Authors: Matthew James
36
I open my eyes and find myself in the same chamber as before—the one from my previous dream—except something isn’t right. The world is in black and white, with some shades of both sprinkled in. It sort of looks like I’m watching an older movie.
There are no flaming lamps floating on the walls, no obsidian bonfire frozen in time and no psychotic, wannabe warlord ranting about taking over the world, killing billions, and using me to do it. It’s just a very large, very bare, void of nothingness. Plus, the cave sounds like it’s crumbling, like an A-Bomb was dropped above it and the shock wave is now passing through.
There’s a colossal pillar to my left, the size of a redwood. It looks like a giant stalagmite and stalactite fused together after years and years of dripping.
Like some of my previous spelunking adventures in America’s Midwest, the roof of this cave must be made of limestone. The stalactite would have dripped calcium—among other minerals—to the cavern floor where it would build up to form a stalagmite. As the water drains through the rocks above, it would basically eat away at the limestone, causing it to bleed down and form these majestic columns.
There must be a huge body of water above me,
I think, then, remember where I am.
Possibly a sea or part of an ocean—the one that ringed Atlantis in its heyday.
Then, I see something around the back of the pillar. There’s a slight glow coming from what I guess might be a lantern or possibly a small fire. I slowly and quietly peek around the base of the stone column and see that the light source is neither a lantern or fire, but a crystal of some sort. But gemstones don’t usually glow.
It’s then that I see the
people
sitting around the glowing jewel, three of them to be precise. It looks like they are finishing up a conversation, but I must have just missed it since they aren’t speaking, they’re just sitting staring at each other.
After watching them for what seems like a full minute and not seeing one of them speak a single word, one of the tall men stands, his back to me.
Come brothers, we must return to the surface and try to restrain our fallen brother and forgive him for what he has done and for what he will do next.
I hear him speak, but I can’t see his face from here.
The other two follow the first and stand, turning directly towards me. I duck and hide, concealing myself deeper into the shadow of the limestone column. I hide because they look exactly like Nannot. Then it hits me.
Could these be the Elders we’ve read about?
I think.
I wonder…
But decide not to try it, just in case they aren’t as friendly as I hoped.
The world around me flickers, like a computer screen glitch. Then something strange happens, the lifeless color of this place slowly starts to return, like the HDMI cable has been plugged in.
Come my friend, there’s no need to hide.
I freeze. How did they know I’m here? I didn’t make a peep.
You cannot hide in your own mind. Even if you could, we are not to be feared.
I slowly and cautiously step out, looking up at the large individuals, not quite sure what to make of them. They’re huge and are all exactly the same height, around eight feet tall. Their bodies are long and wiry, but very strong, reminding me of a muscular basketball player’s body.
I step closer, getting an even better look at them. They too have on Egyptian-style robes—like Thoth—though not as elaborate. They’re just soft and flowing, and made of white silk-like material. Simple, yet beautiful in design. Under their robes they have on what looks like medieval-style armor, but more
modern
in design. It’s sleeker and more nimbly built, allowing for greater flexibility and made from orichalcum, naturally.
That’s when I remember the other statues of the Atlantean kings, up in the courtyard. I glance up to their heads and notice no crowns.
That’s because we are
not
kings,
says the middle one in a familiar accent, answering my next question.
You can hear my thoughts, can’t you?
I ask mentally, testing my hypothesis.
Oh, and why do you sound like Sean Connery?
Among other gifts, yes we can hear you in here,
he says tapping his temple.
Although, thought has no language and regardless of what tongue you speak we would understand you just fine.
He pauses as if pondering my second question a little longer. Then he continues,
As to why I sound like him…? Your subconscious chose this voice, not me.
Makes sense I guess, but having Dr. Henry Jones Sr.’s Scottish brogue in my ear is going to take some getting used to. Plus, I’m never gunna’ hear the end of it from Kane if he finds out that I have Indy’s Dad in my head.
One other thing, why have you guys only communicated with me while I sleep? Why not talk to me while I’m awake?
All three react, staring straight into my soul,
Guys? Are we not the only ones to contact you?
I can tell they are worried and they seem like they are in fact on my side, so I decide it can’t hurt to tell them about Nannot’s contact with me earlier.
Once I’m done, they just simply nod their heads and continue, answering my previous question like nothing happened. But I can feel the tension in the air.
We deduced long ago that the human brain is at its least defendable state during sleep. We have an easier time breaking in while you are at rest than if you were awake. Also, we could potentially injure you if we tried.
Right…injured brain…not good.
That’s probably why Rhonar was in so much pain,
I deduce.
I get back on topic.
Then if you’re not kings, who are you?
He gives me a slight turn of his head, cocking it to the side, as if contemplating an answer.
Let us show you,
they all say in unison.
The three Atlanteans open their arms out wide and look straight up towards the cavern’s high ceiling. I can hear them in my head, muttering some incoherent language, again all at once. It’s like they are using the same mind—a hive mind. Every thought, every action, it’s all processed as one.
The room starts to spin, but I feel no ill effect. It’s not like the tugging sensation I had in my other dream. Nor is it like the mental and physical abuse I suffered in the last one
either. No, this is like I’m experiencing the events through my own eyes, and not just through my mind. I can even smell the dankness of the cavern around me.
That is because you are coming along willingly,
says the middle one again.
Your body and mind does not fight us like you fought our brother.
Before I can ask him about his last comment, we are whisked away. We quickly arrive, and appear to be on a coastline somewhere. There is a torrential downpour and an insane amount of lightning, worse than any storm I’ve been through back home. And that’s saying something considering Florida is known as the lightning capital of the WORLD.
The rain is slapping against my face, causing me to flinch and close my eyes. Ouch
.
I’m soaked and being pelted by what feels like miniature paintballs being shot at me.
You mustn’t do this brother. These are your people too.
I reopen my eyes, turning to see who is speaking.
“Holy crap…”
37
My mouth is agape, hanging open and flapping like a fish out of water. I just stare at the spectacle going on in front of me. It’s incredible and intense and well…spectacular!
First, I notice my new
friends
. They face the water hands up in defense of an unseen force. It looks like three mimes pushing against something that isn’t actually there.
You are witnessing the end of our homeland, the night it was destroyed.
I spin and fall, startled. I look up from my seated position and do a double take, slightly confused. I see the three elders standing not ten feet from me, but it’s not the same three I saw just moments ago. They are still in their defensive formation, desperately trying to hold back the wind.
We are here as onlookers, just like you.
I get myself together and stand, watching the battle unfold.
We, myself and the present world elders, are on a pier of some sort, about fifty yards from solid ground. It branches out in three direction, continuing fifty feet farther forward and another fifty feet to the left and right. From above it would look like a plus-sign.
The past elders, the ones trying in vain to protect their home, are standing out at the very end of the forward section of the pier. The rest of us are standing halfway down the right hand arm of the plus-sign.
The wind is unbelievably strong now, howling, swirling around us.
It’s gotta’ be close to hurricane force strength now, maybe more,
I think shielding my eyes from the sideways rain.
CRA-KOOM!
A massive blood-red lightning bolt strikes the end of the right hand arm of the pier, some twenty-five feet away. The wood structure violently explodes and splinters are sent flying. I instinctively dive to the ground, hoping to avoid the shrapnel that’s produced. I mean it is a dream…dreams don’t generally hurt, but then I remember my encounter with Nannot and the bruising I suffered.
It’s then I feel something pinch my arm. I look down to see a pencil-sized shard of wood buried in my forearm. I clutch my arm in pain and yank it out, coming away with my other hand covered in blood.
Okay, I guess I can get hurt in this dream world too,
I think wincing at the spray of salt water stinging my new wound.
I kneel, getting up…again, still clutching my injured arm, and notice that I’m only a couple of feet from the newly formed end of the pier.
All the while the other three elders are still attempting to hold back…the storm? Can they do that?
Kneel before your new king!
A voice booms across the water, originating from out in the maelstrom, one I’ve heard before, in my head. It’s both familiar and dreadful.
Gritting my teeth to stand, I look to the water and see him.
Nannot is airborne, hovering about twenty feet over the thrashing surf. His robes billow in the whirling air. His
black
robes. His eyes are blood red and well…bleeding. “Just like Rhonar’s,” I say out loud. The words come out mute though, the raging wind drowning out my voice.
Then I notice his skin. It’s jet black as well, whereas the three elders are a healthy tan complexion. It’s like the wickedness deep within him has shown its hold over him on the outside.
We shall never call you king, brother. We serve our one
true
king!
Do they mean Thoth? It has to be. The realization finally dawns on me! The three, their hands raised in battle, the fourth confronting them on the coastline and the freakish weather. It all makes sense.
I’m reliving the end of Atlantis.
The cavern that my team and I are currently exploring is under where the actual city of Atlantis once stood. Its obliteration, and… I look over to Nannot, understanding why I’m being shown this. HE is responsible for the island nation’s devastation. HE destroyed it all, killed thousands and is attempting to eradicate countless more.
Do not stand in my way traitors. You cannot defeat me! The Priests of An’tala are finished.
An’tala?
Priests? The elders were Thoth’s personal advisors and it would also look like his bodyguards.
An’tala is what we called our home. You have since renamed it Atlantis,
says an elder…or should I say Atlantean priest. I know by saying
you
he means modern man and not actually me.
CRA-KOOM!
Another incredibly large crimson lightning bolt hits the section of pier I’m standing on, decimating it, throwing me through the air and into the freezing water.
38
I surface nearby, to see the pier completely gone. Obliterated. The three defenders of An’tala are hovering in mid-air, just like Nannot, arms still raised in defiance.
A wave rolls over me and pulls me under. I try to kick to the surface, but get rolled again and again…and again. I’m about to pass out when my head breaks the surface. As I find my bearings, I can still hear the four combatants conversing.
We may not be able to defeat you—only the chosen can achieve that—but we can delay you. Either way, that body does not belong to you.
The body doesn’t belong to him?
I think to myself while trying not go under again.
As I wade in the chilling seawater, a flash of what looks like green energy streaks across the sky and strikes Nannot in the chest. A wave crests and falls over my head, but I don’t go completely under. It does make me struggle against the crashing waves, which are intense. I kick hard and clear it, sucking in another gulp of air. Through stinging, salt-filled eyes, I see the three priests with their fists outstretched in front of them. They let loose another attack, each sending an energy beam into Nannot. Then they send another volley, and another. The blasts must have severely weakened Nannot because, the wind slowly lowers him towards the now calming ocean, threatening to envelope him.
I look around, seeing no sign of the present day priests, the ones who brought me here.
So they can leave but I can’t!
I think.
So not right.
These
three approach slowly, choreographing their moves. They surround Nannot, forming a triangle, and discharge more of the electric force at him all at once. And this time they pour it on, not letting up.
The black-clad twin wails in agony, his head tilted back and his arms and legs outstretched, cursing his brothers.
That’s when I notice the water level around me start to drop. I continue to kick hard through the now lowering tide and try to stay afloat, but the surf is too strong. I slip beneath the waves a couple more times, almost not making it back to the surface. Every time I come back up I see less and less water, and more and more…sand.
Nannot’s agonizing screams fill my head and intensify until he explodes and is turned to dust. I’m not sure what I just witnessed.
Did they just kill their brother? Or was it just his physical body that was destroyed?
Either way, Nannot is gone. The three warrior priests bow their heads, defeated.
My feet hit solid ground the same time his body is incinerated. I’m a hundred feet below where the pier was and where the coastline still is.
I guess it’s more of a cliff face now,
I think taking in my new surroundings.
The elders turn and move inland, sailing through the air at an incredible speed, disappearing from sight. A loud sonic boom echoes from behind me as they break the sound barrier.
I turn and see the three priests from my time standing behind me.
“What was that? What happened to him?” I ask.
The middle one answers,
That was
not
his true form, but a tool of his corruption. He has taken many in the past, but never used them like this.
He holds out his hands, motioning to the current state of things.
I look around, fully taking in the devastation. The water is gone, evaporated maybe. Or maybe it found a new home in an undiscovered fissure in the seabed?
Our abilities are strong
, says the middle one again, obviously reading my thoughts.
“You did this?” I say shocked.
The three of them all lower their heads, as if shamed for what they did.
Yes, but we had no other way of halting his advances. He wanted to destroy it all, every living thing. And who he didn’t execute, he would enslave and experiment on. We could not allow this to come to pass no matter the consequences.
“Like the destruction of your home?”
He doesn’t answer.
They look up together,
Every few generations, he takes another and tries again. Each one is stronger than the last.
“Takes another?” I ask.
All three of them lift their hands and point their long fingers at me.
I get it. He takes another human, another host.
“Why humans?”
Humanity is naturally…unkind to one another. He uses their wants and ambitions against them. He gives them unlimited strength, and promises the world. What human would say no to that?
It’s a bait question. They’re expecting me to answer and say that I wouldn’t. I mean, of course I wouldn’t, but it would be nice to be asked these things instead of them being assumed of you.
“The Great Deceiver,” I say to myself.
The who?
“It’s what we call the Devil. Satan.”
Yes, we know of him. Nannot’s maliciousness has caused a few legends to arise over the millennia, that being one.
I shake off the notion that this man—or should I say monster—Nannot, is the real life version of Satan. It’s just too absurd and quite honestly scares the shit out me.
“What happens now?” I ask.
They just re-aim their outstretched fingers and point towards the outer limits of the city.
I follow their direction and turn my attention to the new cliff face.
CRACK.
POP.
POP.
CRACK.
The ground rumbles and shakes. A large crack appears in the cliff face, about half way between us and the edge of the city above. Then there’s another crack this one even louder and then another. Each successive snap louder than the last.
Directly overhead, the entire coastline crumbles and falls apart. Chunks of rock and what look like buildings tumble into the newly formed canyon…the one we’re currently standing in.
Before the priests and I are crushed by hundreds-of-thousands of tons of debris, we are thrown back into the dark and gloomy cave, where I first met them.
I’m in shock and breathing heavily, not being able to fully react to what I just witnessed. It’s then I feel a large and strong hand on my shoulder and turn to find one of the elders standing next to me. He looks into my eyes. He has the same stone faced, armor plated mask as Nannot, which makes it very hard for me to gauge his emotion. But, I feel his sadness in my mind and in my soul. My heart aches for them.
“What ended up happening to your home?”
His hand slips from my shoulder and he backs up, rejoining his kin.
The reason Lord Thoth evacuated our homeland is because Nannot first attacked us with a series of immense earthquakes. Thousands of our people perished in the toppled buildings and fires. The faults and fissures underground started collapsing. The city eventually fell in on itself, where it would be buried by the newly formed desert. Erased. These caverns are the only thing that survived to your time.
The fact that they survived doesn’t shock me. They are, after all, over a thousand feet underground. It’s basically the world’s most effective bomb shelter.
“So the earthquakes opened a fault somewhere and that’s where all the water went?”
They nod.
“What is this place for? The necropolis,” I ask.
The necropolis was a holy place to our kind, before it was tainted by evil. We buried our dead and remembered those who lead before us. It didn’t always look the way it does now.
The scenery changes again. We are standing on the same landing where I slept and had my first encounter with Nannot. It’s almost impossible to tell that this is the same underground cave we stood in just a short time ago.
The cavern is full of…life. Hundreds of Atlanteans roam around, going about their normal lives. They dress the same as the priests, if only a little more informally, and they are in fact people. Ordinary people. Their faces are a melting pot of every race and creed from around the globe. I wonder if the demographics of this kingdom prove that many of the world’s major cultures started here.
I hear a giggle followed by more laughter as a small group of children romp by me. They are playing a game of tag as they run down the steep steps at full speed. Not a single one of them falls or slows.
Huh, anyone else would have fallen so hard and probably ended up being rushed to the E.R. if they tried that when they were a kid,
I think.
As I scan my surroundings, I hear the sound of rushing water and look to my right, towards where the moat of lava should be. It’s gone, replaced by crystal clear water. It’s like looking into a stream filled with ultra-purified, spring water. Liquid glass.
There are more people down on the perfectly usable beach too. Gleaming white sand lines the shores, all the way around the bend I saw before. No cracked, burnt earth and certainly no molten lava pits, either. It’s the ideal island get-away-type beach, minus the scorching summer heat.
This place is a hodgepodge of activity, not exactly what I pictured it to be from my prior experience here.
The trees in the stone forest are actually trees too. A gorgeous canopy of green encircles the courtyard. A blend of dotted colors is mixed within the foliage as well.
Fruit trees,
I think.
Every conceivable fruit is on display. I watch as a random person just strolls up to a tree, picks what appears to be an apple, takes a bite and walks away.
What is this place?
As I scan through the trees, I see a slight glow radiating from deeper within this Eden… The word resonates through my mind.
Eden.
Could it be? Maybe. It’s definitely something for me to check out later. But, first…
I redirect my attention back to the glimmer of something in the distance. The top half of a very ornate and beautiful golden pyramid shines across the now thriving necropolis. It’s completely covered in orichalcum—or knowing these people--it’s made entirely of it.
So, it wasn’t always black.
I take a step and trip, looking down at my foot. I’m not sure what I stumbled over but, I see my shoes and then my shorts. I’m still dressed in my normal clothing, except I’m freshly bathed and my clothes appear to have been expertly cleaned. And thank God, because I don’t think I’d be very comfortable walking around in a bed sheet.
That’s when I notice that I’m alone. The three Priests are gone. It’s just me and a very much alive Atlantean civilization.