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Chapter no 13 – I Face the Killer Turkey

The Red Pyramid

MY TURN.

First of all, Sadieโ€™s โ€œpuppy dogโ€ comment was totally out of line. I was not starry-eyed about Zia. Itโ€™s just that I donโ€™t meet a lot of people who can throw fireballs and battle gods. [Stop making faces at me, Sadie. You look like Khufu.]

Anyway, we plunged into the sand tunnel.

Everything went dark. My stomach tingled with that top-of-the-roller- coaster weightlessness as I hurtled forward. Hot winds whipped around me, and my skin burned.

Then I tumbled out onto a cold tile floor, and Sadie and Zia crashed on top of me.

โ€œOw!โ€ I grumbled.

The first thing I noticed was the fine layer of sand covering my body like powdered sugar. Then my eyes adjusted to the harsh light. We were in a big building like a shopping mall, with crowds bustling around us.

No…not a mall. It was a two-level airport concourse, with shops, lots of windows, and polished steel columns. Outside, it was dark, so I knew we must be in a different time zone. Announcements echoed over the intercom in a language that sounded like Arabic.

Sadie spit sand out of her mouth. โ€œYuck!โ€ โ€œCome on,โ€ Zia said. โ€œWe canโ€™t stay here.โ€

I struggled to my feet. People were streaming pastโ€”some in Western clothes, some in robes and headscarves. A family arguing in German rushed by and almost ran over me with their suitcases.

Then I turned and saw something I recognized. In the middle of the concourse stood a life-size replica of an Ancient Egyptian boat made from glowing display casesโ€”a sales counter for perfume and jewelry.

โ€œThis is the Cairo airport,โ€ I said. โ€œYes,โ€ Zia said. โ€œNow, letโ€™s go!โ€

โ€œWhy the rush? Can Serqet…can she follow us through that sand gate?โ€

Zia shook her head. โ€œAn artifact overheats whenever it creates a gate. It requires a twelve-hour cooldown before it can be used again. But we still have to worry about airport security. Unless youโ€™d like to meet the Egyptian

police, youโ€™ll come with me now.โ€

She grabbed our arms and steered us through the crowd. We mustโ€™ve looked like beggars in our old-fashioned clothes, covered head-to-toe in sand. People gave us a wide berth, but nobody tried to stop us.

โ€œWhy are we here?โ€ Sadie demanded. โ€œTo see the ruins of Heliopolis,โ€ Zia said. โ€œInside an airport?โ€ Sadie asked.

I remembered something Dad had told me years ago, and my scalp tingled.

โ€œSadie, the ruins are under us.โ€ I looked at Zia. โ€œThatโ€™s right, isnโ€™t it?โ€

She nodded. โ€œThe ancient city was pillaged centuries ago. Some of its monuments were carted away, like Cleopatraโ€™s two needles. Most of its temples were broken down to make new buildings. What was left disappeared under Cairoโ€™s suburbs. The largest section is under this airport.โ€

โ€œAnd how does that help us?โ€ Sadie asked.

Zia kicked open a maintenance door. On the other side was a broom closet. Zia muttered a commandโ€”โ€œSahadโ€โ€”and the image of the closet shimmered and disappeared, revealing a set of stone steps leading down.

โ€œBecause not all Heliopolis is in ruins,โ€ Zia said. โ€œFollow closely. And touch nothing.โ€

The stairs mustโ€™ve led down about seven million miles, because we descended forever. The passage had been made for miniature people, too. We had to crouch and crawl most of the way, and even so, I bonked my head on the ceiling a dozen times. The only light was from a ball of fire in Ziaโ€™s palm, which made shadows dance across the walls.

Iโ€™d been in places like this beforeโ€”tunnels inside pyramids, tombs my dad had excavatedโ€”but Iโ€™ve never liked them. Millions of tons of rock above me seemed to crush the air out of my lungs.

Finally we reached the bottom. The tunnel opened up, and Zia stopped abruptly. After my eyes adjusted, I saw why. We were standing at the edge of a chasm.

A single wooden plank spanned the void. On the opposite ledge, two jackal-headed granite warriors flanked a doorway, their spears crossed over the entrance.

Sadie sighed. โ€œPlease, no more psychotic statues.โ€

โ€œDo not joke,โ€ Zia warned. โ€œThis is an entrance to the First Nome, the oldest branch of the House of Life, headquarters for all magicians. My job was to bring you here safely, but I cannot help you cross. Each magician must unbar the path for herself, and the challenge is different for each supplicant.โ€

She looked at Sadie expectantly, which annoyed me. First Bast, now Zia

โ€”both of them treated Sadie like she should have some kind of superpowers. I mean, okay, so sheโ€™d been able to blast the library doors apart, but why

didnโ€™t anyone look at me to do cool tricks?

Plus, I was still annoyed with Sadie for the comments sheโ€™d made at the museum in New Yorkโ€”how I had it so good traveling the world with Dad. She had no idea how often I wanted to complain about the constant traveling, how many days I wished I didnโ€™t have to get on a plane and could just be like a normal kid going to school and making friends. But I couldnโ€™t complain. You always have to look impeccable, Dad had told me. And he didnโ€™t just mean my clothes. He meant my attitude. With Mom gone, I was all he had. Dad needed me to be strong. Most days, I didnโ€™t mind. I loved my dad. But it was also hard.

Sadie didnโ€™t understand that. She had it easy. And now she seemed to be getting all the attention, as if she were the special one. It wasnโ€™t fair.

Then I heard Dadโ€™s voice in my head: โ€œFairness means everyone gets what they need. And the only way to get what you need is to make it happen yourself.โ€

I donโ€™t know what got into me, but I drew my sword and marched across the plank. It was like my legs were working by themselves, not waiting for my brain. Part of me thought: This is a really bad idea. But part of me answered: No, we do not fear this. And the voice didnโ€™t sound like mine.

โ€œCarter!โ€ Sadie cried.

I kept walking. I tried not to look down at the yawning void under my feet, but the sheer size of the chasm made me dizzy. I felt like one of those gyroscope toys, spinning and wobbling as I crossed the narrow plank.

As I got closer to the opposite side, the doorway between the two statues began to glow, like a curtain of red light.

I took a deep breath. Maybe the red light was a portal, like the gate of sand. If I just charged through fast enough…

Then the first dagger shot out of the tunnel.

My sword was in motion before I realized it. The dagger shouldโ€™ve impaled me in the chest, but somehow I deflected it with my blade and sent it sailing into the abyss. Two more daggers shot out of the tunnel. Iโ€™d never had the best reflexes, but now they sped up. I ducked one dagger and hooked the other with the curved blade of my sword, turned the dagger and flung it back into the tunnel. How the heck did I do that?

I advanced to the end of the plank and slashed through the red light, which flickered and died. I waited for the statues to come alive, but nothing happened. The only sound was a dagger clattering against the rocks in the chasm far below.

The doorway began to glow again. The red light coalesced into a strange form: a five-foot-tall bird with a manโ€™s head. I raised my sword, but Zia yelled, โ€œCarter, no!โ€

The bird creature folded his wings. His eyes, lined with kohl, narrowed

as they studied me. A black ornamental wig glistened on his head, and his face was etched with wrinkles. One of those fake braided pharaoh beards was stuck on his chin like a backward ponytail. He didnโ€™t look hostile, except for the red flickering light all around him, and the fact that from the neck down he was the worldโ€™s largest killer turkey.

Then a chilling thought occurred to me: This was a bird with a human head, the same form Iโ€™d imagined taking when I slept in Amosโ€™s house, when my soul left my body and flew to Phoenix. I had no idea what that meant, but it scared me.

The bird creature scratched at the stone floor. Then, unexpectedly, he smiled.

โ€œPari, niswa nafeer,โ€ he told me, or at least thatโ€™s what it sounded like.

Zia gasped. She and Sadie were standing behind me now, their faces pale. Apparently theyโ€™d managed to cross the chasm without my noticing.

Finally Zia seemed to collect herself. She bowed to the bird creature.

Sadie followed her example.

The creature winked at me, as if weโ€™d just shared a joke. Then he vanished. The red light faded. The statues retracted their arms, uncrossing their spears from the entrance.

โ€œThatโ€™s it?โ€ I asked. โ€œWhat did the turkey say?โ€

Zia looked at me with something like fear. โ€œThat was not a turkey, Carter. That was a ba.โ€

Iโ€™d heard my dad use that word before, but I couldnโ€™t place it. โ€œAnother monster?โ€

โ€œA human soul,โ€ Zia said. โ€œIn this case, a spirit of the dead. A magician from ancient times, come back to serve as a guardian. They watch the entrances of the House.โ€

She studied my face as if Iโ€™d just developed some terrible rash. โ€œWhat?โ€ I demanded. โ€œWhy are you looking at me that way?โ€ โ€œNothing,โ€ she said. โ€œWe must hurry.โ€

She squeezed by me on the ledge and disappeared into the tunnel. Sadie was staring at me too.

โ€œAll right,โ€ I said. โ€œWhat did the bird guy say? You understood it?โ€

She nodded uneasily. โ€œHe mistook you for someone else. He must have bad eyesight.โ€

โ€œBecause?โ€

โ€œBecause he said, โ€˜Go forth, good king.โ€™โ€

I was in a daze after that. We passed through the tunnel and entered a vast underground city of halls and chambers, but I only remember bits and pieces of it.

The ceilings soared to twenty or thirty feet, so it didnโ€™t feel like we were

underground. Every chamber was lined with massive stone columns like the ones Iโ€™d seen in Egyptian ruins, but these were in perfect condition, brightly painted to resemble palm trees, with carved green fronds at the top, so I felt like I was walking through a petrified forest. Fires burned in copper braziers. They didnโ€™t seem to make any smoke, but the air smelled good, like a marketplace for spicesโ€”cinnamon, clove, nutmeg, and others I couldnโ€™t identify. The city smelled like Zia. I realized that this was her home.

We saw a few other peopleโ€”mostly older men and women. Some wore linen robes, some modern clothes. One guy in a business suit walked past with a black leopard on a leash, as if that were completely normal. Another guy barked orders to a small army of brooms, mops, and buckets that were scuttling around, cleaning up the city.

โ€œLike that cartoon,โ€ Sadie said. โ€œWhere Mickey Mouse tries to do magic and the brooms keep splitting and toting water.โ€

โ€œโ€˜The Sorcererโ€™s Apprentice,โ€™โ€ Zia said. โ€œYou do know that was based on an Egyptian story, donโ€™t you?โ€

Sadie just stared back. I knew how she felt. It was too much to process.

We walked through a hall of jackal-headed statues, and I could swear their eyes watched us as we passed. A few minutes later, Zia led us through an open-air marketโ€”if you can call anything โ€œopen-airโ€ undergroundโ€”with dozens of stalls selling weird items like boomerang wands, animated clay dolls, parrots, cobras, papyrus scrolls, and hundreds of different glittering amulets.

Next we crossed a path of stones over a dark river teeming with fish. I thought they were perch until I saw their vicious teeth.

โ€œAre those piranhas?โ€ I asked.

โ€œTiger fish from the Nile,โ€ Zia said. โ€œLike piranhas, except these can weigh up to sixteen pounds.โ€

I watched my step more closely after that.

We turned a corner and passed an ornate building carved out of black rock. Seated pharaohs were chiseled into the walls, and the doorway was shaped like a coiled serpent.

โ€œWhatโ€™s in there?โ€ Sadie asked.

We peeked inside and saw rows of childrenโ€”maybe two dozen in all, about six to ten years old or soโ€”sitting cross-legged on cushions. They were hunched over brass bowls, peering intently into some sort of liquid and speaking under their breath. At first I thought it was a classroom, but there was no sign of a teacher, and the chamber was lit only by a few candles. Judging by the number of empty seats, the room was meant to hold twice as many kids.

โ€œOur initiates,โ€ Zia said, โ€œlearning to scry. The First Nome must keep in contact with our brethren all over the world. We use our youngest

as…operators, I suppose you would say.โ€

โ€œSo youโ€™ve got bases like this all over the world?โ€ โ€œMost are much smaller, but yes.โ€

I remembered what Amos had told us about the nomes. โ€œEgypt is the First Nome. New York is the Twenty-first. Whatโ€™s the last one, the Three- hundred-and-sixtieth?โ€

โ€œThat would be Antarctica,โ€ Zia said. โ€œA punishment assignment.

Nothing there but a couple of cold magicians and some magic penguins.โ€ โ€œMagic penguins?โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t ask.โ€

Sadie pointed to the children inside. โ€œHow does it work? They see images in the water?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s oil,โ€ Zia said. โ€œBut yes.โ€

โ€œSo few,โ€ Sadie said. โ€œAre these the only initiates in the whole city?โ€

โ€œIn the whole world,โ€ Zia corrected. โ€œThere were more beforeโ€”โ€ She stopped herself.

โ€œBefore what?โ€ I asked.

โ€œNothing,โ€ Zia said darkly. โ€œInitiates do our scrying because young minds are most receptive. Magicians begin training no later than the age of ten…with a few dangerous exceptions.โ€

โ€œYou mean us,โ€ I said.

She glanced at me apprehensively, and I knew she was still thinking about what the bird spirit had called me: a good king. It seemed so unreal, like our family name in that Blood of the Pharaohs scroll. How could I be related to some ancient kings? And even if I was, I certainly wasnโ€™t a king. I had no kingdom. I didnโ€™t even have my single suitcase anymore.

โ€œTheyโ€™ll be waiting for you,โ€ Zia said. โ€œCome along.โ€ We walked so far, my feet began to ache.

Finally we arrived at a crossroads. On the right was a massive set of bronze doors with fires blazing on either side; on the left, a twenty-foot-tall sphinx carved into the wall. A doorway nestled between its paws, but it was bricked in and covered in cobwebs.

โ€œThat looks like the Sphinx at Giza,โ€ I said.

โ€œThatโ€™s because we are directly under the real Sphinx,โ€ Zia said. โ€œThat tunnel leads straight up to it. Or it used to, before it was sealed.โ€

โ€œBut…โ€ I did some quick calculations in my head. โ€œThe Sphinx is, like, twenty miles from the Cairo Airport.โ€

โ€œRoughly.โ€

โ€œNo way weโ€™ve walked that far.โ€

Zia actually smiled, and I couldnโ€™t help noticing how pretty her eyes were. โ€œDistance changes in magic places, Carter. Surely youโ€™ve learned that by now.โ€

Sadie cleared her throat. โ€œSo why is the tunnel closed, then?โ€

โ€œThe Sphinx was too popular with archaeologists,โ€ Zia said. โ€œThey kept digging around. Finally, in the 1980s, they discovered the first part of the tunnel under the Sphinx.โ€

โ€œDad told me about that!โ€ I said. โ€œBut he said the tunnel was a dead end.โ€

โ€œIt was when we got through with it. We couldnโ€™t let the archaeologists know how much theyโ€™re missing. Egyptโ€™s leading archaeologist recently speculated that theyโ€™ve only discovered thirty percent of the ancient ruins in Egypt. In truth, theyโ€™ve only discovered one tenth, and not even the interesting tenth.โ€

โ€œWhat about King Tutโ€™s tomb?โ€ I protested.

โ€œThat boy king?โ€ Zia rolled her eyes. โ€œBoring. You should see some of the good tombs.โ€

I felt a little hurt. Dad had named me after Howard Carter, the guy who discovered King Tutโ€™s tomb, so Iโ€™d always felt a personal attachment to it. If that wasnโ€™t a โ€œgoodโ€ tomb, I wondered what was.

Zia turned to face the bronze doors.

โ€œThis is the Hall of Ages.โ€ She placed her palm against the seal, which bore the symbol of the House of Life.

 

The hieroglyphs began to glow, and the doors swung open.

Zia turned to us, her expression deadly serious. โ€œYou are about to meet the Chief Lector. Behave yourselves, unless you wish to be turned into insects.โ€

โ€ŒC A R T E R

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