Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Chapter 25


            Lasser and Bakhashaf filled us in on the cavern and its City. We sat spellbound, listening to the impossible.
            “It began as a limestone sinkhole thousands of years ago,” Lasser said. “Admittedly the sinkhole was a big one, perhaps a hundred meters in depth, with a small opening at the top, about one meter in diameter. Occasionally wild animals like foxes and desert cats, wandering through the desert at night, would accidentally drop into the hole – to their deaths.
            “Geological formations like this are quite common in Arabia. I’ve explored many of them myself. There’s a famous sinkhole over in Oman: it’s called Majlis al-Jinn, or the Meeting-Place of the Jinn. It’s a huge chamber, one of the biggest in the world, and its opening at the top is about 125 meters above the chamber floor. Felix Baumgartner and others have used it as a BASE jumping site.
            “But I’m not much for parachutes. I’ve been lowered down into that cavern by rope, and you can take it from me: Majlis al-Jinn is impressive, but it’s nothing compared to this place. You see, this cavern has been enlarged from its natural state – dramatically enlarged.”
            Bakhashaf said: “When the jinn found the sinkhole, it suited their purposes. They needed a hidden base, where humans were unlikely to find them. But the chamber was not big enough. So they began expanding the sinkhole, and building the City.”
            “At first they concealed the opening at the surface with optical illusions – imaginary dunes, bogus rock outcrops. But eventually, over the centuries, a natural sand sea, driven by the winds, covered the entire area, and the jinn devised a portal system – a kind of sand whirlpool – that would temporarily suck the sand away from an enlarged aperture and allow their aircraft to come and go.”
            Bakhashaf smiled: “Those ‘flying saucers’ the world knows so well – the UFOs…. They aren’t spaceships! They operate only inside the earth’s atmosphere! There is a hangar not far from here. We met some of the pilots!”
            “The secret would have remained for millennia more,” Lasser said, “if it hadn’t been for the oil exploration teams and their seismic surveys.”
            Wait till the world hears this, I thought.
            I imagined the jinn “aircraft” zipping up to the surface, past the inhabited structures around them. I thought about the towering buildings outside our quarters, set on levels above levels, and the vast, soaring expanse of the cavern, with its natural dome, and an automated portal at the center of its highest point. I sat there silently, as did my colleagues, marveling at the power of this hidden species of intelligent beings.
            I took Mubarak’s hand, and as his fingers closed around mine, I imagined, or think I imagined, a scene from the distant past. Huge laser-like instruments melted away the walls of the limestone cavern. Other beams of glowing particles, turquoise in color, rose up from the floor and created great structures, glistening, inhabitable buildings complete in structure and detail. They seemed to be using the substances in the earth that surrounded the sinkhole: limestone, granite, desert sand. The process had to be some kind of mineral transformation, carried out on a grand scale – a kind of modern alchemy….

            Annette Braverman sat alone in a conference room at the U.S. Consulate General in Dhahran, staring at the image on a large screen at the end of the conference table. The image was that of the President of the United States, and he seemed troubled. His lips began moving; there was a slight delay in the sound, due to a satellite issue, but his words soon matched the movements of his mouth.
            “So you haven’t heard anything from Goddard or Keller or anyone?” he asked.
            “No sir,” Braverman said. “But there is no need for concern at this point.”
            The President frowned. His long thin face, with drooping cheeks and soulful eyes, reminded her of a bloodhound.
            “This is a very important time for all of us, Annette,” he said, though she needed no such reminder. “Our future may hinge on the actions of that small group. I frankly feel very helpless in this situation, and wish there was more I could do.”
            “I understand, sir.”
            “I have the utmost confidence in Devereaux, and in Professor Goddard. I know you are very confident of the abilities of Dan Keller. Let’s hope we are contacted soon, and that everything works out for the best.”
            Annette looked up at the video image of the President. She knew him to be a consummate politician, an expert in the convoluted ways of Washington and in horse-trading with the U.S. Congress. But she wondered if this whole affair might be beyond his well-known skills as a political leader. Who, after all, is equipped to handle a pivotal encounter with another intelligent species? What if we screw this up?
            The President clearly had nothing more to say, and was keeping the video connection alive simply for the human contact of it. Braverman thought he must be fundamentally a very lonely man – surrounded by experts, aides and sycophants, but hesitant about what steps he should take when the fate of the whole world was at stake. She didn’t envy him at all.
            “The second I hear something, Mr. President, I will get back to you,” she said.
            After a pause, the President replied: “All right then.”

            Jinn had brought us hot mint tea and fresh fruit, and we continued our conversations among ourselves, seated on couches in the corner of that vast room. As we talked, two figures entered the room from a far-off darkened passage and walked slowly toward us. As they approached, Keller jumped to his feet.
            “Art!” he shouted. “Dahoum!”
            He looked at us and said with genuine emotion, “It’s Art Vallentine and Abdul Rahman Dossary – the missing geologists!” Keller led the way. We surrounded the two men and welcomed them back into human company. Keller did the introductions.
            The two geologists looked none the worse for wear, though a bit confused – not by the strange setting, but by our presence. They wore clothes supplied to them by the jinn: simple, brightly colored jumpsuits that shone with a metallic gleam.
            “How did you all get here?” Vallentine asked Keller. “Did you get sucked down in that whirlpool?”
            “No,” Dan said, “we came through a cave network, from the Najran area. Tell us about the whirlpool.”
            We sat Vallentine and Dossary down on one of the couches and listened to their story.  Arthur described their frightening descent into the whirlpool of sand. Both of them were convinced they were going to die. Vallentine had jumped from their Hummer and was trying in vain to climb out of the growing vortex. Dossary stayed in the vehicle, and rode it down into hell – or wherever they were going.
            Both men lost consciousness, and awoke sometime later in a small oval cavern chamber, lit with a soft, greenish glow. They lay on large, overstuffed cushions covered in what seemed like silk, and they were dressed in brightly colored jumpsuits. Dahoum’s outfit was lapis blue, and Art’s was deep burgundy. They were wearing strange footgear, clinging “socks” with a supple, leatherish feel. Soon afterwards, they met their first jinn, a pair of beings in idealized human form, and were told briefly where they were and why.
            “They hinted someone was coming for us, but they were never specific,” Dahoum said. “We never expected to see you folks.”
            “They’ve been feeding us with familiar Arabian foods,” said Arthur. “We’ve been quite well treated, but we’ve been isolated, and haven’t seen much of this place. I don’t know what to believe. First we get sucked down into the earth by a whirlpool of sand. Then we end up in some futuristic prison, staffed by spirit creatures, if that’s what they are. This whole thing creeps me out.”
            “When you do get the tour,” I said, “it will blow your mind.”
            Dan Keller asked Vallentine: “Where are your camp workers? The three Pakistanis?”
            “After the whirlpool, we never saw them. Apparently, they didn’t get sucked down to this subterranean world. We were told the camp crewmen were taken back to Haradh, none the worse for wear. We weren’t told how.”
            “I’ll believe that when I see it,” said Dossary, shaking his head.
            I told the geologists: “If our hosts, the jinn, told you the three men are safe, then they are safe.”
            “Goddard…” Arthur said, thinking about my last name. “Are you related to Matt Goddard? He used to be a petroleum engineer at Aramco.”
            “He was my father,” I said. I explained that Dad had died about a decade earlier, a few years after retirement, hit by an unexpected cerebral aneurism at my parents’ home in Austin, Texas. “I grew up in Dhahran.”
            “I didn’t know he had passed away,” Vallentine said. He seemed to be genuinely saddened. “Matt was a great guy. Very well liked by his colleagues. I don’t think I ever met you, though….”
            “I was away at college, and grad school,” I said. Those tumultuous years seemed so far in the past that they belonged to someone else.
            “So why are you all here?” Dahoum asked. “What the hell is going on?”
            “The jinn are revealing themselves to the world,” Devereaux said. “Or at least to the Americans and their allies. They seem to be about to announce something. A world-altering event, perhaps. We’re down here on a mission sponsored by the U.S. and Saudi governments, aimed at establishing contact with the jinn and determining where we go from here. We’re about as new to this place as you are.”
            “Do you have any way of communicating with the outside world?”
            “Not at the moment. Sorry.”
            Mubarak – the only one of us who really knew what was going on – sat off by himself, expressionless, quietly observing the conversation. I wished I could get inside his mind. He looked at me for a second, and I thought I saw a spark. A spark of what, I wasn’t sure….
            “This is crazy,” Vallentine said. “I’m not sure I buy it. I’m not sure I believe in this jinn stuff.”
            “Well, it really doesn’t matter whether you or I or anyone believes it,” Devereaux said grimly. He was clearly stressed, and was fighting to stay calm. “Something is going to happen, and we will have to deal with it – whatever it may be.”

            Mubarak Awda took me by the hand and escorted me out of the room. We soon passed into the great cavern of the City, alive with lights and movement. We crossed an expansive plaza and entered another building, this one immense in size, egg-shaped, windowless and colored sea-green. Before long the two of us were sitting together in a comfy little room, talking intently.
            “Tomorrow our leaders will make their announcement,” he said. “I want you to be ready for this, because it involves you personally, more than you know.”
            “You have to help me out here, Mubarak,” I said. “Surely you can tell me something.”
            Though I was the one doing the pleading, his eyes seemed to be begging me for something. Acceptance, I supposed.
            “When the announcement is made, everything will change,” he said. “I’m asking you to stand with me.”
            “That’s a strange way of putting it,” I said lightly. But his expression remained deeply serious. “Of course I’ll support you,” I added.
            “More than that,” Mubarak whispered. “I need more than that.”
            I took his hand. It was cool and reassuring. I avoided his dark brown eyes, because I knew that if I stared into them, I would plunge deeper than I wanted to.
            I suddenly thought: Was he proposing to me? My God, I thought, he can’t be proposing! I was really fond of him, and in a strange way we had once been intimate, had made love … but for God’s sake, he’s a freaking jinni! My head began to spin, I felt dizzy, and I took a deep, deep breath.
            “Slow down, sport,” I told him. “Let’s just take things as they come, one event at a time. We’ll handle the big announcement tomorrow, and then we’ll see where it leads.”
            Mubarak smiled, and sat back. He studied me for a moment, then stood up suddenly.
            “Come with me,” he said.
            He took my hand and we left the room. We passed through a series of winding passages, and emerged into the great cavern that enclosed the city of Iram. We were several levels up from the bottom plaza. We walked the streets of the city, passing many jinn. Some walked, like us, and took human shapes. Others were vaguely humanoid glows, in various colors, moving above and below, unrestrained by topography.
            We soon reached a gateway, and passed into an impressive hall, with a dome overtop. In the center of the hall, on the gleaming marble-like floor, far below the great dome, sat a white sphere about three meters across. The hall seemed empty of life. We approached the sphere slowly. When we reached it, the boundaries of the sphere became hazy, immaterial, and we entered the white object. This action seemed totally normal, and I was surprised how calm I felt. We sat down in the sphere, and I realized its inner skin was like a viewing screen in a theater. Suddenly we were looking at a landscape, a spring meadow, with distant, greenish mountains, and puffy white clouds scudding across the blue sky. If it was a video, it was incredibly realistic. Three dimensions, and sounds too. I heard the wind. In fact, I thought I could smell the wildflowers in the grass.
            Mubarak said in a quiet voice: “The sphere allows us to review history, to see what is past, what has happened. We are going back very far, into the times of legends, when truth is hard to separate from the imagined. This is the time before mankind, before Adam, as some say, when there were only jinn.”
            Suddenly we were moving up into the mountains. We overflew many villages, passed stone castles and fortifications. And we saw hundreds, thousands of inhabitants, many of them – not humans, but jinn. These, I was sure, were the many types of jinn that were spoken of in later times: afreets, marids, ghouls and common jann. Most I saw as gauzy shapes, echoes of reality, often vaguely like humans or beasts, but many times not. The farther we went up the mountain slope, the more jinn we saw. They were living their lives, as families, clans and tribes. They met in marketplaces, held assemblies. They raised walls, as if by magic, pointing with their fingers as stone blocks moved slowly into place. They flew over the fields, seated in the air as if cross-legged on flying carpets, or swooping with their arms extended, like great birds. Some traveled the roads on immense, tamed beasts – giant sloths, shaggy primordial elephants, woolly rhinos and frightening creatures I did not recognize. Despite the innate strangeness, it all seemed so normal!
            “This was the way we lived before mankind,” Mubarak told me. “We preferred the old, low mountains and their rich, green vegetation.  These climes became the Mount Qaf of legend, the green emerald mountain range surrounding the world, the primordial home of the jinn. So our life continued for eons. Then, suddenly, the humans appeared, and everything changed. For a while, we ignored them, thinking we had a clear advantage. They were primitive, and lived in just three dimensions of space. They could not shape-shift. They could not slip between dimensions and travel across continents instantaneously. But the humans were persistent – sometimes relentless. Like us, they possessed the power of free will, and they exercised it, sometimes shocking us with their boldness. They expanded quickly upon the Earth, like a rampant tumor. Sometimes we fought them, or tried to frighten them away. But our efforts were half-hearted. It was not long before we were forced into hiding, and we took on a new role with regard to mankind.”
            “A new role?” I asked.
            “As guides,” Mubarak said softly. “We were told by our leaders that this was indeed our destiny.”
            “So … you are our partners, our helpers.”
            “Yes.”
            “And all that we have achieved – as a species – has been done with your assistance?”
            “Much of it. Though most humans don’t know this. And will never know. Those who believe in jinn think we do evil and mischief. A few of us are wrong-doers, certainly. But most of us are not.”
            I sat silently in the sphere, watching the pre-Adamic jinn living their lives, and I thought about the implications of what I had just heard.

            We stood outside the sphere. Mubarak this time took both my hands. His own hands were warm and dry, and in their grip I seemed to feel an electricity, a force of some kind, passing between us.
            “Now I would like you to experience the dimensions beyond your own. Your senses are aware of these dimensions, but human brains have trouble processing the data. Perhaps someday your species will be able to experience the full array of natural dimensions. But for now, I need to possess you – temporarily – in order for you to experience the real world. Is this acceptable to you?”
            My heart began racing. I was not sure of this, but I wanted to know.
            “Okay,” I said.
            “Close your eyes,” he said.
            There was a long silence. I felt Mubarak’s presence. Somehow, he became a part of my consciousness.
            “Now open your eyes.”
            I opened them. I gasped. I was staring at Mubarak, and he looked the same, but different. There was richness, a brilliance to him. A depth…. I cannot describe this, but I could see him from all directions, even directions I was not aware of, inside and out. More than that, I experienced him. Yes, I could see his human form, his face, his body. But I also saw – was this insight? – what he really looked like. His jinn nature. And then I realized: This was how the jinn were able to possess us…. All they had to do was to sense us, to perceive us, to experience us…. My gaze drifted to the buildings around us. They too were brilliant, and oh so experienced. The colors! And textures! And the lives of those behind the walls! I knew all that I needed to know about this place. It was so apparent, so open to my senses! I felt a great joy welling up in me.
            “My God,” I said softly. I embraced him.

            “I know,” Mubarak said, just as softly.
(New)

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