[Right, Carter. Give me the mic.]
So Iโd been to the Louvre once before on holiday, but I hadnโt been chased by vicious fruit bats. I wouldโve been terrified, except I was too busy being angry with Carter. I couldnโt believe the way heโd treated my bird problem. Honestly, I thought I would be a kite forever, suffocating inside a little feathery prison. And he had the nerve to make fun!
I promised myself Iโd get revenge, but for the time being we had enough worries staying alive.
We raced along in the cold rain. It was all I could do to avoid slipping on the slick pavements. I glanced back and saw two figures chasing usโmen with shaved heads and goatees and black raincoats. They mightโve passed for normal mortals except they each carried a glowing staff. Not a good sign.
The bats were literally at our heels. One nipped my leg. Another buzzed my hair. I had to force myself to keep running. My stomach still felt queasy from eating one of the little pests when I was a kiteโand no, that had not been my idea. Totally a defensive instinct!
โSadie,โ Bast called as we ran. โYouโll have only seconds to open the portal.โ
โWhere is it?โ I yelled.
We dashed across the rue de Rivoli into a wide plaza surrounded by the wings of the Louvre. Bast made straight for the glass pyramid at the entrance, glowing in the dusk.
โYou canโt be serious,โ I said. โThat isnโt a real pyramid.โ
โOf course itโs real,โ Bast said. โThe shape gives a pyramid its power. It is a ramp to the heavens.โ
The bats were all around us nowโbiting our arms, flying around our feet. As their numbers increased, it got harder to see or move.
Carter reached for his sword, then apparently remembered it wasnโt there anymore. Heโd lost it at Luxor. He swore and rummaged around in his workbag.
โDonโt slow down!โ Bast warned.
Carter pulled out his wand. In total frustration, he threw it at a bat. I thought this a pointless gesture, but the wand glowed white-hot and thumped
the bat solidly on the head, knocking it out of the air. The wand ricocheted through the swarm, thumping six, seven, eight of the little monsters before returning to Carterโs hand.
โNot bad,โ I said. โKeep it up!โ
We arrived at the base of the pyramid. The plaza was thankfully empty. The last thing I wanted was my embarrassing death by fruit bats posted on YouTube.
โOne minute until sundown,โ Bast warned. โOur last chance for summoning is now.โ
She unsheathed her knives and started slicing bats out of the air, trying to keep them away from me. Carterโs wand flew wildly, knocking fruit bats every which way. I faced the pyramid and tried to think of a portal, the way Iโd done at Luxor, but it was almost impossible to concentrate.
Where do you wish to go? Isis said in my mind. God, I donโt care! America!
I realized I was crying. I hated to, but shock and fear were starting to overwhelm me. Where did I want to go? Home, of course! Back to my flat in Londonโback to my own room, my grandparents, my mates at school and my old life. But I couldnโt. I had to think about my father and our mission. We had to get to Set.
America, I thought. Now!
My burst of emotion mustโve had some effect. The pyramid trembled. Its glass walls shimmered and the top of the structure began to glow.
A swirling sand vortex appeared, all right. Only one problem: it was hovering above the very top of the pyramid.
โClimb!โ Bast said. Easy for herโshe was a cat. โThe side is too steep!โ Carter objected.
Heโd done a good job with the bats. Dazed heaps littered the pavement, but more still flew round us, biting every bit of exposed skin, and the magicians were closing in.
โIโll toss you,โ Bast said.
โExcuse me?โ Carter protested, but she picked him up by his collar and pants and tossed him up the side of the pyramid. He skittered to the top in a very undignified manner and slipped straight through the portal.
โNow you, Sadie,โ Bast said. โCome on!โ
Before I could move, a manโs voice yelled, โStop!โ
Stupidly, I froze. The voice was so powerful, it was hard not to.
The two magicians were approaching. The taller one spoke in perfect English: โSurrender, Miss Kane, and return our masterโs property.โ
โSadie, donโt listen,โ Bast warned. โCome here.โ
โThe cat goddess deceives you,โ the magician said. โShe abandoned her post. She endangered us all. She will lead you to ruin.โ
I could tell he meant it. He was absolutely convinced of what he said.
I turned to Bast. Her expression had changed. She looked wounded, even grief-stricken.
โWhat does he mean?โ I said. โWhat did you do wrong?โ โWe have to leave,โ she warned. โOr they will kill us.โ
I looked at the portal. Carter was already through. That decided it. I wasnโt going to be separated from him. As annoying as he was, Carter was the only person I had left. (How is that for depressing?)
โToss me,โ I said.
Bast grabbed me. โSee you in America.โ Then she chucked me up the side of the pyramid.
I heard the magician roar, โSurrender!โ And an explosion rattled the glass next to my head. Then I plunged into the hot vortex of sand.
I woke in a small room with industrial carpeting, gray walls, and metal- framed windows. I felt as if I were inside a high-tech refrigerator. I sat up groggily and discovered I was coated in cold, wet sand.
โUgh,โ I said. โWhere are we?โ
Carter and Bast stood by the window. Apparently theyโd been conscious for a while, because theyโd both brushed themselves off.
โYouโve got to see this view,โ Carter said.
I got shakily to my feet and nearly fell down again when I saw how high we were.
An entire city spread out below usโI mean far below, well over a hundred meters. I could almost believe we were still in Paris, because a river curved off to our left, and the land was mostly flat. There were white government buildings clustered around networks of parks and circular roads, all spread out under a winter sky. But the light was wrong. It was still afternoon here, so we mustโve traveled west. And as my eyes made their way to the other end of a long rectangular green space, I found myself staring at a mansion that looked oddly familiar.
โIs that…the White House?โ
Carter nodded. โYou got us to America, all right. Washington, D.C.โ โBut weโre sky high!โ
Bast chuckled. โYou didnโt specify any particular American city, did you?โ
โWell…no.โ
โSo you got the default portal for the U.S.โthe largest single source of Egyptian power in North America.โ
I stared at her uncomprehendingly.
โThe biggest obelisk ever constructed,โ she said. โThe Washington Monument.โ
I had another moment of vertigo and moved away from the window.
Carter grabbed my shoulder and helped me sit down.
โYou should rest,โ he said. โYou passed out for…how long, Bast?โ
โTwo hours and thirty-two minutes,โ she said. โIโm sorry, Sadie. Opening more than one portal a day is extremely taxing, even with Isis helping.โ
Carter frowned. โBut we need her to do it again, right? Itโs not sunset here yet. We can still use portals. Letโs open one and get to Arizona. Thatโs where Set is.โ
Bast pursed her lips. โSadie canโt summon another portal. It would overextend her powers. I donโt have the talent. And you, Carter…well, your abilities lie elsewhere. No offense.โ
โOh, no,โ he grumbled. โIโm sure youโll call me next time you need to boomerang some fruit bats.โ
โBesides,โ Bast said, โwhen a portal is used, it needs time to cool down.
No one will be able to use the Washington Monumentโโ
โFor another twelve hours.โ Carter cursed. โI forgot about that.โ Bast nodded. โAnd by then, the Demon Days will have begun.โ โSo we need another way to Arizona,โ Carter said.
I suppose he didnโt mean to make me feel guilty, but I did. I hadnโt thought things through, and now we were stuck in Washington.
I glanced at Bast out the corner of my eye. I wanted to ask her what the men at the Louvre had meant about her leading us to ruin, but I was afraid to. I wanted to believe she was on our side. Perhaps if I gave her a chance, sheโd volunteer the information.
โAt least those magicians canโt follow us,โ I prompted.
Bast hesitated. โNot through the portal, no. But there are other magicians in America. And worse…Setโs minions.โ
My heart climbed into my throat. The House of Life was scary enough, but when I remembered Set, and what his minions had done to Amosโs house…
โWhat about Thothโs spellbook?โ I said. โDid we at least find a way to fight Set?โ
Carter pointed to the corner of the room. Spread out on Bastโs raincoat was Dadโs magic toolbox and the blue book weโd stolen from Desjardins.
โMaybe you can make sense of it,โ Carter said. โBast and I couldnโt read it. Even Doughboy was stumped.โ
I picked up the book, which was actually a scroll folded into sections. The papyrus was so brittle, I was afraid to touch it. Hieroglyphs and illustrations crowded the page, but I couldnโt make sense of them. My ability to read the language seemed to be switched off.
Isis? I asked. A little help?
Her voice was silent. Maybe Iโd worn her out. Or maybe she was cross
with me for not letting her take over my body, the way Horus had asked Carter to do. Selfish of me, I know.
I closed the book in frustration. โAll that work for nothing.โ โNow, now,โ Bast said. โItโs not so bad.โ
โRight,โ I said. โWeโre stuck in Washington, D.C. We have two days to make it to Arizona and stop a god we donโt know how to stop. And if we canโt, weโll never see our dad or Amos again, and the world might end.โ
โThatโs the spirit!โ Bast said brightly. โNow, letโs have a picnic.โ
She snapped her fingers. The air shimmered, and a pile of Friskies cans and two jugs of milk appeared on the carpet.
โUm,โ Carter said, โcan you conjure any people food?โ Bast blinked. โWell, no accounting for taste.โ
The air shimmered again. A plate of grilled cheese sandwiches and crisps appeared, along with a six-pack of Coke.
โYum,โ I said.
Carter muttered something under his breath. I suppose grilled cheese wasnโt his favorite, but he picked up a sandwich.
โWe should leave soon,โ he said between bites. โI mean…tourists and
all.โ
Bast shook her head. โThe Washington Monument closes at six oโclock.
The tourists are gone now. We might as well stay the night. If we must travel during the Demon Days, best to do it in daylight hours.โ
We all mustโve been exhausted, because we didnโt talk again until weโd finished our food. I ate three sandwiches and drank two Cokes. Bast made the whole place smell like fish Friskies, then started licking her hand as if preparing for a cat bath.
โCould you not do that?โ I asked. โItโs disturbing.โ โOh.โ She smiled. โSorry.โ
I closed my eyes and leaned against the wall. It felt good to rest, but I realized the room wasnโt actually quiet. The entire building seemed to be humming ever so slightly, sending a tremble through my skull that made my teeth buzz. I opened my eyes and sat up. I could still feel it.
โWhat is that?โ I asked. โThe wind?โ
โMagic energy,โ Bast said. โI told you, this is a powerful monument.โ โBut itโs modern. Like the Louvre pyramid. Why is it magic?โ
โThe Ancient Egyptians were excellent builders, Sadie. They picked shapesโobelisks, pyramidsโthat were charged with symbolic magic. An obelisk represents a sunbeam frozen in stoneโa life-giving ray from the original king of the gods, Ra. It doesnโt matter when the structure was built: it is still Egyptian. Thatโs why any obelisk can be used for opening gates to the Duat, or releasing great beings of powerโโ
โOr trapping them,โ I said. โThe way you were trapped in Cleopatraโs
Needle.โ
Her expression darkened. โI wasnโt actually trapped in the obelisk. My prison was a magically created abyss deep in the Duat, and the obelisk was the door your parents used to release me. But, yes. All symbols of Egypt are concentrated nodes of magic power. So an obelisk can definitely be used to imprison gods.โ
An idea was nagging at the back of my mind, but I couldnโt quite pin it down. Something about my mother, and Cleopatraโs Needle, and my fatherโs last promise in the British Museum: Iโll put things right.
Then I thought back to the Louvre, and the comment the magician had made. Bast looked so cross at the moment I was almost afraid to ask, but it was the only way Iโd get an answer. โThe magician said you abandoned your post. What did he mean?โ
Carter frowned. โWhen was this?โ
I told him what had happened after Bast chucked him through the portal. Bast stacked her empty Friskies cans. She didnโt look eager to reply. โWhen I was imprisoned,โ she said at last, โIโI wasnโt alone. I was
locked inside with a…creature of chaos.โ โIs that bad?โ I asked.
Judging from Bastโs expression, the answer was yes. โMagicians often do thisโlock a god up together with a monster so we have no time to try escaping our prison. For eons, I fought this monster. When your parents released meโโ
โThe monster got out?โ
Bast hesitated a little too long for my taste.
โNo. My enemy couldnโt have escaped.โ She took a deep breath. โYour motherโs final act of magic sealed that gate. The enemy was still inside. But thatโs what the magician meant. As far as he was concerned, my โpostโ was battling that monster forever.โ
It had the ring of truth, as if she were sharing a painful memory, but it didnโt explain the other bit the magician had said: She endangered us all. I was getting up the nerve to ask exactly what the monster had been, when Bast stood up.
โI should go scout,โ she said abruptly. โIโll be back.โ We listened to her footsteps echo down the stairwell. โSheโs hiding something,โ Carter said.
โWork that out yourself, did you?โ I asked. He looked away, and immediately I felt bad.
โIโm sorry,โ I said. โItโs just…what are we going to do?โ
โRescue Dad. What else can we do?โ He picked up his wand and turned it in his fingers. โDo you think he really meant to…you know, bring Mom back?โ
I wanted to say yes. More than anything, I wanted to believe that was possible. But I found myself shaking my head. Something about it didnโt seem right. โIskandar told me something about Mum,โ I said. โShe was a diviner. She could see the future. He said she made him rethink some old ideas.โ
It was my first chance to tell Carter about my conversation with the old magician, so I gave him the details.
Carter knit his eyebrows. โYou think that has something to do with why Mom diedโshe saw something in the future?โ
โI donโt know.โ I tried to think back to when I was six, but my memory was frustratingly fuzzy. โWhen they took us to England the last time, did she and Dad seemed like they were in a hurryโlike they were doing something really important?โ
โDefinitely.โ
โWould you say freeing Bast was really important? I meanโI love her, of courseโbut worth dying for important?โ
Carter hesitated. โProbably not.โ
โWell, there you are. I think Dad and Mum were up to something bigger, something they didnโt complete. Possibly thatโs what Dad was after at the British Museumโcompleting the task, whatever it was. Making things right. And this whole business about our family going back a billion years to some god-hosting pharaohsโwhy didnโt anyone tell us? Why didnโt Dad?โ
Carter didnโt answer for a long time.
โMaybe Dad was protecting us,โ he said. โThe House of Life doesnโt trust our family, especially after what Dad and Mom did. Amos said we were raised apart for a reason, so we wouldnโt, like, trigger each otherโs magic.โ
โBloody awful reason to keep us apart,โ I muttered.
Carter looked at me strangely, and I realized what Iโd said might have been construed as a compliment.
โI just mean they shouldโve been honest,โ I rushed on. โNot that I wanted more time with my annoying brother, of course.โ
He nodded seriously. โOf course.โ
We sat listening to the magic hum of the obelisk. I tried to remember the last time Carter and I had simply spent time like this together, talking.
โIs your, um…โ I tapped the side of my head. โYour friend being any help?โ
โNot much,โ he admitted. โYours?โ
I shook my head. โCarter, are you scared?โ
โA little.โ He dug his wand into the carpet. โNo, a lot.โ
I looked at the blue book weโd stolenโpages full of wonderful secrets I couldnโt read. โWhat if we canโt do it?โ
โI donโt know,โ he said. โThat book about mastering the element of
cheese wouldโve been more helpful.โ โOr summoning fruit bats.โ โPlease, not the fruit bats.โ
We shared a weary smile, and it felt rather good. But it changed nothing.
We were still in serious trouble with no clear plan.
โWhy donโt you sleep on it?โ he suggested. โYou used a lot of energy today. Iโll keep watch until Bast gets back.โ
He actually sounded concerned for me. How cute.
I didnโt want to sleep. I didnโt want to miss anything. But I realized my eyelids were incredibly heavy.
โAll right, then,โ I said. โDonโt let the bedbugs bite.โ
I lay down to sleep, but my soulโmy baโhad other ideas.