Jake Ransom and the Skull King's Shadow Read online




  Jake Ransom and the Skull King’s Shadow

  James Rollins

  For all my nieces and nephews:

  Katherine, Adrienne, R.J., Mack, Alexandra, and Nadia.

  May all your worlds shine with wonder and magic.

  Contents

  Map

  Prologue

  Grave Robbers

  Part One

  Three Years Later

  1 School Daze

  2 An Unexpected Invitation

  3 Mr. Bledsworth’s Show

  4 The Black Sun

  Part Two

  5 Land of the Lost

  6 Broken Gate

  7 Calypsos

  8 Strangers in a Strange Land

  9 The Council of Elders

  10 The White Road

  11 The Alchemist’s Apprentice

  12 Bornholm Hall

  13 The First Tribe

  14 A Midnight Intruder

  15 The Crystal Heart of Kukulkan

  Part Three

  16 Game Day

  17 First Skirmish

  18 Race Across Town

  19 Death Trap

  20 I See You…

  21 Rumor of War

  22 First Blood

  Part Four

  23 Whistling in the Woods

  24 Shadow in the Machine

  25 World Enough and Time

  26 The Long Count

  27 Serpent Pass

  28 Last Stand

  29 Fire and Shadows

  30 Time and Time Again

  A Note from the Author

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Map

  PROLOGUE

  GRAVE ROBBERS

  The man fled down the steep slope of the jungle mountain. His boots slipped in the muck of wet leaves and slick mud. Clinging branches and snagging thorns sought to catch him, but he ripped straight through them.

  Must not stop…

  As he reached a sharp switchback in the trail, he fought to keep from tumbling headlong over the cliff that bordered the path. He swung an arm out to catch his balance and skidded in the mud around the turn. His other hand clutched the paper-wrapped parcel to his chest. Despite the near fall, he sped faster. He glanced back over his shoulder.

  Fires still raged atop the mountain’s summit.

  The natives called the place Montaña de Huesos.

  The Mountain of Bones.

  It was a cursed place, shunned by all. The peak rose from the dark emerald jungles of the Yucatán Peninsula, where Mexico bordered its southern neighbor of Belize. Swamps and deep pitfalls challenged all who dared approach it, while mosquitoes and biting flies plagued anything that moved. Thick forests and vines crusted over the mountain in an impenetrable mass, hiding its true heart from prying eyes. The peak overlooked a lake where crocodiles floated like broken logs. From its forest canopy, gray monkeys with white faces stared down, strangely silent, like small ghosts of old men. Elsewhere, shadowy jaguars prowled its deepest glades. When it rained, which was often, waterfalls and cataracts flowed down the mountain’s sides like molten silver.

  It was a sight to behold.

  But a rare one.

  Few people had ever set eyes on the giant mountain; even fewer had ever walked its slopes. And only one man knew its secret.

  He had learned the truth.

  The Mountain of Bones…was no mountain.

  Clutching his package, the man hurried down the dark jungle path. The ghostly monkeys barked softly at his limping passage as if encouraging him to run faster. The stub of a broken arrow stuck out of his thigh. Fiery agony lanced through his leg with every other step, but he had to keep going. The hunters were closing tightly around him.

  His name was Henry Bethel.

  Dr. Henry Bethel.

  Professor of archaeology at Oxford University.

  He and his dearest colleagues, Penelope and Richard Ransom, had spent the last three months of the rainy season excavating the top of the Mountain of Bones. They had uncovered a tremendous cache of pristine artifacts: a silver jaguar mask, a crown of jade and opal, small carvings of onyx and malachite, a twisted golden snake with two heads, and many other priceless objects from the Classic period of the Mayan civilization.

  They had found the items in a stone tomb atop the mountain. Even as he fled now, Henry remembered Penelope Ransom being lowered on a rope into the tomb for the first time. Her flashlight’s glow had illuminated the subterranean crypt and the giant sarcophagus it held inside. Atop the coffin’s carved limestone lid, the most magnificent artifact rested: a two-foot-tall gold pyramid, topped by a chunk of jade carved into a curled snake with outstretched wings—like a dragon. The sculpture depicted a creature out of legend.

  Kukulkan.

  The feathered dragon god of the Maya.

  The tomb was the discovery of a lifetime.

  And word had quickly spread.

  Drawn by the rumors of gold and treasure, the bandits had attacked two hours ago, as the sun sank. Under the cover of twilight, the archaeological camp had been quickly subdued by rifles, machetes, and barked threats. When the attack had first started, Henry had rushed to the Ransoms’ tent, only to find it empty. He didn’t know what had happened to Penelope and Richard.

  He still didn’t.

  All he knew was he had to get the package to safety.

  The Ransoms had left specific instructions.

  He risked another glance up. He could no longer see the flames from the burning camp. The attackers had torched the entire site, even blowing up the petrol tank to the generator.

  The crack of a rifle shot echoed down from the summit.

  Startled, Henry flinched, and his left boot heel slipped. His legs went out from under him. He struck his backside hard and began a treacherous slide down the remainder of the mountain’s steep slope.

  He dug his heels, but the muddy ground proved too slippery from the day’s rain. Wet palm fronds slapped his face, and half-buried rocks pounded his spine. A branch of a thorny bush tore a fiery path across his cheek.

  Still, he hugged the parcel tightly to his chest.

  The mountain’s slope suddenly ended, and Henry shot off the edge. He went airborne with a small cry of surprise. Plummeting feetfirst, he splashed into a small murky pool at the foot of the mountain. It was shallow, waist deep. His boots struck the pond’s sandy bottom and jarred his teeth together with a loud clack. Still, he kept hold of the package. He lifted it above his head to keep it dry.

  Just a little farther…

  The lake and boat lay only a half mile away.

  He took a deep breath and attempted to slog out of the pool—but his legs refused to obey. His boots were trapped in the muddy bottom of the pool, sunk to the ankles. He twisted and yanked, but the sucking muck held him in an inescapable grip. His efforts only wormed his legs even deeper. He felt the mud and sand climb up past his calves to his knees.

  No…

  The level of the water quickly rose up his chest. The chill of the pool sank to his bones. He knew the danger he had fallen into.

  Quicksand.

  He clutched the package above his head. What to do? Tears of frustration and fear misted his sight. In that moment, the rational part of his brain dropped away, replaced by raw terror.

  Henry stared up at the cursed mountain.

  Montaña de Huesos.

  The Mountain of Bones.

  And now his bones would join all the others.

  He had failed the Ransoms.

  With Penelope and Richard vanished, no one else knew the truth. He watc
hed the moon climb over the sharp edge of the mountain. He shivered at the sight, and even this small motion hurried his descent into the quicksand. Mud climbed to his waist, the water to his neck.

  The secret would die with him.

  Sensing his doom, he craned up at the mountain.

  A mountain that was no mountain.

  From his deadly vantage, the truth seemed so obvious now. The sharp lines, the steep slopes, the blunted summit. Though the mountain appeared to be some natural hill, he knew the ages had buried its true heart under centuries of mud, leaf, vine, and snaking roots.

  In his mind’s eye, Henry peeled and stripped the piles and tangles away to reveal the hidden heart. He pictured the four sides, the nine giant steps, and the flat summit thrust up toward the rising sun.

  A Mayan pyramid.

  The ancient structure lay buried within the false mountain.

  But that was not its deepest secret.

  Not by far.

  Henry fingered the twine that snugly wrapped the parcel. He sent out a silent apology and prayer to Richard and Penelope Ransom.

  As water climbed to his lips, he tasted the sandy water. He spat and choked. His vision blurred. Lights danced before his eyes.

  No, not lights…

  His vision sharpened despite his panic.

  Torches approached through the boggy jungle. Flames flickered. Dark shadows shed to reveal a dozen warriors. They were half naked, dressed in loincloths. Ashes and black paint daubed their faces. Some came forward with drawn bows, flint arrows pointed toward him. Others had rifles shouldered.

  The hunters had found their prey.

  From out of their midst, a larger figure pushed forward. The leader of the bandits. But Henry knew the bandits were no more bandits than Montaña de Huesos was a simple mountain.

  The attackers also hid a darker secret.

  Henry heard a familiar whump-whump echoing from off in the distance. Helicopters were sweeping toward the burning campsite. Military helicopters. Henry had managed to get out a Mayday on the radio before escaping.

  If only they’d come sooner…

  The bandits’ tall leader strode forward and lowered to one knee.

  Henry struggled to see the man’s face, but the torchlight seemed to shun his form. Wearing a longcoat and slouched hat, he was more shadow than man.

  He reached out a wooden pole with a wicked steel hook at the end. Henry knew the man was not offering to pull him out of the quicksand. He was after the package. Henry attempted to yank it under the water, but he moved too slowly. The man lunged out with the pole and snagged the package from his fingertips.

  Henry struggled to regain it, but it rose beyond his reach.

  The bandits’ leader climbed to his feet. With a skilled flip, the package sailed high and landed in his open palm. For just a moment, Henry caught a glimpse of bony fingers with nails sharpened to points.

  Like claws.

  Then the man tossed aside the pole and started to leave.

  “Thank you, Dr. Bethel,” came a hoarse whisper, strangely accented. “You’ve proven most resourceful.”

  Henry strained his neck as far back as it could reach. His lips rose above the water. He spat his mouth clear.

  “You’ll never have it!” Henry’s choked words were followed by a bitter laugh of satisfaction.

  The leader swung back toward him. From beneath his hat, his eyes appeared like polished shadows, brighter than the cloaking darkness, sinister, unnatural.

  As Henry sank beneath the pond’s surface, those strange eyes focused on him and narrowed. The waters grew colder under that questioning gaze.

  As the water swamped over Henry’s head, he answered silently the dark suspicion of the leader. You’re too late.

  He heard the leader cry out. Henry imagined the man ripping into the package he had guarded so bravely. He knew what the man would find: only dried-out palm fronds, folded and bundled.

  Through the drowning waters, Henry heard the scream of bright anger from the bandits’ dark leader. The man had finally realized nothing was what it seemed here in the shadow of the Mountain of Bones.

  Not bandits, not the mountain…not even a package tied in twine.

  All a trick.

  The purpose of Henry’s flight was to blaze a false trail, one to lure the hunters away from the true path. As darkness descended and Henry sank into the jungle’s final and eternal embrace, a smile formed on his lips.

  The secret was safe, headed to where it belonged.

  To be hidden until it was needed.

  No one paid attention to the small Mayan boy as he climbed the two steps to the post office in Belize City. He carried a twine-wrapped parcel in his hands. Behind him, the ocean glinted brightly. It had taken the boy and his grandfather a full month to reach the coast. They had to be careful, wary, and watchful.

  His grandfather knew all the old paths, the secret ways of their ancient people. He had taught the boy much on the long journey—how to soothe a toothache by chewing on the sap of the chicle tree, how to start a fire with flint and tinder, how to walk a jungle and not be heard.

  But the most important lesson was unspoken.

  To honor one’s promise.

  The boy lifted the package toward the mail slot. He longed to look inside, but promises had been made. So instead he stared at the address written on the brown paper wrapping. He sounded out the letters.

  “North Hampshire…Connecticut.”

  He imagined the long journey the package would take. He wished he could follow it, too. Fly off to some exotic land.

  The boy traced a finger over the top line:

  Master Jacob Bartholomew Ransom

  So many names for one person. With a shake of his head, the boy tipped the package through the slot. It struck the bottom with a satisfying thunk.

  With the promise fulfilled, the boy turned away. “Master Jacob Bartholomew Ransom,” he whispered as he headed down the post office steps.

  With so many names, surely he must be someone very important.

  Maybe a distant prince or lord.

  Still, the question nagged him—and would for many years.

  Who exactly was Master Jacob Bartholomew Ransom?

  PART ONE

  Three Years Later

  1

  SCHOOL DAZE

  From his school desk, Jake Ransom willed the second hand on the wall clock to sweep away the final minutes of his sixth-period history class.

  Only another twenty-four minutes and he would be free.

  Away from Middleton Prep for a whole week!

  Then he could finally get some real work done. He had already mapped out his plans for each day of the weeklong vacation break: to explore the rich vein of shellfish fossils he had discovered in the rock quarry behind his house, to attend a signing by one of his favorite physicists, who had a new book out called Strange Quarks and Deeper Quantum Mysteries, to listen to the fourth lecture by a famed anthropologist on the cannibal tribes of Borneo (who knew sautéed eyeballs tasted sweet?)—and he had so much more planned.

  All he needed now was the school’s last bell to ring to free him from the prison that was eighth grade.

  But escape would not come that easy.

  The history teacher, Professor Agnes Trout, clapped her bony hands together and drew back his sullen attention. She stood to one side of her desk. As gaunt as a stick of chalk, and just as dry and dusty, the teacher peered over her fingertips at the class.

  “We have time for one more report,” she announced.

  Jake rolled his eyes. Oh, great…

  The class was no happier. Groans spread around the room, which only hardened her lips into a firmer line.

  “We could make it two more reports and stay after the last bell,” she warned.

  The class quickly quieted.

  Professor Trout nodded and turned to her desk. One finger traced a list of names and moved to the next victim in line to present an oral report. Jake found it am
using to watch her thin shoulders pull up closer to her ears. He knew whose name was next in line alphabetically, but it had somehow caught the teacher by surprise.

  She straightened with a soured twist to her lips. “It seems we will hear next from Jacob Ransom.”

  A new round of groans rose. The teacher did not even bother quieting them down. She plainly regretted her decision to squeeze in one more report before the holiday break. But after almost a year in her class, Jake knew Professor Agnes Trout was a stickler for order and rules. She cared more about the memorization of dates and names than any real understanding of the flow of history. So once committed to her course of action, she had no choice but to wave him to the front of the class.

  Jake left his books and notes behind. He had his oral report set to memory. Empty-handed, crossing toward the blackboard, he felt the class’s eyes on him. Even though he had skipped a grade last year, he was still the second tallest boy in his class. Unfortunately it wasn’t always a good thing to stand out in a crowd, especially in middle school, especially after skipping a grade. Still, Jake kept his shoulders straight as he crossed to the board. He ignored the eyes staring at him. Not one to set fashion trends, Jake wore what he found first that morning (clean or not). He ended up with scuffed jeans, a tattered pair of high-top sneakers, a faded green polo shirt, and of course the mandatory navy school jacket with the school’s insignia embroidered in gold on the breast pocket. Even his sandy blond hair failed to match the current razored trend. Instead it hung lanky over his forehead.

  Like his father’s had been.

  Or at least it matched the last picture Jake had of the senior Ransom, now gone three years, vanished into the Central American jungle. Jake still carried that photograph, taped to the inside of his notebook. It showed his parents, Richard and Penelope Ransom, smiling with goofy happiness, dressed in khaki safari outfits, holding up a Mayan glyph stone. The photo’s edges were still blackened and curled from the fire that burned through their hilltop camp.