Part 12 (1/2)

Peering at the screen, Flinders suddenly pressed her face closer and laughed out loud. ”In ancient Greek mythology, the Sevastopol area was where the Parthenium was supposed to have been, a temple dedicated to the virgin G.o.ddess Artemis, where, in cla.s.sical times. Iphigenia, the daughter of Agamemnon, was forced to make human sacrifices on a marble altar.” She lifted her eyes to look at both of them. ”Human mythmaking always operates as a continuum, an evolution of story as religious traditions evolve over time. So if there's a mountain here dedicated to the virgin G.o.ddess Artemis, who was just one later incarnation of the great lunar Mother G.o.ddess wors.h.i.+pped in the Paleolithic Era, then you can bet it was dedicated to an earlier-Neolithic-version of the same Mother G.o.ddess. Since they were a seafaring people, the Atlanteans would have undoubtedly wors.h.i.+pped an earlier form of Poseidon, but like all Neolithic communities, their main religion would have been dedicated to the Mother G.o.ddess. You have to understand the religious tradition of the G.o.ddess. From the Paleolithic to the Neolithic, the cave was considered her sacred shrine, the actual womb of the G.o.ddess herself, where souls were born and the dead returned to be resurrected and born again. And that's where they'd take the Tablet. To a place they considered sacred-a cave, probably one located inside the mountain. Most likely the mouth would have been on the sh.o.r.e of the Euxine Lake.”

Excited, Skarda leaned forward. ”Do you know where the Parthenium was?”

”Hang on,” she said, typing in a search. A moment later she read the answer off the screen: ”'Cape Fiolente'. Right here. Just to the west of Sevastopol along the coast.”

April didn't like the news. ”Wouldn't it be under water now?”

But Skarda grinned and raised an eyebrow at Flinders. ”Have you ever gone scuba diving?”

TWENTY-SEVEN.

Fort Meade SITTING down in the unadorned white box that was her office, Rachel booted up her computer. Something about Tomilin was making her uneasy-something she couldn't quite pin down, but which kept nagging at the edge of her thoughts. It wasn't his creepy s.e.xual interest, even though that repulsed her. He was up to something. Like many of the politicians she'd met in Was.h.i.+ngton, he was a hypocrite, wrapping himself in the flag to get votes but in reality only interested in putting dollars in his pocket. Rachel had been raised as a conservative herself, but her parents had instilled in her a truly patriotic love of her country and her flag, values which she had taken to heart and still held dear.

This was why she despised men like Tomilin. She'd seen the indifference on his face when she'd shown him the images of the dead animals. He truly didn't care. He had made a fortune in the oil business with insider deals, hedge funds, and conspiring to manipulate oil production and prices worldwide.

He didn't care about America.

He cared only about himself.

And his pal, David Charbonnet, seemed only a shade of a hair worse.

But that wasn't what was worrying her. Something else was going on. There was a bad feeling to it, making something move and twist and claw at the bottom of her stomach.

For a moment she paused, staring at the screen. Her every instinct yelled at her run, to jump into her car and start driving. Anywhere. Just away. As far away from Was.h.i.+ngton DC as she could get.

But reason overtook her. Steeling herself, she sat up, her spine rigid, and started to type.

TWENTY-EIGHT.

Sevastopol, Crimea FROM the air, Sevastopol Harbor looked to Skarda like a giant blue snake trying to eat its way into the Crimean coastline. From Geneva they'd taken a Lufthansa flight to Simferopol, the busy travel hub where they'd boarded a train to Sevastopol and the coast. While the train twisted and turned through the mountain pa.s.ses, where forests of pine, beech, oak, and juniper plunged down to the sh.o.r.es of blue-green bays, Skarda turned over in his mind the events of the past few days. He knew he could count on April. He could always count on April. She was sitting across from him, meditating, her face looking oddly serene with her black, fierce eyes closed against the world. But when he considered the odds they were up against, he wasn't so sure of his own abilities. Jaz was a dangerous enemy: fast, lethal, and unpredictable. And backed by big money. That was why it was so important to find the Tablet and the source of the isomer before she did, because whoever had hired her would unleash its destructive capacity to its fullest potential. And the same went for the mysterious commandos with the Mi-25. They still had no clue who they were.

Rolling an ache out of his shoulders, he watched a hillside strewn with wildflowers flash past. Even through the thick plate gla.s.s window the spicy scent of juniper reached his nostrils, reminding him of some pleasant memory he couldn't pin down. But it was Flinders who worried him. He felt had no right to expose her to danger, and she didn't even have the most rudimentary of survival skills to combat the forces they were up against. Yet at the same time he respected her wishes and her free choice. She was stubborn and determined and he admired her for those qualities. He looked over at her in the opposite seat, sprawled out with her eyes closed, her lush body rocking gently with the motion of the train. He knew he would do what he had to do to keep her alive.

The train lurched sharply, rumbling around a steep promontory. The change of motion jerked him from his reverie as the sun-drenched S-shape of Sevastopol Bay burst into view.

”We're here,” he announced.

April's eyes snapped open, her body uncoiling as she sat up straight.

Flinders yawned and gave her arms a stretch. Far below, past a stand of oaks, she caught a glimpse of azure blue water and cl.u.s.ters of white buildings straddling the slopes of lush hillsides. ”Pretty.”

”I wouldn't count on it,” April said.

___.

It was just after noon when April piloted the rented Rinker Express power cruiser along the rocky coast, where the eons had punctuated the ancient limestone with innumerable inlets, coves, and sea arches. The hunched shoulders of the headlands, blanketed with a patchwork of dull greens, browns, and reds and tapering down to conical sea stacks reminded Skarda of Big Sur. There was hardly a ripple on the surface of the sea, just the gentle tug of the tide, and the sunlight bouncing off the flat sheet of water into his eyes made him break out in a slight sweat.

”GPS says this is it,” April called out. Before they'd started out, Flinders had worked out her estimation of where the Temple of Artemis had stood in cla.s.sical times.

Consulting her laptop monitor, Flinders compared the images on the screen with the headland in front of them. At its western end a towering sea stack jutted from the surface, its base creaming with laces of foam, attached by a limestone swayback arch to a cliff that curved to the east along a rocky beach clumped with bright green seaweed. A lone rock stuck up out of the water like a miniature island.

s.h.i.+elding his eyes with his hand, Skarda craned his neck back, surveying as much of the top of the cliff as he could. It would have been the perfect spot for an ancient temple with a commanding view over the sea.

April throttled the engine back while he tossed the anchor over the side. The tide caught the cruiser, rocking it gently. Then he moved to the stern where April was zipping up one of the dry suits he had rented. They'd decided she would make a preliminary dive to try to locate the cave opening, if there was one.

The problem, as Flinders had explained it, was that there was no way of knowing the depth of the original sh.o.r.eline, because the flood sea water would have spread out around the perimeter of the Euxine Lake instead of just filling it like a bathtub. The farther the water spread, the less the rise in sea level.

When April had strapped on her BC backpack and disappeared over the side, Skarda gave Flinders basic instruction in scuba operation. She proved herself to be a strong swimmer and unafraid of being under the surface of the sea. By the time April returned he was satisfied she could make the short trip into the interior of the headland.

Surfacing next to them, April pulled off her face mask. ”There's a split in the rock about thirty-seven feet down, but I don't think it was part of the original beach. It looks like this area was. .h.i.t by a pretty big earthquake at some point and the rock face split. I went inside. It leads to an open cave system above the water level that looks like it runs through the whole interior.”

Skarda looked at Flinders. ”Good. It's under forty feet. That means it's a no-stop dive, so we won't have to decompress.”

___.

Sunlight filtered through the clear water as Skarda angled his body down along the wall of the submerged cliff, trailing behind April in the lead and Flinders between them. Now he understood why April had presumed an earthquake had struck the coastline: on a projecting ledge below he could see the silhouettes of huge boulders that had at some time tumbled from the cliff, now forming grottoes and fissures that were home to crabs, eels, and octopi.

In front of him a school of gray mullets flashed apart and reformed as April darted into a black aperture in the rock wall about seven feet in length and three in width. For a moment Flinders hesitated, but then she gave a kick to her fins and the hole swallowed her up.

Skarda followed.

Immediately claustrophobia closed around him. His stomach lurched. He fought down panic, pus.h.i.+ng himself forward even though his brain screamed at him to back out and head for the clean, fresh air of the surface. Ignoring the impulse, he willed his mind to a blank slate, concentrating on the bobbing cone of April's dive light ahead.

The light disappeared in a burst of bubbles and then he was aware of Flinders' legs thrusting downward in front of him, kicking up another storm of bubbles, then rocketing upward out of sight. Giving his own legs a scissor-kick, he shot to the surface, yanking off his mask. Then he hauled himself onto a flat rock and climbed to his feet.

They were standing on the floor of a low-domed cavern whose slick walls glistened with light reflected from April's lamp. Skarda wrinkled his nose. The odor of dead fish and ancient mold made him want to gag. Algae and lichens covered the walls, and fallen stones and blocks of limestone littered the cave floor, more evidence of at least one earthquake in the past.

April unzipped her dry suit. They'd worn jeans and sweats.h.i.+rts under their suits, carrying their boots in dry bags. Shedding his own suit, Skarda laced up his boots and took out his own lamp, flas.h.i.+ng it toward the opposite end of the gallery, where the rock floor led upward at a steep angle.

April was already moving ahead. Skarda followed Flinders up the incline to the mouth of a smaller pa.s.sageway whose ceiling reached no more than six or seven feet off the ground. Again his head spun with claustrophobia, but he gritted his teeth and drove himself forward, hunched over. At least this tunnel was short. When he pushed himself through he was standing in a ma.s.sive gallery, too enormous for their LED's to penetrate more than a few feet in front of them. It was chillier here also, cold and clammy, and the dampness hung like a mist in the air. The stench of age and must a.s.saulted his nostrils, making him hack out explosive coughs.

They started forward carefully, April's lamp spearing a cone of light over the rough rock five feet in front of her. Skarda and Flinders followed closely at her back, their boots slipping on the dank slabs of rock that composed the floor. Every small noise they made echoed, then bounced off the walls and came back again, the sound magnified. The tunnel twisted and curved, but from the strain on his legs, Skarda knew they were traveling upward at a fairly steep angle.

The pa.s.sageway narrowed. Up ahead, April stopped. ”Hang on!” she called out. Her flash probed the darkness, then she made her way back to their position. ”You're not going to like this,” she said to Skarda. ”The tunnel narrows up there. About two feet high, three feet wide. It's hands and knees time.”

Twenty minutes later they crawled out of the claustrophobic pa.s.sageway, their clothing scuffed and streaked with dirt. Skarda's face and s.h.i.+rt were slick with sweat and his breathing was coming in ragged gasps.

He climbed to his feet as April panned her LED around the more s.p.a.cious chamber they had entered. Now he could see that they were standing on a wide spine of rock whose outer edge dropped precipitously into a black chasm. He aimed his flash into its depths, but the beam made little penetration into what looked like a bottomless pit.

April's lamp stabbed ahead, picking out the entrance to another pa.s.sageway. Walking single file as far away as possible from the rim of the chasm, they stepped through the opening, their feet slipping on a slick-floored tunnel that tilted upward at a steep angle. This ended abruptly in a small chamber, littered with fallen stones dripping with moisture and covered with green slime. But here were signs of human activity: some of the rocks had been worked by tools.