Caitlin ignored her. She sat there, still, as though she’d seen Medusa. The hit from Yokane’s stone had connected her to the tile that had been in this room. Caitlin felt terrified and out of control, yet at the same time she had never experienced such energy coursing through her. It was as if she had become Arfa, Jack London, all the unsettled animals in New York. But she had to keep it contained.
Flora saw her inward look. “Talk to me,” she ordered.
“It’s radioactive, the stone you have, with the carvings of crescents in a triangle.”
Flora’s body jerked as if she’d lost balance on the stool. “How do you know about the carvings?”
“I’m looking at the stone. No, into it. It… it’s showing me the history of this room.”
For the first time, Flora seemed unnerved. Caitlin’s eyes snapped back to her. “Your dead man studied it and it was radioactive.”
“Nonsense,” Flora sputtered. “We checked it for radioactivity.”
“That Geiger counter was ticking hard right before it killed him,” Caitlin said evenly. Finally she felt she was back on an equal level with Davies.
Flora grabbed Caitlin’s forearm. “Before what killed him? The stone?”
“I don’t know if it was intentional or just a consequence. But it did.”
Flora’s phone went off and she cursed. She wrenched it out of her pocket as if she were going to throw it across the room but out of habit checked the screen.
“I must take this,” she said, then stood, turned her back on Caitlin, and walked into the hall.
CHAPTER 21
Pao and Rensat shrieked after Mikel as he raced away from them. He was surprised that they did not pursue him. Perhaps they were bound to the room by some mechanism he did not understand.
The wind in the tunnel will not be much help to spirits, he thought.
Their echoing cries were a combination of pent-up rage and hopeless frustration.
Mikel tore through the huge room, but not blindly. It was lit with the fires of hell.
It was the opening to one of the pits that serviced the Source—a hot-tub-sized vent that had apparently been designed to release the steam pressure lest it rupture the pipes. There were small openings above that must have led through the tunnel to the surface to give the steam some way out; perhaps they had originally been used to melt the oncoming ice, to keep the glaciers at bay. There were also tiles along one walclass="underline" Mikel could only surmise that Rensat had been in here earlier looking for clues to the identity of whoever turned the damned thing on. Or trying to find Enzo or who knew what else.
The chamber was a well of unfathomable energy, power so compact and deep it seemed to have mass. That pressure was softened somewhat by the life-sustaining mask; even so, his body was vibrating, oscillating at a cellular level from the energies that surrounded him.
And that was just the beginning, he realized. The force traveling through the Source would be unimaginable. Not just the part that was manifest here, but throughout the world: for all he knew, the Galderkhaani had probed deep, sent their tiles or some other construct far into the crust, the mantle, perhaps beyond.
Mikel had only those few seconds of total awareness to himself. Then he saw, in his mind, Rensat touching the tiles on her side of the room—activating a sequence of some kind. And then Pao was there, with her, also in his mind.
There was no reason to pursue me, Mikel realized. The tiles are projecting their thoughts along an arc, to other tiles throughout the ruins. It was the same way that pure energy had gotten into the minds of animals caught along lines between New York and Antarctica.
As Mikel feared, Pao was not about to let him leave without an agreement to help.
“I will not permit it!” he heard.
The immaterial Galderkhaani attacked the only way they could—by forcing Mikel’s mind to open itself to images stored in the ancient library and to Pao’s own warnings.
He cannot harm me, Mikel thought… hoped. If it were possible, Pao would have done so already. But he had not reckoned on the ingenuity of the Galderkhaani. The safeguards were clearly designed to cause intruders to make their own mistakes, make them unable to distinguish between the real and the unreal.
The first visual assault were the fangs of a leopard seal. As the enormous head of the animal lunged at him. Mikel felt the horror though not the pain or disfigurement of the animal biting at his throat. His heart beat hard and fast despite the structure imposed by the mask’s skin. Every instinct he had screamed at him to turn back, to seek Pao’s room with a promise to submit, behave.
But he had never listened to his saner angels and refused to do so now. Mikel ground his teeth together.
It’s not real! he thought hard.
Mikel stepped uncertainly forward, head bowed against the pressure being released by the vent—a cyclonic wind that was dissipated, he now noticed, into a series of funnels above. There had to be a doorway of some kind to the tunnel and the airstream beyond, he thought, so he continued into the maelstrom. The leopard seal retreated; Mikel could see it swimming in a long-vanished well, a pool, a short distance away, staring at him. It did not attack again, not physically. It lurked. Mikel’s will had rolled the vision back.
Better than having my brain melt, he thought.
“You will not get away!” he heard Pao shriek after him.
I will…, Mikel thought.
“Your efforts will fail!”
They must not…
“I will join with your soul and trap you among the bones of Galderkhaan for all time!”
You are not real! Mikel screamed inside.
“Listen to your words,” Pao sneered. “They are uttered in a dead tongue that you have never learned. This is very real!”
And then, through the stones, Pao’s entire mind dissolved into Mikel’s brain like salt in water. Pieces of living Galderkhaan poured in—towers and villas, airships with nets strung between them, the odors of the sea and jasmine, the laughter and tears and chatter of citizens.
Mikel wrenched his brain into focus. The stones, he thought, I have to get away from them.
But then there was something else. Something whispering and beguiling under it all like the serpent in Eden or the Sirens.
“Seek that which I seek,” Pao commanded. “Be what I am. The joys of all-knowing await.”
But Pao misjudged his subject. Mikel was not so far enamored of their eternal power as he was of the power to be gained of its knowledge in his real world. Fighting the temptation was seductive but easy. What would life or ascension or whatever awaited be like if he had to endure the guilt of its deadly course of action?
Galderkhaan is already gone, he told himself. You are fighting to save everything and everyone you know!
Mikel’s desire to resist created a slight but tangible split that gave him a foothold in his own identity. In that moment he both felt and understood the spirit’s driving obsession: to find the woman Mikel knew from the video taken in Haiti, the one person they believed could actually go back and prevent what Pao was calling the ulvor—traitor—from destroying Galderkhaan. That singular desire was lodged in his brain, in Galderkhaani, now that he was away from the stones in the library.