Trifariam, The Lost Codex (2012) (27 page)

BOOK: Trifariam, The Lost Codex (2012)
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He saw something gold shining from one of his fingers. It was a golden wedding ring.

James tried to catch the attention of the guide as he walked away. “Excuse me, but you’re very tall and remind me of a good friend of mine. Have you ever played basketball?”

The guide didn’t even crack a smile. He seemed to be in a bad mood.

“Are you the guide in charge of taking the Asian group to meditate in the Great Pyramid?”

“What do you want?”

“The boss… umm… has sent me to replace you. I think you have the day off.”

“What?!” he exclaimed, turning towards him and studying him closely. He could smell his fear and uncertainty. “I’m sorry, but this group gives good tips. I’m taking them.”

“But… the boss told me that you have the day off to spend with your wife.”

“My wife…?” he asked, taken aback. “Has she given birth?”

Those words came like a lifebelt to cling onto desperately, it was his last hope. The plan might well work, he just needed to be a little craftier and the giant would end up toppling. He continued. “Of course! I thought you already knew! The boss has told me that he would even fire you himself if you were crazy enough to come to work! You have to go straight to the hospital. When you get there, ask for your wife and you’ll be able to see your baby.”

The giant beamed with joy. He hugged James with excessive strength, like a bear squeezes its prey. A crunch rang out down his spine as if it had been broken from the first to the last vertebra. Then he looked at him, his eyes red on the verge breaking into tears. He handed James a piece of paper which contained permission for the group, then he ran off in search of a taxi.

When that beast finds out I lied to him… I’m finished! I have to find it as soon as I can,
thought James.

The inside of the site was empty, it was probably a requirement enforced by the Asians themselves so that nobody interfered in their meditation. Logically, they would have had to pay a huge amount of money.

The group, now guided by James, walked over to the entrance to the Great Pyramid after showing the security guard the document signed by the General Secretary of the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities. He didn’t phone to confirm the visit - he seemed to know what the situation was.

They went up to the fifth row of stones. James went in first but clearly gestured for the rest of the group to wait. It seemed as though he was checking that the site was ready, but really he was looking for the cable to the surveillance cameras.

After a few minutes, the crowd was beginning to get restless and even one of the security guards decided to see why they still hadn’t gone in. His voice rang out through the tunnel, which in the case was parallel to the ground, and it startled James at the very moment he had found one of the cables. The guard was close, but he still couldn’t see him clearly. He took the virus transmitter out of his bag and inserted the cable into the pincer, pressed the button and watched it tightly grip the wire, tearing off part of it and inserting its sharp prongs.

The nanorobots’ mission had begun.

“What are you doing in there?” asked the guard as he caught up to him.

James, who by now was standing up, started to walk towards him with a serious face. He tried to distract attention from the place where he had left the transmitter. “You’re a disgrace! Perhaps you know how important those people waiting for us are? They’ve paid millions for everything to be perfect and I don’t see any security precautions which would make at least make their visit safer. Unacceptable!” he shouted.

“But sir - ”

“Don’t try to convince me! There are very influential people in that group: politicians, business leaders, engineers, even people with royal connections. It is disgraceful that not even a safer handrail has been fitted. I’m considering reporting you immediately to the relevant authorities, have no doubt about it.”

“But… we - ”

“Enough! Go up immediately and tell them they can start coming in.”

The guard was completely confused. He ran up to the exit and gestured for them to go down, while James wiped away the sweat from his forehead with a cloth. He was bursting with adrenaline; he had really been sensational and thought on his feet.

The tourists entered the Great Pyramid and made their way along the horizontal shaft, negotiating their way around the difference in floor level. James was waiting for them at the end, just at the shaft which led up to the Grand Gallery.

The group remained quiet, nobody uttered a word and, naturally, there weren’t any flashes from digital cameras. When they entered the Grand Gallery, one or two softly ran their fingers over the walls, but the majority walked on with their hands clasped together near their stomachs and their heads slightly bowed. They seemed to be getting ready to start their spell of meditation.

James stood to one side when they entered the King’s Chamber. The group began to take out their mats and place them down all over the room, with practically the same distance between each. They adopted the typical asana posture from yoga, sitting on the floor with their legs crossed and hands resting on their knees. James followed their lead and did exactly the same.

Silence fell.

Outside the pyramid, Anthony was working on his laptop at top speed. The virus had been a complete success and although the position of the transmitter wasn’t ideal, the signal came through perfectly and the nanorobots had done away with the site surveillance and PA systems. Taking advantage of the fact that the group were meditating in the room, along with James, he filmed about a minute-long video of what was happening. He ran it through a powerful computer program which replicated the recording an infinite number of times, in order to put them all together and create a long video of around six hours’ duration. Next there was a blackout in the control room which lasted for one-thousandth of a second and was invisible to the human eye. This allowed Anthony to run the film he had created.

The same was done with absolutely every other camera situated inside the pyramid, although in this case the job was less laborious. It was enough to capture a frame of what was happening in each chamber before relaying it to the computers in the control room. Nobody would be aware that they were looking at a photograph rather than the real film.

Eventually a faint whistling was heard in the room, inaudible to the group of tourists who by then were already in another world. That was the signal. Nobody even noticed when James stealthily rose to his feet and tiptoed around those who were scattered about the room.

Everything had better turn out right, for their sake,
he thought, terrified.

Although his three friends had complete control of the whole video surveillance circuit, along with the lighting and communication systems in the pyramid, he had a feeling of deep anguish as he proceeded alone through those long tunnels. He walked through the Grand Gallery almost without blinking, petrified in case some guard could spring up at any moment, giving him the shock of his life. He observed how the lights eerily switched on and off, in sync with his steps. The cause behind such a phenomenon was Anthony, who was watching his every move via the laptop and was guiding him by lighting up the path. However, he was careful to switch off the lights after James had passed by, in order to avoid arousing suspicion. He passed through the tunnel which led to the Queen’s Chamber. The smell was completely different from that on his last visit, it was even damper still. The sense of isolation inside had probably made his senses more acute, to the point where he paid attention to all those insignificant things that had passed him by before.

The Queen’s Chamber lit up just as James entered the doorway. The room, shadowy and gloomy, made him much more uneasy than the thought of being in an old alleyway in the most dangerous part of the United States at the dead of night.

James’ heart almost stopped when he saw something moving, slinking from one side of the wall to another. He turned round sharply, over and over, in every which way, trying to work out what it was. He would run away if necessary. To cap it all, he heard a voice from the afterlife ring out behind him, making every last hair on his body stand on end. He couldn’t hold back the scream which escaped from his mouth.

“It’s your shadow, James. Don’t be such a baby.”

He instantly recognized the voice as that of his dear friend Richard, speaking to him through one of the speakers installed in the chamber. For a moment, he wanted to swap places with him so he could feel how the darkness and loneliness of the pyramid could make you lose even your sense of judgment.

He took the robot out of his backpack and went about setting it up right in front of one of the security cameras, under the remote supervision of Anthony. In his mind, he recalled all the steps that Anthony had previously explained to him, and he executed each with amazing accuracy. This was partly so he could avoid having to hear that unearthly voice which, in Anthony’s case, would be even more haunting.

Once everything was set up, he inserted it into the southern shaft in the chamber, which measured eight by eight inches. The shaft was rather steep, so it was a stroke of luck that the robot did not rely upon wheels and instead moved via a tank-like mechanism. After switching on the remote control, the robot emitted an electric sound, like that of a radio-controlled car, and the front lights automatically lit up. The monitor in his hands crackled into life, showing what the robot could see from the entrance to the hole. The picture wasn’t too clear, but even so it started its ascent up the incline.

For the first few feet, the robot bounced from wall to wall until James managed to gain control and right it, little by little. After twenty minutes, the information panel on the remote was already giving a reading one hundred and fifty feet. James tried not to miss even the tiniest detail etched on the walls, while the robot proceeded without having found any obstacle.

He sometimes felt the presence of somebody who was watching him from the shadows. Unable to hide his distress, he turned to look into the penetrating, defiant blackness which emanated from the entrance to the chamber and seemed to want to engulf the whole room. Shaking, he occasionally shone one of his flashlights at the exit, calming down when he saw that nobody was prowling around him in the darkness.

At two hundred and fifty feet, the robot eventually stopped before what seemed to be a stone wall with two copper knobs and a small hole made by a drill.

Mary had brought him up to speed with all the latest investigations that had taken place inside the Great Pyramid before he went in. In the nineties, a group of scientists managed to use a robot to enter one of the eight inch square shafts for the first time; at the end, they were confronted with a block which sealed the tunnel. In spite of the significance of their findings, it wasn’t until nine years later that a group of experts re-entered the hole, this time under the leadership of the professor of the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities, and with the help of National Geographic. They drilled the rock, creating a tiny two-and-a-half-inch long hole which ran from one side to the other. They later inserted a fiber optic camera, broadcasting the events to the whole world. The surprise was greater still when they saw what was on the other side; an empty space which was eighteen inches deep and, at the back, was another block!

A never-ending loop of questions had tormented the minds of experts for decades. How did they manage to place those blocks, sealing access to the Secret Chamber? What was the reason for them being there? And, most importantly, what was hidden behind them?

Forty-five minutes had already gone by since he had left the King’s Chamber and, in some way, his fear was subsiding as his desire to find something increased. He examined the narrow passage with the help of the robot’s camera, discovering that it just as Mary had said. Even the tiny hole made by the drill was there.

I should blow up the stone block,
he thought, even though he knew it wasn’t the most viable option. If the Egyptian authorities found out what he intended to do, he would be sent to prison for life. However, he didn’t have any choice.

He used the hydraulic arm to fit the first set of explosives into the center of the door. According to Anthony, it would only destroy whatever was in a four-inch radius.

I hope he’s right.

He brought the robot back quite a distance, around nine feet, so that the impact from the shockwave wouldn’t cause it damage. His thumb trembled on the button, unsure about what he was about to do. When panic finally released its grip and a feeling of bravery washed over him, he eventually noticed a strange engraving on one of the side walls.

He had failed to notice it during the ascent, perhaps due to him gripped by fear. He turned the camera until the drawing appeared clearly, filling the whole screen of the monitor. What he was looking at left him rooted to the spot for several minutes. He was unable to react.

“Oh my god!” he said at last. “Incredible!”

Chapter 32

A
small cloud provided the three people inside the vehicle with a few seconds’ welcome relief from the overwhelming heat inside. In the back, Anthony, dressed only in a sweat-soaked, sleeveless white tank, was feeling flustered as he watched James’ movements on the monitor. On either side of him, Mary and Richard showed they disapproved of his decision by shaking their heads.

Inside the pyramid, James carefully examined the entrance hole, hoping that something had slid down it and put in an appearance.

Outside the pyramid, the questions came thick and fast.

“Why didn’t he press the button?”

“What the hell is he doing?”

“I’m gonna ask him just that, before he does something crazy,” said Richard furiously, knocking the microphone out of his hands.

“Wait!” shouted Mary. “Look at the hole, the robot’s coming out. He probably tried to detonate the explosives but it didn’t work. Are you sure you connected the cables correctly?”

Anthony didn’t even credit her with a response, he didn’t agree with a word of what Mary had said. Billions of dollars were poured into research and development testing, earmarked exclusively for subjecting prototypes to the most inhospitable conditions and thus greatly improving the performance of the device. Anthony was therefore the only one who was nonplussed when James suddenly relieved the robot of all its explosives, as well as the cylindrical drill used to make holes. He immediately took out the book he had found and after leafing through several pages, he found what he was looking for - the golden triangle.

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