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Gods of Atlantis

Page 4

by David J. L. Gibbins


  To Jack, the golden disc represented everything that was fascinating about this place: the symbol of a people on the cusp of the greatest revolution in human history, a symbol that al owed them to look forward to a new world and yet also back to the time of their ancestors. He wanted to feel what they had felt, to see the world as they had seen it, to look far back in prehistory to the time before the memory of the deep past had become clouded by the foundation myths that fol owed the first cities and the first dynasties; and he wanted to look forward to where these people were going, to understand what motivated them as they poured al their energy into creating this place and then fleeing the oncoming flood. If he could see those things, then he would have found the greatest treasure of this place. He wanted to discover their past. Above al , he wanted to find out about their beliefs, how these people saw their existence at the dawn of modern religion. He wanted to find the gods of Atlantis.

  Costas tapped Jack’s helmet. ‘You happy?’

  Jack drew his eyes away from the symbol and looked at Costas, his form now visible as the sediment cleared. Beneath a tattered boiler suit fil ed with tools, Costas was completely encased in white, like an astronaut. His helmet bore the anchor logo of the International Maritime University, partly obscured by a laser range-finding device that he had spirited up in the engineering department, one of numerous gadgets that always festooned him when he went diving. Underneath the white outer layer they were both wearing e-suits, Kevlar-reinforced drysuits with integrated buoyancy systems, back-mounted oxygen rebreathers and dive computers with readouts visible inside their helmets. But the famed environmental resilience of the e-suit did not extend to diving in near-boiling water inside an active volcano, so they were entirely encased in thermal protection developed at IMU from the latest NASA and Russian spacesuit technology. Jack had to remind himself that they were not inside some lunar simulator, but under the Black Sea off Turkey, more than thirty metres below a solidified lava flow and heading for a place that made outer space seem distinctly congenial by comparison.

  He tapped the intercom on the side of his helmet.

  ‘Happier now I know we’re on target. Lucky that pil ar wasn’t crunched by the borer.’

  ‘I was driving it, remember? Rule number one.

  Never trash the archaeology.’

  ‘You mean you got lucky.’

  ‘We used the 3-D terrain map of the site from five years ago, and put the borer dead on the entrance to the chamber leading to the holy of holies.’

  ‘I’ve lost al sense of direction. My compass has gone haywire.’

  ‘Did Lanowski mention the magnetic anomaly?’

  Costas said. ‘We noticed it yesterday when we did a magnetometer run over the site. The readouts showed some pretty spectacular spikes, centring over the likely location of the magma chamber. The Turkish geological survey guy with us said he’d recorded a similar anomaly at several other places along the North Anatolian Fault, though nowhere as spectacular as here. You get anomalies like this at a few other places in the world where an upsurge in magma has a localized effect on the earth’s magnetic field – along the Puerto Rico Fault in the north Caribbean, for instance. The guy said there’s a lot of variation in how magnetic materials react to these field changes, but they’d noticed that meteoritic iron is the most dramatic. Several samples they had from one meteorite impact site in Siberia felt twice as heavy as normal at one place along the North Anatolian Fault where they tried them, and he reckoned it might even be more marked here.’

  ‘Sounds like fodder for the fringe theorists,’ Jack replied. ‘The people who stil think Atlantis could only have been built by extraterrestrials. The truth is, everything we saw here is paral eled elsewhere in early sites, only on a lesser scale. And we only have to look at the Egyptian pyramids or Stonehenge to see that doing things on a colossal scale was never as much of a problem in the past as the fringe theorists seem to believe.’

  ‘Man makes himself,’ Costas said. ‘Isn’t that the famous Jack Howard byline? Everything he builds, and al his ideas, come from within.’

  ‘And then he sometimes unmakes himself,’ Jack said. ‘That’s what I real y want to find out here, whether these people were the first to take hold of their own destiny and see the potential within themselves, and the danger. That’s what seems to have fascinated Plato about Atlantis when he used the story to warn the Athenians about hubris, about flying too close to the sun. Cal it the Icarus factor.’

  ‘My objective is to see whether little baby ROV wil work inside a volcano,’ Costas said cheerful y, patting his oversized torso. The Michelin Man effect of the suit was compounded by the cargo Costas was carrying: a miniature remote-operated vehicle the size of a toaster, which he had zipped up inside a protective bag on his chest, like a kangaroo with a pouch. Costas was one of the world’s leading submersibles experts, and his passion was miniaturized ROVs, the focus of endless happy evenings tinkering in the engineering complex of IMU’s main campus at Cornwal in south-west England.

  ‘So how’s Little Joey doing?’ Jack enquired.

  Costas held up the tethering cable that hooked the ROV’s battery to the submersible at the entrance to the tunnel, and checked a monitor on his wrist. ‘Only a few minutes more now.’

  Jack turned again and stared at the golden disc.

  ‘Odd that we didn’t notice this pil ar the last time we came this way.’

  ‘Jack, we were a little preoccupied, remember?

  You were having a gun battle, and I was about to be executed by a Kazakh warlord who was going to hurl me into the magma chamber.’

  Jack stared ahead pensively, casting his mind back five years. There had been a dark side to the discovery of Atlantis, and a cost to himself personal y that had preyed on him since returning here. Five years ago they had made another discovery, one that had turned the archaeological hunt into a modern-day race against time. At the end of the Cold War, a renegade Russian captain had taken his submarine ful of nuclear warheads towards a secret rendezvous with a buyer in the Republic of Georgia, but had struck the uncharted submerged flank of the volcano and sunk. When Jack and his IMU team had stumbled across the submarine, the middleman had returned with a vengeance, seeking his merchandise. In the ensuing battle, the original Seaquest had been sunk and they had lost one of their team, Peter Howe, the IMU security chief. Peter had been a close friend of Jack’s from their schooldays and time in British Special Forces, and had been persuaded to join IMU

  when Jack had set it up soon after completing his doctorate at Cambridge. In the five years since his death, Jack had been driven by a feeling of responsibility to the dream he had shared with the original few – with Peter, with Costas, with Maurice Hiebermeyer – a dream that had seen them chart discoveries far more extraordinary than they could ever have imagined when he had founded IMU. But there was stil a shadow over this place: the discovery of Atlantis had come at a price, one he never wanted to have to pay again.

  Costas peered at him. ‘We could cal it a day, Jack.

  This is going to be a dangerous dive, and we’ve got a spectacular result now with that disc. It’s hardly as if IMU activities have been out of the spotlight for the last five years, but when you decide the time is right to reveal this to the media, it’l boost public interest big time. And we’re not even supposed to be here at al .

  It’s your cal .’

  Jack took a deep breath. Costas was right. They had returned to Atlantis on a wing and a prayer. Two weeks ago they had been in Seaquest II off the ancient site of Troy in the northern Aegean Sea, excavating the remains of a gal ey from the time of the Trojan Wars in the late second mil ennium BC. At the citadel of Troy itself, his oldest friend Maurice Hiebermeyer and their Cambridge professor James Dil en had been in charge of clearing an extraordinary underground chamber they had found beneath the ancient palace, searching for clues to support Jack’s theory that Troy had been founded at the time of the exodus from Atlantis four thousand years before
the Trojan War; that it was a staging post for the diaspora of people who had taken their language and knowledge of farming south and west across the Mediterranean at the dawn of civilization.

  At Troy, his mind had never been far from Atlantis, only a few hundred miles east of the Bosporus in the Black Sea, but the chances of a return had seemed remote. Then, two weeks ago, the Turkish and Georgian surveil ance team who monitored the Atlantis site had requested IMU assistance in boring a sample shaft into the volcano. Several months previously they had recorded a fal -off in seismic activity, and for the first time in five years a limited intervention for geological purposes seemed feasible, though it was stil deemed too risky for diving. The main concern was to understand better the seismic characteristics of the North Anatolian Fault, the huge rent in the earth’s crust that ran west under the southern shore of the Black Sea to the Bosporus Strait, threatening Istanbul. Jack had seized on the chance and offered Seaquest II, which had the right sub-sea boring equipment and could sail immediately from the excavation site at Troy. Costas and their bril iant if quirky engineering genius Jacob Lanowski had spent several sleepless nights downloading al the survey data from five years ago so that they could position the boring tunnel exactly where Jack wanted it to go, towards an unexplored entranceway he had seen five years before; at the same time, the priority remained to get the tunnel into the upper magma chamber to satisfy the geologists’ needs.

  After heated discussion with Seaquest II’s captain, Scott Macalister, Jack had won the day, and Macalister had agreed to al ow a dive, on the condition that Jack himself arrived from Troy only the day before and then left as soon as he had off-gassed enough nitrogen to al ow him to fly. He and Costas had departed that morning in the submersible under cover of darkness, from Seaquest II’s internal docking bay. It was a covert mission in every sense of the word, and went against many of Jack’s better instincts. The international protocol fol owing the eruption five years before had been to leave the site undisturbed until improved technology and seismic conditions al owed further research, with IMU acting as the overseeing agency and the Turkish navy enforcing a no-dive zone to deter looters. The site was beyond the twelve-mile territorial limit and the protocol was therefore not protected by law, but Jack knew that any attempt openly to dive at the site would upset the agreement and might make the Turkish authorities think twice about continuing IMU’s permit to excavate at Troy. He had weighed it al in his mind over and over again, but he knew that the chance to be where they were now might never come up again in his lifetime. Anything they found would have to be reported as incidental to supposed emergency repair work on the boring equipment, and his own presence in the tunnel – which could only have been for archaeological exploration – kept strictly hushed up.

  He turned to Costas. ‘You know my answer. I’ve taken too much of a risk with IMU’s reputation getting here to bail out now. And I want more than gold. I want to find the inner sanctum of Atlantis.’

  ‘You remember what Macalister said?’

  Jack recal ed Macalister’s briefing just before they set out in the submersible. Although Jack was archaeological director of IMU, Macalister as captain o f Seaquest II had the final say over anything that might affect the safety of his ship and crew, and one of those concerns was holding position over an active sub-sea volcano that might burst forth at any moment.

  ‘He said don’t push this place. We’ve seen what it can do.’

  ‘You remember what else he said?’

  ‘Just the usual.’

  ‘He said no frigging about. Do not let Jack Howard see something else that intrigues him and disappear off alone down some tunnel. He knows you pretty wel , Jack. We go in, we take pictures, we come out. Ful stop. He told me if needs be, tie a rope to your ankle.’

  ‘And you said?’

  ‘I said nobody ties Jack Howard down. I said I trusted you.’

  Jack grinned. ‘Trusted me to do what?’

  ‘Trusted you to look after me, to look after yourself and to think of your daughter Rebecca and how much she needs her dad, alive and wel . Remember what happened six months ago.’

  Jack was silent. He remembered al too wel .

  During their search for the treasures of Troy, Rebecca had been kidnapped, the worst forty-eight hours of Jack’s life. It had ended in an explosion of violence that had frightened even Jack, showing him how far he would go to protect his own. It was stil unresolved business, with the mastermind behind the kidnapping stil at large, but the important thing was that Rebecca was safe and being watched over by the best security people available. She had needed al her friends at IMU afterwards, but she was young enough to feel that it was also a huge adventure, and she had shown a toughness and resolve that proved to Jack that she had inherited a certain ability to look after herself.

  ‘It was hard enough keeping her from joining us.

  She’d have been halfway down the tunnel ahead of us by now.’

  ‘Like father, like daughter.’

  ‘Anyway, what about Costas Kazantzakis, always stuck down a hole in the seabed fiddling with some malfunctioning gadget, oblivious to the world around him?’

  ‘My gadgets don’t malfunction. And I don’t fiddle.

  Anyway, when have I ever let you down?’

  Jack grinned through his visor at Costas. ‘Never.’

  He lifted his right hand with the palm out, and Costas did the same, pushing them together. ‘Buddies.’

  ‘Right on.’

  Jack turned back to the stone pil ar, now clear of silt, with the golden disc reflecting luminously in his headlamp. He flipped up the protective cover of the pod on the front of his helmet and activated the control board on his right wrist, using the pod to take a series of flash photographs and then a video sequence panning up the pil ar and focusing on the symbol on the disc. He closed down the visor and pushed himself off from the pil ar, hanging in the water alongside Costas in the middle of the tunnel. Costas patted his tool belt, an impressive array of wrenches, jacks and other gear that went with him everywhere, strapped and Velcroed to the tattered grey remains of a boiler suit he wore over his spacesuit, and then gestured at the golden symbol. ‘You don’t want to grab it and bag it?’

  Jack shook his head. ‘I think that thing belongs here.’

  ‘You getting superstitious?’

  Jack shook his head again. ‘You remember the golden disc from the shipwreck five years ago, how we realized it was a key to getting into the door in the rock face? It’s just a hunch, but this thing looks like some kind of opening device too. If we can make an obverse of that symbol and use it as a key, then that disc might turn and activate something else. A job for the IMU engineering lab.’

  ‘I’m on to it. We’l need a laser scan of that symbol.’

  Jack tapped the pod on the front of his helmet. ‘Just done it.’

  ‘One of my malfunctioning gadgets?’

  Jack grinned. ‘Okay. My apologies. It’s just something for the future. We’d need another window in the seismic profile for Macalister to let us down here again.’

  ‘We’ve waited five years for this window. We can wait again.’

  Jack stared ahead. For once he felt more comfortable in a tunnel than in the open sea. Years before, he had nearly lost his life diving in a mineshaft when his cylinder valve had jammed, and had only been saved by Costas buddy-breathing with him to the surface. Since then they had dived together thousands of times, but whenever they were in confined spaces that incident was always lurking just beneath his consciousness, forcing him to keep focused. Yet here the thought of the sea outside was more daunting. Below about a hundred metres depth, the Black Sea was virtual y devoid of life, a toxic soup of hydrogen sulphide caused by decaying organic matter with not enough oxygen present. Thousands of metres beyond that, in the abyssal depths, the water was like brine, a legacy of the time before the Atlantis flood when the Black Sea had been cut off from the Mediterranean and had nearly dried up, leaving salt
lakes in the deepest reaches. Jack had seen photographs taken by Russian deep-sea probes of ancient wrecks with human bodies encased in salt, sepulchral forms stil chained to gal eys half swal owed in the brine. And he remembered his escape from the wreck of the first Seaquest five years ago, his desperate climb in the ADSA advanced deep-sea anthropod pressure suit through a bed of volcanic vents spewing plumes of smoke into the darkness. He had sworn he would never dive there again, and he had meant it. He remembered what Macalister had said. Don’t push this place.

  He glanced at the digital time readout inside his helmet, and looked at the tether behind Costas. In a few moments they would be ready. He stayed calm, keeping his breathing measured, checking his instruments one last time.

  ‘I know what you’re thinking,’ Costas said. ‘You’re thinking there’s nothing to worry about. You’ve got the best possible equipment, and the best possible buddy.’

  ‘Not that. I’m imagining a tropical island, snorkel ing on a reef, then cocktails on the shore.’

  ‘And women?’

  ‘Al you want. Of course, I’m spoken for.’

  ‘Katya, or Maria?’

  Jack coughed. ‘Tough cal . So I was thinking of taking Rebecca, for her school holiday. Last chance for some father–daughter bonding. She’l be having boyfriends soon.’

  ‘Jeremy’s been seeing her, you know.’

  Jack turned to Costas. ‘Jeremy Haverstock? You must be kidding. You must be joking.’

  ‘He’s a good guy. The best. Helped me a lot with building Little Joey.’ He patted the bulge over his stomach again. ‘Anyway, we al thought you knew.’

 

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