Ghazzi turned and faced Baahir. “If this is true, no matter how unbelievable it sounds, why would Anubis imprison his own soul?”
Baahir sighed. This was hard for him to repeat. His mother had been so sure of the reason that it scared him. What was strange was that it had never turned away his father. He believed his wife, but Baahir figured that was because he loved her deeply and supported her no matter what and nothing more. Zahra
“Legend says that, in order for Anubis to become a god, he confined his mortal soul, and that, if released, it would unleash a plague upon the world.”
Ghazzi’s smirk morphed into a full-fledged, gap-toothed, jack-o-lanterned smile. “A plague?”
He didn’t believe a single thing that Baahir was telling him, though Ghazzi had graciously allowed him to explain it without interruption or ridicule. Baahir had rarely ever repeated what his mother had believed in for fear of mockery. She had hidden her beliefs from the public, knowing it would have destroyed whatever professional standing she had maintained.
And if people found out that Baahir believed the plague story,
Baahir refused to ever become that, no matter how convinced his mother had been.
He tilted his chin up to the god, more specifically, the relic between his hands. “My sister has a jar similar to that, you know.”
Ghazzi looked back to the engraving. “She does?”
Baahir nodded. “It’s a family heirloom. After our mother died, Zahra begged our father to have it. She cherishes it.”
“Zahra?”
“Yeah, she works for the British Museum. She’s brilliant, but is also an adrenaline junky. The woman never stops.”
“And the jar?”
Baahir shrugged. “Last I saw, it was in her office.”
Speaking about the mythos of Anubis and his own family’s beliefs spurred something inside of Baahir. He stood with Ghazzi closely in tow. Baahir tipped his head back at the tunnel and spoke.
“Retrieve Abbas and Rahal. We’ll need their help if we’re going to open this thing and see if we’re right.”
Ghazzi smiled wide and excitedly headed off. Baahir knew he should call in proper reinforcements, but he wanted to see it through on his own. His mother had believed in all of this myth and legend, and he made it his personal mission in life to either prove her right or invalidate her work.
For better or worse, it would be the closure he needed.
He was a man of
Baahir valued Occam’s razor.
The being who had portrayed himself to be Anubis was most likely just an intelligently gifted human being who had displayed psychopathic behaviors, alleging himself to be divine. He had been a person living in a dark time who possessed an understanding of a deeper knowledge, one that had often been confused with magic and witchcraft over the years.
In this case, the simpletons of the period had feared what would come to be known as
That’s what made the most sense to Baahir anyway.
The fact that there were some people that actually believed that Anubis had been real and, in fact, a god both concerned and terrified him. Then again, all religions seemed odd to Baahir. He was wholly agnostic, even before his mother died. An all-knowing entity that watched over the universe was too farfetched for him to have ever believed in. He could never grasp it. But if there was one thing that had always intrigued him, and gave him hope that it was all true, it was the idea of there being an afterlife.
Because Baahir would give anything to see his mother again.
Ghazzi returned in no time with both Abbas and Rahal. The prospect of opening the vault’s lid was too much for either man to ignore.
Baahir stepped up to the front of the stone lid with Abbas on his right and Ghazzi on his left. Agent Rahal was holding Baahir’s phone high above them, filming everything the device’s light touched. Baahir’s heart raced, as he was sure everyone’s was. This was history in the making.
“Ready?” Baahir asked, meeting eye to eye with Abbas and Ghazzi.
Both men nodded, sweat pouring down their faces. Baahir’s face was likewise drenched. The storm had brought an uncomfortable thickness to the air, and the lack of airflow inside the temple was brutal.
“Okay, Mr. Rahal, make sure you get everything.”