Authors: Christian Darkin
Stanley had always felt there was something strange about the sketch. He could not help but look at it every time he entered the room. It seemed somehow alive, as though the creature's great eye was staring at him through time. It had been watching him from the wall since the day he was born. It was
familiar, but monstrous. The skull frightened him and drew him in at the same time.
âSo it's still just sitting there, waiting to be dug up?' said Mr Grantham with poorly disguised excitement.
âAs far as I know,' said Henry. âIf it had been found, I'm sure it would be in the British Museum. That's where it should be.'
âPossibly, possibly,' said Mr Grantham. âBut, you know, there are private collectors who would be exceedingly excited by such a piece.' He paused. âConsiderable sums of money have been known to change hands. I could make introductions if you are interested?'
Stanley's father reddened. âThank you, but I am not at all interested,' he said shortly. âThe place for the thing is in a museum where scientists can study it. What the devil use would it be in the house of some rich gentleman? The world should see it and learn its secrets. How else do we progress? How else do we leave ignorance and superstition behind? You teach geography: you must have some interest in science.'
âQuite so,' said Mr Grantham softly. âBut nobody can study it underground.'
âOne day I'll go back.' Stanley could see Henry was stung by the remark. âOne day I'll bring it out. I will!'
âOf course,' soothed Mr Grantham with a smile that Stanley didn't trust. He stubbed out his cigarette. âYou know, we really should be getting back. New term starts in three days â lots to do.'
The train was a monster of green and black iron. Huge clouds of filthy steam billowed from its funnel and from under its wheels as it hauled its coaches through the countryside. Inside, Stanley and his luggage could have been in his own living room. The walls were walnut. The seats were comfortable, and although the carriage rattled a little, he could still eat ice cream out of his Thermos flask without fear of staining his school uniform.
By the time he arrived, most of the other boys were already there. His tardiness didn't bother him: he wasn't new, so had already claimed his place in the dorms. He unpacked quickly and set out to find out what his friends had been up to during the holidays.
Herbert, of course, was already there. His family lived at the school even when it was empty because his father taught there, and he treated the place as his own. Today, he had been asked to make sure all
the new boys knew their way around. Instead, he was making sure they knew who was boss.
Once unpacked and signed in, there wasn't much to do until the formal start of school on Monday. The teachers all either had their hands full with the new arrivals, or were preparing their lessons, so Stanley knew he'd be left pretty much to his own devices. He decided to leave the hectic, crowded corridors and take a walk around the grounds.
That was when he spotted the bag. It was a large, thick canvas bag, and it was lying at the back of the school. He noticed it because it was sitting in the middle of a flowerbed, leaning against the wall. It looked as though the bag had been dropped out of the window above, and indeed, the upstairs window above it was still open.
Why would anyone drop a bag out of a window?
wondered Stanley.
It was probably someone playing a practical joke. In that case, someone would be in trouble. These were the teachers' living quarters.
He took a closer look. The bag was open at the top, and contained a few old working clothes, a pair of muddy boots, a crowbar and a pickaxe. Underneath them lay some old books and a pile of
maps. Stanley was just about to walk away when he noticed something else protruding from the bag. It was a curved metal shape with a rough texture. Stanley recognised it immediately as the handle of a pistol.
âWhat are you doing there?' The voice came from behind him. He sprang up. Mr Grantham was jogging across the field towards him.
âNothing, sir,' Stanley replied hastily. âI just thoughtâ¦'
âLeave that alone!' snapped Mr Grantham, stopping right in front of him. âThat's mine.' He picked up the bag, obviously flustered. âIt's⦠erm, quite all right, Stanley. I'm just taking⦠er⦠You know you shouldn't be round here. Off you go.' He swung the bag over his shoulder and jogged off towards the school's back gate.
Stanley watched him go. What was that about? Why dump his bag in the flowerbed and then creep round the back of the school to pick it up? If he wanted to go out, why not go out through the front entrance like everyone else? Obviously, he didn't want anyone to know what he was doing.
Stanley waited until his teacher had stepped through the gate before cautiously following him.
At the edge of the field, Stanley flattened himself into the thick hedge that separated the school grounds from the road. He pushed his way through to the inside of the hedge so he couldn't be seen from the road or the school buildings, and edged his way along the fence.
He didn't have to go far before he heard voices.
âYou're certain of this?' a gruff voice was saying.
âYes, it's just sitting there waiting to be dug out. A complete Megalosaurus skull!' Mr Grantham's voice was easily recognisable. âIt'd be the pride of your collection. You'll be the envy of the Royal Society.'
Stanley peered out from between the bushes. The other man was a little older than Mr Grantham and judging by his suit, he was not short of money. On the road beside them, a smart new canvas-sided lorry was parked. It was shiny and black and not at all like the rusty old commercial vehicles Stanley was used to seeing around. Mr Grantham dumped his heavy bag in the open front of the lorry.
âIndeed,' replied the other man. âWell, if it is there, and it is what you say it is, there'll be plenty in it for you.'
âThank you, sir,' oozed Mr Grantham. âThere is, of course,' he continued carefully, âa small question of
provenance. Technically, the father of one of my pupils was the first to make the discovery. Technically, the find could be credited to him. Of course, Marchant has some damn fool notion of giving over it to the British Museum.'
âProvenance?' The stranger sniffed. âMy dear boy, its provenance is whatever I say it is.'
Mr Grantham spoke as though he felt obliged to continue. âOf course, technically, we should seek the permission of the land owner to even search for it.'
âThen we will dig quietly,' said the man. âOnce the find is in the back of my lorry, who's to say where it came from? Plus, if anyone should turn up while we're working, it will be your job to discourage them from asking questions.' He raised an eyebrow at Mr Grantham. âYou are prepared for that eventuality, I suppose?'
âOh, yes, Mr Hampton,' said Mr Grantham nervously. Stanley thought of the pistol he'd seen nestling in the bottom of the canvas bag. Mr Grantham was prepared all right.
âThen we'd better get going.' Mr Hampton jumped into the driver's seat of the lorry and Mr Grantham got into the other side. The engine coughed into life.
Without stopping to think, Stanley stepped quickly out of the bushes and dived into the back of the lorry.
What am I doing?
he thought to himself, as the vehicle sped off and his school disappeared from sight.
The lorry bumped and rattled along the road. In the back, Stanley held on tight to the leather straps holding the canvas roof in place. The lorry was empty apart from a few sacks and a tarpaulin draped over the metal floor. Stanley already regretted jumping in. He had no idea what was going to happen next or what he could do about it. He had a fair idea of where they were going, but he knew it was a long way from school and he had no way of getting back before he was missed.
As the lorry headed out into the countryside, Stanley tried out a few excuses. Perhaps he had been involved in an accident. Nothing serious, but he'd been knocked unconscious. Maybe he'd seen a robbery and had had to help the police identify suspects. On second thoughts, it might be better to go for something a bit less heroic. Something that didn't sound so much like an adventure. A mundane excuse would be far more convincing. Perhaps he'd just fallen asleep in the library for two days and nobody had noticed.
Suddenly, the lorry turned into a long drive, and pulled up outside a country house. He heard Mr Grantham and Mr Hampton jump out and crunch off across the gravel driveway. Stanley popped his head out of the back of the lorry and looked around. It was a huge house. Newly built, but evidently meant to look like one of the mansions of the rich old families. Mr Hampton had obviously made a lot of money, and recently by the look of it. Most people who'd done that had either played dangerous games on the American stock market, or had somehow turned the war to their advantage.
Stanley heard the crunch of feet on small stones, and saw the two men trudging back across the gravel. Mr Grantham was dragging a wooden box full of heavy mallets, chisels and thick chains and pulleys. Mr Hampton carried equipment more suited to an archaeological dig. He had clearly done this sort of thing before.
Stanley ducked quickly back inside the lorry and looked around. There was nowhere to hide. He only had one chance. He dived under the tarpaulin at the back of the lorry, and lay as still and flat as he could.
He shut his eyes and listened intently as the two men loaded their equipment into the lorry. At any
moment they could pull up the tarpaulin or, worse, drop an axe or heavy box on his head. Digging implements clattered onto the floor around him. Then there was silence.
Moments later the engine started. Stanley lifted his head out and sighed with relief.
They didn't stop again for a long time. The lorry's solid tyres did nothing to cushion Stanley from the potholes and bumps in the rough, uneven roadway. As the journey went on, roads made for cars gave way to roads made for horses and carts, and then to winding country lanes made for horses and pedestrians.
Small, ancient villages passed by, the twisting roads taking them first through open farmland, then through wide, flat moorland where ponies, gorse and the odd, incongruous boulder were the only landmarks. Suddenly, the road seemed to close in around them. Dense trees and thick bushes lined the road, making it impossible for Stanley to tell how fast or in what direction they were travelling.
The landscape seemed to confuse the drivers too. Every so often, Stanley was thrown suddenly against the back of the lorry as it lurched to a halt, then backed up, or turned around completely to go back the way it had come. At one point, they stopped completely
and Stanley could hear the two men shouting at each other in the front seat. Then the engine started up again and they rattled off in a new direction.
Eventually, they slowed to jogging pace, and turned off the road on to a footpath along the heavily wooded side of a hill. The path turned back and forth as it slowly climbed. Branches scraped along the canvas side of the lorry. For Stanley, it was as though clawed fingers were pushing into the cloth from all sides, trying to grab him.
Now the lorry was moving at walking speed, labouring over every bump and pothole in the path. It lurched and rocked so much, Stanley thought it might topple over, but they kept going, back and forth and upward.
Eventually, the path came to an end and the lorry turned off into the woods. The engine revved hard as the lorry struggled over the crest of the hill, then tipped forward alarmingly as they bounced downhill over thick brambles, lurching and shuddering as they negotiated their way around trees and over boulders.
When the driver finally gave up and cut the engine, they were perched at a precarious angle against a tree stump. Stanley heard the front doors open and looked quickly around the sparse interior of the lorry.
They would surely find him now. There was nowhere to hide, and in any case they'd obviously reached their destination so they'd be unloading the equipment any second.
He waited, frozen to the spot, but nobody came. Cautiously, he crept to the back of the lorry and peered out. There was still no sign of the two men. He hopped out of the back and ducked into the woods, then made his way around to the front.
They don't want to unload their tools until they've found what they're looking for,
he thought.
He felt around at the front of the lorry and flipped open the bonnet. Underneath was a complex array of gears, levers and moulded metal. Behind the main engine block, a nest of cables connected the engine to the cab. He wrapped his shirt cuff around his hand to protect himself from the hot engine, grabbed the wires and yanked. Two or three of them gave way immediately. Another tug released the rest.
That should slow them down a little,
thought Stanley, as he quietly closed the bonnet.
He crept deeper into the woods, striking out in front of the lorry â he knew they must have gone that way otherwise he'd have seen or heard them. The trees were old and thick, and where their branches allowed
light down to the ground, wild tangles of brambles grew.
It didn't take long to find the two men. They were talking loudly and scanning the woods ahead as they walked. Stanley followed quietly.
Suddenly, Mr Grantham shouted, âThere it is!' and ran off.
Mr Hampton followed, slightly less nimbly. Stanley heard him say, âBy Jove, that could well be it!'
He dodged forward and hid behind the double trunk of a large tree. As he looked out, he recognised what appeared to be the tomb from his father's sketch. The mossy stones, the worn carvings around the stone door, everything was as his father had drawn it.
Squinting, Stanley could just make out some of the animals depicted in the carvings. Some he recognised. Others seemed to be strange, mythical beasts. There were unicorns, snakes with wings, even dragons.
âWell, what are you waiting for?' snapped Mr Hampton.