Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Taking a deep breath, she ventured inside the Temple. The Grand Foyer was a huge room, richly decorated, with a vaulted ceiling, tall columns, and immense stained-glass windows. Faceted colored crystals the size of a baby’s head were inset into each of the columns. The stained-glass windows were designed to allow sunlight and moonlight to strike the crystals at different angles during the day and throughout the night. Generating a particular hue all through the room at a specific time each day, each color of the spectrum carried within it an identifiable vibration. The early light of morning awakened a vibrant red tone that corresponded with the grounding aspects of the first chakra. Eventually all the colors of the rainbow passed through the Grand Foyer during the day, ending with a radiant violet that not only resonated with the seventh chakra but also with the oncoming night sky. And in the evenings, the light of the stars and the moon would shine through the crystals creating a silvery lavender hue that glowed throughout the vestibule.
In the back part of the Grand Foyer an imposing double-arched marble doorway surrounding an ornately carved set of shining brass doors, opened into the Great Hall. No one was around so she walked over and tried the doors. They were locked. She noticed that the Great Hall was centered between two corridors that projected out on either side of the foyer. Since there were no locked doors keeping her out of the hallways, she wandered down the left corridor as far as she thought was acceptable.
As Akana sauntered down the passageway, it dawned on her that she was in the world-famous Infirmary about which she had heard stories since her childhood. She passed a series of rooms, each equipped with crystals of all kinds and what looked like some kind of healing equipment. Although she wanted to explore the Infirmary in detail, she decided it would be prudent not to go any further until she got permission. Hopefully, she would have the chance to return later and look more closely.
She didn’t see anyone in the foyer yet, so she traipsed over to look at the other hallway on the right of the Great Hall. It held the Temple Sanctuary and several smaller private sanctuaries and meeting rooms. The Temple Sanctuary was open, so she peeked in the door. The walls, of a yellow cream hue, captured the dazzling light as it blazed through the ceiling-to-floor windows lining the front of the room. Overhead, the clear glass ceiling grandly displayed the glorious blue skies of Atlantis. The floor of the room was made of a colorful mosaic tile. A beautiful wool runner graced its middle, stretching from the door in the back to a small platform that looked like a type of stage extending across the front of the room.
She felt as if she were invading a sacred space so she hurriedly tiptoed out of the room and went back to the reception area in the Grand Foyer. She sat down on a bench and soaked in the rays of the orange mid-morning hues that shone directly on her body, producing a calming yet euphoric sense of well-being.
Chapter 9 (cont'd)
Kahotep awoke first. He examined the back of her head, admiring her bountiful curls. Unable to resist, he wrapped one of her sweaty dark ringlets around his finger. Feeling the tug on her hair, she stirred and turned over to face him, gracing him with a sleepy smile. He returned her smile and whispered in her ear so as not to break the spell too quickly. “So, my Sweet Lady, what would be your pleasure for the rest of the afternoon?”
“Well, besides you…” she traced the outline of his hand that was now resting on her breast, “I would...like to drive the shuttlecraft!” A mischievous grin adorned her face.
“Well, it seems you are awake,” he grinned back at her. “So, do you have any experience driving?”
“Absolutely none,” she answered honestly. “I’ve only ridden the public shuttlecrafts. I’ve never had an opportunity to learn to drive. But I always wanted to.”
“Well, it’s time you get some experience then. All right, Lady, I will teach you!" They jumped enthusiastically out of bed, dressed, and raced to the craft.
Akana climbed into the pilot’s seat. Her chair seemed too big for her and she could barely see up over the control panel. Kahotep joined her in the seat next to her as her co-pilot. “The first thing you need to do is to sign in,” he began, “so tell the craft your name, that you are the pilot, and then instruct it to adjust to you.”
Excitedly, she complied. “I am Akana of Atlantis,” she told the craft. “I am the pilot of this shuttlecraft. Please make adjustments to accommodate for me.”
“Welcome, Akana of Atlantis! We will make our adjustments now,” a pleasant voice from the shuttlecraft replied.
Her seat moved slightly forward then back, then to the right and left. It raised up and down then finally rested in a position that greatly improved the fit of her chair, as well as her view out the windshield. Immediately, a seatbelt closed across her lap.
“Push the green button that is lit up here on the console between us,” her co-pilot instructed. This she did. A holographic map of the area appeared at a forty-five degree angle in front of her.
“You can see where the cabin is—here.” Kahotep pointed to the three-dimensional version of the cabin. Now if you touch it thus,” he touched the image of the cabin on the map and it immediately enlarged, “you can bring it in closer. Touch it twice and it’ll return to its former size. You can do this with any part of the map. Now—where do you want to go?”
“I’d like to explore the area first, until I get used to piloting.”
“All right then, let’s map out a small path. Lightly trace the direction on the hologram where you want to go then hit the blue button on the console. This will lock in your program.”
She drew about a five mile trail around the trees in the forest then pushed the glowing blue button.
“OK, now what?”
“Now you need to use voice commands,” he said. “Tell the craft to follow your plans.”
“Please follow the path I have indicated,” she told the computer.
Gently, the craft began to rise. It slowly followed the directions that she had just mapped out. Then it gently landed back on the shuttleport.
“Well done! Now, do you want to drive without programming it first, Kana?”
“Of course. What do I do?”
“Use your voice commands to get the craft to ascend, then trace the path you want it to follow with your finger.”
“Now?”
“Sure, I think you’re ready. And I’m here to back you up.”
She took a deep calming breath. “Ascend!” she commanded.
Slowly, the craft rose up as directed. It hovered high above the shuttleport and turned southwest as Akana traced her outstretched palm through the holographic map. To speed up, she merely had to trace faster, so she experimented. The movement was a little jerky at first, but she quickly assimilated her new skill and smoothed out the ride. She let out a big hoot as she sped the vehicle around in ever tighter concentric loops.
“So you’ve never driven before, you say?” Kahotep asked in disbelief.
“Not ever, and was that a mistake!” she replied. “This is great!”
“So where are we heading, Speedster?”
She grinned. “I want to see the crystal cave.”
“Oh, nothing like a little challenge for your first flight out, is there, dear?” Kahotep laughed.
“Not at all,” she replied.
The shuttle was now heading toward the active volcano on the northeast corner of the island. She touched the map and an enlarged view appeared. She found what she was looking for—a shelf along the inside rim where they could land the craft. She decreased the size of the volcano on the map back to normal then smoothly guided the craft to a safe landing onto the ledge.
The door on the craft lifted up and they carefully emerged. After assuring themselves they were on solid ground, they both looked around. The ledge was packed down smoothly, apparently used over the years as a landing strip for others wanting access to the cave. Over the ledge, very far below, lava flowed freely. The smell of sulfur permeated the air.
They made their way to the inside edge of the rim, up against the wall of the mountain, to the opening in the cave. She had pilfered a couple of lightsticks from the craft and handed one to Kahotep.
She got on her hands and knees and easily crawled through the cave entrance. Kahotep crawled in after her. Once they made it through about a three-foot tunnel, they stood up. Their lightsticks illuminated the way as they stepped carefully down a softly sloping path. After about two hundred feet it opened up into a large cavern. Their lightsticks revealed a grotto encrusted with jeweled crystal treasures.
“Oooh, Kahotep! I’ve heard about this cave, but I never would have imagined this!”
The cave was actually a huge geode that had been formed millions of years before from cooled molten lava. The walls were thickly covered with a wondrous display of sparkling crystals. Even more astounding were the long spear strands of quartz crystals that stretched across the entire cave, each about the width of a grown man. Akana approached one to examine it more closely; she was dwarfed by its size.
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