question, ‘and also fire and volcanoes.’
‘So you think the stone ended up in a volcano?’
‘Considering what else happened in Atlantis, I’d say it was a possibility. Listen to this: “The mountains north of the city are spewing fire and ash. The island shakes as the gods of the land and the sky and the sea all turn their anger upon Atlantis.” Interesting – the text’s now in the present tense. It’s not a record for posterity any more, more like a last journal entry . . . “The witch Nantalas has begged the king for her life. She says she can find the sky stone. The king asks her why, when it has brought only destruction and the wrath of the gods upon the empire. She says a new Temple of the Gods must be built and the sky stone sealed in it for eternity, so that nobody may ever again repeat her blasphemy.” She managed to convince him to let her lead the search.’
‘Crikey, she must have been one hell of a good talker,’ said Matt. ‘I’m amazed he didn’t give her the chop on the spot.’
‘I think she knew that even if she found it, she would still be killed for what she’d done. But I guess the king thought it was worth trying – if they could pacify the gods, maybe they could save Atlantis.’
Eddie shook his head. ‘Well, we know how that turned out. But did she find it?’
‘I don’t even know if she managed to escape Atlantis before it sank. We’re almost at the end of the text.’ Nina became more solemn as she read the last few lines. ‘“The people are fleeing, but there are not enough ships. One of the mountains has collapsed into the earth, leaving only a pillar of fire. Even the great temples are falling. Only the Temple of Poseidon is strong enough to hold, and I do not know for how long.” And then . . .’ She brought the composite image back up on the laptop’s screen, pointing out the final words. ‘The inscriptions are much cruder now – they were written in a hurry. “The king and queen have fled. The dead lie in the streets. The ground does not stop shaking. The gods have cursed us. The sea . . .”’
‘What?’
She gave Eddie a grim look. ‘It says, “The sea is rising. Atlantis falls.” And that’s where it ends.’
‘Christ. That’s pretty bloody biblical.’
‘The end of an entire civilisation,’ she said, almost sadly. ‘We know there was a disapora that survived for a few centuries, but eventually the last Atlanteans were conquered, died, or absorbed by other cultures. But it all ended right here – when Nantalas thought she could control earth energy.’
‘But she blew it. Literally.’
‘Right. It seems that she channelled so much energy through the meteorite that it caused an earthquake, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis . . .’ She gestured at the main viewport, outside which the second submersible was still photographing the rest of the inscriptions. ‘She sank the entire island. I remember when we first found Atlantis, someone had the theory that the collapse of a subterranean volcanic caldera could account for how it ended up eight hundred feet below the surface. If that’s right, then it was an uncontrolled release of earth energy that actually caused it.’
‘One person could do all that?’ Matt asked in disbelief.
‘One person can kill a million – if they happen to have their finger on the trigger of an atomic bomb. That’s essentially what happened. They didn’t know what they were dealing with . . . and their arrogance, their hubris, destroyed them. It’s like you said, Eddie – it’s as if they had nuclear power eleven thousand years ago. Only they didn’t have the knowledge or the wisdom to use it properly.’
‘Do we now?’ he replied, not entirely rhetorically.
The silence that followed was unexpectedly broken by a chirp from the LIDAR system. ‘What was that?’ Nina asked.
‘I dunno,’ said Matt, turning back to the instruments. ‘That’s the rangefinder – it means something new’s just come into scanning distance. But there shouldn’t—’
The sharp boom of an explosion shook the submersible – followed by an even louder crump of crushed metal as Gypsy imploded in front of them.
23
The Sharkdozer was knocked backwards by the shockwave. ‘Jesus!’ Eddie shouted. ‘What the fuck was that?’
Nina looked ahead. The view was obscured by a swirling mass of bubbles . . . then they cleared enough to reveal that the other submersible was