed the earth,” Lo Fa said. “I did it at night. Those fool soldiers wouldn’t know it if you dropped a rock on their heads. I had friends help. But their friendship only goes so far,” he added. He had one eye that was dead, completely white, so he spoke with his head twisted, good eye forward.
“You have no friends,” Che Lu said. “Only scoundrels you keep company with.” She held out a small packet filled with bills and it disappeared into Lo Fa’s tunic. “For your friends.”
“They will remain my friends now.” Lo Fa smiled, revealing broken and yellowed teeth. “Let us go, quickly, and get off this road. You have permission to break the seal?” he asked as he jumped into the back of the Jeep.
“Yes.”
With Ki driving slowly, the truck following, they went between the massive boulders. There were statues of tigers perched on top of each one. The boulders enclosed a small courtyard, about thirty meters wide by fifteen long. The side of the mountain was cut into, revealing two massive bronze doors covered with writing. A large pile of dirt was pushed to the side, Lo Fa’s work for the past two weeks since Che Lu had contacted him. She knew they wouldn’t have much time and she hadn’t wanted to waste it digging to the doors.
“This way.” Lo Fa was out of the Jeep, surprisingly agile. He walked up to the doors, Che Lu and the others following. He pointed at the barely visible seam between the two panels. “The Old Ones sealed it with molten bronze.”
One of Che Lu’s students was filming the doors with a camera, recording them for posterity. They had not seen the light of day for over two thousand years.
“How do we open them?” Che Lu asked.
“It is not my problem,” Lo Fa said. “You told me only to uncover the doors.”
“I told you to get me in,” Che Lu said.
Lo Fa spit again, then gave a crooked grin. “Yes, that you did.” He slipped off his backpack. He reached in and pulled out a long line of blue cord. “Have your students tape it to the seam, from top to bottom.”
“What is it?” Che Lu asked as she waved a couple of her male students to do as he bid.
“Detonating cord. Explosive,” Lo Fa said.
The students paused, looking at the cord in their hands in fear.
“Ah, it won’t explode until I put a blasting cap in the end,” Lo Fa snarled.
“And where did you get that?” Che Lu asked.
“The army is very careless,” Lo Fa said. “It always surprises me when they manage to put their boots on the correct feet.”
“Why is the army here?” Che Lu asked him as he prepared the detonator.
Lo Fa spit. “This time the trouble is not just students in Tiananmen Square. There is real trouble. People are tired and they want change.” He pointed at the mountain tomb that dwarfed them. “This once was China, the center of civilization. Now with this talk of aliens, people no longer know what to believe and the agitators are seizing the opportunity to push for change, to regain China’s place in the world. It is easier said than done.”
“But you have not said specifically why the army is here,” Che Lu chided him.
Lo Fa straightened and stared at her with his good eye. “They are here specifically, old woman, to fight rebels.”
“Rebels?” Che Lu wondered if she had spent too much time in the library at the university. “There is open rebellion?”
“There is fighting. Especially among the Muslim people who live in this province. They owe no loyalty to Beijing.”
“I have heard nothing.”
“That is the government’s desire.” Lo Fa had a small metal cap in his hand that he was attaching to the end of the blue cord. “It is not hard for them to suppress news from such faraway places as this province. When thousands die here in floods the world never knows because the government doesn’t want them to know. You can be sure they do not want word of fighting to spread.”
“How serious is it?” Che Lu asked.
Lo Fa was done rigging the blasting cap. “I would be very quick about your business here and be gone as fast as you can. In fact, old lady, if I was you, I would go home now.”
“I can’t do that,” Che Lu said.
“I should have never sent you those oracle bones.” The old man’s voice lowered. “There is something else.”
“What?”
Lo Fa looked about the mountainside above them nervously. “I’ve heard there are foreigners about the area.”
“Foreigners?”
“Rumors. The army was on the mountain four days ago. There were explosions and weapons firing on the other side. I don’t know what they were doing. That is all I have heard. That is all I know.”
The cord was laid and Lo Fa put the cord from the blasting cap into a small detonator. He waved them all back. He looked at Che Lu. “I hope you know what you are doing, old woman. This tomb has not been opened since the emperor’s retainers sealed it. Perhaps it is best to leave it be.”
“Superstitious?” Che Lu asked.
“No,” Lo Fa replied in a strangely serious tone of voice. “It is just that I do not like meddling with things beyond me.”
“This is not beyond me,” Che Lu said confidently, but inside she wondered. She had been teaching too long and it had been many years since she’d been on a dig, and never in her many long years had she been on one as potentially important as this one.
Lo Fa hesitated for the briefest of seconds, then pulled the ring on the top of the detonator. There was a flash and crack, the sound confi
ned in the courtyard.
Che Lu winced when she saw the damage done to the doors, but there was no other way. A black line was singed into the bronze along the seam, with a small opening about chest high.
“The jack from the Jeep,” Lo Fa ordered.
He took the jack and, jamming it into the hole, began cranking the handle. With a groan the doors slowly swung open. A dry rush of cool air swept over the small party standing in the courtyard, causing all to shiver.
“Your tomb,” Lo Fa said with a wave of his hand. “I am done here.” He slung his backpack over his shoulder. “Che Lu, I would leave now.”
Before she could respond, he had already disappeared out of the courtyard.
Several students turned on flashlights, and with Che Lu leading the way, they entered the tomb. Right inside the doors was a large anteroom. The light of the lanterns flickered off the walls. They were painted with many pictures of women and men in royal garb. Che Lu had seen similar pictures many times before. There was something different about these, however, something that caused her to pause, before moving on, but she couldn’t put her finger on what troubled her.
A wide tunnel beckoned, leading into the heart of the mountain. With firm steps Che Lu led the students down the tunnel. It ran ten meters wide and was perfectly straight as far as the glow from the lights would penetrate the inky blackness. One of the students put his light next to the wall and they all stared at the smoothly cut stone. Che Lu tried to imagine the state of craftsmanship that could make such smooth walls with hand tools, and she felt a chill run down her bent spine. The Old Ones had certainly been masters of the stone.
There was no dust and the air was dry, the slightest odor of decay carried on it. Che Lu paused after about two hundred meters. There was writing on the walls where two smaller tunnels split off to each side at ninety-degree angles. She took a flashlight from one of her students and held it so she could see.
High runes. There was no mistaking the hieroglyphics. She pointed and the female student with the camera flicked on the power, lighting the wall, and quickly filmed it, then shut down to preserve the batteries.