Part 6 (1/2)

Khalid knew only a few words of English, and these weren't those. Eyeing her warily, he half turned to Ahmed. Something in her expression told him to run.

The woman whipped out a pistol fitted with a suppressor.

Khalid's eyes went wide and he took a stumbling step backward.

”Ahmed!” he cried out.

But it was too late. The woman shot him twice and he dropped to the floor just as Ahmed was twisting himself around in time to receive two bullets in the brain.

”Incompetence,” Jaz finished, and walked out the door.

FIFTEEN.

Siwa Oasis, Egypt IT was just before dawn and still cool when April drove the rented Land Rover away from the fumes and bleating horns of Cairo and headed southwest on the El Baharia-Siwa Road into the barren wasteland that was the Western Desert. The road cut through a level sabkha plain, a salt flat dazzling in the sun, packed down with a layer of small, dark pebbles, each glinting with fierce points of light, broken only by the intermittent sight of oil pipelines and wrecks of abandoned cars and trucks. On both sides enormous sand dunes rose up in the distance, some shaped by the winds into cones or pyramids, others with their summits sheared off flat, like mesas. With every hour of full daylight the scorching heat grew in intensity. By noon, the full force of the merciless sun had heated the Land Rover's interior to the temperature of a blast furnace, even with the air conditioning cranked to the max. Rivulets of sweat trickled down from Skarda's temples and his s.h.i.+rt stuck to the skin of his back like a damp paper towel. Even April grumped. Secretly she was hoping for a sandstorm to blow up or another car tailing them in the distance, just to relieve the monotony. By the time they reached Marsa Matrouh, with its white sand beaches and aquamarine waters, it was with relief that they stopped for gla.s.ses of cooling watermelon juice.

But closer to Siwa the landscape changed dramatically. As they turned south they could see the silver skeletons of abandoned water drills littering the sand, now that the government had banned farmers from individual drilling. Trees and shrubs began to dot the landscape, sure signs of underground water. Rounding a pa.s.s, Skarda got his first glimpse of the oasis: a fertile depression sixty feet below sea level, guarded by the Gebel el-Mawta, the Mountain of the Dead, the necropolis where the Romans and the Ptolemies tunneled tombs out of the solid sandstone to bury their dead. Far in the distance, he could make out the bowl of the Siwa depression, hemmed in by limestone cliffs and low mountains, succ.u.mbing on its southern edge to the northwestern sh.o.r.e of the Great Sand Sea, the enormous expanse of restless, s.h.i.+fting dunes and burning salt wastes that stretched east to the banks of the Nile and west across North Africa to the Atlantic Ocean.

April braked around another cliff face, and they pa.s.sed a donkey cart driven by a young boy. Flinders pointed to her right. Squinting his eyes, Skarda could see salt lakes s.h.i.+mmering in the distance like immense silver coins, flanked by tabletop mountains standing like guardian sentinels. This truly was an oasis in the middle of the desert, with dense groves of short, squat palms and date, orange, and olive orchards watered by hundreds of freshwater springs bubbling up from the sandstone bedrock.

A hot wind battered the Land Rover as they neared the small cl.u.s.ter of dun-colored boxes that formed the village of Siwa, hard-baked in the heat, crowned by a crumbling hilltop fortress that looked like it was made out of sand-colored ice cream melting in the sun.

April scanned the area, frowning in irritation. The town itself consisted of a couple of narrow streets thronged with donkeys, carts, and men pedaling bicycles. ”So this is where these pillars are?” Her tone made it clear that she wasn't too impressed.

In the back seat, Flinders s.h.i.+fted from side to side in ecstasy, taking in the view. ”You can't forget-Siwa was once an important stop on the ancient caravan trade routes that connected the Nile Valley to Libya and the Mediterranean. Alexander the Great spent nine days in the desert searching for this place, trying to reach the Oracle at Amun, because he wanted to be p.r.o.nounced a G.o.d, the son of Zeus.”

”Was he?” Skarda asked.

”Yes. And then he went on to conquer half the known world.”

That seemed to brighten April's att.i.tude. ”My kind of man,” she said.

___.

Their plan was to wait until dark to explore the Oracle, when any tourists would be securely settled in their hotels for the night. Which meant some down time to let Flinders brief them on the physical layout of the temple. Their hotel, built from kershef-a mixture of rock salt, straw, and mud-had no electricity, in keeping with the local environmental codes, so Skarda lit beeswax candles while she booted up her laptop with battery power.

She pointed at the writing on the screen. ”This is the pa.s.sage that gives the location of the pillars. It says there's a secret entrance under the 'sacred altar'. Wherever that is.”

”Any ideas?” Skarda asked.

”Maybe. See these symbols?” She turned the monitor so he could see four geometric shapes that looked like upright and inverted triangles, two with lines drawn through them.

”They're early signs representing earth, air, fire, and water-the four elements that the alchemists believed composed all matter. Remember, the Egyptians believed it was Thoth who invented the science of alchemy, so these symbols must be tied into the location of the pillars and the Tablet. I'm guessing they're what we have to look for. But these vertical shapes-” she ran her finger over two long thin oblong signs-”I have no idea what they are. Since they're placed right next to the location of the pillars, they have to be a clue.”

”Well,” Skarda said, his grin flas.h.i.+ng in the candlelight. ”There's only one way to find out.”

___.

A waxing quarter moon cast a glittering pathway of light on the Birket Siwa as the Land Rover sped along the narrow road to the Aghurmi acropolis, a tapering hill of sandstone and chalk that looked like some weird fruit growing out of a dense grove of palm trees. On the dark ring of the close horizon the three-story-high faces of limestone outcroppings gleamed like bleached bones.

April ran the Land Rover under a clump of date palms next to a path that led up the hillside. With quick strides they climbed to the flat expanse of the hilltop, where the mud-brick ruins of a fortress rose up before them, looking like it was the work of some giant child making sandcastles at the beach. This was the more recent structure, built by the Arabs in the fifteenth century CE, that enclosed the ancient temple at its heart. Entering the citadel gate, Skarda pulled his LED lamp from his backpack and flashed it in a wide sweep, noting the thick palm logs that b.u.t.tressed the entrance. In Cairo they had stopped to fit themselves out for the expedition, with packs, coils of a.s.saultline rope, lamps, chisels, hammers, and bottled water. April also fitted out her pack with two of her favorite Fusion Fulcrum throwing knives.

Letting his lamp carve a path of light in front of him, Skarda strode through the gate. Directly in front of him rose the remains of an abandoned mosque whose minaret tapered to a point just below the moon, as if its tip were balancing the bright sliver in place in the night sky.

April's lamp raked over the deep fissures that had ruptured the walls. Heaps of rubble littered the ground as a result of centuries of rock falls. She gave her head a solemn shake. ”This place has seen better days.”

But Flinders was impressed. The beam of her flash bobbed this way and that as she tried to take everything in at once. To the north and east irregular sandstone walls ran along the edge of the rock. ”This,” she announced, ”would have been the entrance to the court where the processions of the G.o.d took place. Imagine that-Alexander himself walked where we are right now, on his way to seek his future with the Oracle.”

Ahead a rectangular doorway about twenty-five feet high opened into deeper darkness. Stepping through, they entered a chamber about the size of a living room. Flinders unfolded a sketch she had made of the temple and shone her light on it. ”Okay...this is the outer court. Over there-” She pointed to the west wall. ”-is a crypt. And through that opening ahead is the inner court that leads to the sanctuary where the Oracle was. Hopefully that's where we'll find the altar.”

They moved through the chamber. The roofs of the Oracle enclosure had vanished long ago, and even with the glow of the moon and the warm starlight, the night enveloped them in pools of darkness as they made their way through to the inner court, their boots crunching on broken rock.

Flinders' flash picked out three doorways on the north wall. ”Follow me,” she said, and headed for the middle entrance.

The sanctuary itself was small, about ten by twenty feet, with walls covered with inscriptions, some as defined as if they were carved yesterday, and others worn and almost indistinguishable in the moonlight. On the wall to his immediate right Skarda could make out the partial outline of a human figure wearing an Egyptian crown.

Flinders pointed at a set of hieroglyphs enclosed in an incised oval carved next to the figure. ”This is the royal cartouche of Ahmose II, who ruled during the twenty-sixth Dynasty, in the sixth century BCE. He's wearing the crown of the North, which is the crown of Lower Egypt. The Greeks called him Amasis. Supposedly he was the one who built the Oracle, although legend has it that it's hundreds of years older, constructed to honor Ham, the son of Noah.”

Skarda played his light over the walls. From what he could make out, it looked like the Pharaoh was offering vases to a lineup of waiting Egyptian G.o.ds. But clearly the image had been deliberately defaced. ”It looks like somebody took a chisel to this. What happened?”

”My guess is it was the work of the Persians, after they defeated the Egyptian army in 525 BCE at the battle of Pelusium. There was no love lost between them. Herodotus wrote that the Persian ruler Cambyses II had Amasis' mummy dug up, mutilated, and then burnt. But then Cambyses was also supposed to have a led a force of fifty thousand Persian soldiers into the desert on an expedition to destroy the Oracle and they were swallowed up by a giant sandstorm and never seen again.”

”Karma's a b.i.t.c.h,” April said.

Flinders consulted her map, then swung her flash at a narrow doorway on the eastern wall. ”This should lead to an area behind the back wall.” Skarda saw her teeth flash in a grin. ”This is probably where the main altar was. The Oracle here was a woman called a sibyl, who allegedly went into a trance to be able to communicate directly with the G.o.ds and give prophecies under divine inspiration. Usually they were vague statements, which could be interpreted in many ways-the same way that modern fortune tellers and psychics operate. The sibyl would hide in a secret room and whisper into a tube that opened onto the altar in the temple, where the words would be amplified and considered the voice of the G.o.d by the supplicants. Then later the priests could interpret the oracle in any way that seemed appropriate. I'm hoping this is where the altar is.”

Flinders stepped through the doorway. Her LED speared through the darkness, illuminating a chamber hewn from the solid rock. Stooping his tall frame to enter, Skarda straightened, seeing Flinders triumphantly pointing her beam at what looked like a four-by-six-foot granite box in the center of the room, about three feet off the ground, surmounted by a granite lid about ten inches in height. April's light joined his.

”The altar,” Flinders announced.

”It doesn't look so secret to me,” April said.

”My guess is that it's the entrance to whatever is under this room. That's where the secret is.”

April angled her lamp to s.h.i.+ne on the dark line where the lid joined the base. ”How do we get it open?”

Flinders moved to the altar and stooped down to examine it. ”Well...the ancient Egyptians did invent pin and tumbler locks, made out of wood or stone. A series of internal pins would line up with grooves carved in the lid, and voila, open. Let's hope that's what we have here. And let's hope they were made of stone. Anything made out of wood would have rotted away long ago.”

”But we still have to figure out how it works,” Skarda said.

Getting up, Flinders studied to the hieroglyphs carved on the lid surface. ”This is a hymn to Thoth, so I think we're on the right track.” She stooped, running her fingers over the surface of the altar. Smiling, she looked up at them. ”This is Thoth's cartouche.” She aimed her flash, showing them a raised oblong enclosure carved from the rock, surrounding a series of hieroglyphic images.

April bent, inspecting it closely. ”There's a hairline crack here.” She indicated a thin line where the boundary of the cartouche met the granite block. ”It looks like it's been opened before.” Finding the chisel in her pack, she fitted the point into the crevice and swung back her mallet.

But Flinders grabbed her wrist. ”No! We can't cause any destruction here! These are priceless artifacts!”