square-shaped opening in which there was something that looked like a chair. Carvings and symbols far stranger than mere hieroglyphics adorned the sides.
Caleb moved forward into the structure. He turned and gently sat in the stone chair.
“Dad, wait.”
“It’s ok. It’s not trapped.” Caleb looked around, and Alexander had the impression that his dad was sitting in a cockpit of sorts. Except there was nothing else in there except a slot, a groove in the arm of the chair, by his right hand.
“Its… different,” Caleb said. “I believe we’re directly under the main pyramid. And this…” He looked up, then shined his light up there, and Alexander understood. The interior of the pillar, or shaft, was hollow.
“What do you see?”
“Nothing. It just goes up straight.” He turned off his flashlight, closed his eyes. “Hold on, I’m getting something, seeing more of it…”
Alexander closed his eyes, reached out into the darkness as if to pluck his father’s vision like a piece of fruit. Absently, he switched off his own flashlight. And now in complete darkness, a new light sparked behind his eyes.
A
“Mars!” Alexander whispered as he came back to the present. Caleb’s light was back on. His father rubbed his eyes, and cautiously traced the slot with his index finger. “Did you see it?”
“I… saw something. A man where you’re sitting. Putting the tablet in there, and then directing some kind of light beam out the top of the pyramid, toward what I think was Mars.”
Caleb cocked his head, looked sharply at Alexander. “You really…?”
“Didn’t you see it too? You’ve got to believe me. It was a long time ago, had to be. Only this pyramid and the Sphinx were there, but Egypt wasn’t a desert. There was a jungle, and—”
“I believe you.” Caleb leaned forward, rubbing his head. “I don’t want to believe you, but I do. There have been a lot of crackpot theories about this site, this pyramid. I never gave much thought to some of the more outlandish ones, like that the Great Pyramid was an ancient power source, or a weapon used by extraterrestrial ‘gods’ in their own petty wars. But now…”
“But now it doesn’t seem so… crackpotty.”
Caleb smiled. “Nice word, Alexander. No it doesn’t, but I didn’t see all that. I saw something else, I was focused on the man.”
“The Pharaoh guy? What about him?”
“It seemed,” Caleb said, “he wasn’t really there.”
Alexander blinked, trying to recall what he’d seen. The man sitting there, holding the tablet. All that heat and power passing into him, through him. “Oh.”
“Yeah,” Caleb said. “I think that was just his projection, whatever it is Montross learned how to do.”
“And Grandpa.”
Caleb nodded. “But somehow, while in that out of body phase, he could still touch the Emerald Tablet. Move it, insert it.”
“Like I was able to move the lever under the Sphinx!” Alexander’s eyes shined with the memory.
Caleb nodded as he shined the light into the groove, trying to see anything down there. “And that’s the key, I think. To what the Emerald Tablet can do. It interfaces with consciousness, or our souls, or something. One and the same and phased together with the spirit, the Tablet’s full power can be consciously controlled, wielded.”
Alexander whistled. “So what did I see them attacking?”
“I can’t say, yet. But I don’t think it helps us now. This… place. This facility is dormant. I can feel it. Even if we brought the Tablet down here, I think they—whoever they were—Thoth’s enemies maybe, dismantled the core. Maybe it was in some ancient war, something that turned this lush land into a desert. Whatever it was, this facility, this pyramid, is nothing now but a tomb. Our tomb, unless we can get out.”
“Perhaps,” said a new voice. “I can be of assistance.”
Alexander spun around, fumbling with his light. Shining it this way and that, finally zeroing in on the presence: back at the passage entrance that led into this chamber. A lone figure stood there.
It took him a moment to see that it was a woman. Someone in a long gray cloak. Actually, he realized, a
“Easy,” Caleb whispered. “I think I know her, but how-?”
“-Did I find you?” The woman approached, her own flashlight aimed down, a large maglite beam glinting off the solid floor and making it seem like she walked on a star. “I got a call from your very concerned sister.”
“Phoebe!”
“She was fine when I talked to her. In a helicopter, heading towards some mission for your American friends.”
“What friends?” Alexander was rubbing his head, shining his light from the newcomer to his father.
“Not important now,” said the woman as she took a moment to shine her light on the central apparatus, following the shaft upwards to where her more powerful light caught it merging with the precipitous ceiling. “I can’t believe it. This really exists.”
“Who are you?” Alexander asked, but then his eyes adjusted, and he saw her more clearly, not as a ghostly goddess of the abyss, but as flesh and blood. He had seen her before, on rare occasions when all the Keepers would gather. When Lydia and Uncle Robert would send him off to play (or learn) in the upper levels of the Alexandrian Library while they met and decided the fate of the recovered scrolls. “You’re—”
“Rashi Singh.” Caleb stood and bowed to her. “Keeper, this was too dangerous, you coming down here. And how did you even bypass the guards up there?”
There was a gleam in her dark eyes as she spoke. “Herodotus. The lost chapters. Deliberately cut from his
“I must not have seen that scroll,” Caleb said excitedly.