This is the longest chapter yet, being longer than two pages (I know! Reilly's really starting to up his game! Next we'll have character development and realism! Don't be silly...) and thus this post will be a long one, so I apologise in advance for the delay. Secondly, I will be having an interlude between this and the next chapter, because... well, it's just that stupid. We really kick into the high gear with this one, it becomes plain-Reilly sailing from here on out. It becomes Dan Brown turned up to eleven, after our chapters of "introduction" to ease us in before it got too intense.
The northern entrance to the mine had been the main entrance.
Originally, it had been level with the waterline of the swamp, and through its doors a wide canal bored horizontally into the mountain. Barge loads of gold and diorite would be brought into the mine through this canal.
Matthew Reilly! Author of riveting barge adventures!
But then Imhotep V had come and reconfigured it.
Damn you Imhotep! Taking our excellent barge-based infrastructure and ruining it for the rest of us! He shall rue the day he ruined this mine...
Using a temporary dam not unlike the one the European force was using today,
I see Imhotep had German engineers and a boat city as well...
his men had held back the levels of the swamp while his engineers had lowered the level of the doorway, dropping it 40 feet.
Take a shot.
The original door was bricked in and covered over with soil.
Do we need to know this? Spoiler: No.
Imhotep had then disassembled the dam and allowed the swampwaters to flood back over the new doorway, concealing it for over 2,000 years.
Until today.
But there was a second entrance to the mine, a lesser-known one, on the south side of the mountain. It was a back door, the endpoint of a slipway that had been used to dispose of waste during the original digging of the mine. It too had been reconfigured.
It was this entrance that the Nine were seeking.
Well no fucking shit. A lesser known one? How'd they find out about it? Do they have diagrams? Do they have Imhotep's head kept in cryogenic storage? Do they have an all powerful intuition? Did an alien tell them? This being a Matthew Reilly novel (where their opponents have boat cities and future tech), any or all of these options are equally possible.
Guided by the tall, white-bearded Wizard -who held in one hand a very ancient papyrus scroll, and in the other a very modern sonic resonance imager-
Stop.
Right, we now know that Wizard is tall. Finally, a fact on our character, though it was unfortunately one we could have guessed as well as a fact on a character we already had some idea of. But that is not why I have stopped it here. Not even because this team of military bad-asses who are supposedly competent and trying to save the world are putting their elderly civilian up ahead, where he'll be the first to wander into the "deadly traps" and 200 armed European soldiers which Matthew Reilly has gone at great pains to grant a sense of foreboding to, both of which will turn Wizard into strawberry jam.
No, I've stopped us here because of a sonic resonance imager.
This is the image of a "sonic resonance imager" I found on Google. Check out the size:
This is the image of a "sonic resonance imager" I found on Google. Check out the size:
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"I can't do that, Max..." |
But I won't go on about it, not yet at least.
For Wizard has invented something far, far, far, far stupider.
Two things in fact.
Both of which come up very, very soon.
Oh yeah, Wizard's an inventor. I should mention that.
they stopped abruptly on a mud-mound about 80 metres from the side of the mountain. It was shaded by four bending lotus trees.
Quick! Use your sonic resonance imaging machine to scan for plot! Also, as these are the only trees thus far described, I shall presume that they are the only trees in the area and thus this mound is hardly secret.
"Here!" the old fellow called, seeing something on the mound.
"Oh dear, the village boys did find it."
DIALOGUE! WHOOP WHOOP! It's only taken us four chapters to get dialogue, all of it from Gandalf here, and all of it absolutely meaningless. What village? Did they hire some villagers to go poking around this dangerous swampland for a death-temple surrounded by a small army? Because if so, these guys are dicks. Also, as we all know that those village boys are definitely dead and we've been told that this is the Sudan, we can officially say that the black guys have died first. Way to go, Matt. All you need now is to blow up Los Angeles and have a cop two days from retirement and we can officially make this the most 90s thing ever.
In the middle of the muddy dome, sunken into it, was a tiny square hole, barely wide enough for a man to fit into. Stinking brown mud lined its edges.
Take a shot for the frequent repetition of mud. Also, this is getting a little sexual.
You'd never see it if you weren't looking for it, but it just so happened that this hole was exactly what Professor Max T. Epper was looking for.
Really.
We're not going on until you have read that sentence seven times. If anything, it actually gets stupider each time. I didn't think that to be possible. That is the most babyish, basic, terrible sentence we have read thus far, and let's not forget that we have had "And indeed it was." In the previous chapter no less.
He read quickly from his papyrus scroll:
'In the Nubian swamp to the south of Soter's mine
Among Sobek's minions
Find the four symbols to the Lower Kingdom.
Therein lies the portal to the harder route.'
Epper looked up at his companions: "Four lotus trees: the lotus was the symbol of the lower kingdom. Sobek's minions are crocodiles, since Sobek was the Egyptian crocodile god. In a swamp to the south of Soter's mine, Soter being the other name for Ptolemy I. This is it."
A small wicker basket lay askew next to the muddy hole -the kind of basket used by rural Sudanese.
Wow.
That dialogue was a thing of beauty. How do we know Wizard is a smart man: He can translate riddles? I'm guessing, from this, that Max Epper is a professor of History due to how it is tangentially related to the plot. He is also probably the man who taught Matthew Reilly. Though I'd much prefer it if he was a professor of something completely unrelated to everything in the book, like Russian or New Romantic Poetry, and that he was just bluffing that he knows stuff about this.
Also, I've decided that he'd be played by Donald Sutherland, who always comes across as a lovely man. I mean, the options are him or Jim Carey.
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He already looks like a professor anyway. |
"Those stupid, stupid boys." Wizard kicked the basket away.
I also think that he might be racist.
On their way here, the Nine had passed through a small village. The villagers claimed that only a few days ago, lured by the Europeans' interest in the mountain, four of their young men had gone exploring in the swamp. One of them had returned to the village saying the other three had disappeared in a hole in the ground and not come out again.
Maybe it's not scary? Maybe there's just lots of chocolate down there.
Wait, that sounded a bit racist...
At this point, the leader of the Nine stepped forward, peered down into the hole.
The rest of the team waited for him to speak.
Not a lot was known about the leader of this group.
Or, indeed, anybody. The best one is still the bird, and there's been no sign of it for a while now, so I'm thinking that it has flown off. I miss that bird... Oh, right, Matthew's still doing a very important character introduction, let's see what it is.
Indeed, his past was veiled in mystery. What was known was this:
His name was West -Jack West Jr.
Take a shot. If you're on a do or die mission to save the world, I think I'd want to have a bit more information on my leader and direct superior than what his name is. Oh, we get a little information in a second, but not nearly enough to make him trustworthy. And I'm sorry, but there is no way that that is his real name. Jack West Jr. sounds like a self insert Mary-Sue character in an Indiana Jones slash-fiction.
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the crux of the novel.
Call sign: Huntsman.
Take a shot. Technically two: one for the name and another for the sentence being less than five words. Also, I thought he was going to be the one who got given "Pooh Bear" as a call sign, just for giggles.
At 37, he had the rare distinction of being militarily and university trained -he had once been a member of the most elite special forces in the world, while at another time he had studied ancient history in Trinity College Dublin under Max Epper.
Right. I'm sure that Mr Reilly thinks that this is rare, but to get anywhere in the military (much like any profession) a degree is incredibly helpful. I know one can rise through the ranks, it's part and parcel for the job, but having the ability to think and adapt and having a great education under your belt are big bonuses for the unit. Also, spoiler warning, one of the team is the son of an Arabian Sheikh. Are you telling me that he didn't get some of the best schools in the world? They also mention later on that Princess Zoe knows loads of shit about history, and I'm pretty sure that one of the group is also a fucking genius. In fact, the only one ever described as thick is Big Ears. So it can't really be that rare in this group.
Indeed, in the 1990s, when the Pentagon had ranked the best soldiers in the world, only one soldier in the top ten had not been an American: Jack West. He'd come in at number 4.
I was really hoping he'd give a different name there, just so that all of this build up would have been for nothing. Who takes these scores? Is there a points system? Do they fill out an application form to be considered? Is there an "X-Factor" style show, something like "World's Best Soldier"? I'm hoping it works on a "Highlander" system, where you have to murder your way up the list. Because that would be awesome.
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Oh Connor. You'll always be my Jack West Jr. |
Oh, and spoiler alert, the best is probably "Scarecrow", from the Shane Schofield novels, but they are a whole different kettle of ineptitude.
But then, around 1995, West disappeared off the international radar. Just like that.
Take a shot.
He was not seen at international exercises or on missions again -not even the Allied invasion of Iraq in 2003, despite his experience there during Desert Storm in '91. It was assumed he had quit the military, cashed in his points and retired. Nothing was ever seen or heard of him for 10 years...
... until now.
Take a shot. I have a question:
If Jack West Jr is 37 in 2006 (when the book is set), that would mean he was born in 1969. He went missing circa 1995, meaning that he was already the world's 4th greatest soldier at the tender age of 26. How is this possible, Mr Reilly? I mean, I know that this is fiction, and Jack West is our hero, and that the age of enlistment in Australia is 17 (meaning that he has had 9 years of training and experience), but even with the enormous margin of error in the Pentagon's testing, how is he the 4th best in the world at the age of 26? Did they have him bring in the ears of those he killed? Was there a battle royale?
Fuck it, I don't care.
Now he had re-emerged.
Take a shot. It's hyphenated. Drink.
Supremely fit,
I should hope so, the world's 4th best soldier shouldn't be letting himself binge on a diet of coca cola and chocolate muffins if he's hoping to save the world.
he had dark hair and laser-sharp brown eyes that seemed perpetually narrowed. Apparently, he had a winning smile, but that was something rarely seen.
Fuck it, he's Hugh Jackman now.
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Damn. Look at that man. |
This isn't a movie. The product placement isn't necessary.
Oh buggery.
I've realised that Wizard's inventions show up sooner than expected. Line up some shots.
His hands were gloved, but if you looked closely at the left cuff of his jacket, you might catch a glimpse of silver steel. Hidden under the sleeve, his entire left hand and forearm were artificial, mechanical.
Yes folks.
He's the Winter Soldier.
Oh, and don't you worry, it's explained. My god is it explained. Think of the stupidest reason for him having a metal arm that you possibly can. You're not even close.
How they came to be that way not many people knew; although one of those who did was Max Epper.
Will you stop saying his name? He's not Saxton Fucking Hale.
Expertly crafted in the art of war, classically trained in the lore of history and fiercely protective of the little girl in his care, one thing about Jack West Jr. was clear: if anyone could pull off this impossible mission, it was him.
Show, don't tell.
So to recap: The team of international "heroes" are lead by a murderous one-armed death-protege named Jack West Jr, who for all we know has just kidnapped a little girl and forced 3 Sudanese men to their deaths. He is accompanied on this venture by a confused elderly man they have kidnapped, who is armed with technology which he could only have obtained from the future.
Now, the chapter is not actually finished, but I think we'll take a break there, as there is a chapter break at the bottom of the page (despite the rest of it starting completely afresh on the next page) and there is enough silliness there to merit a new entry.
Besides, I need to sit down.