“And now he’s been arrested in China at the same time Chinese forces attacked my supposedly secret farm in Australia. The Chinese know. About his workand that we have the Firestone, the top piece of the Capstone.”
Abbas frowned. “The Capstone has greater significance? Beyond the Tartarus Event?”
“From what I read last night, more significance than we can possibly imagine,” West said. “The striking of the Capstone by the Sun during the Tartarus Rotation was just the beginning.”
At that moment, West seemed to retreat into himself, thinking in silence. Then he said, “I need more time to examine Wizard’s work and make some calls. After that we have to convene a meeting. A new meeting of concerned nations. Give me a day to study all this and then let’s gather here for what might be the most important meeting in the history of mankind.”
WEST SPENT the whole of the next day reading and sorting through Wizard’s voluminous notes.
Names were scattered among Wizard’s writing, of which West knew some but not others.
Tank Tanaka, for instance, he knew. Tank was Wizard’s longtime Japanese colleague; West had met him on numerous occasions.
Others he only knew slightly, like “the Terrible Twins,” Lachlan and Julius Adamson, a pair of mathematical geniuses from Scotland who had studied under Wizard in Dublin. Fast-talking, exuberant, and much loved by Wizard, the twins operated as one brain, and taken together they were arguably the most formidable noncomputerized mathematical force in the world. In their spare time, they liked to beat Vegas casinos at the blackjack tables simply by “doing the math.”
One summary sheet that Wizard had prepared commanded most of Jack’s attention. It was virtually a representation of Wizard’s thoughts, a mixture of diagrams, lists, and handwritten notations by the old professor.
West recognized a few of the terms on the sheet, like the Sa-Benben, Firestone, and Abydos.
Abydos was a little-known but hugely important Egyptian archaeological site. It had been sacred to the ancient Egyptians from the very beginning to the very end of their civilization, spanning some three thousand years. It bore temples belonging to Seti I and his son, Rameses II, and contained some of the earliest shrines in Egypt.
Jack had also seen the Mystery of the Circles before, but had no clue what it meant.
Other things, however, were completely new to him.
The Great Machine.
The Six Pillars. That they might be oblong uncut diamonds was certainly intriguing.
The obscure references to Faberge Eggs, Easter, and the sinking of the Titanic at the bottom of the page— well, they completely baffled him.
And, of course, the unusual diagrams scattered all over it.
He used this sheet as his central reference point and read on.
Elsewhere among Wizard’s notes, he found some digital photos of stone carvings written in a language he had not seen since the Seven Wonders mission.
It was an ancient script known only as the Word of Thoth—named after the Egyptian god of knowledge.
Mysterious and obscure, it was a language that defied translation even by modern supercomputers. Indeed, its cuneiform-like strokes were often thought to contain secret mystical knowledge.
Historically, only one person in the world could read it: the Oracle of the Siwa Oasis in Egypt. This person, magically it seemed, was born with the ability to read the Word of Thoth. A long line of Oracles had existed right up to the present day, and although it was unknown to her teachers and friends at school, Lily was one of them.
She was the daughter of the last Oracle at Siwa, a foul spoiled man who had died shortly after her birth.
Most unusually for an Oracle, though, Lily was a twin. As Jack had discovered during the Capstone mission, she had a brother named Alexander—like his father, a disagreeable, spoiled boy—who could also read the Word of Thoth. After that mission, Alexander had been spirited away to a quiet life in rural Ireland, in County Kerry.
Jack got Lily to translate many of the Thoth inscriptions in Wizard’s notes. Many were nonsensical to Jack, while some were just plain weird: for instance, one Thoth carving stated that the ancient Mesopotamian city of Ur, famous for its huge ziggurat, was an exact replica of “the Second Great Temple-Shrine,” whatever that was.
Jack also showed Lily one prominent Word of Thoth carving from Wizard’s notes:
Lily looked at the complex array of symbols and shrugged, translating it in seconds. “It says:
“With my beloved, Nefertari,
I, Rameses, son of Ra,
Keep watch over the most sacred shrine.
We shall watch over it forever.
Great sentinels,
With our third eyes, we see all.”
“With our third eyes?” Jack frowned.
“That’s what it says.”
“Nefertari was the favorite wife of Rameses II,” Jack said. “And together they keep watch over the most sacred shrine, whatever that is. Thanks, kiddo.”