“I know. We have to go. Maybe there’s a chance we can get there ahead of them.”
“Doubt it,” she said. “Unless the storm delayed their flight.”
“Let’s hope for nasty weather,” Caleb said, and went for the car keys.
19
The Pharos protects itself.
Somewhere over the Atlantic, while Phoebe was fast asleep beside him, Caleb had the sudden certainty that they would be too late. They’d had no luck at the Rochester airport. And not only did all the previous flights leave on time, but theirs was the first to be sidelined.
Two hours they’d waited for de-icing and final runway clearance, then they were off to JFK, where they had another hour’s delay before boarding their flight to Alexandria, after a stopover in Paris. They had no way of knowing how much earlier Helen and Waxman had left. All they could be sure of now was that they would be too late.
He buzzed the flight attendant and requested a pillow and tried to sleep, knowing that he would need his strength.
It was ten thirty in the morning by the time they hailed a cab at the Alexandria airport. At eleven, they were stuck in horrendous traffic, behind slow-moving produce trucks, and held up by a gala event at the Bibliotheca Alexandrina, where huge crowds surged around a festival-like atmosphere on the grounds in front of the enormous glass-roofed construction. Caleb marveled at the blue dome of the planetarium off to the side, and he noted the sturdy construction, the reinforced concrete girders and the enormous walls of the main library. As they slowly drove past, he recalled reading that four levels were dug under sea level, protected from the sinking of the land on a raft of concrete.
Finally they made it to the causeway. Halfway across, Phoebe grabbed Caleb’s arm. They were both sitting in the back seat, neither talking. Barely breathing. It seemed like they were in a funeral procession.
“Sirens.” Phoebe pointed, and Caleb saw the flickering lights up ahead. He rolled down his window and looked out. In the sky, a lone helicopter sped away, rising up from the Pharos promontory.
“Bad accident,” the cab driver said, his English surprisingly good. “I hear it on my CB radio. Scuba divers have… how you say… accident?”
“What happened?” Phoebe asked as they neared the parking area for Qaitbey. Her face had gone pale, her shoulders trembled.
The cabbie spoke some words into his CB, and the answer came back, a garbled series of guttural consonants. “I am told an older woman was just lifted out in a helicopter, taken to hospital.”
Phoebe’s nails dug into Caleb’s flesh. “Stop! Turn the cab around and take us there.”
“Pardon?”
“Do it!” Caleb said, his mouth dry. “Did they say what happened to her?”
“Do not know. They find her on the rocks. No swimsuit, no air tank. They say she will probably die, I am sorry to say. Underwater very long.”
“Was there a man with her?”
“Yes, yes. Man with her. He is OK. He must be very powerful man. He survives accident and calls police.”
Caleb shot Phoebe a look.
She leaned forward. “Just drive to the hospital, please. Fast.”
As they turned around, Caleb stared at the old sandstone turrets of Fortress Qaitbey, and he saw the red and blue lights flickering off its massive walls. For an instant, he could see a marble stairway ascending between two immense royal statues looking solemn and compassionate.
Helen was on the second floor. And as Phoebe wheeled into the room and rolled beside her bed, Caleb glanced around for Waxman. His hands were tight fists, and he found himself grinding his teeth, fuming.
“Where is he?” he asked the first doctor entering his mother’s room. “The man who brought my mother here, where did he go?”
The doctor, a dark-skinned bald man, shrugged. “Your father checked her in—”
“He’s not my father.”
“—and… eh… he left immediately. Said you would be along to care for her.”
Son of a bitch.
Caleb went to his mother’s side. His arm around Phoebe, he sat in a chair and they both held her hands. She was so cold. Her head was wrapped in bandages, and a tube had been inserted into her nose. An IV fed fluids through her right arm.
“What about a decompression chamber?” he asked. “Shouldn’t she be in one?”
Phoebe shook her head. “The nurse told me she’s too bad off. She needs the IV, morphine and rest. They chose to save her life.” Her voice cracked and she could barely finish the sentences. “They say she won’t wake up again, and if she does, she’ll be a vegetable. The damage to her brain, a severe stroke from the pressure…” Phoebe blew her nose and rubbed away her tears. “She won’t—”
“It’s okay,” Caleb whispered, even though he knew it wasn’t. “Mom’s alive,” he said. “And as long as she is, there’s hope.”
“What did he do to her?”
“We’re going to find out.”
Phoebe lifted her head. Her eyes were like steel ball bearings, cold and fierce. “Let’s do it now. Let’s view the bastard.”
He took his hand away from his mother’s and held Phoebe’s. They had seen similar visions before, but never this direct, never such a match, detail for detail.
It started with the caduceus. The door parting, the seventh symbol unlocked. This vision tunneled through Caleb’s consciousness like a sonic drill. He saw the great door ease open, and Helen and Waxman gave a shout of joy. Their skin glittered with a golden dust. They picked up their lanterns and a flashlight, and bounded forward. Caleb’s mind’s eye followed…
… Waxman down another staircase. He shines the lantern’s brilliant light around. “Eight sides to this room.” They stand together in an immense, cavern-like chamber with high vaulted ceilings and what looks like two circular portals above, vents for bringing in the water used for the second trap.
“We’re in the octagon section.” Helen pans the walls with her flashlight. “Caleb was right. ‘As Above, so Below.’”
“Yeah, all credit and glory to your son, Amen!”
“Stop being so cynical. He’s the reason we’re here.”
“No, you are. It was your dedication, your focus, your drive that kept this dream alive long after he deserted you.”
“You’re wrong.”
“Whatever. We’re almost there. The treasure awaits.”
They circle around and around on smooth stairs, through thin layers of dust shaken free in the quakes. Here and there a crumbled stone lies on the stairs, and pieces of the wall have fallen in places; but soon the steps end and they walk onto a flat floor that leads to another door, this one with a single image drawn on its surface.
“That again! What is this?” Waxman shines his light up and down. It’s a modest door, about half as large as the previous one, and otherwise non-descript. The room itself is bare, with no artwork on the walls. Nothing inscribed on the floor. No rings, no pits. Nothing but red granite blocks.
Helen shifts her weight, looking over her shoulder. “I don’t know, but I think we may have it all wrong.”
“Nonsense. Here’s a handle on the door. Probably just pull on it and—”
“Don’t touch anything!” She shouts and grabs his hand.
“Are you serious?”
“Do you even have to ask?” She takes a step back, almost to the stairs. “Did you forget what we just went through up there? Any one of those traps could have killed us, and when we find another door you think it’s going to be as simple as pulling it open?”