PRIMORDIAL DEEP
The ten-foot boat was thrown nearly two feet out of the water, the bow raised thirty degrees, and the stern submerged almost to the waterline. It splashed down again, sucking a layer of pond scum into the bottom. Ian was summarily thrown backwards, out into the fetid stench of the brackish swamp. He cut his shoulder, as his nor’easter snagged on a cypress stump, and hung him there. Dazed at first, he flailed and screamed for Alma to come for him.
The cartographer nearly spilled over the side herself, in a frantic effort to come about and row toward him. She was clumsy in the water, unsure of maneuvering the oars. She yelled for him to hold on, as he struggled to extricate himself. He was pinned against the dead trunk, lifted out of the murky bayou high enough to prevent him from slipping out of the oversized raincoat.
The enraged creature bellowed, as much in pain, as territorial defiance now. It bolted passed Alma, with a churning brown wake that expanded across the algae covered surface of the marsh. The greenish brown of its heavily mottled skin, almost warty in appearance, with looser folds near the pale oyster yellow of its underbelly, moved inexorably toward its helpless prey.
Alma clumsily drew close and reached out her hand to Ian, as the Alty surged between them. The lake monster butted Ian with its lowered head, ripping him from the ensnaring folds of his borrowed slicker. It hung like the tattered remains of a macabre scarecrow, the hood empty and the sleeves floundering. McQuade was once again thrown headlong into the water, amid rushes and lily pads closer to shore.
“Alma,” he gasped, sputtering water as he tried to catch his breath from the force of the blow to his ribs. “Help me! Don’t let it get me, again!” Del Nephites yelled for him to hold on, as she managed to turn the boat toward him a second time. He pulled himself along with a one-armed, flailing dogpaddle. His side ached, and he was sure the monster had bruised, if not cracked one or more of his healing ribs. It submerged and was now nowhere in sight. It gave Ian hope that if Alma hurried, they just might make it out of that fetid swamp. She rowed alongside, or as close as she dared, dropped the oars and clung to the side of the boat. She held out her hand to him, as he grasped thin air to reach her in time.
If they could have but seen themselves from above or below, where angels and demons stood by and did nothing, they would have still watched helplessly, as the Altamaha-ha rose up from the depths. Without slowing, it corkscrewed in its path, and gaped the maw of its fearsome mouth toward the nearest of Ian’s kicking legs. His outstretched fingertips just brushed Alma’s, when the creature struck, lifted him up, and bore him under. The last he saw or heard, was Alma’s muffled screams, and the quickly fading light of the steel-gray morning that silhouetted her lithe form.
Also Written by
DALLAS TANNER
NOVELS
THE CRYPTIDS TRILOGY
Shadow of the Thunderbird
Track of the Bigfoot
The Shroud
NOVELLAS
The Chuppacabra
W A K E
O F T H E
L A K E M O N S T E R
BOOK 3 OF THE CRYPTIDS TRILOGY
Dallas Tanner
TRILOGUS BOOKS
Wake of the Lake Monster: Book 3 of The Cryptids Trilogy
Copyright © 2009 by Dallas Tanner
Published by Trilogus Media Group, LLC at Smashwords
All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of various products referenced in this work of fiction, which have been used without permission. The publication/use of these trademarks is not authorized, associated with, or sponsored by the trademark owners.
eBook Edition License Notes
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DEDICATION
To Billye McCarty
Editor Extraordinaire
For The Cryptids Trilogy
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Every novel begins its life as a diamond in the rough. Someone has to spot its potential amid so many unfinished others, then see that it is cut and polished until its facets are revealed. If you find any imperfection, or remnant of its former state in the novel you hold in your hands, the fault remains with the author. I’d like to express my thanks and appreciation to those who chipped away at anything that didn’t shine.
First and foremost, my tireless editor Billye McCarty, whose guiding hand told my story better than I ever could. Ideal reader Fred Scheeren, who has waited longest for the trilogy to be completed. David Caldwell, best friend, proofreader and resource on all things military, from minie balls to atom bombs. Rick Spears, museum exhibit designer and artist of all creatures real and imagined. Bob Finley, who slogged through a week in the Altamaha River with me, and salvaged a pair of Nessie chaser mini-subs in the process. Cryptozoologist Loren Coleman, for his books, his early morning advice, and infinite patience.
Leslie Williams and her son Connor, who reminded me why I got into cryptozoology, in the first place. James Rollins, who continued to give me encouragement and advice, long after his own literary success. The faculty and students of Greenville Technical College, who adopted my first novel and invited me time and again to talk about it. Kristi and Larry Draper, scuba diving enthusiasts who just might make a fossil diver out of me yet. My cat Samwise, who sleeps atop my monitor until he decides I’ve written enough for one night.
Last and certainly not least, fellow author and brother-in-ink Lee Murphy, for teaching me how to catch as much light with this little gem as I possibly can. I am indebted to you all, and proud to call you my friends.
CHAPTER 1
Cartographer Alma Del Nephites bumped her head against the coach passenger window. Sleep eluded her in a window seat over the wing of an overcrowded Boeing 737. She tossed and turned, as it fought the Gulf Stream en route from Lima, Peru to Mexico City. The Foundation agent was just dreaming of an elusive city in a forgotten civilization. It meant she was no longer obsessed with returning home to her family and village. She was finally free of any obligation to those she left behind at the foot of Machu Picchu, in the Peruvian Andes.
It was over these same mountains, that the outdated jetliner encountered turbulence. Ten years earlier, she left the altar of an arranged marriage to the son of a greedy and powerful landowner. She could still see herself in her mind’s eye; the tatters of her long-dead mother’s wedding dress drenched in mud, as it caught on the jungle rushes. The eldest daughter of Miguel and Rosalita Del Nephites fled the small church, their ancestral home and life, forever.
Vowing never to return.
It was the last promise that she could no longer keep. Her father did not openly pressure her to marry, but the village of Cahzca Yunqa was dying. Only by instilling her love of the millennial town into her betrothed, could she hope to save it from oblivion and the slow decay of time. Alma pictured the old rustic shops and dilapidated buildings joining the Incan ruins of the mighty and fallen. Machu Picchu barely stood stone upon stone. To the tourists who flocked to the Andean ruins, it was just another victim of desolation, and the conquest of the Spanish. In truth, the conquistadors never discovered it, or mentioned it in their chronicles. Its exact purpose was unknown, which coincided with the knowledge and understanding of most visitors to Machu Picchu. To capitalize on the ignorance, villages like hers became trading posts for trinkets and souvenirs made elsewhere.
* * *
She found her childhood home virtually unchanged upon her return. Once she left, Ramone de Montoya wasted no time in chasing after the recently widowed young wife of the village’s only mercantile, solidifying the union without her. The once svelte and handsome heir to the lands surrounding the tiny village was eventually disowned by his cruel father. He married a woman who could only give birth to bright, beautiful, headstrong girls. He lost his birthright to his younger brother, who seemed incapable of siring anything but strapping young boys.
With nowhere else to go, her former fiancé now ran the shop with his shrewish wife. For not providing her with all the status and comforts of his family’s wealth, she would punish him the rest of his life. He swept the storefront porch, gaping when he saw the matured beauty of the prodigal daughter who rejected him. As Alma glanced up, he looked away, pretending not to notice her arrival. She bore him no ill will. In fact, she never would have become educated and seen the world, had it not been for him. Ramone barely met her gaze as he stepped inside and closed the door.
Del Nephites exited the bus and completed the last seven miles of the arduous, uncomfortable journey on foot. She told no one of her plans to return home, let alone her arrival. Several of the adults and older children came out to greet her with hugs and kisses, proud of her defiance. Others tacitly avoided or ignored her, for limiting the fortunes of their isolated village. For better or worse, her escape ultimately turned the attentions of the landowner from their town. It was the last stop at the foot of the Andes, along the trail that wound up into the mountains, and Machu Picchu. The senior Montoya would have turned it into a way station, to be trodden underfoot by visitors to their land.
Her father was ailing when Alma entered the house of her birth. He was gray with age, lined and withered from years of worry and care. She looked after him the last eleven weeks of his life. He was stricken with an inoperable tumor that led to dementia. He saw her only as the young woman she once was, the last time he laid his fading eyes upon her. He pleaded with her now, not to marry Ramone. He finally admitted it was wrong to insist that it would be her only chance for happiness, or to escape the poverty of their life.
She promised, and entering the fourth month of her return home, he died.
Alma remained only a month longer to see that his affairs were in order, and the rest of her family would be cared for by relatives, and friends of the family. She had three elder brothers, one younger brother, and two sisters, of whom she was the oldest. In the remote village of Cahzca Yunqa, everyone depended on everyone else for life and survival.
Death was a harsh reality in the remote mountainside community. Proper medical attention for long-term illness was not only unaffordable, but also often refused, even by those few who had the means. To be given up to die did not deprive the dignity of the sick and afflicted. Instead, it was observed as a time of celebration, the passage of the spirit from mortality to eternity. It was the tradition of her people to show reverence for the sanctity of death, throughout. A wake was held to ensure the demise. A festival was held thereafter, to honor their patron saint and remember all the dead of the village.
The most recently departed attended, as the guest of honor. Afterwards, her father’s body was taken down from a pyre that would never succumb to flames, and placed in a roughhewn sepulcher. There, he would lie in everlasting peace beside her mother. Rosalita was stricken in childbirth, when the last of the twins was breeched. Though they were identical, and their mother would have died for either of them, their father always loved one and despised the other.
She was only thirty-one when she died, the same age as her grown daughter. With no widow left behind to mourn his passing, it was customary that the eldest daughter show grief for her father by cutting her hair. Alma did this herself, as she sat before the oaken mirror in her parent’s bedroom. Their wedding picture was edged into one corner of the oval frame. A picture of herself and her siblings adorned the other. Strands of dark sable began to fall with each snip of the scissors. The origin and true meaning of the tradition was lost, but not the observance of the ritual. When she finished, she sat amid the raven curls of her shorn tresses. It was difficult for her to express sorrow, but not to honor his memory. She did what any child, any good daughter would do.
For the first time since her mother died, she wept out of sorrow.
Alma suffered another loss in that homecoming. She left a second loved one behind, buried as to her joy of this passing world. Del Nephites shifted miserably in her seat, casting her crystal blue eyes about to see if any perceived her thoughts. Only a young boy eyed her curiously, smiling without front teeth at her sudden attention. For nearly three years, she avoided flying commercial airliners because of the effect on her giant crimson spider, Titian.
Eighteen inches in diameter, the unclassified breed of arachnid took up residence in the wooded grove behind the cartographer’s childhood home. There, she passed the winter. In the early days of spring, she grew large and built a nest sack. Watching over her brood, Titian grew thin, and frail besides. A week later, Alma found her pet lying overturned on the ground, her long legs splayed outward at the foot of a calabash gourd tree.
In the boughs and branches, the last of Titian’s hatchlings, each the normal size of a full-grown spider, gazed warily at her. A few held close to the trunk, as if to approach the dead matriarch and feed upon her. They scattered before Alma, not suffering that one of them should become her pet, in the stead of their mother.
Soon, they were all gone, and Del Nephites was left alone with the body.
Where no one could see, she gathered the lifeless remains, placing them in a box she once kept as her dowry. Her mother gave it to her on her fifth birthday, telling her that she should gather into it all the promises and precious things that would bring her happiness. Since there was now no one to share it with, she emptied the few ragged contents, and gently laid the stricken arachnid inside. Delicately, she tucked and folded the spindly legs over the corpse, and resealed the lid.
She bound the cover to the sides of the box with a length of twine scarcely thicker than the strands of Titian’s web. Alma slept that night with the makeshift coffin beside her bed. Del Nephites decided to return the next morning to the place where they first met, there to inter the remains.
At dawn, she slid a folding shovel into a sheath running down the side of her backpack. She donned her glacier glasses, and put on a faded vest. Most of the insulation was flattened, nearly useless against the early morning chill. Then, she woke a loudly snoring third cousin on her father’s side, who lived next door. She paid him for a ride back down the mountain trail. It was nearly a hundred kilometers to Cusco City. The transition, from rusted out pickup to a train filled with tourists, did little to lessen the discomfort she felt. A rude little German boy kept asking her, in broken Spanish, what she had in the box she held tightly on her lap. He would not go away, or leave her alone, so she showed him.
It was the last time he approached her for the duration of the trip.
Most of the towns and villages, nestled along the winding mountain course, remained nearly unaltered through the centuries, despite the advent of the railroad. Several built open-air markets beside the tracks, in the hopes that gawking turistas would stop and buy their wares. They did, too often for Alma’s taste. The shop owners sold few handmade items, most of which were imported from China. The rest were consumer goods as diverse as washing machines, computers, and motorbikes. Many carried an overwhelming array of spare parts for unidentifiable machinery, such as cogs, gears, and circuit boards. The latter were most likely scavenged from failed NAFTA ventures. Alma fingered an invisible rosary, thanking the patron saint of her village for sparing it either the ravages, or decadence of progress.
Still, she succumbed to a young girl selling only a single item, which she kept hidden in the folds of her poncho. She was native Incan, probably a direct descendant of the former inhabitants and rulers of this mountainous country, and those adjoining it.
“Senhõrita,” she said in a fluent Portuguese dialect, so that many of those immediately around her would not understand her words. Whatever she offered was for the older woman alone. The child played to Alma’s vanity, calling her by the greeting of a young woman. “I have something unlike any of the others, something rare and old. I see by your pack that you carry a shovel, and dig at the earth. You are no farmer, but a scientist. Would you like to see what I have for you?”
“Very much,” Del Nephites replied honestly, her curiosity piqued. The young girl gazed about her, and then drew the cartographer aside with a gesture of her tousled head. They were soon alone in a quiet place, further away from the bustle of the makeshift bazaar. The child turned, so that her back was against the crowd, shielding their view. There was a strange wisdom about her, a timeless understanding stretching back to the ancient Incas. She seemed undiminished by her age, or the generations separating them.
Satisfied they were alone, the youth withdrew the object she guarded so closely. It was a figurine, hand molded of sun baked, reddish terra cotta clay. It was scarcely six inches in height, nearly nine in length. It was a dinosaur, but not depicted as scientists described them even half a century before. It had large eyes on either side of a reptilian head. Its lower jaw was thick and heavy, lined above and below with sharp teeth. The snakelike head rode on a long, serpentine neck to broad shoulders. Wide, claw-tipped flippers supported its powerful chest. Its torso narrowed at the hips to a tapering lower half. It used its hind flippers for balance, folding together to form a curling spade around the vestigial remains of a tail. It appeared anatomically correct in every respect, right down to the logical way it carried itself. Only one thing set it apart from the small plastic dinosaurs for sale in blister packs, and larger vinyl ones standing in rows at several of the stalls.
There was a perfectly scaled human in ceremonial dress, astride its bent shoulders. Before she could refuse, the little girl placed the ancient looking statuary in Alma’s hands. The older woman was so surprised, that she nearly fumbled it. Now, it was the cartographer’s turn to become adamant. Reverting to English, Del Nephites turned the relic over, finding no mark, or date of its creation. She knew the age generally by the method of its baking. It was a tradition of long standing among her people, as well.
It was not ceramic, fired at high temperature in a kiln. There was not even the baked in residue of having been placed in the ashes of an open hearth, to harden after molding. No, her first assessment was correct. This artifact predated any authentic sculpture or pottery to be found here, by thousands of years. She commented that perhaps her boss would enjoy another oddity for his office display case. “How much do you want for it?” she ventured, to begin the obligatory haggling. The girl shook her head, stepped back, and waved her hands in refusal before her.
“For you, young lady. Nothing.”
The bargaining was going opposite to all she encountered in her journeys. The more she bid for the item, the less the child would accept. Alma rested the model in the crook of her arm, reached into her backpack and withdrew a small pouch containing her traveling money. She pulled off two American ten-dollar bills, worth ten times their value in South America. The girl ran off a short distance, back toward the open central bazaar, and turned. She ignored the men, women and children making their way along the narrow aisles of tables and booths.
“Is there nothing you want in exchange for this?” Del Nephites called after her, gingerly proffering the figurine.
“Yes, there is,” the child replied. There was hurt in her voice; for a gift freely given, but not openly received. “Tell him we are watching.”
“Who?” Alma was confused.
“Your friend. He will come for you, and set you both free!”
The young girl then stepped back into the crowd, and vanished without a trace. Alma tried to follow, but there was no sign of her passing, among the throng of buyers and sellers. It almost seemed to her as if the strange child had never been there, at all. Except for the artifact, and the money she would have gladly exchanged as payment for it. Feeling foolish, Del Nephites returned the cash to her pouch. She gently wrapped the statuary in her discarded vest, laying them both inside her pack. The cartographer only had time to scan the bargain hunters once more, in vain. The engineer sounded the whistle, as the conductor checked his pocket watch and called for everyone to board the train. Soon, the locomotive steamed from the stoking furnace, gathering speed as it left the open-air market and the strange little girl behind.
Both appeared anxious to be on their way.
* * *
Between four and five that afternoon, they finally arrived at the cultivated Urubamba, or Sacred Valley of the Incas. The capital city of Cusco lay beside a swiftly flowing tributary of the Amazon River. It was one of two, forming a delta to the northwest. Machu Picchu stood barely visible on the heights, in the gathering mist of early evening.
The heart of the brisk Peruvian tourist trade, Alma wandered the streets of the ancient city, quickly finding a hotel with vacancies. Only after she checked in did the street urchins and beggars stop trying to separate her from what little money she carried. Not wishing to run the doling gauntlet a second time, she ordered room service and stayed in for the night. That evening, she stepped onto the veranda and gazed out over the city. The skyline was dominated by a pair of huge cathedrals, fronting one another at the famed Plaza de Armas. As a brisk, but gentle breeze lifted the curtains of the balcony behind her and stirred her hair, she thought for the first time in weeks of Ian McQuade.
Laying Titian to rest would be her last responsibility to home and Peru. Aside from her surviving relatives, there would be no reason to return to the village. There was so much that she wanted to tell the anthropologist, if she ever got the chance. They grew close in pursuit of thunderbirds from the Black Forest region of northern Pennsylvania, to Chaco Canyon in New Mexico.
She fought back the slightest telltale pangs of regret, any feelings she might harbor for him. It was too late now, she supposed. No one had heard from her former partner, since his abrupt departure from the Chimera Foundation. He left under mysterious circumstances, following his first assignment without her as senior agent. Amelia Pritchard, their operations specialist and niece of CEO Cyril Pritchard, told her that Albert Myers was his partner on a Phase One fact-finding mission. It was never divulged what transpired between them at that time, or whether a Phase Two expedition was mounted. The petite blonde wanted to say more, but all communication to the surface was not only monitored, but censored as well. Ever the conspiracy theorist, Myers was once again contained in the subterranean facility, beneath the Manhattan office building that bore its name.
Officially, the Foundation claimed to have no idea of Dr. McQuade’s present whereabouts. Off the record, of course, they had all but guided his steps until he met her by the shores of the Rio Negro, near her home outside of Manaus, Brazil. He was lost, searching for the legendary Diablo Rojo in the company of thieves. She rescued him there in the rainforest, and brought him to Pritchard and the others in New York. She had no idea of the less than coincidental arrangement, but doubted she ever convinced Ian of that. He did not trust her, and she made it clear that the feeling was mutual. Still, one unimpeachable source would not be silenced, either by its daunting security chief, Edwin Burroughs, or the imperious Loretta Michaelson, Amelia’s adoptive aunt and supervisor of the Operations Center.
When she got back to the states, she would call his mother…
* * *
After a breakfast of eggs, black beans and mixed poached fish washed down with a cup of green tea, Alma gathered her belongings and checked out of the hotel. Skirting solicitors by clinging to side streets and walking alleyways, she came to a shop that rented motor scooters to tourists. Alma paid the proprietor for a full day, in deference to, or perhaps in anticipation of, the winding medieval cobbled streets.
According to oral tradition, legendary ruler Manco Cápac founded the city in the eleventh century AD, as the sacred capitol of the four administrative regions of the Incan Empire. He was believed to have emerged from nearby Lake Titicaca, where he planted a golden staff at the site of the Temple of the Sun. Titicaca remains the highest navigable inland body of water in the Americas, and the second largest in South America, after Maracaibo.
Beyond that, not much is known or accepted as fact, before the coming of the Spanish conquistadors. Only that the Incan Empire reigned over a great part of what is today Ecuador, Colombia, Peru, Bolivia, Argentina and Chile. When Francisco Pizarro supplanted the Spanish flag, and founded his own city there on March 23rd, 1534, a cultural blending took place. He preserved much of the previous architecture, hydraulic engineering, medicine and agriculture. The Incan capital for over 200 years, much of the city, as it now stood, was built atop the ruined foundations of the trampled empire. She secured the wooden box, carved by her father as a gift from her mother, to the back of the two-seater Honda Elite 80. She revved the 80cc, four-stroke fully automatic transmission, and eased the pearl blue scooter into traffic.
Within minutes, Del Nephites reached the outskirts of the city. She began the eight-kilometer journey to Tambo Machay. At 12,267 feet, the highest elevation of the primary ruins north of modern Cusco, Tambo Machay lay 300 meters off the main road. This thoroughfare joined these “Baths of the Inca” with the massive fortress of Sacsayhuaman, sacrificial amphitheater Quenco, and Puca Pucara. The latter was a trading post in its day, for goods and travelers. More apparent by the stretch of highway when seen from above, the archaeological sites of old Cusco were formed in the shape of a puma.
Twenty minutes later, she arrived and gazed about in fond memory.
Parking the rented moped, Alma untied and lifted the box carefully from the metal tray behind her seat. There were only a few tourists milling about, and an old woman spinning yarn in front of the Temple of the Sacred Waters. Its construction consisted of three terraces of fine stonework. Mortarless, yet they were so closely fitted that a knife blade could not be passed between them. The channeled springs had an underground rivulet as their source. It was the site of water purification and worship.
Perhaps the Incan priests sensed its relative unimportance to the conquering Spanish. The abutting rock face behind the tiered levels was used to conceal an invaluable cache of their knowledge. Discovered three years earlier when its natural roof caved in, the repository was full of clay tablets, scrolls, and plates of beaten brass. Many were written with a form of Egyptian hieroglyphics, among other ancient languages. The irony was that not only could they not read the gathered texts; the Incans had no written language of their own. Among them was also found cryptic knotted strings, called khipus. At first, they were believed to be a form of accounting, used to record numerical data.
The Sumerians and Babylonians wrote on clay, the Egyptians on stone and papyrus. Cloth may have been the medium of the Incas, a rare commodity for its day, a sign of wealth and authority. Serious scientific and philological studies ensued, which sought to prove the knotted strands were more than ledgers. No Incan equivalent of the trilingual “Rosetta Stone” inscription used to decipher Egyptian hieroglyphs was ever excavated, there or elsewhere. It was an archive, a library of sorts. It contained the combined records of the Incas, and the peoples the empire dominated at its peak.
She was called in to catalog the finds, and decipher as many of the charts and maps as she was able. It was here, in a tree whose branches and roots grew down through the opening, that Alma Del Nephites first encountered Titian. The poor thing squealed in fright and derision. It snipped its thread-thick web strands, and scuttled up the bole in flight from the pursuing cartographer. Reaching out to lay hold of the spider, it lunged out and sank its fangs deep into her forearm, just above the wrist.
Ignoring the wound after a single outcry, Alma slipped off her down-filled vest and wrapped the creature up in it. It writhed and struggled to break free, but Del Nephites climbed up and out of the backside of the chamber. She spread her booted heels and straddled the low cliff framing Tambo Machay, refusing to set it free. They would remain together, from that day to this. For nearly three years, the two were inseparable, much to the chagrin of Ian McQuade and others like him. Alma could not be held responsible for the arachnophobia of others. Like any neuroses, the event predisposing individuals to fear spiders usually stemmed from an aggrandized childhood memory.
Author and philologist J.R.R. Tolkien was bitten by a spider, as a young boy in his native South Africa. The literal representation of that encounter figured prominently in not only The Lord of the Rings, but The Hobbit and The Silmarillion, as well.
* * *
Skirting the edge of the surrounding hillside from which the “Baths of the Inca” were hewn, Alma once again found her way into the chamber. Shrubbery and wild brush overgrew the base of the tree, at once hiding and blocking the entrance. It was larger now than she remembered, with longer branches and thicker roots. It was difficult, slow going on the way down. She balanced between the obstacles and the burden she carried so gingerly. Sunlight filtered through the exposed aperture in dusty pillars slanting against the bare walls. Not only was the stone cut room empty, even the tiled mosaics were carefully removed from the floors and adjoining walls. Nothing remained but her memories, and the reliquary of a dead culture. Its only purpose was to serve as a time capsule, so that its people and culture should not be forgotten with the passage of time.
For a moment, she recalled the lost city of the Anasazi. She almost killed Ian, by failing to warn him of the hazards of another underground river. She forced her wandering thoughts back to the present, and her grisly task. She set down the tiny casket, sliding out of her backpack. Alma unfolded her shovel, beginning to dig at the base of the tree. Its deepest roots cracked the floor, exposing what little remained of the precision masonry.
She labored more than a half hour, raising chunks of unadorned tile and the soft earth beneath it. When she dug a hole wide and deep enough, Alma slowly got to her feet, wiped her hands and removed the threadbare vest. Wrapping it tenderly around the box containing Titian’s remains, she placed both in the makeshift grave. She struggled for words against her strained emotions, offering the eulogy and a prayer in the same ragged breath.
For the second time since her mother died, she wept in sadness.
* * *
Alma Del Nephites wiped a single tear away from the bitterness of that recent memory. In English, German, Spanish and Portuguese, the flight attendant announced their arrival from the coastal city of Lima, Peru to Mexico City Airport. Their landing was uneventful, and Alma was soon at the luggage carousel, awaiting her only suitcase. She checked her bag, but kept her backpack as carry-on luggage with her, during the flight. Other than the unusual statue she received from the strange little girl during the train ride to Cusco, she had nothing to declare. She proffered her dog-eared, stamp-filled passport to the customs agent.
It was her intention to stay in Mexico only a few days. She wished to visit old friends and forget her grief, before returning to New York and the Foundation. There was one person she wished to see, in particular. He was the entomologist she avoided to protect Titian. They broke up amicably, before she ever found her pet. She refused to reconcile or ever see him again. She even returned his mail, unopened. Alma was certain he would seek to classify Titian, dissect her and keep her remains in a jar of formaldehyde. Now, there was nothing to keep them apart. Perhaps she could begin her life again here, possibly even with him. She understood and felt her loneliness more keenly than in years past. For the first time in more than a decade, she felt…
Vulnerable.
* * *
As it turned out, the clay model was enough to get her detained, even without Titian. She was shaken out of her reverie, and escorted roughly to a room adjoining the customs area. There, she was interrogated for an hour about the terra cotta figurine of the strange animal, and its human passenger.
“For the last time, senõra. How did you come by this artifact?” Alma was angry at the balding officer, with his potbelly and droopy mustache. His name was Claudio, and the customs agents regarded him uncertainly. He looked weak; spineless in fact, but he wielded great influence over them. Odd, that a regular federale with more knowledge than she had about the statuary should be on hand to arrest her, literally upon her arrival.
“I told you over and over again,” Alma repeated in Andalusian Spanish, the ceceo dialect erroneously attributed to a lisping Castilian ruler. “I bought it at an open air market, in Peru. I thought it primitive, yet curious, so I purchased it for a friend in America. That’s all there is to it. Now, may I please have my belongings and leave?” Alma lied about how she acquired the relic. She understood the penalty for trafficking in stolen antiquities. If she said it was simply given to her, she would appear more of a courier than a duped sightseer. As much trouble as she had brought upon herself already, the appearance of guilt would mean an automatic prison sentence. The Mexican judicial system was based on Roman and Napoleonic law, much like that of France and Italy.
“You are presumed guilty, until proven innocent. Your civil rights are subsequently denied, in lieu of your crime.” Claudio raised himself up, and hitched his gun belt back under his ponderous middle. It all but disappeared from view, beneath the great swell of his distended belly. He seldom took his hand from the butt of his service revolver, which shone and smelled of cleaning oil. “I’m afraid not, Senõra Del Nephites. I am most disappointed to say that you will be remanded into our custody, at this time.”
The sheriff opened the door to the interrogation room, motioning for two plainclothes men in dark suits to enter. They approached as if already instructed, and lifted her up from her chair to either side. Claudio pulled her hands together, cuffing her wrists. “You see, you are in possession of one of the fabled clay models of Acambaro. There are still many of these figurines unaccounted for, and feared lost. For all I know, you may be entering Mexico to steal another of our archaeological treasures, to sell on the black market!”
Alma protested that she knew nothing of Acambaro, as she was led away.
CHAPTER 2
Near Glen Rose, Texas, seventy-five miles southwest of Dallas, a storm was brewing. Not from the slate gray skies of early spring that permeated the landscape with a tinge of silver, but from the ramifications of an event a century old. Strongly held beliefs were about to collide over the providence of a discovery no one in a hundred years could fully explain.
It was either 65 million or seven thousand years in the making, depending on the balance of truth versus fact. It was not an enviable position for a seasoned professor of paleontology, let alone an inexperienced substitute.
The man restlessly pacing before the group of undergraduates struggled for a reply. He could no longer hide from them, any more than he could avoid himself. He squelched a nervous stutter, in spite of sandy blonde hair worn longer to hide his face, beneath a beard grown out of apathy and rebellion. Somehow, neither made him feel any more menacing, than distant. He adjusted his wire-framed glasses, as he thought of something to say to his expectant audience.
For the past four months, anthropologist Dr. Ian McQuade lived a life of isolation and self-imposed exile. Only the unexpected phone call and opportunity to lead this field study group saved him from lapsing into despair, altogether. For the first time in his life, he truly hated academia, and all it represented. A professional student well into his late twenties, he entered his thirties no longer idealistic about the delusions of education. Like Einstein, he truly began to appreciate the value of imagination over knowledge.
As the anticipation of his gathered students lapsed into awkward silence, their collective stares reflected his own lost confidence. He was just like them, once. He sought knowledge with reckless abandon, trading intellect for worldly experience, as long as possible. Now, they wanted him to be their voice in the wilderness. The dried riverbeds of the Paluxy were no place for a baptism; not even one by fire. Religion and science always made for strange bedfellows. Philosophically, they both sought to explain the natural order of the universe. There was always a price to be paid for disturbing the status quo, wherein the twain should never meet. When the tipping point of dogma collided with discovery, there was simply no middle ground.
You were considered a heretic in either camp; fit only to be burned at the stake.
In his mind’s eye, he relived the loss of his Ph.D. candidacy at the University of Virginia. He was cast out because he believed in the fabled beasts of Native American legend. He sought to gain credibility by theoretically proving their existence. His masters’ theses in anthropology, paleontology and zoology were rife with allusions to thunderbirds, lake monsters and Bigfoot.
Why should his doctoral dissertation be any different?
John Dreyson, his faculty advisor and professorial chair of the anthropology department, caught the lack of metaphorical reference and called him on it. Ian could still hear the echo of the old man’s office door, as it closed behind him. For a time, he found work as the erstwhile assistant curator of the beleaguered Clayton Echols Museum of Natural History, in Boston, Massachusetts.
He was forbidden there to pursue the obsession that drove him to the brink of social acceptance and professional respectability. Cryptozoology was the study of hidden animals, those out of place and time. Ian argued that it was a legitimate science, an extension to mainstream curriculum. His old friend and mentor reminded him that it was not a degreed field of study, in any college or university, anywhere in the world. It lurked at the fringes of several acceptable fields of study. By rejecting his dissertation, Dreyson made damn sure that UVA was not going to be the first to grant legitimacy to a pseudo-science and career killer. What he did, he believed to be in the best interest of his most accomplished pupil.
Following a thinly veiled lead to South America in search of a legendary giant spider, McQuade was lost along the Rio Negro, the largest tributary of the Amazon River. His thieving guide and porters nearly starved him to death, as they circled the resort city of Manaus. Only the spider’s owner, a fair, blue-eyed Peruvian named Alma Del Nephites, saved his self-funded expedition from disaster. She defended him, exposing the petty criminals for what they were. They took his money to buy fast food in town, while he ate tubers and drank questionable water. He finally found Diablo Rojo, the arachnid Red Devil. She called the 18-inch horror Titian, and treated it more like a child than a pet. The odd thing was that she came in search of him, there in the canopied rainforests of western Brazil.
Conveniently, coincidentally, or by design, she lived nearby. Alma delivered the fateful message of a phone call waiting for him, along with a jet to New York. An offer to search for monsters of myth and legend was too compelling to pass up, considering his other prospects at the time. Word got back to Frank Gustman, curator of the museum, of Ian’s exploits in the jungle. McQuade was promptly fired as a potential embarrassment to the hallowed halls of the nearly bankrupt museum.
With nowhere else to go, Ian accepted a position with the Chimaera Foundation. Too many things fell into place, leading up to that moment. Unable to refuse a steady paycheck, he felt like a lab rat running the maze of their labyrinthine, underground corridors. It gave him the chance to prove the existence of thunderbirds. In the end, he was vindicated and received his Ph.D. from Dreyson himself, but couldn’t tell anyone outside of the organization about it. With Alma no longer at his side, he was then asked to find the very creature that started him on this path. He saw a Bigfoot as a child, but no one had believed him.
He was again redeemed, but lost his heart and soul for the work.
His obsession led to rash decisions and the death of a member of his team. This was no benevolent lost city, but a seismic monitoring station on the desolated rim of Mt. St. Helens. For their part in the tragedy, Dr. Ian McQuade could not forgive himself, any more than he would the Foundation.
If only Alma had been there. She might have known what to do…
* * *
“Professor McQuade? Ian…” It was Sybil Lance, a black graduate student, sent by Upstate Carolina Technical College to look after him. One of the forty-thousand who took courses remotely under the auspices of Clemson, Furman, and the University of South Carolina in Columbia, she was more like a chaperone than a pupil.
She was nearly his height at five-foot, nine inches. Her dark irises searched the unfocused glaze in his unblinking, hazel eyes. He looked away, but her gentle touch became a firm grip on his upper arm. She was concerned he was not up to the challenge confronting him. In spite of the trauma that seemed to be fighting its way to the surface, he shrugged out of her hold. The anthropologist turned to face the class of seventeen boys, eleven girls.
This was a rare field research trip for them, and only his presence convinced the school to permit him access to their additional financial resources. It did not require a college degree to teach at the community college level, and most Ph.D. recipients sought administrative positions. Ian was an exception. He would not be there long, but they took full advantage of his scholastic credentials. The position didn’t pay well, and was only temporary.
Dr. McQuade carried a full range of courses, in conjunction with his background. He interspersed stories of undiscovered or relict creatures, thought dead long ago, with their textbook studies. When they asked the inevitable question whether man walked side by side with dinosaurs, he was strangely non-committal.
“Why don’t we go and find out?” he suggested. In the final weeks of Winter Quarter, he found himself staring back at their inquisitive faces, along the banks of the Paluxy. He first shared with them the more recent history of the area. How, in 1908, a violent flood careened through the river valley. The following summer, a teenager by the name of Ernest “Bull” Adams was wading through the limestone creek bottom of the Wheeler Branch.
The boy stumbled across a series of large, three-toed tracks, arguably revealed by the removal of sediment the year before, in the torrential rainfall. Two years later, in 1910, a local youth named Charlie Moss, and his brother Grady were fishing along a limestone shelf of the Paluxy. Together, they found more of the unusual tracks. Even more curiously, these alternated with manlike footprints, 15 to 18 inches in length. The implication and furor they caused, over the course of the past three decades, were only a source of mild acceptance and casual discussion, at the time. After all, a gap of over 60 million years separated the last of the dinosaurs from the first ancestors of modern man.
By the 1930’s, some enterprising Glen Rose residents began to chisel out the dinosaur tracks, selling them to tourists and residents alike. It was also rumored that some of the ‘human’ tracks were carved out and sold, but their current whereabouts are unknown. Apparently, no photographs were ever taken.
Around this same time, George Adams, the brother of the boy who originally discovered the first set of tracks in 1908, was said to have fabricated human tracks. His nephew Wayland, Ernest’s son, later explained the technique. It involved finding a suitably oblong depression, then hollowing out the facsimile of toes and heel, at his uncle’s leisure.
The first scientist to take an interest, a paleontologist by the name of Roland T. Bird, located a number of three-toed tracks with the help of locals. A fellow by the name of Ryals, who was the first to cut and sell the tracks, showed him the only ‘human’ track Bird ever found. The results were inconclusive, at best. Combined with the limited carving skills of Adams, the anatomical attributes were too grossly misshapen to be organic.
Let alone, human.
By the 1960’s and 1970’s, until as late as 1999, other tributaries had yielded up more of these incredible finds. “We are standing at the Upper Taylor Platform of the McFall Trail,” Ian explained. “It was here that the latest of these intermingled tracks were discovered. Over the same period of time, there has arisen much confusion as to the authenticity and origin of these tracks.”
“Some want to believe that it is proof man co-existed with the dinosaur, only seven millennia ago. Others want to disprove that anything remotely human dwelled on this planet, 65 million years ago. The former are called creationists, the latter evolutionists. They have polarized into the irreconcilably different camps of science and religion.”
They gathered around the vestige of a previously undiscovered track, which allowed a community college like Upstate Tech to fund a short research junket. Some of the students even tried what so many before them had attempted. Like some prehistoric Hollywood Walk of Fame, they placed their bared feet into the track. It was large, nearly seventeen inches, but the shape was only marginally human. It sat within the recessed track of a saurian impression, slightly askew.
One of the students sought to interrupt the last of his professor’s monologue on the area and its gift to humanity, buried so long beneath two feet of solid rock. With his present frame of mind, McQuade ignored the heavyset older man, and continued unabated.
“Many have come to study the tracks, some to remove them for profit. Others sought to destroy them to keep the world status quo, whatever their perception. As for me, I could really care less, one way or the other.” An audible gasp escaped the assembled crowd. Almost in unison, they turned their gazes downward at the overlaid tracks supposedly linking man with dinosaur.
“What we do know for sure, is that mainstream geologists assign the Paluxy river bed and its tributaries around Glen Rose to the lower Cretaceous period. This would make the formations into which the tracks were laid about 113 million years old.”
Abner Garrett, a gray-haired man with a handlebar mustache who often quoted scripture, or wandered off for personal prayer, finally reached the point of exasperation. He stabbed a finger full of self-righteous indignation downward onto the cover of his King James Bible. “I trust the Good Book, son. No one can tell me that we’re not looking at a human footprint. The dinosaur tracks are faked, I tell you. There’s no way you’re going to prove it, otherwise!”
With a cavalier attitude far beyond and removed from his former self, Ian pulled a multifunction knife from its sheath. It was the only souvenir of his time with the Foundation. Turning the blade on its curved edge, he reached down and dug into the base of the heel. He looked up into their expectant faces, especially that of his eldest pupil.
With a flick of his wrist, he dislodged a chunk of sediment to expose a triangular, dewclaw impression. “I can, and I just did,” Ian stated. There was a challenging chorus among several of the other students, but his hard look shamed them into receding behind their classmates. “My advice, to all of you, is that you study and discover for yourself, empirically. Use your mind and your senses to seek out what is true about this world. If you rely on others or trust only your heart, you may very well blind yourself to the obvious.”
He asked to borrow Garrett’s bible, which was heavily marked with red colored pencil over significant verses. He blushed with embarrassment, as Ian thumbed through the tabs to find that Job 40:15-24 had already been highlighted. “In The Book of Job, CHAPTER 40, verses fifteen through twenty-four, it reads:”
Look at the behemoth, which I made along with you and which feeds on grass like an ox. What strength he has in his loins, what power in the muscles of his belly! His tail sways like a cedar; the sinews of his thighs are close-knit. His bones are tubes of bronze, his limbs like rods of iron. He ranks first among the works of God, yet his Maker can approach him with his sword. The hills bring him their produce, and all the wild animals play nearby. Under the lotus plants he lies, hidden among the reeds in the marsh. The lotuses conceal him in their shadow; the poplars by the stream surround him. When the river rages, he is not alarmed; he is secure, though the Jordan should surge against his mouth. Can anyone capture him by the eyes, or trap him and pierce his nose?
“That’s not necessarily proof of any dinosaur in the bible,” Abner countered. “Verse Fifteen could be referring to a crocodile, hippopotamus, or even an elephant. Seventeen might just as easily describe a trunk. The original Hebrew translation of Verse Twenty-Four suggests that ‘eyes’ might actually mean ‘by a water hole’.”
“My point, exactly,” Ian commented, handing the open scriptures back to their fastidious owner. “But, since you brought it up, what about Verse Seventeen? Such animals were common in those days, and none had a tail like a cedar. Psalms 92:12; Isaiah 2:13 and 37:24; Ezekiel 17:22 and 31:3. Along with Amos 2:9, they all describe the cedar tree as high and tall. I had to study this out for myself, and I believe you have, too. Unfortunately, the term dinosaur wasn’t coined until the 19th century, to describe the first fossils discovered in the modern world. In the dark ages, they might have believed them to be the remains of dragons. The bones and tracks are real enough; the only question is how and when they got here, and whether our prehistoric ancestors ever lived beside them.”
Garrett remained adamant, growing red-faced as his mustache drooped.
“Well, according to Verse Sixteen, sounds to me like your dinosaur might have had a belly button! Quite a trick for a reptile, large or small, don’t you think?” With that, Abner Garrett snapped his Old Testament shut, and stepped smugly back into the crowd.
Sybil regarded the astonished group, voicing their collective question for the anthropologist. “Professor, what about all those other footprints? Some of them are clearly five-toed. Some are huge. You believe that no ancestor of modern man could have possibly made them? What about all your stories of relict, prototypical humans surviving the last ice age, when it killed off the other megafauna? Could it be that something not quite human passed through here, at some point?”
Ian chuckled mirthlessly, as he cleaned his knife. He returned it to the sheath looped at his belt, snapping the cover. “Are you asking me if Bigfoot hunted dinosaur? I proved for myself whether any species of large, hairy, manlike bipeds exist. I suggest you do the same, but keep in mind; if you have any aspirations of a scientific career, or value your academic credentials, don’t waste your time.”
Ian hoped that his audience would be so quelled by his dismissive tone, that they would overlook his Freudian slip into present tense. The last thing he needed was for his misguided recommendation to get back to the department heads at South Carolina’s largest technical school system. Now that he was no longer part of the Foundation, he needed the work.
Two year associate degree program, or not; multiple degrees, or not; they would have been within their rights to kick him out. He simply stood, turned, and walked away. His mind raced after a fragmentary thought, a tenuous ideal to bridge the gap he had inadvertently created.
This was not about science, or religion; it was about him and his beliefs.
More than that, his money from the first Foundation mission was running out, and he needed the little this job paid. He refused any compensation for the second mission, referring to it as blood money. All the same, it was brought down to the same hard ground. Was he willing to throw away another opportunity, for the sake of his foolish pride?
He had little time to sift an objective reply through his fragile ego, when Lance once again stole up behind him. She called his name several times in a low, persistent tone. When he balked at her interruption of his reverie, she took his arm again, literally spinning him around. He was about to scold her for the rebuke, but could only stare down at the flip cell phone she proffered him.
“Professor, there’s a woman on the line for you. I told her you were busy, and tried to take a message. She insisted on talking with you, said it was an emergency. You have to take this call!” Ian stared dumbly at its black and chrome surface, backlit buttons, and screen of cobalt blue. He was unwilling, or unable to fathom who would want to track him down, and with such poor timing. His mother?
Alma…
Tentatively, he took the mobile phone from the young woman, stepping even further away from her. The students still followed, gathering behind her. They were all looking for answers, but he had none to give them.
Yet.
“Hello?” Ian waited expectantly as a voice, faint through the white noise at the edge of the roaming service perimeter, called his name. He blocked his other ear and shushed the murmuring crowd, but still couldn’t make out the identity of the caller. It was indeed a woman’s voice, but tremulous. Neither his mother, nor Del Nephites would ever use such a hesitant tone with him.