That’s why we were surprised to find Narmer, and his precious grave goods, in chamber two.” She shrugged. “Yet another mystery.”
Logan paused. “What do you think we’ll find? Beyond the third gate, I mean.”
She thought for a moment. Then she looked at him. “I’m one of the top Egyptologists in the world. That’s why Stone chose me. I’ve studied just about every royal tomb, sand burial, pyramid, cult temple, and mastaba ever discovered and documented. Nobody knows more about this stuff than I do. And you want to hear something, Mr. Ghost Hunter?” She leaned forward, piercing him with her gaze. “I don’t have the faintest idea what we’re going to find when we unseal that third gate.”
43
When Logan stepped into the testing chamber, Dr. Rush was leaning over the figure of his wife, who was lying on the examination table, dressed-as with the previous crossings-in a hospital gown. “Last time, honey,” he was saying as he caressed her cheek.
She looked up at him, smiled briefly. Then she glanced over at Logan as he approached the bed. He nodded, took her hand, gave it a brief squeeze. He could not read the look on her face-apprehension? resignation? — and this time the touch of her hand told him nothing.
He stepped back as Rush consulted the instrumentation, prepared to administer the sedative. Five minutes passed, then ten, as the doctor lit the incense; inserted first one needle, then another, into the IV’s connecting hub; applied the amulet and the candle; and went through the modified hypnosis text. Finally, he picked up the digital recorder and approached the head of the bed.
“Who am I speaking to?” he asked.
The only reply was Jennifer’s labored breathing.
“Who am I speaking to?” he asked again.
No response.
“That’s odd,” Rush said. “I’ve never had a problem with the induction process before.” He examined the instruments again, gently raised one of his wife’s eyelids, peered at the eye with his ophthalmoscope. “I’ll up the propofol, deepen the sedation slightly. And I’ll give the cortical stimulation an extra notch.”
Logan waited, without speaking, as the doctor busied himself around the table, then went through the hypnosis text again. This time, Jennifer’s breathing became shallower, more rapid.
“Relax your mind,” Rush told his wife in a calm, almost cooing tone. “Let it go free. Let your consciousness slip from your body. Leave it an empty shell, unpossessed.”
An empty shell. Without knowing exactly why, Logan suddenly grew alarmed. He took a step forward, instinctively, as if to stop the procedure, before managing to get himself under control.
Rush picked up the recorder again. “Who am I speaking to?”
No reply.
Rush bent closer. “Who am I speaking to?”
Jennifer’s mouth moved. “Mouthpiece… of Horus.”
“And do you know who I am?”
“The defiler. The… unbeliever.”
“Tell me more about the ornament in the wall painting. The one the pharaoh, or high priest, was wearing.”
“No… priest. Only for… child of Ra.”
Child of Ra. The pharaoh. Logan frowned. But that epithet hadn’t become common until at least the fourth or fifth dynasty, hundreds of years after Narmer’s time. Could this be more evidence of what Tina Romero had speculated about-a historical anachronism, a kind of collective amnesia of ritual and religion in the wake of Narmer’s death?
Rush held the digital recorder close to Jennifer’s lips. “You called it ‘that which brings life to the dead, and death to the living.’ What did you mean?”
“The… great secret… Gift of Ra… It must not be… polluted… by the touch of the infidel.”
Jennifer’s breathing was growing still more rapid and shallow.
“Keep this short,” Logan told Rush in a low voice.
“What lies beyond the third gate?” Rush asked.
Jennifer’s face grew contorted. “Swift death. Thy limbs shall be… scattered to the corners of the earth. Thou… all of thee… will find madness and death to be thy share…”
The curse of Narmer, Logan thought.
Suddenly, to his inexpressible horror, he saw Jennifer-still under the influence of the drug-slowly sit up on the table. But her movements seemed strange, wrong somehow-it was as if she was being pulled into a sitting position by some invisible force.
Abruptly, her eyes opened, but they were staring, sightless. “Madness and death!” she cried in a terrible voice. And then her eyes closed and she crumpled back onto the bed. As she did so, the instrumentation started to bleat.
“What is it?” Logan asked sharply. But Rush did not answer, instead busying himself with the medical equipment. He moved to Jennifer’s side, gave her a quick examination. After several minutes, he straightened up again.
“She seems to have suffered a brief seizure of some kind,” he said. “I can’t tell without further tests. But she’s resting comfortably now. I’ll keep the propofol going another few minutes, then bring her around.”
Logan frowned. This procedure had gone far beyond his comfort factor. “That’s the last one-right?”
“Right. After this, I’d never ask her to do another-not even if Stone demanded it.”
“I’m glad to hear it. Because having seen this, I have to tell you, Ethan, that in my opinion, such treatment of her-given my earlier recommendation-is indefensible. Especially considering her past.”
Rush glanced at him. “What past is that?”
“The past I just uncovered in those CTS documents you gave me. Her psychological history.”
Rush continued to look at him, his face hardening. When he did not reply, Logan continued. “I’m talking about her diagnosis of schizoaffective disorder.”
“You’re talking about a twenty-year-old diagnosis,” Rush said, his tone turning defensive. “And a misdiagnosis, at that. Jen didn’t suffer from schizoaffective disorder-it was just a bout of teenage acting out.”
Logan didn’t reply.
“At the very most, it was a mood disorder. Mild, and temporary, and it went away with the onset of adulthood.”
“Even so-given that, how could you put her through this? How could you allow her to be so traumatized?”
Rush frowned, opened his mouth to retort. Then he paused, took a deep breath. “It was important to Stone. It was important to me. I thought this was a chance to further our CTS research, to apply our findings in the field. And as I told you before, I thought it would be a good thing for Jen as well. I didn’t expect she would find it so difficult. Had I known-well, let’s just say it will never happen again.”
There was a brief silence. Then the two stepped away from the table, but both kept their eyes on Jennifer’s still form.
“I’ve been thinking about what you said,” Rush murmured in a quiet voice. “That Jen was brain-dead for so long-that her NDE was so protracted-that, in essence, she might have lost her… her soul.”
“That’s not what I said,” Logan replied.
“It’s what you implied. That she was a kind of empty vessel. And that if King Narmer’s spirit was still intact, in this place, that it could… well… take temporary possession of her.”
“Since we last talked, I’ve done more research into that myself. In theory, what you say is possible. However, that’s not the case here.”
“I’m relieved to hear it. But how can you be sure?”
Logan’s gaze was still on Jennifer. “Two reasons. I do believe it’s possible for the life force of one whose