“I wasn’t aware of that. Why wasn’t I told?”
“Only spoke to the boss-man about it in private, and he said we’d come back to these, but they weren’t likely to be major hits at the time. Nowhere to spend our energies.”
“So, what were they?”
Orlando clicked on the upper left section of the program’s readout. An image appeared, an artist’s rendition of a giant head, severed at the neck, on a beach, being worked on by artisans. In the distance was a statue astride a circular harbor, pyramids and obelisks along the shore and a sail boat departing under its legs. It held a torch aloft.
“The Colossus of Rhodes,” Orlando said. “Another of our friends, one of the Seven Wonders of the World. Itself a lighthouse, the immense Colossus collapsed in — what else — an earthquake, in 226 BCE. But its remains, so huge and impressive, stayed on the ground for over eight hundred years, a major tourist attraction.”
“What happened to the pieces?” Phoebe asked. “Where’s the head?”
“No one knows for sure. Lots of rumors about Arabs taking the remnants, melting them down or storing them somewhere. At the time, I didn’t think much of this, but I did try to RV the head. But never got anything specific. Thought we should bring it up at the next meeting, but then we got the Antarctica hit.”
“Okay, so that’s a possibility. What’s the other one?”
Orlando smiled and clicked. “This.”
“Ah,” Phoebe said, and whistled. “Lady Liberty.”
“Yep, inspired by the Colossus. Built almost exactly to its specifications in size and possibly posture.”
“Except they changed the gender.”
“Yeah, well you can’t fight progress.” He smiled. “At this point, if Caleb were here, he’d go into all sorts of conspiracy stories about Freemasons and symbols, about the significance of the dedication date, the Masonic service, and hidden purposes behind Liberty’s delivery to the new world of light and reason, yada, yada.”
“Of course,” Phoebe groaned. “And we’d all just nod and hope he got to the point. Which is…?”
Orlando shrugged. “No idea. The head’s still on her shoulders, and doesn’t fit our images, so we passed on this hit. Although, I think it might still be worth a look. Maybe there’s something there.”
“Maybe,” Phoebe urged, leaning in. She clicked on the back button, returning to the first image that had filled the screen. “So what’s this?”
“That,” he said slowly, “is new. Hit Number Three.”
“It’s…” Phoebe said, squinting, “small. Can you enlarge it?”
“Hang on.” He expanded the magnification, and the view increased, the details solidifying. It appeared to be a photograph taken from high above, of a desert with boulders, rocks and mountains, a desolate plain. Except there was something imbedded in the desert floor. Something half in shade, with a mouth, an outline of a crown, and an eye staring back at them.
“I’ve seen this before somewhere. That’s a face?”
Orlando nodded. “If you believe the nutcases out there. The same people who see the Virgin Mary in potato chips and Elvis in some guy’s liver spots.”
“But—”
“Yeah,” said Orlando grimly, now taking the pointer and decreasing magnification. Ten times. Fifty. A hundred.
“Jeez.”
“Yeah,” Orlando said again. “You see, back in China, waiting for you guys at that mausoleum, I had the idea of expanding my search, looking for matches… elsewhere.”
“You expanded it all right,” Phoebe said, staring along with him at the reddish globe set against the stars.
“It’s—”
“Yeah,” he repeated, one more time, incredulous.
“Mars.”
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
You know what they say about sequels: up the stakes, up the body count. In writing this book I felt you could also say, double the research. I think I read every book out there (and there are hundreds) on the life and legacy of Genghis Khan. The one I found invaluable, with vivid first-person descriptions and even interviews with a living Darkhad, was Genghis Khan: Life, Death, and Resurrection, by John Man. I also followed the exploits of Chicago millionaire and professor Maury Kravitz, who has been visiting Mongolia for years with a research team, narrowing the search for the lost tomb. Good Luck Maury! (But beware those traps if you ever find it.)
I confess to feeling some pressure writing this, as teams from several countries are currently on the hunt to solve this archaeological mystery. If they find him somewhere else, then I may look a little silly. But then again, if he’s where I’ve got him, I expect a share of the treasure.
I’ll also acknowledge here the usual bits about historical accuracy. The Westcar Papyrus is real, as is its prophecy related to the secret chamber. So too is the description Herodotus gave of the Great Pyramid’s origin — the legend that a shepherd prince, not an Egyptian Pharoah, had been its engineer. And as for HAARP, there are many books on the subject of what’s going on up in Alaska. I only scratched the surface here; much more to come in Book 3.
Of course, thanks goes out again to all the fine people who helped make Pharos so successful, and did it again here — Stan Tremblay, Shane Thomson and Tim Schulte from Variance Publishing.
And I’d also like to thank my best Buckeye friend, Kim Klever — world-renowned adventurer in her own right, for the pictures and descriptions of Bodrum, Turkey, after her trip there in 2008. And thanks again, as always, to my faithful first readers (you two know who you are!). And finally, thanks go to everyone who came along for this thrill ride. May the Morpheus Initiative continue to entertain (and enlighten) you!
— DJS, 2011