Read The Cult of Osiris Online

Authors: Andy McDermott

The Cult of Osiris (15 page)

BOOK: The Cult of Osiris
6.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

What
can
we do?' Nina asked rhetorically. Logan won't listen to us, Hamdi's involved in it, and we can't get inside the compound to find the thing ourselves.

Macy delved into a pocket. 'I've still got my ID,' she said, producing a card. If the guys at the gate are new, they won't recognise me, so I could get in.'

And then what? If Shaban's guys see you, they'll try to kill you. And even if you get proof, Logan'll have you arrested if you try to give it to him/

But we've got to do something! The IHA is going to open the Hall of Records in less than eighteen hours, which means whatever the bad guys are doing, they're doing it right now! This is the only chance we'll have to stop them!

I don't want them to rob the Hall of Records either,' said Nina, 'but unless we have solid proof we can take to the Egyptian authorities, we can't do anything to stop them/

So you're just giving up?' Macy said in disbelief. She pulled out the magazine pages and flapped them at Nina. 'Did you just give up when someone said you wouldn't find Atlantis? Did you give up when nobody believed the Tomb of Hercules was real?

Nina irritably snatched the papers from her hand. 'Did you get your motivational speeches from fortune cookies?' she retorted. 'I'm being practical here. We can't do anything unless we can get inside the compound, which we can't do without IDs - and even if we do, there are fifteen archaeologists and a whole TV crew plus God knows how many guards wandering about the place!

They can't all be there the whole time,' said Eddie. 'They're doing this thing at the crack of sparrowfart tomorrow morning, right? So the IHA and telly guys have to get some sleep beforehand.' He looked over at the high wall. 'Do they still do that light show that was in
The Spy Who Loved Me?'
Macy nodded. 'So everyone'll be looking at the Sphinx, not anything else. . .'

Something in mind?' Nina asked.

I might have a way to get us all in.' He turned to Macy. 'It means you'll have to risk getting caught, though. You up for that?'

Nina gave him a warning look, but Macy was already responding with an enthusiastic affirmative. 'What do I have to do?'

Get through that gate without being arrested, for starters.' He glanced back towards Cairo. But first, we need to do a bit of shopping.'

The sound and light show was under way by the time they returned to Giza.

Eddie regarded the spotlit Sphinx, then followed the direction of its gaze over the seated audience. Huh,' he said, spotting a particular illuminated sign on a building beyond the perimeter. 'The Sphinx is looking right at a Pizza Hut.'

Whoever built it'd completely freak out,' Macy said. The whole point of it looking in that direction was so it would see the sunrise. Now? Start the day with a Pepperoni Feast.'

You don't know who built it?'

I thought it was Khafre,' said Nina.

Macy shook her head. Doubt it. Haven't you heard of the Inventory Stele? The what?' asked Eddie.

This ancient text a guy discovered in 1857. According to that, the Sphinx was already there when Khafre was building his pyramid. That's why the causeway to the pyramid doesn't point due east - they had to work round the Sphinx.

Actually, I
have
heard of the Inventory Stele,' Nina said frostily. 'And I don't think the argument about what it says has been definitively settled.'

But finding the Hall of Records makes it look a lot more likely to be true, huh? None of the Third Dynasty pharaohs ever mentioned the Hall. Maybe they didn't know it was there. And if the Sphinx is a lot older than Khafre, that might explain why its head's so small compared to the rest of its body. One of the pharaohs had the original head re-carved to look like himself.'

Eddie chuckled. T think,' he said, leaning closer to speak quietly into Nina's ear, 'you just got owned.'

Shut up.'

They stopped not far from the gate, and Macy looked at the two uniformed men. I don't recognise either of them.'

You're sure?' Nina asked.

Built, good-looking young guys? Yeah, I would have remembered them. And are you sure you want to do this?

I'm ready,' Macy insisted. She took out her ID card, about to head for the gate - then paused and opened a couple of extra shirt buttons.

Nina raised an eyebrow. 'What're you doing?'

Cloaking device. Trust me.' Her decolletage adjusted for maximum effect, prompting a faintly lecherous grin from Eddie quickly followed by a swat from his wife, Macy crossed to the security gate. She held up her ID, but even from Nina and Eddie's vantage point it was obvious that both guards were less interested in her face than in what was on display below it. The gate was opened, Macy giving the two men a cheery smile as she sashayed through.

Better get moving,' said Eddie, starting for the road.

Nina frowned. Unbelievable. She does something that sets women back about thirty years . . . and it works!'

'Jealous, are you?' Eddie teased.

No.
And you can stop leering at her, as well. They're fake.' What?' He shook his head. 'You sure?'

Eddie, she looks like a broomstick with two watermelons taped to it! And her father's a plastic surgeon. Do the math. Also, she's young enough to be your daughter.

Thanks for depressing me.

I thought it was someone else's turn.' They both smiled.

They reached the section of road directly above the construction site and looked down. There was still a pair of guards standing watch - but two other men instantly caught their attention. Neither was familiar, but Nina had a horrible idea what was inside the large case they were carrying out of the tent.

Damn it!' she said. They're already cleaning the place out!'

You think the zodiac's in that box?

Maybe. Or part of it. They might have had to cut it up to get it through the tunnel. God, what if we're already too late?'

However, both men soon returned, now empty-handed. They entered the tent.

I guess they haven't finished yet,' said Eddie.

Good - maybe we can still stop them. Have you seen Macy?'

Eddie spotted her peering over a wall inside the upper temple, where she had been hiding from the men carrying the case. 'Yeah, in there.' He pointed, then gestured for her to leave

cover and approach the construction site. 'Okay, let's hope the twins work as well on those two down there.'

He reached under his leatherjacket and T-shirt, drawing out the twenty-foot length of nylon line bought in a Cairo store that he had wound round his waist; carrying it openly would have roused the suspicions of even the sleepiest Tourist Police officer. Once he had gathered it up, he fumbled with his belt. 'Steady,' he said to the grinning Nina. You'll get what's in my pants later.'

About damn time!

He smiled back as he pulled out a metal hook from behind the buckle, where he had wedged it to trick the metal detectors. By the time the line was tied to it, Macy had emerged from the upper temple and was approaching the construction site - attracting the guards' attention.

Nina regarded the hook nervously as Eddie wedged it under the slab topping the walk Will it take your weight?'

You saying I've got a fat arse?' He looked down again. The guards were moving to meet Macy before she reached the perimeter of orange netting. A quick check to make sure nobody was coming along the darkened road, then he dropped the rope over the wall - and followed it, rapidly lowering himself down the stone face. The hook scraped and creaked.

He glanced over his shoulder as he descended. The guards had almost reached Macy. Twelve feet to the ground ten, eight. . .

She stopped, making the two men come to her. Eddie let go and dropped the last six feet, landing almost soundlessly in a crouch and immediately moving into cover behind one of the piles of bricks. Macy was holding up her camera, gesturing at the Sphinx. He couldn't hear her over the booming voice of the light show's narrator, but guessed she was asking them to take her photo with the monument behind her.

They didn't seem cooperative, one holding out a hand for her ID. Eddie silently advanced on the trio as Macy shrugged, showing off her impressive cleavage once more. These guards were less distracted, the man impatiently snapping his fingers.

She had seen Eddie by now, and made a show of checking her pockets before finally producing her ID. The guard snatched it from her, holding it up to his torch.

Eddie slipped through the plastic netting. Both men had their hands near their guns.

If they heard his footsteps or caught him in their peripheral vision . . .

The guard looked back at Macy, shining his light in her face. He frowned.

About to remember her—

Holy crap!' Macy cried, suddenly whirling and pointing excitedly to the west. 'Look!
Pyramids!

The guards instinctively turned to see - as Eddie rushed up behind them and slammed their heads together with a dull crack of bone against bone. The two men collapsed nervelessly.

Macy jumped back, startled. 'Oh my God! Did - did you
kill
them?

Only if they've got fucking Humpty Dumpty heads,' he said. 'Give me a hand.

But that was like something out of a movie! How did you do that?'

Take head, hit hard. Pretty simple.' He lifted one of the limp guards by the shoulders. With reluctance, not sure if he really was still alive, Macy helped Eddie drag him behind a dirt mound.

The first man out of sight, Eddie returned for his companion, looking up at the wall to see Nina hesitantly climbing down the rope. By the time the second guard was concealed, she was close to the ground.

She looked round as Eddie came to her, Macy following. Check it out!' she gasped, straining at the rope. Pretty good for someone who hasn't exercised in months—
1

There was a faint ping of metal from above as the overstressed hook broke, and Nina dropped the last three feet to the sand. 'Ow, dammit!' she yelped.

Eddie helped her up. Wasn't my fat arse we had to worry about, was it?' Macy giggled.

Shut up,' Nina grumbled, brushing dust from her butt as Eddie coiled the rope and moved off to hide it. 'And what the hell was that?' She flapped a hand at Macy's chest. 'Put them away, for God's sake.'

Annoyed, Macy refastened her shirt. What? It worked/

Eddie wouldn't have fallen for it.

Why, 'cause he's old?

No,' Nina said, offended, because he's ex-special forces and they're trained not to fall for things like that.'

Macy was surprised. He was in the army? I thought he was just some archaeology guy. You mean he wasn't joking when he said about being your bodyguard?'

'No, he wasn't. That's how we met - he saved my life. More than once, actually. Although I've saved /us life a few times now, so we call it square.

Cool,' said Macy, now even more impressed by Nina's husband. 'So . . . does he have a younger brother or something?'

Eddie came back. Don't know how long they'll be knocked out,' he said, but I think we need to do this pretty sharpish anyway.'

Definitely,' Nina agreed. She went to the tent, listening for any indication of life inside before opening the flap. It was empty - but as Macy had described, there was a wooden cubicle occupying one end.

Crap,' Macy muttered, finding only an empty table at the other. This is where the plans were, but they've taken them!' She looked back. One of those guys carrying that box was Gamal, the security chief. Maybe they've almost finished - what if we're too late?'

Let's find out.' Nina opened the cubicle door.

Macy had been right: there was indeed a shaft descending into the plateau. The sound of a generator came from somewhere below ... as did another, more distant noise, the screech of a

power tool. She went to the ladder, but before climbing on to it she tied her hair into a ponytail.

She's back, baby, yeah!' said Eddie, grinning. Macy smiled too, touching her own matching hairstyle as Nina started down the ladder.

7

SB

The shaft descended over twenty feet to a gently sloping, stone-walled tunnel. Nina checked that nobody was waiting at the bottom before dropping down. The way north was blocked by compacted sand, but to the south had been dug out to re-open a passage not used for thousands of years. Light bulbs were hung from the ceiling every fifteen feet, stretching off into the distance.

Towards the Sphinx

The blueprint Macy had shown her was accurate. The Hall of Records had two entrances - the one on the east side that the IHA team would shortly open, and another to the north, reserved for royalty. Only the conspirators of the Osirian Temple knew about the latter . . . and Berkeley hadn't looked for any other ways in. With a deadline to meet and his eyes filled with stars, he had rushed straight for the obvious target, not even considering that there might be another.

It was a mistake that could cost dearly.

Eddie jumped down beside her. He sniffed. Smells like they're cutting stone.' Nina picked up a faint burning odour. That's what that is?'

'Yeah. I had a summer job at a monumental mason's once - they used power saws to cut the gravestones. Smelled like that.

'You used to make gravestones? I learn something new about you every day.'

He smiled. 'Man of mystery, love.

Macy hopped from the ladder, looking round in wonder. Oh, my God. This is awesome!' She rubbed the sand coating one wall to reveal darker stone beneath. 'Pink granite - probably from Aswan. This is definitely a royals-only way in. It was too expensive for anyone else.'

'You know your stuff,' said Eddie.

'Of course I dol' Then, more self-conscious: 'The Egyptian stuff, anyway. I'm not as hot on the rest. . . Can we get going now?'

'Behind me/ Eddie said firmly, moving in front of her. 'We don't know what's down here.'

They discovered one thing about two-thirds of the way down the tunnel - a petrol-powered generator, its exhaust hose leading back to the surface. Just past it, the passage showed signs of major damage: the ceiling was propped up by hefty wooden beams.

BOOK: The Cult of Osiris
6.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

At the Earl's Convenience by MAGGI ANDERSEN
Something Wild by Toni Blake
Project Northwoods by Jonathan Charles Bruce
Killing Thyme by Leslie Budewitz
Relentless by Scott Prussing
Alpha Me Not by Jianne Carlo
Paying Her Debt by Emma Shortt