The Granite Key (Arkana Mysteries)

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The Granite Key (Arkana Mysteries) Page 26

by N. S. Wikarski


  Erik rubbed his head wearily. “Time for a recap. What does the message say when you put it all together?”

  Griffin referred to his notes. “The entire text now reads: ‘You will find the first of five you seek, when the soul of the lady rises with the sun, at the home of the Mountain Mother.’”

  “So we know how many relics there are and where the first one is hidden,” the Security Coordinator mused out loud.

  “All that remains is to solve the riddle of the second line,” Griffin added. “A task which cannot be accomplished here. Might I suggest we continue this discussion in more comfortable surroundings?”

  Cassie stood up, dusting off her jeans. “I guess we’ve got our work cut out for us.”

  From out of nowhere, an arm shot out across her throat, pulling her backwards. She could feel a gun barrel pointed at her temple.

  A voice with a southern accent punctuated the darkness. “I’d say your work is just about done, folks.”

  Chapter 40 – Rock And Roll

  Griffin and Erik sent the beams of their flashlights in the direction of the voice. They revealed a man with one arm across Cassie’s neck and the other pointing a pistol at her head.

  “Now you boys don’t want to do anything foolish, do you? Get this young lady killed or somethin’ like that?” he drawled. “Hands up where I can see ‘em, fellas.”

  “Who are you?” Griffin demanded, raising his arms above his head.

  “It’s him,” Cassie said shakily. “It’s the man who killed my sister.” In all her daydreams of confronting Leroy Hunt, she had never imagined this scenario. Her fantasies had always included a cordon of policemen standing between her and her sister’s murderer while she hurled abuse at him.

  “Now hold on there, missy. I never killed your big sis,” Hunt protested in a wounded tone.

  “You were chasing her and she fell! You might as well have killed her!”

  The cowboy’s voice grew wary. “Now how’d you come to know that? Were you hidin’ out in the shop someplace?”

  “I had a nightmare and you were in it. I saw everything!”

  “Cass,” Erik cautioned. It was the first time he’d actually used her name. “You really don’t want to upset the nice man, do you?”

  “That’s right.” Leroy nodded approvingly. “You listen to that boy. He’s talkin’ sense. You ought’nt to rile a fella who’s got a gun pointed at your head. It just ain’t smart.”

  “I don’t care about being smart right now!” Cassie could feel tears of frustration and sadness welling in her eyes. The man who had stupidly ended her sister’s life was about to end hers for no better reason.

  “Mr. Hunt,” a voice called out tentatively from the shadows.

  “Daniel,” Hunt shouted over his shoulder. “You stay behind me and point that flashlight so’s I can see everybody.”

  “But Mr. Hunt,” the voice pleaded. “The Fallen Ones have given us all the information we need. We should be leaving now.”

  “Don’t tell me my business, boy!” Leroy shot back. “Your daddy give me a job to do and I’m gonna see that it gets done proper.”

  “But Mr. Hunt,” the voice was more urgent now.

  “Mr. Hunt nothin’!” Leroy bellowed. “Do like I told you and train that flashlight over here.”

  Cassie could hear the sound of feet scuffling through the dirt some distance behind her. A light flicked on obediently to reveal her two companions with their hands raised over their heads. Erik looked tight-mouthed and tense while Griffin was still gaping in shock. For once in his life, he seemed to be at a loss for words.

  “Now then,” Hunt said pleasantly, “I believe we got some loose ends need tyin’ up. Why don’t you two boys walk on down that ramp and go inside that tomb you was just lookin’ at.”

  “Why should they?” Cassie demanded. “You’re just going to kill us all anyway!”

  “Cass!” Erik warned again.

  “Maybe I will and maybe I won’t. There’s a lot of maybes could happen in the next five minutes or so.” He paused and regarded the two men who remained motionless.

  “Daniel, you keep that light steady on them boys.” The beam traveled to the men’s faces, making them blink. “You fellas go on and do like I told you,” he instructed.

  Erik and Griffin, arms still overhead and flashlights still in hand, exchanged looks and complied. Hunt followed, with Cassie in lockstep slightly ahead of him. She could feel the gun scraping against her temple as they walked. Daniel followed, his flashlight pointed dutifully ahead of the strange procession.

  The men paused in front of the stomion.

  “Go on now,” Hunt urged once more. “Inside.”

  They had to crawl through the top half of the doorway since the bottom half was filled with fallen rock and gravel.

  Once they were inside, Leroy threaded his way carefully down the rock-strewn ramp, still gripping Cassie by the neck.

  He stopped right in front of the doorway. “Alright, Missy, now it’s your turn. In the hole. And don’t try runnin’. No way you can get past me anyhow without takin’ a bullet. Might as well join your friends inside.”

  Cassie had no intention of trying to make a break for it. The dromos was only three feet wide and most of it was clogged with debris. She wouldn’t be able to move in any direction without being caught. Hunt released his grip on her neck so that she could breathe freely again. She knew the gun was still pointed at her as she crawled through the stomion into the tomb. Her companions trained their flashlights on her to make sure she was alright. She gave them a tremulous smile and walked to the center of the chamber. Erik pulled her behind him in a futile gesture of protection. Griffin closed ranks next to him.

  “Daniel, come on down here and hand me that light,” Hunt instructed, his voice calm and matter-of-fact, almost as if he were asking someone to pass the peas at the dinner table.

  “Please, Mr. Hunt!” the voice whined from the darkness once more. “I’m sure father never intended for something like this to happen.”

  “The hell he didn’t,” Leroy said over his shoulder. “Why you think he called me into this mess? To babysit you? You better do like I say or he’s gonna know what a gutless wonder his boy is. You want that? You want me goin’ back and tellin’ your daddy how you let him down?”

  “No,” the voice quavered.

  “Good, that’s settled then,” Hunt said emphatically. “Now hand me that goddam light!”

  Daniel wordlessly complied.

  The cowboy leaned across the pile of rock that filled the lower half of the stomion, a flashlight in one hand and a gun in the other.

  Cassie looked around the circular burial chamber. Stone and mortar, no windows, not even a dark corner to hide in. They were trapped.

  “I gotta say this is convenient. More folks ought to get snuffed right inside a tomb. Very economical. Saves on funeral expenses.” Leroy took aim and murmured, “Just like shootin’ fish in a barrel.”

  Cassie instinctively shut her eyes and put her hands over her ears. She didn’t want to know what was coming next.

  What came next was something nobody expected. Without warning, a low rumble emanated from beneath their feet. The earth began to shiver. Cassie lost her balance. It seemed as if rock was raining down from the sky. The dromos walls were collapsing.

  Leroy quickly retracted his head from the stomion.

  Cassie could hear him calling to his companion. “Looks like Mother Nature is gonna finish the job for us. Come on, Daniel. We best get outta here while we still can!” The sound of footsteps sliding over gravel echoed in the tomb as the men scampered over the rock pile. The noise of their hasty retreat had barely faded before rock came crashing through the doorway, filling up the stomion completely and burying the Arkana team inside.

  When the rumbling of the earth finally stopped, the silence that followed possessed the stillness of death.

  Chapter 41 – Exit Strategy

  Stunned and shaking,
Cassie struggled to sit up. Her flashlight had rolled to the side of the chamber, the beam pointing toward the wall. She crawled on all fours to retrieve it. Swinging the light around in a wide arc, she asked, “Erik? Griffin? Are you guys all right?”

  Erik sat up, coughing from the dust blown into the chamber by fallen rock. “I’m OK,” he confirmed succinctly. “Griffin?”

  From another part of the tomb the Scrivener answered. “Miraculously, we all still seem to be alive.” He wiped a thick coating of dust from his face, retrieved his flashlight and stood up. Shining his beam toward the stomion, he revealed that it was now completely filled with rock. “Alive for the moment anyway. It would appear we’re sealed in.”

  Erik walked over to the doorway and tried pushing against the newly fallen boulders at the top. They rolled inward as a pile on the other side of the door rushed to take their place.

  Cassie fumbled in her jacket pocket for her cell phone, thinking she might be able to reach Xenia. “No good,” she said. “There’s no signal down here.” She looked around the stone chamber nervously. “How long before we run out of air?”

  Griffin’s eyes traveled around their enclosure, judging its size, calculating air volume. “Several hours, I’d say.”

  “OK, everybody stop breathing.” The girl laughed weakly. “Let’s try to conserve oxygen.”

  “If you stopped chattering, that would be a good start,” Erik snapped. He wandered around the center of the chamber, training his flashlight on the domed ceiling of the vault, studying it closely.

  Stung by the rebuke, Cassie rounded on him. “By the way, weren’t you supposed to provide security for this field mission? Great job of letting the crazy cowboy sneak up on us. Really fine work!”

  Even in the dim light, she could see Erik’s face redden. Apparently, the girl had struck a nerve. “I might have heard him coming if you two weren’t yakking all the time!”

  “Oh, so it’s all our fault?” She leaped to her feet, ready to go toe to toe when Griffin interposed himself between the combatants.

  “This isn’t helping the situation,” he objected. “We need to cooperate if we’re going to get out of this dilemma.”

  “Aren’t you the optimist,” Cassie muttered angrily as she retreated to the opposite wall of the chamber.

  Griffin sat down beside her. “We just need to calm ourselves and assess the problem rationally.”

  The two watched Erik as he stuffed his lit flashlight into his jacket pocket and raised his arms above his head. Then he began walking around the perimeter of the room, waving his hands gently from side to side.

  “How very extraordinary,” Griffin commented to Cassie.

  “Do you think he’s finally lost it?” the girl whispered doubtfully. “Or maybe he just wants us to join him in a chorus of Kumbaya.”

  “I can hear you,” Erik stated flatly. “You’re using up my air.” He stopped pacing and stood before a section of wall. Standing on his toes, he reached his arms higher and waved them side to side. “Yup, that’s it,” he commented half to himself.

  “What are you doing?” Griffin asked.

  “Checking for air flow. You think you could give me a hand here, stretch?”

  Griffin was several inches taller than Erik. He hastened over to the other side of the room and mimicked the Security Coordinator’s movements. He waved his arms overhead and then stopped at a particular spot on the wall. “Yes, I believe you’re right. I feel it.”

  Cassie stood up impatiently and walked over to join the other two. “What is it?” she demanded.

  Griffin smiled at her. “A draft.”

  “And that means what exactly?”

  ‘It means a way out,” Erik explained laconically.

  “How do you figure?” The girl wasn’t convinced that a slight breeze was anything to cheer about.

  Griffin explained. “This dromos is approximately twenty feet in diameter and about twenty feet high at the apex of the dome. Judging from what we observed on the outside, the top half of the dome has been exposed to the elements for quite some time. For centuries, possibly a millennium, moisture has worked its way into the mortar, freezing and melting and separating the clay from the surrounding stones.”

  “Plus we just had that nice little earthquake,” Erik added. “Look at these cracks.” He trained his flashlight at a spot above his head. Cassie could see a thin fracture running up toward the ceiling.

  “Precisely,” Griffin confirmed. “The dome is weakened. No doubt the mortar between the stones has eroded completely at the spot where we felt that draft. We should be able to remove enough of the rock for us to squeeze out.”

  “Without bringing the whole roof down on top of us?” Cassie shuddered at the thought.

  “It’s fairly unlikely since this is a corbelled vault,” the Scrivener commented. “The stones overlap one another to add structural stability.”

  Erik shrugged nonchalantly. “Even if they all fell, at least it would be a quicker death than suffocating.”

  “You can’t be serious!” she exclaimed.

  He smiled sardonically. “Do you have a better idea?”

  “No,” she admitted weakly.

  “Then why don’t you stop complaining and help us? Over there.” He pointed at the small boulders blocking the stomion entrance. “We need to pile up enough of those against the wall so we can climb to loosen the rocks where the ceiling is weakest.”

  “Yes,” Griffin joined in. “The part of the dome that is above ground is about ten feet above the floor. It’s no good for us to loosen stones at eye level. We’d still be buried.”

  “We’ll have to work fast,” Erik advised. “I don’t know how long the batteries in these flashlights will hold out.”

  The thought of being trapped underground in complete darkness unnerved Cassie. She stopped complaining and sped to the task.

  After countless trips to the stomion rock pile, the trio managed to build a sturdy enough platform to reach the spot on the wall where a draft seemed to be flowing into the chamber.

  “You’d think with all of the rocks we just pulled out of the doorway, we might have opened a way out,” Cassie observed ruefully.

  “I expect the entire dromos has been completely filled in,” Griffin said glumly. “No hope of escaping that way. But cheer up,” he added optimistically. “At least we won’t have to worry about running out of air.”

  “You know, your perkiness can get kind of annoying. Can’t you just let me wallow in my misery for a while?”

  “Sorry,” he said sheepishly.

  Erik was rummaging around in his backpack again. He withdrew an army knife. Looking up at his companions, he asked, “Either of you have something sharp we can use to scrape away the loose mortar?”

  Cassie reached into a pocket and produced a metal nail file. “Will this work?”

  The Security Coordinator nodded approvingly. “It can’t hurt. How about you, Griffin?”

  After thoroughly checking his pockets, Griffin reluctantly held forth a gold ball point pen. “This is all I have with me.”

  “Good enough,” Erik said.

  “That was my favorite pen,” Griffin commented sadly.

  Since the rock pile was only wide enough to support one person, they took turns climbing up to gouge and dig at the mortar. After what seemed like hours, one of the stones was loose enough to be dislodged.

  “Stand back,” Erik cautioned. “The earthquake could have destabilized the entire dome. I don’t know how many others will fall.”

  His companions moved to the opposite wall of the chamber. They nervously shone their flashlights on the fracture in the ceiling as he carefully worked the rock free.

  The second he pulled it from the curve of the dome, three other stones surrounding it fell out of place and dropped to the rock pile at his feet. He waited tensely to see if any more would tumble loose. “So far, so good,” he murmured.

  With the delicacy of a brain surgeon, Erik freed two mor
e corbelled stones without disturbing the rest of the dome. Eventually he had opened up a space wide enough to allow a single body to squeeze through.

  “You did it!” Cassie exclaimed in surprise.

  “We did it!” Griffin corrected, elated nonetheless.

  Erik gave a half smile. “You guys ready to go topside?”

  “Yes, please,” the Scrivener requested politely.

  Cassie nodded in a flood of mute relief. They weren’t going to die after all. At least not today. With a shock she noticed a grayish light coming from the gap in the ceiling.

  “Is that…” she paused.

  “Daybreak,” Erik completed the sentence.

  “How long were we down here?” she asked in wonder.

  “Too long,” he replied concisely. “Better let me go first.”

  “Chivalrous to the end.” Cassie’s voice dripped with sarcasm.

  Erik gave her an exasperated look. “In case our friends are still hanging around outside.”

  “Oh.”

  He reached into his backpack for the thousandth time and pulled out a hand gun.

  “What the…” Cassie trailed off in shock. “You had a gun all this time and you didn’t try to use it?”

  “In case you forgot, the cowboy had you in a stranglehold with a pistol to your head. If I’d made a move, he would have splattered your brains all over the countryside.”

  “Lovely image,” interjected Griffin.

  “Besides, we had our hands in the air. If’ I’d dived into my backpack to reach for a weapon, same result. Your brains splattered all over the countryside.”

  “Well, why weren’t you carrying it someplace more useful?” Cassie challenged. “Like a holster or something.”

  “Too obvious,” Erik countered.

  “Gee, it’s nice to know that if you actually needed to use a weapon, it would be conveniently out of reach.”

  Erik climbed down off the rock pile and glowered at Cassie. “You can make this about me all you want but you’re just covering up for the fact that you’re the weak link in this operation!”

  “What?” Cassie gasped.

 

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