The bonus of going AWOL: I come back to dozens of chapters in all my favourite stories
The downside: I'm caught up and now have to wait for more chapters lol
Patria/Marick is an explosive ship! That's one combo that has the potential to end in a murder-suicide
Hot-headed and diva don't play well together when they clash, that's for sure!
Poor Orion... I can understand where Tara is coming from, but, really!!! He promised his folks, before he even got together with her, that he wouldn't tell ANYONE! Way to make this all about you, Tara!
Iris WTF girl?!? Definitely saw that ending badly, so no surprise there lol
Those flirty sims just can't seem to stop getting themselves in trouble! It does make Iris fun to write, though. Same with Tara and her unfortunate trio of socially awkward/inappropriate/neurotic traits. I'm not sure Orion would agree with me, though!
Tadris eloping in Lucky Palms was perfect for them! Cheers to many wonderfully lucky years ahead!
The game married them off very quickly. Tad's family-oriented trait seems to be pretty dominant in story progression.
I wonder whether Susan and Boyd will get back to Oasis Landing. Emit seems to be cutting it rather fine... Unless something they did poofed him out of existence??? Wasn't he a Wainwright descendant...
Emit would say he does everything just on time, but I'm sure it doesn't feel that way to them! Boyd and Susan are getting pretty old, but they're not all the way at the end of elder just yet. He will turn up again, but not for a little while yet.
I love how Travis, the loner, the geeky nerd, is actually the one navigating romantic waters much smoother than the other, more "popular" kids lol 10 points to the Nerds!
He was lucky and found the right nerd to pair with!
Though that could probably be said of his parents and grandparents as well.
And what to say about Cyclair??? They are still my favourite ship in this whole show! I'm going to bawl like a baby when the oldies (and the REALLY oldies... I'm looking at you Susoyd/Boysan... WIP lol) start to pass...
Like I said, Boyd and Susan aren't ready to kick off all that soon yet. I will cry when they go, too. I haven't played far enough to see who's going first yet, but I'm bracing myself for it, however Grim decides!
And I'm glad you're still enjoying old Blair and Cycl0n3, and the rest of the story! Thanks so much for reading and commenting!
Chapter 100
When Orion and Iris went inside the small building behind the Al Simhara base camp, they found themselves in a rough stone room containing relics, tools, and what looked like a crude station for taking notes. There wasn’t a lot in there, but there were stairs in the back leading down.
“So if this is an archaeology site, did they build this place on top of some ancient tomb?” Iris looked at a pot that someone had attempted to start reconstructing.
“Maybe. They might’ve built this over or around the original site to protect it and use it as a sorting or work room. But since it’s not locked and right next to the camp, it’s probably fine for people like us who’re staying there to go in.”
“Probably… but I’d still rather not explain it to security, or Mom and Dad.” She made a face. “Who wants to hear that lecture?”
“Not me. I heard enough about the meteor to last at least until I’m Patrick’s age.” Orion started down the stairs, and Iris snickered as she followed.
“I bet. It seemed like they went on to you for hours. Must’ve felt even longer actually getting it. Your meteor was impressive, though. I’m glad you actually are a goody-goody, otherwise I’d be worried about getting on your bad side,” she teased before they both froze upon seeing what was at the bottom of the stairs.
“Holy llama! Is that a skeleton?!”
They went over to check it out. “Yeah.” Although neither had ever seen a sim’s remains up close before, they weren’t fazed. All the Wainwright children were used to the grittier side of biology growing up with Boyd and Susan and their science and experiments. “Travis will be sorry he missed this. Think he’d say this guy has less of a life than Cycl0n3?”
“I don’t know. That’s a tough call,” Iris replied with a grin. “I’m tempted to go back and get him, but he’s even grouchier when you wake him up.”
“We can show him later if he wants to see it. This guy’s obviously been here a while, so I doubt he’s going anywhere.”
Iris gestured to the wide door that led to the next room. “Want to see what’s in there?”
“Hell yeah!”
Through the arch was a larger room with a grand door on the opposite side and a path to it inlaid in the floor tile. There was a chest with ornate carvings on it in the center of the room, and a stone table and chair in the corner. “Weird. Like an underground foyer or something. I wonder what’s in the chest?” Orion mused as he opened it. Inside were two relics, a small bronze cup and what looked like a fossilized apple, and a piece of alabaster cut in the shape of a plumbob. “Huh. The plumbob symbolizes life in a lot of an ancient cultures. I wonder if this was some kind of offering box.”
“Better not take anything, then. You don’t want to bring the old ‘deadly dangerous’ curse down on you,” Iris warned jokingly.
“That can only be cast by a mummy, or were you not listening when Travis went on about it at the market earlier?”
“Guilty. Sorry, not that the legends and stuff aren’t interesting, but when he gets into fanboy mode, and there’s a cute guy by the fountain checking me out…” She paused as she spotted some golden coins on the floor and picked them up. “Hey, do you think these are those ancient coins you need to get the fancy tent and rare stuff?”
“I don’t know, but they look pretty rare themselves, if you ask me. I’d keep them.”
“Not like they were in a chest or anything,” she agreed as she pocketed them. “They did say you could find them at sites like this.”
“If nothing else, they’re cool souvenirs.” Orion smirked as he headed for the door. “Though that’s funny you tuned out Travis mid-geek ramble to pick up guys here in Egypt.”
That door led to another hallway chamber, but the door beyond was locked by some hidden mechanism. “Hey, cool! I think this is another one of those puzzle rooms like in the catacombs in China. Help me figure this out.”
“Sure. But I don’t see what’s so funny about me checking out the hot guys looking at me,” Iris replied on a haughty note. “This statue’s kind of in a weird spot. See how it’s crooked? I wonder if it has something on it, like a switch?”
Orion examined it with her, and then noticed an odd tile that had markings in a border like subtle markings on its base. The tile it was askew over had different markings, and that was curious. “Look at that. Doesn’t it seem like this should be on that? The base is almost the same size as that tile, and look at the carving pattern down here.”
Iris nodded. “I see what you mean. That tile looks, I don’t know, looser than the others, too.”
“Floor switch. I bet if we move this over there…” Orion pushed the statue, and while it was heavy, it was not too heavy or awkward to move if he was careful. “Yeah. I’m going to try that. I think that’s what this is.” He started pushing. “As for why you checking out guys at the market was funny, it’s because Travis bored you so much that you needed a distraction, and you jumped to that instead of looking for a souvenir or postcard for poor Lester back home.”
When the statue slid onto the other tile, there was a clicking sound, but the door remained locked. Curiously, though, the now-exposed tile beneath where the statue had been was now more obviously different than the others around it. “Meeting guys here doesn’t mean I can’t still send Lester a postcard, you know.” They examined the new tile. “That’s the only statue in here. Do you think they took whatever went on this one? Or that it might’ve been broken or destroyed?”
“I don’t know. But maybe we can try to trip it some other way.” Orion knelt beside it and pushed down. “There’s some give. We should be able to make it work. Try standing on it, while I try the door.”
Iris stepped onto the tile, and there was a groaning noise, but nothing else happened. The door stayed locked. “Hmm.” She shifted, trying to trigger it, and it almost worked, but not quite. “Anyway, Lester is fine. It’s not like he’ll wither away and die without me over vacation. We even chatted over messenger when I was in the tent.”
“Bet you didn’t mention your potential friends in the market, though,” Orion teased.
“Bet what he doesn’t know won’t hurt him, much like Mom and Dad with us and this. Besides, it’s not like we’re married or anything. What’s wrong with meeting someone while I’m here and having some vacation fun with him, if we like each other? It’s not like it’d turn into anything beyond that anyway. Just a good time, a foreign fling, over when vacation is.” The floor switch still wouldn’t budge, despite her leaning and twisting in all directions on it. Frustrated, she hopped up and down. “Come on, you stupid piece of—”
That did it, and there was a loud click followed by the sound of gears moving inside the locked door. They exchanged proud looks, and Orion gave her a thumbs-up. “You got it!”
“When you’re good, you’re good,” Iris replied with a victorious grin. “And you know, you might want to chat up a local girl or two while you’re here. Maybe you’ll meet someone you like.”
“I don’t think so.”
“Why not? A lighthearted desert romance might be just the thing to get you out of your funk.”
“A lighthearted fling that’s over as soon as vacation ends? On the off chance I meet someone I like that also likes and accepts me, only to have a little time together before I never see her again? No thanks. Losing Tara hurt enough.” He went through the now-open door, which revealed a hall leading to another room.
“It wouldn’t hurt the same because you’d know it’s not forever,” Iris pointed out as they walked down the hall together. “You could even keep being friends long distance after. They have SimBook and Plumchat and Simstagram here too, you know. And maybe being with someone else, even for a little while, would get your mind off Tara.”
Orion sighed. “I know you’re trying to help, but I’m not like you. It wouldn’t get my mind off of her. It’d just remind me of what I used to have and don’t anymore. It wouldn’t be fair to the girl, either.”
“She’d know going in what it was, too, so how’s that unfair?”
“Even so, what would be the point?”
“The point would be that you’d realize there are lots of other girls in the world besides Tara, and one of them might make you happy if you give her a chance. And if you can meet one here, you can meet one back home, too. So why not at least try? Just talk to someone?”
Orion was glad they were at the next room; it saved him having to answer and he’d just as soon have that conversation over. The chamber they found themselves in was the most interesting yet. It looked like it had barely been touched in years, and he wondered if he and Iris were the first to figure out the floor switch puzzle mechanism to proceed that far. At the head of the room was a prominently placed stone chest, similar to the one in the outer chamber, only larger and more ornately carved. Two ancient swords hung above it. “Wow! I wonder what this place was?”
“I don’t know. Some kind of temple, maybe? It doesn’t look like a tomb.” Iris peeked in the chest. “Hey, more coins.” She handed Orion some and pocketed the rest. “There’s a scroll, too, but I think we should leave that.”
“I don’t think it’s a tomb, either. There’s no sarcophagus or canopic jars,” Orion mused while Iris looked at the scroll. It had some glyphs from an ancient language, but she couldn’t read it, so she put it back carefully so as not to damage it.
“There was the skeleton by the stairs, but maybe he was someone who got trapped down here later or something.”
“I don’t know, but,” Orion frowned as something caught his eye. “Hey, come here. Does this wall look weird to you?”
Iris joined him and looked it over. “Yeah. Like they put random seams in it. Do you think those are old cracks they fixed or…?”
He finished her thought. “A secret passage?”
“That would be so cool!”
Orion focused, using his abilities to try and sense beyond the wall. “It’s hollow from here to about there. Right along the odd cracks.”
Iris grinned. “We were right! Let’s try and get it open. Do we push it, or is there a switch?”
“Let’s try pushing first.” Orion leaned against the wall at what he guessed was the right spot and felt a little give. “It’s moving.”
“Awesome!”
After some effort, Orion was able to push the hidden stone door a few inches, then its ancient mechanism kicked in and opened it the rest of the way. They discovered a small chamber containing another stone chest and several pieces of ancient pottery that looked a breath away from crumbling to dust.
“Wow. It must’ve been eons since anyone was in here.”
“I think so.” Orion carefully brushed the dust off the chest and opened it. “But how cool is it to be the first ones to see it?”
“What
is in there?” She peered in over his shoulder as he lifted the lid, and they were both excited to see an ornate marble and gold bust in the likeness of some long-dead pharaoh or priest. “Whoa! That’s cool. I wonder who he was.”
“I don’t know, but let’s take it with us. Mom and Dad will probably want to check it out.”
Iris snickered. “And where exactly are you going to say you found it?”
“Here, of course. Once I make sure we are actually allowed here like I’m pretty sure we are…”
She raised an eyebrow. “And if turns out we’re not and we technically stole it?”
“I take pictures of it as a memento, then quietly slip it back in here tomorrow night before anyone realizes it’s gone.”
“And you say you’re not a goody-goody.” She patted him on the back. “You know how many people would just keep it anyway?”
“You saying you would?”
“I’m saying I’m glad that temptation is on you,” she replied slyly while Orion closed the chest. “I’ve got enough of my own with the cute Al Simhara guys, after all.”
Finding that secret chamber and treasure was the last big thrill of their exploration. The other door in the room only led to a stairwell that went to a different door in the room just outside the one at the bottom of the stairs. They realized they saw that door the first time they were in there, but they mistook it for a carved wall panel since the other door was more obvious and prominent. It was a handy shortcut for getting back out, though.
Iris checked the time on her phone and yawned. Orion didn’t need sleep, but she hadn’t gotten any, and it was nearly dawn. “Oh, I’m going to be so sorry in a few hours. I’m not sure even the desert sun can save me.”
“Want a boost? I’m pretty good on energy at the moment.”
“That’d be great, if you can spare it.”
“Sure.” Orion focused and gave her a small bio-boost. It drained him a little, but not more than breakfast and a twenty-minute meditation would fix, and it perked her back up.
“Thanks.”
“No problem. But we should get back before everyone else gets up. The easiest questions to avoid are the ones that never get asked.”
“Spoken like a real expert,” Iris said cheekily. “Let’s go.”
Camp was quiet when they got back. Travis was fast asleep and slept through them returning to the tent. Iris decided to nap until everyone else got up, while Orion stashed the relic and coins they collected into one of his bags. Afterward, he went back out to the picnic area and meditated. The surrounding desert was peaceful and relaxing…
Until Patrick came out of his tent half an hour later, calling for Maria. Orion snapped to alertness as his brother crossed the camp, looking around with increasing alarm. “Maria? Where
are you?”
“Patrick?”
“Have you seen Maria? She’s not in the tent. Do you know if she’s in the bathroom or shower?” He cast a worried look in that direction, and Orion couldn’t help but notice how much it made him resemble their father.
“Nobody’s been up or out that I saw.” Orion tried to see if he could pick up on some telepathic sense of her, while Patrick ran to the bathroom. The door was ajar, and it was obviously empty, and he came back even more agitated.
“She’s not there.”
“Maybe she just went for a walk or something.”
Patrick gave him a dubious look. “Without her phone? Without her shoes? They’re all still in the tent. I know, because she had me carry the heavy as plum bag that had all five way unnecessary pairs in them. She’s not the pre-dawn fitness jog type anyway.” He looked around again. “Where the hell could she be? Did the freaking aliens grab her again?”
Orion felt sick at that thought. “No. No, they promised they wouldn’t,” he said, but he couldn’t help but remember meeting the alien in Shang Simla who clued him in that different Sixam crews working in different regions of Earth didn’t always communicate. Still, he hadn’t seen any weird activity, and that would’ve jolted him out of meditation just like Patrick waking up did. Orion had far more awareness around him while meditating than full humans did while asleep.
Boyd and Susan were about slept out, and between that and the rough accommodations making it hard to sleep deeply, they heard the commotion and came out. “Is everything okay?”
“Maria’s missing. She’s not anywhere in camp,” Patrick answered his mother, while she and Boyd exchanged alarmed looks.
“He was asking me if I saw her, but I haven’t,” Orion added.
“Have you been out here all night?” Boyd asked Orion before turning to Patrick. “When did you last see her?”
“I was here most of it, but I did go for a walk. I didn’t see her, though.”
“I haven’t seen her since we went to sleep! Hours ago.” Patrick looked at Orion. “Can you sense her at all? Anything?”
“I’ll try.” Orion closed his eyes and focused again, concentrating as hard as he could, while Boyd and Susan looked around the perimeter of the camp and Patrick paced in the sand.
“I swear, if anyone hurt her, I’ll—”
That turned out to be unnecessary. Just as Orion sensed a hint of someone disoriented and confused that wasn’t Patrick or his parents, Boyd called out. “Hey, is that her? I don’t have my glasses…”
They all looked over and sure enough, there was Maria, walking dazedly back into camp, barefoot in her sleeping clothes.
“Baby! Oh, my Watcher! There you are!” Patrick ran over and hugged her tightly. “Are you okay? Where have you been? I woke up and couldn’t find you, and I was so worried.”
“I… I don’t know.”
He eyed her with concern. “You don’t know? You mean you don’t remember? Oh, plum, if those llama aliens took you again—”
“No. They didn’t.” Maria tried to clear her head and gather her thoughts. “I’m not really sure what happened, and I don’t remember it all, but it wasn’t like that. I wasn’t… nobody abducted me.”
“Then what happened? Where’d you go?” He looked at her feet. “You don’t even have shoes on. Your feet are all scratched to plum.”
She winced and looked down. “Yeah. They’re pretty sore.”
“Maria, are you all right?” Susan, Boyd, and Orion were also worried. Although she looked fine other than her sore feet, she still seemed rather out of it.
“You should be careful going out in the wild barefoot,” Boyd added. “There are all sorts of things you don’t want to step on or bite you, even out here where it should be hot and dry enough that nothing would want to live.”
“I just took a walk. I… it was weird. I couldn’t sleep, so I went out get some air. It felt stale in the tent. And I stared up at the moon and, I don’t know. Just started walking, I guess. Somehow, I… I ended up way out there. I hardly even remember going or why I went. I just did.” It was clear she was just as confused by it as they were. “I mean, unlike the time with the aliens, where I didn’t remember anything and it was just blank, this time I—I remember walking around. All over. Kind of running sometimes. I don’t even know what I was running after. But I went and just… went. I don’t know why.” Her voice became shaky as she realized just how out of it she must’ve been, and it frightened her. “Then I just came back, and… here I am.” She frowned anxiously. “That really sounds crazy, doesn’t it?”
Susan tried to reassure her. “It sounds like you might’ve had an anxiety dream in a half-asleep state, and you sleepwalked as part of it.”
“Or maybe Sixam’s memory replacement tech has gotten better, and whoever’s out here doesn’t care what Eni Jish Xip promises us,” Boyd muttered under his breath, but Susan elbowed him. Maria didn’t need to hear that, even if it was possible.
“Try not to worry about it, sweetie. Anyone could have a bad night’s sleep in these cave sim accommodations. Let’s get some salve on your feet and get you cleaned up and have some breakfast. You’re going to want comfortable socks and shoes.”
“Also make sure you didn’t get bitten or stung by anything,” Boyd added.
“I’m glad you’re okay, Maria,” Orion said. “I’ll go make us all some coffee.”
Patrick squeezed Maria’s hand. “I’m just glad you’re all right. I love you. I don’t know what I’d do if anything ever happened to you.”
“I’m fine. It’s probably like your mom said, a stress dream and sleepwalking.” She wanted to believe that, but something about it nagged at her, especially as parts of the dream came back to her. Running. Crazed. Screaming. How stressed
was she? How out of control? She kept that to herself, though, and tried not to think about it.
It was just a dream. Let it go.“Maybe you should wear slippers to bed in case this happens again, and I sleep through it and can’t wake you up in time.” He traced a finger down her cheek affectionately. “Hate that you hurt your feet, even if I’m glad nothing worse happened.”
The others started to wake up, and Iris came out of the tent to see what was going on. Boyd told her the quick version, then paused as something occurred to him. “Oh, Maria! If any of those scratches start to look too red or throb, let us know. I forgot, there’s a poisonous plant in this area, kind of rare, but if you get cut by it and it infects you, it can get real bad if you don’t treat it! I’d hate to see you lose a toe…”
“Dad!” Iris exclaimed, while Patrick groaned.
“We’ll check her feet. She’ll be
fine.”
“Okay. Sorry. I didn’t mean to scare you. I just worry…”
Iris gently nudged him toward the picnic area. “Come on, Dad. Let’s get you some coffee and not scare poor Maria to death over doom shrubs.”
“I’ll keep an eye on it, Boyd,” Maria promised, while Patrick smooched her on the cheek.
“He does mean well, even when he’s a pain in the plumbob.”
“I know. I appreciate it.”
“Come on. Let’s get dressed. I’ll give your feet a good rubdown while we bandage them.”
“Well, I certainly can’t say no to that,” Maria replied sweetly, and went with him to the tent.
Once everyone was up, ate, and got dressed, they went out to their first site. Blair left for her mission shortly after Maria returned to camp, but she was the only one who had to miss out on the trip to see the Great Sphinx. It was impressive enough from a distance, but up close, the ancient monument was even more awe-inspiring.
“No wonder this is considered one of the wonders of the world,” Susan murmured as they approached. “Pictures don’t do it justice.”
“Imagine what it took to build this. The skill to design and direct laborers to build it…” Patrick remarked.
“Not to mention build it to last so long, to withstand the ravages of time,” said Boyd. “What an architectural feat!”
Cycl0n3 took a picture. “Yeah. Here we are at an ancient monument of a giant mythical hybrid cat, and Chris couldn’t be here to see it.” He messaged his photo to him and Blair both with the message “
The Great Sphinx: Even bigger than Diddy’s ego and butt. Also decidedly more dignified.”
Chris responded with a laughing gif and message informing him that Diddy was highly insulted and would now expect him to bring back a cat toy or snack worthy of the Sphinx itself as an apology, but that the picture was cool, and he wished he could’ve been there too.
As Cycl0n3 narrated Chris’ response to the rest of them, Travis ran his hand over the glyphs on the heavy stone door to the interior. “I’d love to go inside and see what’s in there. I can’t believe they’re not doing tours today.”
“Yeah, and no one’s even around to slip a few ancient coins to so we could get in anyway,” Iris said, also disappointed.
“Mom’s taught you well, huh?” Cycl0n3 joked.
“Very funny,” Susan said, and turned to Iris with a raised eyebrow. “Though I’m curious as to where you might’ve come by such, considering this is our first site and your father and I don’t even have any yet.”
Patrick looked from Iris to Orion, amused. “Oh, I’ve got a guess.”
“As do I,” Boyd remarked, also looking at Orion.
He shrugged, not denying anything. “I told you I went for a walk last night. I found some.”
“Uh-huh.”
“He gave me a couple, because that’s what nice big brothers do,” Iris said, then cast a wry look at Patrick. “Take notes.”
“Hah. I never said I was the nice one. I’m the cool one. Besides, my dear wife gets first dibs on shiny things I might find. It’s somewhere in the rules.”
“And you need to know those when you’re married, or you’re in for it, believe me!” Cycl0n3 quipped before adding, “Right, Boyd? You’ve got almost as many years experience at that as this monument is old.”
Before Boyd or Susan could respond, Travis chimed in. “Well, Patrick, I’ll agree you’re the cool uncle, since he didn’t share with me.” He turned to Orion with a gleam in his eyes and leaned on the stone door. “Though a change in my opinion could be bought.”
“You truly are your father’s son,” Patrick retorted.
Travis was about to make a witty comeback when he leaned just a tad too heavily on the right spot on the ancient door, and it slid open. “Holy llama on a plum stick! Did I just do that?”
“Yes, and with language that’d make Saint Blair blush,” Iris joked.
“Way to go, Travis!” Maria cheered. “And don’t worry. We won’t tell her.”
“Not that she hasn’t heard worse,” said Cycl0n3.
“Probably from you,” Patrick said dryly, and Cycl0n3 snorted.
“You should talk, Captain Potty Mouth—which she does actually call you, by the way. You work in profanity almost as well as you do in sheet music and oils.”
Susan cleared her throat. “Well, it wasn’t part of the plan, but being that the door just
happened to open… how about we step inside and take a little look around?”
“Absolutely!” Boyd agreed. “Maybe we’ll get lucky and find some of those shiny ancient coins that appear on unexpected walks ourselves.”
Travis admired the glyphs on the walls and ceiling inside the arch as he led the way in. The air inside was stale with a whiff of smoke, and hotter than one might expect, even for a stone monument in the middle of the desert. “I can’t believe I got us into the Great Sphinx. This is awesome…”
“Just be careful,” Boyd warned, only a step behind his grandson. “Remember, we don’t have a tour guide familiar with the layout, and a lot of these monuments were sacred tombs full of—”
“—TRAPS!” Boyd’s voice rose sharply and devolved into an unintelligible scream of panic when they walked into the entry chamber, and flames erupted from the floor in front of and beside them.
The heat was intense and almost choking, and everyone jumped back to the safe cluster of tiles they came in on, startled.
Boyd kept screaming. “Oh, my Watcher! Fire! FIRE! Oh, my Watcher, GET OUT!”
Iris instinctively leapt back toward the door. The fiery heat made her plantsim skin itch with an innate sense of danger almost as raw and urgent as her father’s freak-out.
Maria was right beside her. “Yeah, no, I don’t think we were supposed to be here,” she squealed, terrified, while Patrick backed up alongside her as well.
Orion stared at the fire traps, startled, but not afraid, while Susan grabbed Boyd’s arm. “There aren’t any samples we need this badly. Come on. The ancient gods have spoken and told us to get the hell out. We’re complying.”
Still hyper-ventilating, Boyd staggered back with Susan’s guidance while Cycl0n3 grabbed Travis, who was frozen in place gaping at the fire-lit chamber in a mixture of awe and terror. “You heard her. Let’s get the plum out of here! My food mishap is the worst fire trap any of us should get hit with.”
That snapped him out of shock and into angry disappointment. “This sucks! A once in a lifetime chance to explore the Great Freaking Sphinx after
I get the door open, literally down in flames! All because some ancient llama more paranoid than Grandpa had to rig it with fire to keep people out thousands of years after he’s dead anyway! What a load of plum!”
“Not going to argue, but move it anyway!” Cycl0n3 ordered, more sharply that time. He looked over at Orion, who was closer than anyone else to the sprung traps. “You too, Chief Engineer! Get away from there! Alien powers won’t keep you from getting barbecued.”
Iris winced. “Come on, guys! I can’t take this heat much longer. I’ve got to get out.”
“Go! Don’t wait! We’re all going.” Boyd was shaking as Susan put an arm around him to help him walk.
“Everyone! Now!”
Iris ran out with the others following behind. Before leaving, Travis took one last look around the flaming chamber, at the ancient walls and statues he could make out through the wall of fire, only able to imagine what might be beyond. He muttered a final string of profanity under his breath as he followed his family out. “It just freaking figures! Something cool happens, and the universe takes a flaming dump on it. Story of my freaking life.”
Author’s Note: Wow, this story is up to 100 chapters! For all of you that are still reading, thank you so much for following! I hope you enjoy it for the many more that are still to come.