Passage to Queen Mesentia

BOOK: Passage to Queen Mesentia
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PASSAGE TO

QUEEN MESENTIA

 

Dorlana Vann

 

 

 

Pixie Punk Press

Table Of Contents

 

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Copyright

Dedication, Acknowledgements, and Bibliography

 

 

 

Chapter 1

 

Thursday April 14, 2005

 

“That was so freaking boring,” Wade Roberts said as he lowered the passenger side window. “Please, don’t ever make me sit through one of those again.” He fought with his tie until he won and then threw it in the backseat.

“Really?” Lilly said. “I found it fascinating. Would you mind? With the window... we still have dinner.”

Wade pressed the button, and the window made its way back up. “That’s because they’re your parents: the greatest archaeology team in the whole universe.” Even though he knew Lilly would freeze in her little sundress, he turned on the air conditioner. She had been the one who had insisted he wear the hot, miserable suit in the first place. He knew the reason he’d been the only one Sunday-schooled up at the lecture was because she wanted to impress her parents. That’s what had annoyed him the most about the entire evening.

“That’s not it,” she said. “I mean, I am proud of them. My goodness, they discovered the tomb of an Egyptian queen who no one even knew existed.”

“It doesn’t even make sense. This cat Unas...”

“The last pharaoh of the fifth dynasty.”

“Yeah, yeah. Why wouldn’t he want anyone to know he had this third wife? It’s not like they had to worry about bigamy. Everyone already knew he had two wives. What’s one more?”

“Oh, so you were paying attention.”

He exhaled, causing his lips to putter, and shrugged his shoulders.

Lilly tucked her long, dark hair behind her ear and her face lit up as she said, “But that’s what makes it so incredible. Don’t you think it’s weird how they found Queen Mesentia’s mummy buried off on its own and not with the other wives? No pyramid or any other indication that there was a tomb, just an underground tunnel.”

“Uh huh. Hey Baby, stop over there at that fillin’ station so I can grab me a pack of cigs.”

“Wade, we’ll be late.”

“Well, call and tell them we’ll be a little late. Unless you want me to pace and be nervous all night.”

She huffed but pulled off the highway and then into a Texaco station.

Wade got out of the car and took his time walking inside. No way was he going to hurry. He could see Lilly through the window with the phone up to her ear. Probably saying, “Mommy, I’m so sorry Wade’s such an ass.”  Actually, he mused, she would never use the word ass, it would be more like, “He’s such a meanie-wienie,” or some other silly word she had picked up from her 3rd graders.

 

Wade climbed back into the car a couple of minutes later, hitting his cigarettes upside down on the palm of his hand, packing the tobacco.

“I tried them three times,” Lilly said as she drove onto the access road. “I don’t understand why no one answered. Even if they’re upstairs, Constance should answer in the kitchen. ”

When Wade noticed she had turned the air off, he started rolling the window back down. 

“You’re not going to smoke that now are you?”

“Uh... yes,” he said with the unlit cigarette already in his lips and his thumb on the lighter.

“Come on… I don’t want to stink.”

“What the hell did you think I was going to do with the things? Eat ‘em?”

The tires squealed as she turned into the next driveway and made an abrupt stop.

“Get out,” she said.

“What?” His mouth dropped open, and the cigarette fell to the floorboard.

“I’ll wait while you take a couple of puffs. All right? And please, take off your jacket.”

Wade gladly rid himself of the jacket. With the door ajar, he lit the cigarette, inhaling a long satisfying drag. 

“Why aren’t they answering the phone?” Lilly asked, holding the phone up to her ear.

“We saw them like five seconds ago,” he said, wishing he had a cold beer to go with the nicotine. 

“You know how they hate it when I’m late, and we’re already thirty minutes behind.”

“Will you stop? It won’t hurt them to wait a couple of minutes.” He squished the fire of the cigarette out with his fingers and put it back inside the pack. He sighed as he sat back down in the passenger seat, hoping she would catch his annoyance so he wouldn’t have to tell her what he really thought of the situation. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Perfection. He didn’t understand why Lilly wasted so much energy on people who would rather be half way across the world digging up bones than near their only daughter. He did hate that they were home, but it would be hard on Lilly to see them go back to Cairo in a month to count, or catalog, or whatever people did with mummies, when she hadn’t seen them in over a year.

As Lilly sat there, all tight mouthed and mad at him, he remembered what he used to call her when they’d first met: Princess Lilly. How someone as classy as Lillian Steward had fallen for a blue-collar cowboy like him, he would never know. Her parents still didn’t approve of him and probably hoped Lilly would grow out of her rebellious behavior and get back together with Mr. Sophisticated. They especially didn’t like them living together without a piece of paper but didn’t want them to get married either. He couldn’t wait for their reactions when she finally did say yes. He had proposed to Lilly twice, and even though she had shot him down both times, he knew one day she would be his wife.

As Lilly turned the wheel and pulled into the circular drive that led up to the four-columned two-story, she said, “Answer my father when he talks to you, don’t be bored, and please don’t fall asleep after we eat.”

“Yes, Miss Steward. I will raise my hand if I have to go to the bathroom.”

“I wonder why the lights are out.” She turned the ignition off letting the night sounds in.   

“Maybe they got tired of waiting and went on to bed.”

“They wouldn’t do that,” Lilly said as she stepped out of the car.

“Sure they wouldn’t,” he responded, right after she had shut the door.

Wade gathered all the mental strength he could find to face Lilly’s parents before forcing himself out of the car.

Lilly stood on the front porch and slowly turned towards Wade as he walked up stairs. “Something’s... off,” she said.

Wade absorbed the same weird vibe. Other than the streetlights filtering in through the huge oak trees, darkness surrounded the house. After a moment of neither one of them moving, he said, “Maybe we were supposed to meet them at a restaurant.”

“No, Mom said here.” She put her hand on the door knob. The door hadn’t been shut all the way; it silently glided open. After a pause, she looked at Wade with an expression of worry hardening her delicate face.

“Stay here,” he said.

Lilly shook her head. “No,” she whispered.

He tried giving her a firm looking at, but still she shook her head.

“Fine,” he said through his teeth. He walked through the dark entrance with Lilly right behind him, holding onto his shirt. He waited a second for his eyes to focus, and then jumped when the light overhead snapped on. He turned to Lilly, and she shrugged her shoulders, her hand on the switch.

 When Wade got a whiff of dinner, the silence and the darkness of the house didn’t add up. And then Lilly glanced past him. Her brown eyes narrowed but then quickly widened. Wade followed her stare to the destroyed living room area.

“Mom... Dad?” Lilly ran past him, stopping for a second to examine the living room.

“Wait! Lilly, don’t!” Wade yelled.

But Lilly didn’t stop. She ran up the stairs calling her parents’ names, each time her voice a little more panicked. Wade chased after her, but as soon as he reached the top of the stairs, he heard Lilly scream.

Chapter 2

 

Two weeks later: Friday April 29, 2005

 

Lilly sipped her glass of pinot grigio as she watched the entrance door. She glanced down at her watch again— 9:30 p.m.—thirty minutes past the time she had practically been commanded to meet with a stranger who had called her that morning on her way to work.

“Is this Lillian Steward?” he had asked with an accent she couldn’t make out. “The daughter of Doctor Steward?”

“Yes, umm… who’s calling?”

“I would like to give you my condolences. Your parents were friends and colleagues of mine.”

She had figured it was just another, “I’m sorry your parents are dead,” call. She’d had about a billion of them. She wished her parents hadn’t known so many people, because the calls wouldn’t stop. “Thank you,” she said. “Thank you for calling.”

She thought that would end the call. However, the man had kept talking, “That’s not all. I need to see you.”

“Who is this? Do I know you?”

“My name is Ben. I knew your parents.”

“You said that. Um, I—”

“It is very imperative that I speak with you tonight. I was supposed to meet with your parents yesterday so they could return to me a very valuable family heirloom.”

By that time, Lilly had pulled in and had parked at the elementary school. “I don’t know anything about that. Call the university, and they’ll direct you to the right place.”

“This isn’t something they would know about. It is personal. Please meet me tonight at The Vine Bistro on Montrose at nine o’clock.”

“I don’t know.”

“I’ll see you there.”

“Wait... how will I even know you?”

“I’ll know you.”

“I’m not sure. Right now isn’t a good time for me,” she had said, but then realized he had already hung up.

The whole thing had been so strange. “Meet me at the bistro at nine o’ clock,” she nervously mocked and took another sip of her wine.  She had spent the entire day trying to make a decision about whether or not she would actually go.  She had even thought about calling Wade, but she couldn’t.

She knew Wade would read way too much into it. She had asked him to move out of their apartment a week before, so she had no right to ask him to do a “boyfriend” favor. Not even a “friend” favor for that matter. Even though they hadn’t officially broken up, she had asked for some room and some time. She didn’t want him to think she’d changed her mind. 

Ever since
that night
, their relationship had been strained. She wasn’t ready to deal with him. Her feelings and thoughts still intertwined in her head. She did good to get up in the morning and face her 3rd grade class.

Wade’s dirty-blond hair and his baby blues weren’t enough for her to let him back in. It was like a switch in her head had turned on. A switch that turned on the “What the hell am I doing with this cowboy?” He embarrassed her around her friends and always forgot to take off his muddy boots. When he got home from work he was filthy and smelled like gasoline. He smoked, used bad language, and drank too much.

Her parents had tried to warn her when she had broken off the engagement to Grant to “explore” her other options… Wade. Her mom had told her that Wade was too rough and would never amount to anything or make a good husband. She didn’t know about all that, but there was no comparison when it came to the proposals. Grant had knelt down on one knee on the rooftop of her favorite restaurant. Wade’s proposal: in his pick-up truck while they had waited on his brother to run in and grab a 6-pack. And that had been at the end of their third date, which they had spent at a honky-tonk.

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