The Dane Maddock Adventures Boxed Set Volume 2
Page 47
Maddock couldn’t help but fondly remember all the dives he and Jade had made together. She’d always taken the lead, trusting he’d always be right behind her. For the briefest moment, he fought down the urge to chase her down and catch her up in a rough embrace, just like the old days.
“Did you find something?”
Bone’s voice yanked him back to reality.
“No, just taking a last look around,” Maddock lied. “Let’s catch up with her before she does something reckless.”
“Wouldn’t want that to happen,” Bones said. “Reckless is my domain.”
When they caught up with Jade, she was hovering over an odd-shaped rock formation.
“The turtle.” Jade indicated the five-pointed, humpbacked formation atop a stone platform. “It’s one of the features mentioned in the codex.” She took out an underwater camera and snapped a few pictures before continuing on.
They searched for nearly an hour, working in a grid pattern around the monument. They passed through more channels beneath archways and around blocks of stone that might have been remnants of old structures, and discovered hieroglyph-like carvings of which Jade made a thorough photographic record, but no totem. It was a shallow dive, and the three of them were experienced divers, so none of them had expended much more than half her or his supply of air, but they decided to surface for fresh cylinders, not knowing what they’d encounter once they located the totem. After fending off Professor’s attempt to switch places with Bones, even trying to bribe him with beer, they returned to the water.
Their search of the final quadrant bore fruit almost immediately. They passed through a deep stone channel and exited to find a stone face staring back at them, and they swam in for a closer inspection. The currents had eroded its sharper features, but the long face, sunken eyes, and protruding forehead were easy to make out.
“You know what this thing looks like?” Bones asked.
“Moai.”
Maddock’s first thought upon seeing the totem was its resemblance to the moai, the statues made famous by Easter Island. He ran a hand across the huge, stone brow, wondering what it could mean. Was there a connection between Yonaguni and the island on the far side of the Pacific? Considering what they and Sofia had found so far, the possibility did not seem far-fetched.
“What now?” Bones asked.
Maddock recited the clue from the codex.
“Behind the watcher’s starry eye, at the center of the trident, the crone points the way to Poseidon.”
“Open up and try not to blink,” Bones said to the statue as he shone his light inside the eye socket. “Lots of gunk in here. Let’s see if it’s covering anything.” He took out his dive knife and began scraping. Maddock did the same to the right eye.
It wasn’t long before he uncovered a rectangular stone bar set in a grooved track.
“I found what looks like a lever.”
“Me too,” Bones said. “Should we pull them both and see what happens?”
“No!” Jade said. “Think about the clue. The watcher’s starry eye, not eyes. I think we’re just supposed to pull one of these handles.”
“How do we know Sofia translated it correctly?” Bones asked. “Do hieroglyphs have plurals?”
“I don’t know about that,” Maddock said, “but why make specific mention of the ‘starry’ eye unless the word is important?”
Bones flitted his light back and forth between the eyes. “No stars here. If the clue refers to a constellation the figure faced back when this place stood above water, we’re screwed.”
Maddock had a different idea. “Jade, where is the turtle formation from here?”
“Just over there.” She pointed to their left. “Why?”
“Except for the rounded back, I didn’t think it looked much like a turtle, did you?”
“You’re right. Some people call that formation ‘the star.’ Let me check it out.” Again, Jade swam away without waiting for a partner, returning in less than a minute. “It points directly at the totem. The right eye, to be exact.”
“You’re sure?” Maddock asked.
“Only one way to know for sure.” Bones thrust a hand into the eye socket.
“Hold on,” Maddock said. “Remember what happened to Matt?” On a dive at Oak Island, their crewmate had tried something similar and almost lost his arm.
“There’s one big difference,” Bones said.
“What’s that?”
“I always come out on top.” Before anyone could stop him, Bones pulled the lever. Everyone swam back as a rumbling sound broke the silence and the totem sank out of sight. “Score!” Bones shone his light down into the hole the totem had revealed. Not only the statue, but a square ten feet across had sunk into the earth, and an angled passageway of the same shape and size lay before them. “A word of advice. Never play me in Russian roulette.”
The passageway sloped downward for about fifteen feet, then leveled out, heading straight for the main monument. Whatever lay at the end would likely be found beneath the mountain of stone.
The passageway through which they traveled was perfectly square. The block walls and slab ceiling were made of the same rock as the monument, while the floor was lined with huge paving stones.
“Reminds me of the Bimini Road,” Bones said.
“Is there anything that doesn’t remind you of a conspiracy theory or far-fetched legend?” Jade asked.
Maddock didn’t disagree with Jade, but he came to his friend’s defense nonetheless. “You can say that to him after all the things we’ve seen?” In fact, Jade had been by their sides during some of their most remarkable discoveries.
“Don’t be so touchy, Maddock. You’re like a soccer mom or something.”
Maddock bit back a retort and kept his eyes straight ahead.
“Looks like we’ve reached the proverbial fork in the road.” Bones slowed down and shone his light around. Here, the tunnel split into three seemingly identical passages. “Three roads diverged in a creepy tunnel.”
“When you make it to the afterlife, I’ll bet Robert Frost will be waiting for you with a shank and a baseball bat,” Jade said.
“And miles to go before I’m appreciated,” Bones sighed. “So, which tunnel?”
“I think this tunnel is the trident the clue mentions,” Maddock said. “A straight shaft, splitting into three at the end.”
“Sounds good to me, dude. The center, then?”
A short way in, Maddock noticed a change in the passageway. “No more bricks and slabs,” he noted. “Just a smooth tunnel carved in stone.”
“We must be under the monument,” Jade said.
“And it’s about to get weirder. Look up ahead.” Their lights glinted on the surface of the water up ahead. “There’s a pocket of air down here. Maybe a big one.”
They broke the surface together and looked around. They were in a pool in the center of a thirty foot-high chamber. Maddock climbed out of the pool and offered Jade a hand up, which she ignored, and hauled herself up to the stone floor.
"Wonder what the air-quality is like in here?” Bones said.
"No telling." They were wearing full masks so their communication devices would work. "I don't care to find out, though."
Maddock turned his attention to the far end of the room where three statues of Greek goddesses, each at least three meters tall, stood on a ledge above three tunnels. Each figure pointed downward at the tunnel beneath her feet, which was partially obscured by a curtain of water pouring from her mouth.
The goddess on the left exuded strength and vigor. She was posed in mid-stride, looking to the side and reaching back for the bow slung over one shoulder. The figure in the center wore a cylindrical crown, held a piece of fruit in her right hand; a mature beauty seemed to emanate from her solemn face. The figure to the right held a torch aloft, and spikes radiated from her crown.
"I guess this is where the crone points the way, "Jade said. "But which one is she?"
&nbs
p; Maddock looked the statues up-and-down. Each was a woman from Greek mythology, but he thought he knew the answer right away.
"It's Hecate, the one on the right."
"Are you sure?" Bones asked.
“Definitely. The one on the left is Artemis. You probably know her as the hunter, but she was also known as the maiden. Hera, in the center, is the mother, and Hecate, on the right, was the crone. What’s more, she’s associated with crossroads and entryways.”
“Sounds like a winner to me.” Bones moved in for a closer look. “You’re right about the center passage. Check it out.”
Maddock and Jade stepped around the water falling from Hera’s mouth and shone their lights down the passageway. In the distance, at the very edge of their dive lights’ glow, a skeleton lay impaled by a broken spike.
“I’ll bet it was designed to go back into the floor so it could catch the next person,” Maddock said. “It must have broken when it caught this poor fellow.”
“Or lady,” Jade added.
Maddock ignored her comment. “Hecate was my suggestion, so how about I lead the way?”
Jade made a show of mulling this over before agreeing.
Maddock led the way up the corridor. He felt certain he had chosen the right path, but the knowledge there were booby-traps in this place made him cautious. The gently sloping passageway soon opened up into a temple much like the others they had discovered. The now-familiar Poseidon stood watch over his domain.
“Whoa!” Bones exclaimed, staring at Poseidon. “Awesome.”
While Bones marveled at the sights and Jade snapped pictures, Maddock moved to the chamber at the back of the temple. His heart fell when he shone his light inside and found it empty.
“What do you see?” Bones asked.
“Nothing. If there was anything here before, it’s gone now.” Maddock’s stomach twisted into knots. They had come all this way and worked so hard for nothing.
Hearing his words, Jade hurried over. When she saw the empty chamber, she seemed to deflate, disappointment marring her beautiful face.
“What do you think happened?”
“I don’t know.” Maddock shrugged. He shone his light on the floor and spotted a line of scrapes and gouges in the flagstone. ”It looks like something heavy was dragged through here.”
“The Dominion?” Jade asked.
Maddock considered this, remembering the entrance to the passage that had led them here. “I don’t think so. We had to clear away a lot of silt and growth on the levers. Unless there is a back door, and I don’t see one, whoever got here first beat us by several years.”
“Great,” Bones said. “Now we just have to figure out who it was.”
Maddock nodded. “Another mystery.”
Chapter 23
“That’s it.” Sofia pushed away from the desk and gazed at the computer screen. She had finally completed her translation of the codex.
“Let me take a look.” Avery rolled her chair next to Sofia’s and read aloud.
“Our only hope lies in our collective strength. Few of us remain, but we must continue to resist, lest we leave this world on its own to face the great city and its deadly power.”
Avery rested her elbow on the desktop, cupped her chin, and gazed at the screen. “Not a very cheerful message, is it?”
Sofia shook her head. As she read these words she could not help but wish she had never sought Atlantis.
“It sounds like the tsunami machine is nothing compared to whatever the so-called great city had at its disposal.”
“And by great city you think they mean…”
“Atlantis. The true Atlantis. The capital or mother city, if you will, of the Atlantean civilization.” She sighed. “It’s funny. A few weeks ago, I would have given anything for definitive proof that Atlantis was more than a myth. Now I wish I could somehow undiscover it. This is all my fault.” The back of her throat pinched but she forced herself not to cry.
“If it hadn’t been you, it would have been someone else. If I’ve learned anything from my brother and his cohorts, it’s that the Dominion is relentless. They’d have kept on until they achieved their goal.” Avery gave her a tight smile. “I’m glad it was you. Another scientist might have given up, or worse, joined their cause.”
“They didn’t give me a chance to join. They tried to kill me as soon as I found the temple.” Sofia winced at the memory.
“Because they knew you’d have refused. Evil is not in your character. Believe me; I’ve known some very bad people in my lifetime.” Avery gave Sofia’s shoulder a squeeze. “Okay, enough feeling sorry for yourself. We’ve got work to do.”
Sofia sat dumbstruck for a moment, but then she broke into laughter. “Some bedside manner you’ve got there.”
“It’s the Maddock in me coming out. But I’m right.” She winked, and Sofia laughed again.
“This is so frustrating.” Sofia ran her fingers through her hair. “The author of the codex seems to think the location of the mother city was common knowledge, but directions to the other cities were needed.”
“His breadth of knowledge is impressive. So much specific detail. It makes you wonder if they had some sort of advanced communication device.” Avery forced a smile, uncertain how Sofia would react to that comment.
“They had a machine that could create a tsunami, so I don’t think that would be so far-fetched an idea.”
Avery took a deep breath. The idea was a test balloon to see how Sofia would react. She’d been hesitant to make any suggestion that might seem too “out there.” She already felt like an imposter amongst this group of accomplished agents and experienced soldiers. Even Corey, who might not have a resume to match that of Maddock or Bones, had played an important role in their adventures. And Sofia was as smart as she was beautiful, which would have rankled if she weren’t also annoyingly kind and congenial. Though Avery didn’t doubt her own skills and knowledge, she feared that the others viewed her as little more than Maddock’s little sister.
“Speaking of far-fetched ideas, I have one.” She paused, trying to read the expression on Sofia’s face, but the archaeologist merely looked at her with polite interest. “We can surf websites filled with crackpot theories about Atlantis all day long.”
“And we have,” Sofia added with a grin.
“Touché. Anyway, everyone has his or her own theory about the location of Atlantis: Mediterranean, Antarctica, the middle of the Atlantic, you name it. The one point of agreement, however, is that once upon a time, a record of Atlantis’ true location did exist.”
Sofia’s jaw went slack. “You’re talking about the lost library of Alexandria.”
“Exactly.” Avery felt her cheeks warming and she hurried on. “Hear me out. No one questions that the library existed, and though it was destroyed, scholars generally agree that most of its knowledge was dispersed long before its final destruction. Considering what we now know about the power Atlantis wielded, I can’t help but believe that information about it would be considered highly important. Surely, someone, somewhere preserved some part of it.” She swallowed hard and waited for Sofia’s response.
Sofia sat in silence for several seconds. “It’s an angle I considered. In fact, I had just begun researching it when I was diverted by the dig in Spain.” Her eyes fell. “Anyway, I agree with you. I think the knowledge is out there somewhere, but I doubt we’re going to find it in any of the traditional sources of information.”
“So what do we do?” Avery was grateful to be taken seriously.
“In my research, I kept turning up one name: Kirk Krueger. He’s an author and researcher who has devoted his life to tracking down the knowledge from the Great Library.”
“Are you sure he’s not a crackpot?” Avery asked.
Sofia grinned. “I can’t say for sure, but he doesn’t act like one. For one, he doesn’t seek the spotlight. He’s a recluse who never makes public appearances and doesn’t make guest appearances on those wild theory-bas
ed television shows. He hasn’t even written any books, for that matter.”
“He’s definitely not trying to profit off his research, then,” Avery said.
“Exactly. Which is why I suspect he might be reliable. He publishes an essay here and there, or makes a post on the discussion board. On even rarer occasions, he’ll speak with a fellow researcher, but never on the record.”
“Great! Where does this guy live?”
“That’s the problem,” Sofia said. “I tried to track him down, but he seems to have disappeared.”
“You think the Dominion had something to do with it?”
“Considering he disappeared right about the time they hired me, yes.”
Avery probably should have found this news discouraging, but instead it only made her more determined. “In that case, I think we need to start a manhunt, and I know a great person to help us.”
Chapter 24
"Another round?" Bones didn't wait for an answer, but headed to the bar and returned with four bottles of Asahi Black.
"Cheers, Bones!" Professor clinked bottles with Bones, Jade, and Maddock, and they all filled their mugs with the dark liquid.
Maddock watched the foamy head dissolve, then took a gulp. The beer wasn't as cold as Maddock would have liked, and was a touch on the heavy side, but it had a strong flavor that reminded him of coffee beans with a hint of dark chocolate. They were lucky to have found any sort of bar on this tiny island.
"I didn't think we'd find a bar on this island, much less a dive like this," Bones said, echoing Maddock's thoughts. "My kind of place." There was nothing about the place, save the clientele, to remind them they were in Japan. This bar, with its musty air seasoned with the sour aroma of spilled beer, uneven wood floor, chipped Formica-top bar, and cheap neon beer signs, would have fit in any number of places back in the States.
"It's for the tourists, as few as they are." Jade picked at the wrapper on her bottle. Her attitude toward Maddock had warmed, but the air between them crackled with unease.