the corridor angled to the right and led to a narrow stairwell. It was too far inside for the wind to blow, and only a trace amount of sand lay scattered on the bare floor.
He jogged up the stairsâthree hundred and fiftyâand into another corridor, his weapon ready at his shoulder. There were dozens more chambers on this level, and each he passed was stripped to its square bones. A few had stone benches carved around the perimeter of the room; more had recesses cut into the walls like shelves. The ceilings were high and flat.
At the top of another long stairwell, the darkness, which had threatened with shadows in the corners of each chamber, became absolute.
Surprised, Jake stopped. Even on moonless, overcast nights and in closed rooms, objects were clear to his Guardian eyesight. He only needed the faintest illumination to see: star shine, refracted light, the tiny glow of an LED indicator.
But this was like closing his eyes and wrapping his head in a heavy black sackâand it was the first time heâd seen true darkness since heâd done exactly that as a kid. Heâd walked out to the middle of a Kansas cornfield, put on the hood, and stumbled around with his arms outâ
His short laugh echoed in the stone chamber, revealing its enormous size and pressing away the suffocating darkness. Fifty years had passed, and heâd thought of that cornfield often, but had forgotten how that particular adventure had ended: his granddad had snuck up behind and scared the piss out of him.
Heâd screamed and taken off running.
Jake shook his head, grinning. No wonder heâd tried to forget that part. His ten-year-old pride had been shredded.
His sixty-year-old pride withstood being scared all the timeâbut stumbling around here wouldnât get him very far.
He searched through his hammerspace, his mind skipping over each item. Thereâd be something he could use. Heâd never bothered to store a flashlight; heâd never needed one.
Still didnât. The dim backlight from his cell phone lit the chamber like a carbide lamp.
It took a moment to register what he was seeing. The enormous chamber was terraced. A deep, rectangular pit had been carved into the floor of each level, with steps leading to the bottom. A colonnade surrounded the room; behind the rows of columns, giant arched entryways led east, west, north.
A bath, he realized. A Roman bath. Sculpted out of solid granite.
Inside a mountain.
Two or three thousand years ago, someone in Tunisia had been flippinâ insane.
Jake lowered the crossbow to his side, tossed a coin out of his hammerspace. Heads, so he went east.
An antechamber lay past the bath. Jake stopped, blinking up at the arch leading outâa line of symbols had been carved above it. Aside from the columns and the design of the temple, it was the first indication of a specific culture heâd seen.
But the symbols werenât Latin or Greek. Heâd have recognized those. No, this reminded him of a script heâd only seen engraved in living flesh and used to cast spells.
A shiver ran up his spine. He turned and backed beneath the arch into the next chamber.
It didnât have to be the demonic script. There were many ancient languages he didnât know. Heâd take a picture on his way outâanother Guardian would recognize it, or heâd find a reference in the Archives.
Where heâd probably have to ask the Black Widow.
The shiver worked its way back down. The woman was straight-up creepy: always draped in black, playing with her spiders, and moving like a mechanical bird thatâd been wound too tight. Talking to her made him feel eight again, his buddies daring him to trick-or-treat at Old Man Marleyâs house.
Finding the courage had been easy enough, but heâd still walked away with runny Jell-O for knees.
They almost gave out again when he turned and his phone illuminated the chamber. Whoa, boy.
The bath had