Forbidden (The Seeker Saga, #2) (11 page)

BOOK: Forbidden (The Seeker Saga, #2)
12.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Why?” Liz said.  “The markings there are
old
, Eve.  Like, centuries old.  We all saw them.”

“Somebody could have taken great care to make them look that way,” Eve said. 

“We’re just going deeper in the rabbit hole,” Madison said with a sigh.  “The more we learn, the less we understand.”

Liz shook her head.  “Nonsense.  We just haven’t had time to process everything yet.  I’m sure there’s a pattern here.  Eve, if you’re certain…” Liz waited, but Eve didn’t hesitate in nodding, “…then we’ll have to go look at the wall again.”

“If somebody carved these down there based on this,” I said, “then they meant for someone to find it.  Why?  The markings are what led you to the crystals, Liz.”

“Maybe somebody wanted us to find them,” Ashley said.  She shivered conspicuously.  “I don’t like thinking of that.”

“No,” Eve said.  “Not us.  This paper’s too old.  It would have taken years for it to yellow like this.  Decades, probably.”

“Alright, well, let’s keep looking,” I suggested.  “We can take that with us when we go.  Along with anything else we might find.”

“Hey, wait a minute!” Madison exclaimed.  I hadn’t noticed, but while the rest of us were talking, she had slinked back to look under the shelf again.  “There’s something else wedged in here that I didn’t see before!  Way at the back.”  She put her arm in and wiggled it around.  “Ugh.  I can’t reach it.”

“Let me try,” Ashley said, coming over beside her.  She bent down, looking inside the hiding space.  “Does anybody have a light?”

“You can use my cell phone,” Liz said, handing it to her after turning the camera LED on. 

Ashley shone it into the space and nodded.  “I see it,” she said to Madison.  “I think I can reach.”  I didn’t notice before, but the raven-haired girl had probably the most slender arms I’d ever seen.  I looked at mine and felt a tiny stab of jealousy.  She was blessed with very graceful arms while mine were thicker and wider.  Not abnormally so by any stretch, but not as nice as hers.  After a minute of prodding beneath the shelf, Ashley pulled her arm out clutching a crumbled piece of paper.

“Nice one!” Madison said, and Ashley smiled proudly.  She gave the sheet to Liz, who straightened it against her thigh.  I watched her eyes run left to right as she read whatever was on it.  By the third line, her eyebrows had reached the very top of her head.

“What is it?” I asked.  The rest of the girls were all leaning in intently.  Liz held a finger up to me, continued reading, and then exhaled heavily and put the paper down.   

“If you thought the drawings were something,” she said, “just wait until you see this.”  She put the smaller piece of paper on top of the other one, and turned it around so the rest of us could read.

At first glance, it looked like the front page of a research report.  A large title followed by a paragraph summary.  There was a rip in the top left corner where it looked like a staple had once been.  I read the title, and found my own eyebrows crawling up: 
A Theoretical Exposition of Potential Physical Phenomena Derived from the Valency of Vitreous Silica Formations.

“Vitreous Silica,” I said under my breath.  “Does that mean…?”

“Crystals,” Liz confirmed.

“This is a paper about the power of the crystals!” Madison exclaimed.

“That’s right,” Liz said.  “But, this is just the paper abstract.  And it doesn’t say much.”

I scanned the paragraph below the title.  None of it made sense.  There was mention of the “physical valency of quartz objects” and reference to “undefined phenomena associated with lechatelierite and tridymite” and a promise to “expound upon the abstract values of atomic energies,” but it was written in complete scientific jargon and was way over my head.

“Where’s the rest of it?” Eve asked.  “Madison, is there anything else under the shelf?”

“Just that,” the diminutive girl confirmed. 

“It’s not dated, is it?” Ashley asked.

“No,” Liz answered.  “But look at the bottom right corner.”

My eyes went there. I immediately found what Liz was referring to.  There, written in tiny letters as a footnote, almost an afterthought, were the words “
With thanks to
Arthur Eliot
,
Research Assistant
.”

“A name!” I exclaimed.

“Our first lead,” Liz nodded.  “The name of the paper’s author isn’t there, but this is nearly as good.”

“Who is he?” Madison asked.

“Somebody who knows about the crystals,” Eve answered.  “Somebody who might be able to give us answers.”

“How do we find him?” I wondered aloud. 

“Like this,” Ashley said, and held out her phone so we could see the screen.  I hadn’t noticed it earlier, but she had become deeply engrossed in it.  I twisted my head to look.  Her mobile browser was open to a Google search for Arthur Eliot.  I read the snippet of bold text under the first one. 
Professor Arthur Eliot, Harvard University
.

“You think that’s the same person?” Liz asked.

“That’s the only result that matches,” Ashley said.

“Harvard,” Madison said wonderingly.  “Tracy, is he someone your dad might know?”

“I doubt it,” I answered.  “But I can ask.”  It was funny thinking of my parents.  Ever since the attack, the only thing on my mind had been the crystals and my – and the girls’ – safety.

“Madison, this is great,” Liz said.  “Thanks to you, I think we found way more than we expected.”  Madison smiled shyly at the praise.  “I don’t think we need to stick around in this office much longer.  I say we take the papers and go.”

“Wait a minute!” Eve said. “What’s this?”  She had flipped over the old blueprint and was examining the back.  We looked where she was pointing.  There, in one corner, was a washed-out stamp of red ink.  Despite the age and wear, though, the three letters that ran across its middle were unmistakable: C.I.A.

I felt the blood rush from my head.  A spell of dizziness came over me.  Dealing with the attacker was one thing.  Finding out that Chris and his dad were in on it was scary, but manageable.  Yet now, discovering that the
Central Intelligence Agency
knew about the crystals in some way, well… it was beyond frightening.  Beyond imaginable.  Just how far did all this go?  It felt like stumbling into a giant spider web, and finding yourself hopelessly caught in the middle.

“Tracy?  Tracy? You okay?”  I blinked, and found Ashley gripping my shoulders.  A look of concern was painted on her face.

“Yeah, fine,” I said softly, “just… spooked a little.  We shouldn’t be here.”

“You’re right,” Liz said.  “Something about this just doesn’t feel right.  Let’s get out of here.”

I nodded my agreement.  Ashley rolled the larger paper up, while Madison helped me stand up.  Liz took the smaller piece of paper and put it in her pocket.  Eve went to the door and stuck her head out.  After a moment, she turned back.  “The coast is clear.”

Chapter Six – The Man in the Caves

 

The cold air that slammed into my face as I stepped out of the building was the most welcome change I could expect

My heart, however, wouldn’t stop pounding until we were a good four blocks away from the geology building.

“Now what?” I asked tentatively. 

“I want to go find out more about Arthur Eliot,” Ashley said.  “Who is he? When did he author the paper?  How does he know about the crystals?”

“And whether he’s a friend or an enemy,” Eve added astutely. 

“We might not find out until we meet him,” Liz said.

“Meet him?” I exclaimed.  “What do you mean?”

“This is just an idea,” Liz said slowly, “so bear with me.  But I think it’s fairly certain the island… it’s not safe.  There are other people who know about the crystals.  And some of those people would go to great lengths to harm us—to harm you, particularly, Tracy.  We know that for sure.”

“Okay…” I said unsurely.

“Madison was the first to point it out.  As long as we stay here, we’re just sitting ducks for whoever will come next.  There is no doubt in my mind that there
will
be others who come next.”

“What makes you so certain?” Eve challenged.

“When the man who attacked Tracy doesn’t return,” Liz said, “Chris and his dad are going to realize that something bad happened.  If they were crazy enough to send one man after her, they wouldn’t hesitate to send another to finish the job.”

I felt my hackles rise at the suggestion. 
More
attackers?  As if one hadn’t been enough.  But Liz was right.  The threat was there, and it was prominent.  The more we found out, it seemed, the deeper ensnared we all became. 

“Anyway, I don’t mean to frighten you, Tracy,” Liz continued, “but that’s the truth.  And it’s not just you.  All of us are likely in the same danger.  All of us
are
in the same danger.  It won’t do any good if we stick our heads in the sand and pretend it’s not there.  Somebody else knows about the crystals, and somebody else knows about
us.
  But… there are people who know about the crystals, people we don’t know about, who don’t know of us either.  That’s the truth.  I don’t think this Arthur Eliot – this professor – knows about us.  For one, he was just a research assistant when he coauthored the paper.  And two, he’s at Harvard.  That’s like, a world-renowned school.  He’s a public figure.  I say we go to him.  We don’t tell him who we are, but we ask him about the paper.  About the crystals.  We can say we’re local high school students doing a project and we found his work.  That’s not far from the truth.  There’s no way he’ll know who we are – he’s never seen us before.  And if somebody out there does make the connection between the crystals and a group of girls from Traven Island, well, we’ll be far away by then.  I say we go find Arthur Eliot on a weekend or something, and see what he has to say.”

“Alright,” Ashley said. “So, say we decide to do that.  There’s still the little problem of us being
stuck on an island!

“And as far as I know,” Madison added, “no one’s ever left during the school year.”

Liz exhaled and rubbed her temples.  “I know, I know,” she said.  “I haven’t thought that far yet.  Like I said, it’s just an idea—”

“Leave that to me,” Eve said suddenly.  There was such fierce determination in her voice that I wondered if she hadn’t tried leaving before.  “If we need to go, I can get us off.  I… know some people.”  She looked at me, and gave a tiny wink.  I blinked in response.  It was difficult to get a read on the girl. 

“But we can’t just
run away
from school!” Madison exclaimed.  “What happens when our parents find out?  What happens when our teachers find out?”

“I think we’ve got bigger problems to deal with than what our teachers think,” Eve said drily.  Madison flinched.

“I’m not saying we run away,” Liz said.  “Only, that we go talk to the professor.  Harvard’s in Boston, and that’s not far from here, once we get on the mainland.  There’s a long weekend coming up.  We can do it then.  That way, none of our teachers will even notice we’ve left.”

“But until then, we remain, as you so eloquently put it, sitting ducks,” Eve said, shaking her head.  “No, that won’t do.  If we’re going to do it, we need to do it right away.”

“Hold on,” I said, suddenly remembering the prisoner.  “What about the man in the caves?  He might have something to tell us.” I’d come to grips with the fact that we’d need to talk to him.  In fact, in a strange way, I had started looking forward to it now.  “Before we decide to do anything, we should see what he knows.”  Rob was still down there, and had been all day.  I wanted to see how he was doing.  I’d bet anything that events of last night were just as traumatic for him as they were for me, even if he didn’t quite show it.

“I’ll go down there with you,” Eve said.

“Okay,” I nodded.  “Anyone else?”

“I want to find out more about Arthur Eliot,” Ashley said, thoughtfully.

“Me too,” Liz said.  “The more we know about him the better.”

“What about you, Madison?” I asked.

“I think I’ll go with them,” she said, looking at Ashley and Liz.  “I spent a lot of time in the caves last night, and I’m not too eager to go down there again.”

“Alright,” I said.  I glanced at my phone, and saw that it was nearly 3:00 p.m.  That meant that the streets would be crowded with students coming from class soon.  It also meant that there were only a few hours of daylight left.  “Eve and I will go down there, and see what the man has to say.  We’ll call you when we’re done.”

“Sounds good,” Liz agreed. 

We quickly said our goodbyes, and split into two groups.  Eve and I headed east, angling toward the cave entrance that was just north of the dorms.  Liz and the others went the other way, heading to the library in the main yard.

While I had a general idea of where the cave entrance was, I had never actually been there.  Eve took the lead.  As we walked, she explained that there were different entrances to the caves all throughout the forest that occupied the upper half of the island, if you knew where to look.  If you didn’t, you could walk all the way to the island’s northern tip and not find any. 

Other books

A Certain Chemistry by Mil Millington
Crossways by Jacey Bedford
The Dead of Sanguine Night by Travis Simmons
Frozen Moment by Camilla Ceder
The Betting Season (A Regency Season Book) by Knight-Catania, Jerrica, Gayle, Catherine, Stone, Ava, Charles, Jane
Mr. Monk on the Couch by Lee Goldberg