Authors: Dan Poblocki
deep within the earth, another light appeared.
Lava, magma, or possibly something living and
nameless, began to rise, shaking the ground
with the speed of its approach.
Timothy shoved his body against the cli , the
railing pressing into his lower spine. He
repeated the sentence, “This isn’t happening,”
over and over, until nal y, he heard Zilpha’s
voice cal ing to him from several steps up.
“Timothy? What’s wrong?”
“The curse … I can’t.”
“Fight it,” she demanded. “Fight it like you
fought the dragon.”
How? If this is the Edge of Doom … ?
How? If this is the Edge of Doom … ?
Timothy thought back to the day at the
museum when he’d imitated the voice of the
robed man on the cli , when Abigail had
thought he was making fun of her. The man in
the painting had been chanting a spel or a
prayer or something. Maybe Timothy could do
the same. He tried to nd his voice. “I …
Timothy July … master of this … domain … do
beseech thee … to leave this place … and
return to … wherever the heck you came
from.” The ground began to shake. Mammoth
red, scaly hands reached up out of the chasm,
claws the size of cars grasping at the space just
below the Taft Bridge. Fighting back a scream,
Timothy clutched at the railing and closed his
eyes. Then, angry, he cried as loudly as he
could, “IN THE NAME OF CHAOS, GO THE
HELL AWAY!”
Everything went stil . Timothy listened to his
heart beating in his eardrums. When he opened
his eyes, the sky had cleared. The red light was
gone. And most important, the claws had
disappeared. The water splashed against the
disappeared. The water splashed against the
rocks, and the stars glit ered in the sky. There
was no Edge of Doom. This was only the edge
of the Lit le Husketomic.
But then he noticed the bright light of the ful
moon higher up in the sky. This was no
il usion. He was running out of time.
“It—it worked,” Timothy stammered,
glancing over his shoulder at Zilpha. “I’l be
right back.”
Timothy rushed down the endless stairs,
holding on to the railing with his good hand,
trying not to slip on the slick boards. He leapt
the last two steps onto a gravel path. The sound
of the river was deafening, but it was a comfort
to hear, as opposed to the horrible rushing
sound of the thing that had, moments earlier,
been rising from the chasm. As Timothy ran,
every few seconds, the path was lit by the light
from above, so he was able to quickly fol ow it
to the smal clapboard building.
Standing in front of a shiny black metal door,
Timothy caught his breath. Glancing back up
Timothy caught his breath. Glancing back up
the cli , he saw Zilpha sit ing on a stair near
the top, inching her way slowly down.
42.
Timothy expected the door to be locked, but to
his surprise, the knob turned in his hand. He
released it, and the door slowly opened a crack.
Timothy stared into the musty darkness. From
inside the building, a grinding sound grumbled,
the whirring of an ancient engine, the light
turning on its old axle.
He kicked the door and it swung open. The
whirring sound was louder now. Timothy
almost cal ed out Hel o? but imagined Jack
hiding somewhere inside. He peered into the
dark room and soon realized that it was not as
dark as it had first seemed.
The room was a perfect circle. Bolted to the
wal , a rickety metal staircase swirled around
the circumference of the building, ending at an
open hatch in the ceiling twenty feet up. From
the hatch, every fteen seconds, the bright light
burst forth, but the rest of the time, a dul
burst forth, but the rest of the time, a dul
phosphorescence spil ed into the room, dusting
the furniture and equipment with a ghostly
glow.
Timothy looked around. The room reminded
him of Hesselius’s abandoned o ce— l ed
with antiques, maps, photos of the surrounding
landscape—except that someone had obviously
recently been here, possibly even worked here
on a regular basis. There was a stack of papers
on a nearby desk. A computer. A telephone. A
tal halogen oor lamp. A modern-looking
o ce chair. Timothy quickly realized he’d seen
al there was to see.
Maybe Abigail was upstairs? The rusting
bolts at ached to the wal s told him it might not
be a safe climb.
Timothy closed the door, so that no one
might slip in behind him. Crossing to the lamp,
he icked the switch, l ing the room with
white light. He stood in the center of the room
and spun one last time to see if he’d missed a
clue, when his sneaker caught in a groove in
clue, when his sneaker caught in a groove in
the concrete oor. Looking down, Timothy
gasped.
Familiar words were carved there:
Righteousness, Integrity, Sacri ce. Earlier that
day, he’d noticed these words stitched in a
triangle on a gray ag in Hesselius’s o ce. But
here, under Timothy’s feet, the words were
arranged di erently. Etched in the stone, the
words radiated from a single point, like a
three-pronged star. Surrounding the words was
a halo of engraved numbers about six feet in
diameter.
Timothy bent down to examine the carvings
more closely. Brushing the concrete with his
ngertips, he noticed that this part of the oor
had been built in several fragments. The words
had each been sculpted into a separate triangle
of concrete, and each number surrounding the
center triangle was contained within its own
single stone. Timothy stood up and stepped
away to get a bet er view. He read the words
again, then traced the circle of numerals several
again, then traced the circle of numerals several
times, trying to glean a pat ern.
435, 102, 340, 921, 556, 900, 167, 761, 149,
899, 255, 929, 320, 532, 203, 230 …
Timothy knew he was missing something.
Then, just like that, the answer struck him.
Carlton Quigley. Bucky Jenkins. Leroy “Two
Fingers” Fromm. The writing from The Clue of
the Incomplete Corpse. The basebal cards.
Christian’s clue to his son. The jersey numbers
had been the safe’s combination. Once Jack
Harwood had discovered his father’s secret
o ce and opened the safe, he’d pieced the
puzzle together in the same way Timothy had.
The journal inside must have pointed Harwood
here, across the river.
Timothy thought of Hesselius’s clue: the
names in the book. Maybe this emblem was
another part of it? The numbers on the oor
were di erent than the jersey numbers. Bigger.
But not too big for page numbers … He closed
his eyes, trying to picture the names on the
pages and the order Harwood had mentioned.
pages and the order Harwood had mentioned.
First, second, and third base. Jenkins, Quigley,
then Fromm.
Bucky Jenkins … Page 149? Slowly, Timothy
crossed the circle and pressed his foot against
the stone with the number 149 carved into it. It
took a bit of e ort, but the stone descended a
few inches into the oor and something deep
underneath the building shook and clicked into
place. Yes! Timothy thought.
Next came Carlton Quigley.
He crossed to the stone that read 102. He
pressed his sneaker against the stone, and it too
sank a few inches into the oor. Another deep
click rat led the building.
One more number to go. Leroy “Two
Fingers” Fromm.
Timothy thought for a long time. He wasn’t
sure which number to step on. He imagined
that each stone might be capable of sinking. He
gured he could try stepping on al of the
stones, and see which ones descended. But what
if he stepped on a wrong number and screwed
if he stepped on a wrong number and screwed
something up? Abigail had mentioned that
Christian Hesselius had been interested in the
engineering feats of ancient civilizations. This
place might be booby-trapped. He decided he
couldn’t take any chances; he needed to
remember the code correctly. He glanced
around the circle one more time, then
intuitively moved toward two adjacent stones:
203 and 230. His memory assured him it was
one of these, but he wasn’t quite certain which
one. They were too similar. Hesselius might
have arranged them to throw o an intruder
like him. Timothy took a deep breath, and
tried once again to imagine the book. He saw
the cover, the title, the look on Zelda Kite’s
face. The jacket was tat ered. The pages were
yel owed. Fromm had been writ en on a right-
hand page, just like Jenkins on 149. An odd
number.
Fromm must be an odd number too.
The answer was 203.
Tentatively, he stepped on that stone and felt
Tentatively, he stepped on that stone and felt
it sink into the oor. Another solid clicking
sound shook the building; then suddenly, the
oor began to tremble. Timothy scut led away
from the circle, watching from a safe spot near
the desk as dust pu ed out from the cracks
between the stones. One by one, each triangular
panel slid straight down into the oor. First
went Righteousness. Then Integrity. And nal y,
Sacrifice.
By the time the lighthouse had set led again
into the sound of its steady engine whirring, a
steep spiral staircase had descended into the
oor. The numbered stones had risen, erasing
the code, once more becoming level with the
rest of the concrete slab. Each of the word
panels had lowered to form a step, each step
two feet lower than its predecessor, ending at
Sacrifice. From there, a dark, ragged gash in the
bedrock opened into a rough-hewn tunnel
directly underneath the building.
Timothy held his sleeve to his mouth,
marveling at the gaping black hole, until the
marveling at the gaping black hole, until the
dust had dissipated.
He icked his ashlight on and o to be sure
it stil worked. By shining the beam into the
new hole, Timothy revealed a steep, wet slope
that disappeared at an early bend in the black
passage. No way, Timothy thought. I have to go
down there?
But he had no choice. The ful moon was
rising, and he had to find Abigail.
As he climbed down the spiral steps and into
the tunnel, Timothy’s last thought was of Zilpha
edging down the stairs. He hoped she’d be
okay.
In the dark, he concentrated on the tight
wal s and low ceiling. He forced himself to take
deep breaths, as if that would help the tunnel
expand. The steep oor was slick with
moisture. Rocks jut ed every few feet, creating
makeshift stairs. Every step he took echoed into
the earth. The ashlight glinted o the rock,
re ecting cobwebs and several large white
scurrying insects. Timothy backed away, as if
scurrying insects. Timothy backed away, as if
the bugs might suddenly grow huge and at ack
him. He leapt over them quickly and kept
moving forward. Every time water dripped into
his face from the ceiling, Timothy yelped,
wiping it quickly away. After he passed an
especial y tight squeeze between the rocks, he
almost started to hyperventilate. How much
farther? The ashlight beam shook as his hand
trembled. Looking into the in nite darkness, he
squeaked, “Abigail?” His voice mocked him as
it mimicked him, passing up and down the
tunnel like a rodent searching desperately for a
way out. Timothy felt the same.
He closed his eyes and imagined his brother,
not the zombie version, but the real one, who
was somewhere in Maryland, lying unconscious
in a bed. His brother was a hero. Timothy
thought he must try to be one too.
When he opened his eyes again, the wal s
had receded. The ceiling was higher. Timothy
could actual y stand up straight. Ahead, several
grim tunnels went deeper into the earth. Even
grim tunnels went deeper into the earth. Even