The Thrones of Eden 3 (Eden)
THE THRONES OF EDEN
Book 3 of the Eden Saga
By
Rick Jones
© 2013 Rick Jones. All rights reserved.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously and should not be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For more information e-mail all inquiries to: rick@rickjonz.com
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ALSO BY RICK JONES:
Vatican Knights Series
The Vatican Knights
Shepherd One
The Iscariot Agenda
Pandora's Ark
The Eden Series
The Crypts of Eden
The Menagerie
Familiar Stranger
PROLOGUE
Dig Site - Southeast Turkey
The old man squinted beneath the desert sun, his crow’s-feet more pronounced on a face that held the uniform color of tanned leather. Liver scales marked his balding pate like the points of a map, the landmarks created by the constant shower of sunlight. And his eyes, when narrowed against the sun, always showed slivers of blue that were as clear as Caribbean waters.
The midday sun was high, its color white. And the old man found himself constantly wiping his brow with a bandana stained with sweat. In the distance he could see a battery of heat rising from the desert floor, the background shimmering from the heat waves.
Today was going to be another scorcher, he thought. But the old man was acclimated to such environments, having lived most of his life in wastelands.
He stood at the edge of a crater looking down at the levels of the dig site. The earth had been manicured in such a way that the levels resembled steps with ladders allowing access from one tier to the next. Dust motes cloyed the air with a thickness the color of desert sand as laborers hacked away at the landscape with shovels and pickaxes.
He stood sentinel, watching, the man a master of his trade, that of an archeologist, beneath a white-hot sun that had little effect on him. His shirt was wet and clung to him like a second skin, the V-shaped sweat stains on his back and underarms clearly mimicking Rorschach designs.
John Hillary was a Senior Archeologist and Chief Geneticist working mostly with funding mainly from grants proffered by the United States government and scholarly institutes. So much, in fact, that he always seemed to have a never-ending well to tap from, the funds taking him to every corner of the planet on digs that often rewrote—or at least brought valid points of questioning—recorded history.
With studious examination he watched his workers like an eagle perched upon an aerie, trying to decipher if this particular site was worth the effort since it has yet to yield a single piece of trace evidence after two months of digging.
Being a man of conviction he at least wanted to find something, even if it was a simple nugget that would possibly lead to the truth.
On the bottom tier of the dig a shirtless boy, slender and lean with strings of sinewy muscle, stood erect with something in his hand, a stone. And with the heel of his palm he wiped the dust from its face until its natural polish glinted against the sunlight.
He lifted the stone high in display. “Profesör, Hillary, ben bir şey buldum!”
“Well, don’t just stand there, boy! Bring it here!”
The boy placed the stone in a satchel he was wearing around his waist like a fanny pack and began to scale the ladders, going from one level to the next with remarkable agility.
When he was topside he reached into the satchel and pulled out the stone.
But it wasn’t a stone at all.
It was a relic.
The professor accepted the piece and examined it with scientific fascination, flipping the artifact over in his hands searching for a single flaw.
Without looking at the boy, he raised a hand and pointed to the pit. “İyi bir çocuk. Şimdi geri dönün ve keşif nokta işareti.” Good boy. Now go back and mark the point of discovery.
The boy did as he was told, descending the ladders to the lower levels as quickly as he scaled them.
Hillary’s mouth lowered in awe. Holding the relic was intoxicating.
It was obviously a fragment of a much larger piece. Its shape was triangular with markings of ancient script, its color and sheen that of black onyx. On the two unbroken sides of the triangle the edging was beveled, a perfect cut of manufacturing. The edge along the broken side was scalpel sharp so when he handled it he did so with caution.
On the scripted side he attempted to analyze the symbols, recognizing little whereas others were alien and familiar to him at the same time. He reached for the small composite book in his shirt pocket, and with his free hand began to flip the pages. He came to a section of designs he gleaned from an article in the newspaper regarding Alyssa Moore’s alleged discovery of Eden, and the unique script and cuneiform writings discovered upon the temple’s walls.
He noted the delicate cursive and the similarities of shapes on his pages mimicked that on the surface of the relic.
The patterns were unique by design and found nowhere else on Earth other than what Alyssa Moore had claimed. These symbols, these simple markings, along with the given coordinates, clearly corroborated with Moore’s story.
He went to the edge of the crater’s rim and looked into the pit that was filled with clouds and eddies of dust, and the glistening of the laborers sweat upon their backs as they dug relentlessly for something that might not be there.
“But it is there,” he whispered to no one in particular. He then turned the relic in his hand. She was telling the truth, he considered. All this time . . .
. . . she was telling the truth.
PART I
A LONG DAY’S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT
CHAPTER ONE
The Archeological Institute of Ancient Antiquities (The AIAA)
New York City, New York
Alyssa Moore was packing boxes with files, records and texts regarding archeological discoveries across the globe. Books written by her father, a once renowned archeologist and founder of the AIAA, the Archeological Institute of Ancient Antiquities, now floundering due to a lack of financial resources, was a legacy that was being boxed and stored away.
The antique desk would be sold or auctioned off, as will everything else in the brownstone office that was blocks away from NYU, once a major source of her father’s funding for archeological digs.
After her alleged discovery of Eden and the inability to prove her claims outside of a few posted articles which ultimately became the fodder for tabloid news, her credibility went from being a legacy to fraud in a matter of months. Government and scholarly institutes treated her like a pariah, refusing to finance future expeditions and digs, the AIAA well drying up to the point where bills could not be paid.
So everything appeared as gray as her mood, even with the floor-to-ceiling drapes parted with the only light coming in was from an overcast sky, causing the shadows in the room to appear deeper and more oppressive.
The bookshelves were empty. And whatever ancient baubles and trinkets she had in display were now packed. And though she had neatly bundled a lifetime of work and discoveries into cardboard boxes, she was hardly set to move.
The life she shared with her father took place beh
ind these walls. The smiles, the laughter, the adrenaline rush always shared when a grant came through to fund another archeological adventure, to make new discoveries and rewrite history. But in the end it always came down to returning to this brownstone that served as a sanctuary where ideas and reminiscing became the bulk of good conversation that was always celebrated with the finest cognac.
She turned to the liquor cabinet, a glass-door facsimile of a French armoire, which was now empty with the exception of the dust that laden its shelves.
A tear slipped from the corner of her almond-shaped eye. I’m so sorry I failed you, Daddy. With a sweep of her hand she, with a slow drag across her face, she wiped her cheek dry.
“Are you all right?” John Savage entered the room carrying a box, and then placed it on top of another. “Honey?”
She waved a hand of dismissal at him. Leave me alone.
“Alyssa, are you all right?” He took her gently into his embrace from behind and enfolded his arms around her.
That’s when she broke into a sob. “I failed him,” she said. “I failed my father. I failed the Institute. And I failed us.”
“You failed at nothing,” he told her, resting his chin on her shoulder. “We both know the truth, don’t we? We know Eden existed. We know what we saw in the Yucatán Peninsula to be real. We had no control over the subsequent cover ups. You know that.”
“You know what else I know? I know that we’re about to lose this house.” She turned to Savage, her eyes welling with tears, and wrapped her arms around the back of his neck and drew him close until their foreheads met. “This is my home. This is where I grew up. This is where my father and I shared worldly secrets and rewrote history. This is where my father built his reputation and legacy, something I destroyed.”
“Stop it,” he told her.
She allowed her arms to fall by her side as she walked to the window. The clouds threatened to open, her eyes watching them as they shifted and morphed into peculiar shapes. Then when she spoke, she did so in a manner that was just above the level of a whisper. “I could have proved the existence of Eden, John. But I chose to bury the evidence in Turkey, instead. Some things are just not meant to be found. And Eden is one of them.”
“You had your reasons, Alyssa. I was there too, remember? You did what you thought was right.”
“And look what ‘right’ got me.” She raised her hand to indicate the boxes piled in the room. “Look around, John. This is what my best has brought us and to the legacy of my father. An eviction notice and a bunch of memories packed away.”
“I wish you wouldn’t give up.”
“John, there comes a time when you have to say it’s over. And it’s over. We can’t even rub the rust off a penny we’re so financially dry. We can’t even pay the light bill.” She looked at the overhead fixture, an antique her father purchased in Ankara, Turkey. It was dead.
“We can rebuild.”
“You don’t get it, do you? My reputation is shot. No one will give me a grant or fund a project because I’m tabloid fodder. I’m the community joke within the world of archeology.”
“Then we’ll find a way together.”
She turned and offered him a false smile.
She was so beautiful he thought, her face the color of cocoa, a trait from her Filipina mother, as was the unique color of her eyes, that of polished copper of newly minted pennies.
She walked to him and fell into his embrace, her arms reaching up behind his back. “I know what you’re doing,” she told him. “You’re trying to give me hope where there is none.”
He said nothing because she was telling the truth. There was no future in the field of archeology. Not now and perhaps never. Right now they were drifting and looking for a place to land.
He cupped his hands around her face and pulled her close until they were inches apart, their noses nearly touching. “We have each other,” he told her. “And right now I feel like the richest man in the entire world. And it’s a pretty big world. So we’ll get through this.”
She feigned a smile, one that said ‘Yeah, sure. We’ll get through this.’ Then she eased into him with the side of her head resting against his chest, and listened to the strong measure of his heartbeat.
And then her cell phone rang.
CHAPTER TWO
“You’re a hard woman to reach,” said John Hillary. “I tried calling the AIAA’s direct number, but it appears that the landline has been disconnected.”
“What do you want, Hillary?”
John Hillary had been a longtime adversary of her father, trying to discredit him whenever the possibility availed itself in order to promote his own self interests and agendas. So the edge of her tone was hardly masked.
“I’m offering you an olive branch,” he said. “I know your father and I had a history—”
“A history! All you ever did, Hillary, was to try to undermine everything he did.”
“Please, Alyssa, allow me to speak. I have something worthwhile to say. Something I think you need to hear.”
She sighed. “What on Earth would ever possess you to think that I would ever want to hear anything from you at all?”
“Please allow me to say that my petty jealousies against your father were just that, petty jealousies. And now that he’s gone, I have come to realize the true greatness that your father brought to the field of archeology.”
“Get to the point, Hillary. Why are you calling me?”
“The truth is, Alyssa, no matter how prominent of a scientist I have become in the field, I could never hold a torch to your father and always had to follow in his shadow. I’ve come to realize that. But I’ve also come to respect you as well . . . A daughter of John Moore is an apple that doesn’t fall far from the tree.”
Another sigh. “You’re costing me valuable time on my phone.”
“I know. And I’m sorry. But I want you to know that I found it.”
“Found what?”
“Eden . . . I found Eden.”
Alyssa eyes detonated with surprise. “Excuse me?”
“Eden,” he repeated. “It’s exactly where you said it was, at the precise coordinates.”
“That’s impossible,” she said. “The site imploded on itself. There’s nothing left besides a crater.”
“This is true. However, I had set up a dig site—”
“—To steal my thunder? Is that what you’re trying to say? Well that’s very Hillary of you since you tried to do the same thing to my father.”
“Alyssa, please. All I’m asking is a moment of your time.”
“The clock’s ticking.”
“A member of my team discovered a relic that bears the markings you posted in the newspapers from interviews when you returned from Turkey, writings that exist nowhere else. Or at least have yet to be discovered elsewhere.”
“What kind of a relic?”
“It’s a piece of black silica, triangular. I believe it’s the material you indicated as to the main substance used in the construction of Eden.”
“They found numerous pieces of black silica at the site,” she told him. Then after a slight hitch, she said, “But nothing with etchings.”
“As we speak, I am holding the relic in my hand.”
“Where exactly did you find it?”
“Approximately forty feet down on the third level, at the west side of the imploded site. But there’s something else.”
“And what’s that?”
“We discovered another tunnel,” he told her. “It appears to be an arterial of some kind that leads to the west.”
“Another tunnel?”
“An arterial. Whatever it was you discovered it extends to the west and under the desert plain. It appears that Eden connects to something else.”
“To what?”
“We’re not sure. We’ve only begun to breach the cave-in caused by the implosion by removing debris. But so far it appears quite lengthy. Who knows where this corridor ends. It may end at
a hundred feet or a thousand. But of note to your discovery, we did find ancient founts that resemble the descriptions you made in the journals. This alone will support your claim.”
“So did you call me to throw this in my face? I’m still not getting the reason as to why you called me.”
“The reason is that I’m digging at the precise location you claimed to be the site of Eden. The claim has already been made. The discovery, no matter what I do from this point on, is yours.”
“My father’s,” she corrected. “The discovery was his.”
“But it was you that brought it to the world.”
“And it was the world that made me a pariah in the field of archeology.”
“Not anymore,” he said. “I need you here, Alyssa, in Turkey. I need your help.”
“You need my help?”
“There’s something definitely down there. I honestly believe that the tunnel leads to someplace in particular down that stretch. Otherwise, why build it?”
“Are you offering me a partnership?”
“You’re an accomplished cryptanalyst. Someone I need.”
“So it’s still about you?”
“I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t. But the fact is, Alyssa, something wonderful exists at the very coordinates you had given and cannot be disputed. Organizations all over the world will recognize the validity of your claim.”
She could almost feel her heart thrumming against the wall of her chest with excitement. “I’m going to ask you one more time, Hillary. Are you offering me a partnership?”
“Yes,” he said. “From this point on, we will share all discoveries together.”
“Yeah, well, that’s all good and fine. But I literally don’t have two nickels to rub together. So getting to you would be impossible at this time.” She looked ceilingward at the Ankara lamp. I can’t even pay the electric bill.