Lily had been aware that she was considered special even as a girl, when she was removed from an orphanage in California and placed under the guardianship of a foundation that had moved her to the Paris mansion where she was educated by the priestesses who lived there. Later she learned that she had been chosen because her blood contained what some psychologists canned “the murder gene,” an inherited characteristic that blots out normal human traits, such as empathy and sympathy. Her cold-blooded persona had been refined by bloody rituals that stretched back to the dawn of time, grooming her for the role she would play. Now… that time had come. Only the faint heartbeat of the crone lying in a room of the Paris sanitarium separated her from joining the line of high priestesses that stretched back forty centuries.
Set in the folds of the mummy’s apron, clutched in boney fingers, was a skull. The long ragged hole in the crown of the skull suggested that the owner had died a swift and violent death. Lily reached into a bronze chest at the feet of the mummy and came out with a dagger that would have been used for sacrifices. With the skill of a surgeon, she scraped a shaving of bone from the skull’s forehead into the plastic bag and put it in her pocket.
Lily turned to face the altar. Lifting the dagger in both hands, holding it high above her head with the deadly blade pointed downward, her voice rang out, echoing off the walls of the huge tomb.
“She is near. And she will die.”
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
Calvin leaned back in his chair. “I’ve figured out how this contraption works.”
Sitting at the table with Calvin were Hawkins, Abby and Kalliste, who brushed a strand of hair away from her forehead, saying, “And I think I understand the linguistic program the ancients loaded onto this amazing mechanism.”
“Kudos to both of you,” Hawkins said. “Let’s start with the hardware. Then Kalliste can tell us about the software.”
Calvin said, “The engineering is similar to the Antikythera computer. Sizes are also comparable. Roughly sixteen inches high, half that wide and around three inches thick.”
“Are those dimensional similarities more than a simple coincidence?” Abby asked.
“I’m just a dumb mechanic. What do you think, Kalliste?”
“Some experts think Archimedes designed the Greek computer. He lived in Sicily when it was a Greek colony. The Minoans had established settlements on the island years before.”
“That establishes a link,” Abby said.
Kalliste nodded. “The provenance is comparable as well. Not the exact location, but the fact that both computers were found on cargo ships and both were designed for navigation. Using the Greek computer a ship could navigate the sea. With the other, Minoan traders could find their way through the cultural seas of different languages.”
“Might have a military application too,” Hawkins observed. “It would come in handy if you intercepted the enemy’s battle plans.”
Calvin tapped the top of the device with a ballpoint pen. “Both computers were housed in wooden boxes, although the wood has disintegrated. They both used bronze gears. Thirty wheels in the Greek device; less than a dozen in the older gadget. The biggest gear meshed with smaller ones in both computers. When you spun the large disk in the Greek gadget it gave you the position of the moon, sun, eclipses, phases, even the years for the Olympic games.”
“How was the big gear powered?” Hawkins said.
Calvin stuck the pen into an opening on the side of the mechanism. “Both devices had a crank. Give it a turn and your computer starts computing.”
“How accurate was it?” Abby asked.
“Not very. Engineering was impressive, but the hand-made gears didn’t allow for precision. I’ll turn it over to the software expert.”
Kalliste borrowed the pen and pointed to the largest gear on the Minoan mechanism. “The gears contain letters or language symbols rather than celestial information. The big disk moves the smaller ones into position so that the corresponding letters are aligned.”
“What languages does it translate?” Hawkins asked.
“The alphabets used by Minoan trading partners: Egypt, Mesopotamia and Greece. The script doesn’t match symbol for symbol. That was an issue in the Rosetta Stone. But you have enough matches to make a rudimentary translation. We have computers now that could fill in the blanks, but it is going to be a slow process at first.”
“How soon can we start translating the scroll?” Hawkins said.
“I’ll rig a crank and give the gears a lube job,” Calvin said. “We’ll have to run tests on the movement to make sure it doesn’t fall apart, since we can’t send it back to the manufacturer to repair.”
Hawkins said, “In that event, let’s turn in, get a good night’s sleep and attack the problem first thing in the morning.”
Calvin yawned. “Good idea. Where’s my rack?”
“Take the bedroom on the first floor. I’ll stretch out on the sofa. The master bedroom is upstairs, if you ladies don’t mind sharing. There should be plenty of room for two.”
Hawkins noticed Abby’s raised eyebrow. He realized too late that he had stepped off a cliff, and flapping his arms wouldn’t help. He could have thanked the gods of Olympus when his phone chirped, signaling a text message. He excused himself and went outside to sit at the table on the terrace overlooking the caldera. The text was from Sutherland.
Bingo. Found a Howard Robsham in London.
Molly had added an email address and links to a number of articles about Robsham, who was a successful international financier. Hawkins scanned the stories, then wrote a quick email to Robsham.
“Dear Mr. Robsham. My name is Matt Hawkins. I’m a robotics engineer with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. I’m working on an archaeological project where your grand-uncle’s name has been mentioned a few times. Wondered if we might talk?”
A reply with a phone number came back almost immediately.
Call me. HR
Hawkins punched in the number. A man with a crisp patrician accent answered. “Thank you for getting back to me, Mr. Hawkins. I’m well acquainted with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. You say you’re in robotics?”
“That’s correct. I design underwater vehicles for the military and scientific community.”
“I’m not unfamiliar with the ocean technology field through my investment companies. Fascinating stuff. What can I tell you about my grand-uncle Howard?”
“As I wrote you, I’ve been helping an archaeologist survey involving a shipwreck that may have originated in Crete. A researcher at the Heraklion museum said that Howard Robsham specialized in Minoan studies.”
“Uncle Howard was an imposing figure. Looked like those Punch Magazine cartoons of John Bull. I live in his house, which he left to my father who passed it down to me. As a boy I loved to come over here. Place was full of exotic artifacts. I’d read King Solomon’s Mines, and Uncle Howard was Allan Quatermain in my young imagination.”
“What can you tell me about the Robsham collection?”
“Apparently the collection was destroyed in the car crash that killed Howard. Bloody shame. He was far and above many professionals. Good friend of Ventris and Evans and the other amateurs who brought passion and knowledge to their work.”
“What happened to the artifacts you saw as a boy?”
“My father turned them over to the British Museum and the museum in Heraklion you mentioned. You can see them there.”