Stone hurried up to meet them just as Alex emerged from a dark crack in the rock.
“This is the place, all right.” He brushed back his damp hair. “And you won’t believe what’s inside.”
20- The Tribe
The passageway leading into the cave was formed of smooth stone, as if careful hands had sanded down every rough edge. Behind him, Alex aimed a flashlight into the passageway. Stone felt as if he were entering a temple, but revised this thought when he saw what lay inside.
The walls were lined with bones stacked floor-to-ceiling. And these were no ordinary bones. Carefully, he withdrew from the top of the stack a massive human femur and turned it over in his hands. It was twice the thickness of any he had ever seen and half again the length.
“I’d hate to meet the owner,” Alex mused.
“It’s not the owner I’d be worried about.” Stone hefted the bone like a club. “It’s his living descendants that would give me pause.”
Trinity ran her hands over one of the piles of bones. “Were these people giants?” she whispered.
“They sure do look like cavemen to me,” Moses pointed deeper into the chamber.
Alex turned his flashlight beam at the back wall where an array of skulls leered back at them. Each was impossibly large, with a low, wide cranium, pronounced brow ridge, large nose, and sturdy jaw.
“They look Neanderthal,” Stone said. “But they’re much too large. Neanderthal were shorter than modern man. These people were huge.”
“And the Neanderthal didn’t live in this part of the world,” Alex added. “At least, not as far as anyone knows.”
They continued their inspection of the cave and found a variety of primitive weapons, tools, and seashell jewelry lying in a deep pit at the center of the main gallery, which lay only a short distance from the cave mouth. The place had a ritualistic feel about it. Had they intruded on the religious center of an extinct tribe of hominids?
“Is it possible that Neanderthals could have lived here?” Trinity scooped up a handful of shell necklaces and let them spill back into the pit.
“Considering we’ve discovered living dinosaurs on this island, I’d say it’s not beyond the realm of possibilities that some larger cousins lived here.” Stone replaced the femur and moved deeper into the cave.
“You mean live here,” Moses corrected.
“What’s that?” Stone turned and his instincts immediately went on full alert at the sight of his friend’s wide eyes and trembling hands.
Moses shivered and inclined his head toward the cave mouth. Down the hill, dark shapes gathered at the river.
Stone’s mouth went dry. Even at this distance, he could see them clearly — they were, indeed, giant, primitive humans. His sharp eyes passed back and forth across the gathered throng, taking in every detail. The largest stood a good seven feet tall with impossibly broad shoulders and powerful muscles. They were armed with a variety of weapons: heavy wooden clubs studded with shark’s teeth, spears tipped with stone points, slings, and long, sharp teeth that must have belonged to dinosaurs at one time, which they wore tucked into their simple hide belts like knives. Each wore simple armor made of hide and bones.
One man, the largest of the lot, gestured and moved his lips. Clearly, these primitives had developed some form of speech. This revelation sent a chill down Stone’s spine. The numbers and apparent physical prowess of these new arrivals presented enough of a challenge, but if they were intelligent enough to form a battle plan, they posed an even greater threat. Just as the thought passed through his mind, the cavemen, as he found himself thinking of them, fanned out and began making their way up the hill. There were at least forty of them, and they all knew how to use the terrain to their advantage, keeping low and using every available tree and boulder for cover.
“It’s almost like they’ve been exposed to gunfire before,” Stone whispered.
“They have slings, so they’re no strangers to projectile weapons,” Alex noted.
“They surely must know how to hunt,” Moses said, “and protect themselves from the dinosaurs.” He looked at Stone. “Can we stop them?”
“I don’t know.” Stone hated to admit it, but it was the truth. “We’ll have to make every bullet count and hope our weapons pack enough punch to penetrate their armor and thick bones. And even if we succeed, we’d probably exhaust our supply of ammunition in the process, leaving us nothing for whatever lies ahead.”
“Then we run?” Moses sounded doubtful
“No good. The only way out is through their line.” Stone took a deep breath. “The map indicated that we had to pass through this cave in order to reach our destination. We just need to find the way out.”
“That could be a problem,” Alex sad. “I’ve been all around this chamber and there’s no other passageway leading out. Not anywhere.”
“There has to be.” Stone fingered his Webley. “You and Trinity keep looking. Moses and I will get ready for a fight.”
21- The Escape
Stone watched the line of cavemen as it moved ever closer. Would they flee if he took out a few of them? He supposed they’d find out soon enough.
“I don’t suppose they’d let us go if we asked them nice?” Moses asked.
“You’re welcome to try, but even if they speak English, I don’t think they’ll forgive us for invading their sacred burial chamber, assuming, of course, that’s what this is.” Stone stole a glance back into the cave. “Any luck?”
“No,” Alex replied. “I don’t know where you expect us to look. We’ve checked everywhere, except…”
Stone suddenly remembered an odd, dotted line on his grandfather’s map. A line that ran downward from the cave and then back up again. Almost as if it denoted an underground tunnel. “Except in the bone pit.” A sudden conviction filled Stone. “Pull all the bones out of the pit. Hurry!”
“Are you serious?” Trinity protested. “That’s disgusting, Stone! It’s like, robbing a grave.”
“It has to be done. Now hop to it!” Stone and Moses exchanged rueful grins.
“We’re going to need some time,” Alex said. “This thing is pretty deep.”
“I’ll see what I can do to slow them down.” Stone turned to Moses. “Cover me.”
Moses’ eyes bugged out. “What are you fixing to do?” He looked out at the approaching throng of cavemen and then back at Stone.
“I’m going to ask them nicely.” He holstered his Webley, took a deep breath, and stepped out into the sun.
As he’d hoped, the cavemen slowed their advance. The largest man and ostensible leader raised a beefy hand and the line halted. They stood there, humid air and silence hanging between them until Stone spoke up.
“We’re sorry we entered your cave. We didn’t know it was sacred.”
The cavemen stared blankly at him. Stone hadn’t expected to be understood, but that wasn’t his goal.
“If it’s all right with you, we’ll just walk away.” He held one hand flat and, with two fingers of the other hand, mimed walking, then pointed off into the distance. A few of the cavemen chuckled. At least, he thought the guttural sound paired with bared teeth was laughter.
“There is something down here!” Alex called from inside the cave. “I see a handhold.”
At the sound of Alex’s voice, the lead caveman started forward.
“Wait a minute!” Stone held his hands palms outward. “We can talk about this. There is no need for anyone to get hurt. All we want is to leave in peace.”
He saw a flicker of movement out of the corner of his eye and ducked as a rock, most likely hurled from a sling, whistled past his head and smashed into the rock wall behind him. With a resounding roar, the cavemen charged.