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Authors: Judith Reeves-stevens,Garfield Reeves-stevens

Tags: #U.S.A., #Gnostic Dementia, #Retail, #Thriller, #Fiction

BOOK: Search: A Novel of Forbidden History
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Still, Yazhi couldn’t help wondering, why had the Spider Woman left in the first place?

And where had she come from?

SIXTY

“Homo antarcticensis,”
Colonel Kowinski said to David and Jess. “It’s not official yet. Probably be a few more years and a lot more sequencing, but that’s what they’re calling them for now. It’s an entirely new species, as different from modern humans as Neandertals.”

They were standing in front of the glass wall that overlooked the sample preparation lab. In that sterile environment, two workers in masks and gowns delicately dissected one of the 432 bodies recovered from what the MacCleirigh Foundation had named the Ironwood-Palmer Site.

“The biggest anatomical difference so far?” Kowinski continued. “It’s the brain. The Navy Medical Research Center’s done MRIs. No corpus callosum. No cerebral hemispheres. It’s just one undifferentiated lobe. Nothing like it in primates at all.”

“Do they know what that would mean?” Jess asked.

“Not a clue. Other than there’re a few more cubic inches of gray matter packed into their skulls, and communication between different areas of their brain was likely more direct, without hitting the bottleneck of the connecting tissue between hemispheres. Judging from what the archaeologists are pulling out of Palmer, the calculating machines with all their gears, the blueprints for their ships . . . I’d say the structure of their brains made them smart. Exceptionally smart.”

“Couldn’t be that smart,” David said. “They’re extinct.”

“As a species, yes. Now that we’ve started examining their DNA, we can conclusively say they interbred with modern humans.” She looked at David. “Maybe that’s where we get our geniuses from.”

“I hope not,” David said. “Imagine being so smart you figure out how to thrive in Antarctica for the one brief window when it’s actually possible. Then the climate swings back to normal and you’re done. Maybe there’s such a thing as being too smart.”

Kowinski’s eyebrows shot up. “So modern humans have managed to survive because we’re stupid?”

Ironwood’s missing all the fun,
David thought. He’d have loved debating with the colonel. “There’s got to be a reason, and that’s as good as any.”

David allowed a lab technician to take new cheek swabs and blood samples. It was the least he could do to make his apologies to the colonel, and to thank them for the medical protocols he was following.

Afterward, he and Jess waited in the entrance lobby of the building.

“You back to Zurich now?” he asked. He knew he would miss the intensity that had thrown them together and changed both their lives. He wondered if she felt the same. If so, she didn’t say. It had taken her some time just to treat him as an ordinary person again.
Because of years of conditioning,
David thought. Beliefs that had to change now, even if human nature didn’t.

“Zurich soon,” Jess said. “There’s a lot the Family has to talk about, and do. The Shop needs a new director. Su-Lin and Andrew are nowhere to be found. So that’s three defenders who need to be replaced. Though, if the Promise has been fulfilled, it may be there’s no need for the Twelve anymore.” She broke off and frowned. “And there’s still the mystery of whatever was on the tables in the temples.”

David had been keeping up with that search. So far, based on the map he had photographed in Cornwall, five more outposts had been located in distant locations around the world, and confidence was high all the remaining ones would be found within the year. None so far had been found intact, though, even the most inaccessible ones. Which to David meant there could be another reason why the tables were empty and the artifacts gone.

“I don’t think it is a mystery why the artifacts are missing,” he said.

“Neither do I. Looters took them all.”

“I agree they were taken, but not stolen.”

Jess looked confused.

“I think the artifacts on the tables were
used,
Jess. The sun maps are like calendars, to save us from ‘the confusion of days.’ The maps showed our world and how to travel it. Who knows what other kinds of instruction books or manuals or models were on those tables? But I bet they showed people how to build things, how to plant crops, write . . . all those skills Ironwood told us about that . . . that kick-started civilization around the world all at the same time, even though . . .”

“Even though the First Gods had gone home to die?” Jess didn’t look convinced.

David smiled. “Their knowledge survived. What more can any of us send on to the future?”

Jess wouldn’t give in. “Our genes.”

Neither would David. “With genetic drift, catastrophe, just plain bad luck, there’re a lot of genetic dead ends, but knowledge survives. Your family and all that they’ve done through the generations is proof of that.”

Jess was quiet for a moment. “You and I are going to be writing a new chapter of
Traditions
. New lessons for more than just the children.” She banished whatever dark thought had momentarily clouded her features. “But, first things first. I’m off to Roswell, New Mexico.”

She said “you and I.”
So she
was
planning to see him again—
but when?
Until he’d made her see reason, Jess believed she was his defender. Now David wished she still believed it. She wouldn’t be leaving him two months before his twenty-seventh birthday.
So few days left.

“Roswell?” he asked.

“Ironwood filed a new will his last day in Vanuatu. He left his entire collection of historical artifacts to me.”

“The government isn’t going to confiscate it?”

“Agent Lyle doesn’t think so.”

“What about the . . . other thing?”

“The other thing,” Jess repeated. “The ‘signature.’ Right.” The look on her face told him she was no happier about this part than he was.

“So you got the talk, too,” he said. “Too many religious implications, which means political implications, so, until there’s more evidence,
don’t
mention the impossible ten-million-year-old map or the three-fingered inhuman hand.”

“The map
is
imprecise, David. I’ve heard some experts say it’s an artistic interpretation no more than ten thousand years old.”

“Imprecise compared to what? Computer simulations of what the Earth looked like back then? Maybe the computers got it wrong.”

“And there’s only one of those handprints. No other sign of . . . whatever it might have been.”

“No other sign, you mean, except for those grooves on the stone path in the cavern. Apparently, they match the size of the talons, fit the spaces between the sharp metal under that gold cross . . . You think maybe that’s how my ancestors—your First Gods—jump-started their own civilization so quickly? They reached Antarctica, checked out the caves for shelter, found the library of golden books some other even earlier civilization had left, and then spread it around the world?”

“It’s going to be a long time till Antarctica’s ice-free again. We’ll probably never know the answer.” Jess fell silent, then looked up at him. “What about the treatments?”

“I’m not dead yet.” Time slowed for David as he saw her pale.

“What do the doctors say?”

“I’m in perfect health, but some of my anomalies are in gene regions that may be involved in sudden cardiac death.”

“Oh, David . . .”

“No. That’s a good thing. It’s what I hoped for. A direction. Something to try.” He smiled. “It’s knowledge.”

“What can they do?”

David shrugged. “I’m on a raft of drugs. Sunday night I check into Walter Reed to get a pacemaker. If my heart acts up, I’ll be okay. And if that is what kept everyone else from reaching twenty-seven, then I’m going to be fine.”

“I don’t like all those ifs,” Jess said.

“Not knowing just makes me like everyone else.”

A Maybach drove up to the main doors.

“Willem’s here . . .” Jess looked at David, and time stopped for both of them.

She reached up, touched his face. “I’ve spent all my life waiting for you. You’d better wait for me.”

“Twelve Winds of the world, Jess.”

Jess understood. She touched the silver cross he always wore now. “No one ever knows . . .”

Yet in that moment, both did know one thing for a certainty: However long their journey would be, it wasn’t over yet.

ANTARCTICA 10,800 YEARS
B.C.E
.

On the twenty-first day of their journey they saw it, just as the sun slipped into the terrible waves and darkness claimed the raft and the seventeen who clung to it. A shimmer of difference at the distant edge of the endless sea. Not the frothing white of the cresting waves that relentlessly attacked them, sweeping them up in huge surges, driving them down in blinding, stinging agonies. Instead, an arc of white that remained still and untroubled.

Land.

That glimpse gave them hope as they rode the waves and the night.

The wind sliced through the salt-spray-stiffened hides they wore, even as the seventeen huddled to conserve what little body warmth they had remaining.

The last of the fish had been eaten seven days ago. The gourds of water from the last icy downpour had been empty for three. The bright-eyed seabirds that glided so slowly and so tantalizingly near, their lace-feathered wingtips only a handsbreadth from the heaving surface of the waves, never came within reach.

The raft-riders fought the near-overwhelming urge to gnaw at the tendon and leather bindings that held together their mat of resin-sealed bamboo and woven vine. When the sun broke free from the sea again, only sixteen were alive to feel its warmth.

No one had seen Stonecutter slip from the raft. If he cried out in despair or release, no one had heard him. All on the raft were his kin, but none mourned. Death was the way of things.

Netweaver was youngest now. Fourteen years old. Both her children were lost in the first days, after the storm swept the raft from the shoreline of home. On the fourth day, her boy was thrown off by a wave and never resurfaced. On the sixth day, her girl, not yet a year old, didn’t awaken, her once black skin ashen. The young mother held her daughter close for two more days before Firemaker slid the small, still body into the green depths.

But all the others on the raft were her kin as well, and now, for them, Netweaver used her young eyes to stare through the slowly brightening haze of dawn. The white was there, larger, closer. The random, capricious wind that had lifted them from one shore was taking them to another.

At her side, Carver, the oldest, almost twenty, stoically kept his apprehension to
himself. He had journeyed up the mountains of home and understood what white meant. Making landfall on ice and snow was no better than remaining adrift on open ocean. Either alternative meant death within days.

The wind picked up as the morning passed, and, in the stark blue sky, thick clouds tumbled into billowing towers, darkening with rain above the new shore.

Netweaver forced her cracked, stiff hands from the palm-fiber rope that bound her to safety, and fought exhaustion to rise unsteadily to her feet. Others near her braced her legs on the slippery bamboo deck so she could see just that small bit farther as the raft creaked at the crest of the next wave.

She held her arms out for balance, gasping as the raft slid down the next trough, then leaned sharply forward as the raft careened up the next wave. There, at the top, for just a heartbeat, just a moment, she saw something more than white.

There was green as well, sweeping down from distant mountains to the nearing shore.

Carver listened to what Netweaver shouted to him over the roar of wind and water. With the help of the others, he stood beside her, to see for himself.

She was right. There was more than ice ahead, and the raft was closing quickly.

More hours later, as the twenty-second day of the journey ended, they were soaked anew in the plumes of spray from wild waves crashing against sharp black rocks. Past that barrier, they could see a crescent of dense trees framing wide stretches of waving grasses.

Green.

The raft held together almost long enough.

A hundred meters from the black stone beach, a corner of the raft snagged on a jagged boulder. The bindings tore, and the bamboo floats under the back half burst free like fish leaping into the air.

Netweaver and the rest scrambled and slid to the intact end of the raft as Trapper and two others were swept away. Before anything else could be done, another wave slammed down on the floundering raft and burst it apart completely.

Twelve of them made it to the black beach that day. Crawling, gasping, cut and gouged flesh stinging with salt. Twelve of twenty-three.

Firemaker and two others didn’t pause but searched through the stones, collected driftwood, finding the raw materials of their trade, of survival.

Carver and Netweaver crawled to the top of a small rise to reach the first clumps of tall grass, chewing on the blades for moisture.

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