The Lost Ark

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Authors: J.R. Rain

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THE

LOST ARK

by

J.R. RAIN

Acclaim for J.R. Rain:

“Be prepared to lose sleep!”


James Rollins
, international bestselling author of
The Doomsday Key
on J.R. Rain’s
The Lost Ark

“I love this!”


Piers Anthony
, bestselling author of
Xanth
on J.R. Rain’s
Moon Dance


Dark Horse
is the best book I’ve read in a long time!”


Gemma Halliday
, Rita and Golden Spur award-winning author of
Scandal Sheet


Moon Dance
is absolutely brilliant!”


Lisa Tenzin-Dolma
, author of
Understanding the Planetary Myths

“Powerful stuff!”


Aiden James
, author of
Deadly Night
on J.R. Rain’s
An Uncommon Quest


Moon Dance
is a must read. If you like Janet Evanovich’s Stephanie Plum, bounty hunter, be prepared to love J.R. Rain’s Samantha Moon, vampire private investigator.”


Eve Paludan
, author of
Letters from David

“Impossible to put down. J.R. Rain’s
Moon Dance
is a fabulous urban fantasy replete with multifarious and unusual characters, a perfectly synchronized plot, vibrant dialogue and sterling witticism all wrapped in a voice that is as beautiful as it is rich and vividly intense as it is relaxed.”


April Vine
, author of The Midnight Rose

OTHER BOOKS BY J.R. RAIN

VAMPIRE FOR HIRE

Moon Dance

Vampire Moon

American Vampire (coming soon)

Vampire Empire (coming soon)

THE JIM KNIGHTHORSE SERIES

Dark Horse

The Mummy Case

Hail Mary (coming soon)

THE RETURN OF ARTHUR

An Uncommon Quest (coming soon)

The Merlin Game (coming soon)

The Lost Ark

The Body Departed

Elvis Has
Not
Left the Building

WITH SCOTT NICHOLSON

Cursed!

Cursed Again! (coming soon)

WITH PIERS ANTHONY

Aladdin Rising (coming soon)

WITH AIDEN JAMES

Plague of Coins (coming soon)

WITH RANDOLPH NEIL

The Forgotten Valley (coming soon)

SHORT STORIES

The Bleeder and Other Stories

Teeth and Other Stories

Vampire Nights and Other Stories

The Santa Call and Other Christmas Stories (coming soon)

SCREENPLAYS

Judas Silver

Lost Eden

THE SPINOZA NOVELLAS

The Vampire With the Dragon Tattoo

The Witch Who Played With Fire (coming soon)

The Zombie Who Stepped on a Hornet’s Nest (coming soon)

COLLECTIONS

Rain Dance: Three Novels

Rainy Nights: Three Novels

Black Rain: Dark Tales

Knighthorse: Two Novels

Vampire for Hire: Two Novels

Dark Quests: Two Screenplays

ANTHOLOGIES

Vampires, Zombies and Ghosts, Oh My!

(edited by Eve Paludan)

THE LOST ARK

Published by J.R. Rain at Amazon Kindle

Copyright © 2010 by J.R. Rain

Cover design by: Gemma at [email protected]

Amazon Kindle Edition, License Notes

This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to Amazon Kindle and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

Dedication

To my father. Thanks for everything, Pops.

Acknowledgment

Once again, a special thank you to Sandy!

The Lost Ark

Chapter One

The dream is always the same.

It’s a warm day with the sun hot on the back of my neck as I set up the tripod on the steep mountainside. The sky is clear and Mount Ararat, fabled resting spot of Noah’s Ark, sits in silent repose, a dormant volcano that dominates the landscape of Eastern Turkey. A small wind works its way over the rocky surface, bringing with it the scent of wildflowers, ancient dust and something else.

Death.

The great mountain shakes suddenly, violently. I look up, my heart racing. A single word instantly crosses my thoughts:
landslide.
And it’s nearby.

Immediately, I snap my head around to where Liz, my fiancé, has disappeared around a bend in the trail to, as she puts it, “go potty.” We’d been engaged for the past two years, traveled the world together on assignment with the
National Geographic
, and still she can’t pee in front of me. Cute, right? Endearing, right?

Except now I didn’t find it so cute and endearing. Now we were separated, and something bad was happening, and it was happening
now.

And it was happening directly above her.

I’m moving. I snatch my tripod and camera, hastily shoving both into my lightweight field backpack.

The mountain shakes harder.

Angrier
.

“Liz!” I shout, but my voice is instantly swallowed by the deep, primeval rumblings of the legendary mountain.

The outcropping of boulders she had chosen to pee behind is fifty yards to my left, along the face of a steep slope. Above, the mountain continues to shake. Dust drifts lazily across the upper slopes. Something is coming, something very bad, and it’s coming down on top of her.

I see to my horror that there is no easy trail to the outcropping. Indeed, the path is paved in loose shale, akin to walking on bowling balls. Earlier I had watched as she carefully picked her way over the shifting rock, arms outstretched, balancing herself with amazing cat-like grace, marveling once again at the extremes she was taking for privacy. But, alas, I respected her need for a peaceful pee, although I didn’t completely understand it. Indeed, I loved her for all her quirks.

I had never been in love before. Not true love. I was never around long enough for anything to develop, at least anything substantial. I was a photojournalist. The world was my home.

But this was different. Liz was different. We had met in Nepal three years earlier, and the chemistry between us was frightening. She was all I could have imagined—and often more than I dared imagine. Hell, I don’t think we left the hotel for a week. It was love and I knew it and I was terrified to leave this one behind, as I had left so many others. So I asked her to join me, to work together as a team. To my utter shock, she had agreed, and now I was traveling the world with the girl of my dreams. Part daredevil and part Mother Teresa, she was unstoppable in her pursuit of justice and equality for those less fortunate. We had been jailed twice for her beliefs, and once sentenced to hang. But that’s another story. She was the best photojournalist I knew, stronger than any man and heartier than even me. And, of course, sexy as hell.

Ultimately, she made me happy. Very happy.

* * *

From high above, beyond a rocky cornice to the east, I can see movement. Big movement. Rock and dirt and debris are in motion. Moving slowly at first, but picking up steam, gaining momentum. Massive boulders are soon mixed into the fray.

By my judgment, the landslide is directly over Liz.

And I am moving myself, clawing my way over the loose rocks. Mount Ararat, at least this lower section, is comprised almost entirely of loose shale, which made footing treacherous. At the moment, I could give a damn about my footing. I use my hands to help claw my way forward. I slide and fall often, slashing my knees and palms on the sharp-edged rocks. Whole sections of shale slip out from under me as if they were banana peels. I fall hard, painfully and often, but still I continue.

The mountain shakes harder. From behind me, emerging from his tent, I can hear my Kurdish guide shouting at me, warning me to stay away.

To hell with that. The churning wall of rock has now picked up considerable steam. Anything could have set this rock slide in motion. We are just below the snow line, and so there are some pastures above and around us. A wandering sheep, shepherded by local Turks, could have set off this raging, churning mass of earth. The mountain is called
Angri Dagh
for a reason. The Mountain of Pain.

I continue my mad scrabble forward. My knees are badly cut, pouring blood into my boots. My palms are torn and slick with the stuff.

The outcropping of boulders is just ahead. Thirty feet. I can hear my own breathing rattling in my head and lungs, my desperate gasps mixed with the ominous rumblings around and above me.

Errant loose pebbles shower down on me. I am at the fringes of the coming rockslide. Now larger rocks pelt me, cracking my jaw and skull.

Still, I keep moving forward. Falling, crying out to her.

And there she is. Appearing from around the corner, hastily pulling at her loose drawstrings. She stops and looks up. I do, too. A wall of rock, a tidal wave of earthen fury, rears above her like a living nightmare.

“Sam!” There is fear in her voice. We have traveled through the world’s most dangerous places, we have endured tyrants and terrorists, and this is the first time I hear such fear.

And it will be the last.

I move forward, faster, falling hard. A churning cloud of dirt and debris fills the air. Liz lunges forward, moving as fast as she can—

Just as a speeding wall of rocks
slams
into her, hurling her fifty yards into the air. She disappears in a hail of merciless churning debris that continues down the mountainside.

She was there one moment and gone the next. I am left standing in shock, gasping and weeping and bleeding.

It would take me three days to find her mangled body.

And when I do, true to mountain climbing tradition, I bury my sweet girl high on the desolate slopes of Mount Ararat, deep in a secluded mountain cave....

* * *

Now, with the distant rumblings of a thunderstorm approaching, I sit up in bed, gasping, hearing her calling my name over and over again, as if she were just outside my window. The cracking thunder sounds ominously similar—too similar—to the devastating rockslide.

At least, the rockslide in my memory.

Dreams are a funny thing. Often they only give you a
feel
for a memory. Half memories, perhaps. The reality was, Liz had disappeared for many days. She had indeed wandered off to use the bathroom...and that was the last time I had seen her alive. I found her three days later, broken and battered at the bottom of a ravine. She had indeed been a victim of a rock slide. Only, I had not witnessed it. She had died completely alone, and there hadn’t been a damn thing I could do about it.

I take a deep breath and my fumbling hand finds my lighter and a pack of cigarettes on the nightstand. I light up and move over to my window, where I sit on the ledge and stare down at the empty street below. The first drops of rain splatter against the glass as I exhale a plume of billowing gray smoke.

* * *

I must have fallen asleep, because Liz is suddenly standing just outside my two-story window, which overlooks a battered industrial street. Liz has no business standing out there in the middle of the night, in the rain. Besides, she has been dead for three years, right?

Another crazy dream.

I dash out my cigarette, mashing it against the window frame. Liz is standing there on the curb in her cargo pants with its too-many pockets, pockets she always stuffed with her essentials. Liz hates purses. Even from here, through the slanting rain and darkness, through the window and my tears, I could see her pant pockets bulging with everything from basic cosmetics to snack food. Once, I had even seen her place an injured lizard into such a pocket.

“Come out of the rain,” I say. As I speak, I try desperately to open the bedroom window, but it won’t budge. Strange, it has never been stuck before. I frantically work at the lock, growing increasingly desperate and furious. I am nearly ready to drive an elbow through the glass, to get to Liz, when she speaks to me from the street. Her voice rising up through wind and rain and a closed window supernaturally easily.

“It’s okay, Sam,” she says hauntingly, her voice sweet and raspy. “Leave the window be. I don’t mind standing out in the rain. I like the rain, remember?”

“Yes, I remember,” I say frantically, thrilled that I am talking to her again, but still frustrated to no end by the stubborn window. “But if I can get this window open you can come inside and stay dry and I can protect you and keep you warm.”

“Forget the window, Sam.”

I try the lock again.

“I said forget the window. You can be so stubborn. Please, Sam. We need to talk.”

At her insistence, I let the window issue drop and settle for pressing my hot forehead against the cold glass.

“Were you just smoking, Sam?”

“Yes.”

“When did you start smoking?”

“When you died.”

“You’ve been drinking, too,” she says.

“Yes.”

“Too much, I think,” she says.

“Yes, probably. I miss you. I can’t help it. I miss you so much. The drinking...it helps a little. I’m sorry.”

She lets the issue go. “So what are you doing with yourself these days, Sam?”

I shrug, suddenly ashamed. “Not much, really. I run a small bar here in town, and lead the occasional expedition. I’m a certified Ararat guide.”

The rain continues down. The image of my fiancé wavers briefly behind the glass. Lightning flashes directly overhead, illuminating the street. And when it does, she briefly disappears. But now she is back, to my great relief.

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