desert of Asia Minor, how he memorized every word ever written on the subject, and how, by the time he was twenty, he was convinced that not only had the city been real, but that he knew where to find it.
It took years, but in Benjamin Howe, he had finally found someone who believed him.
Daria closed the journal and rubbed her eyes, then glanced at the clock on the kitchen wall. It was almost seven-thirty. Sheâd been reading since one. In her eagerness to get to Alistairâs journals, sheâd declined Louiseâs offer to join her for lunch. Now she needed dinner, and couldnât remember where the dining hall was. She locked up the house and drove directly to the diner in Howeville, where she read over the notes sheâd taken from Alistairâs desk while she absently picked at crab cakes and a salad. On her way back through Howeville, she stopped at the renovated train station and picked up a cup of rum raisin ice creamâlarge, since she hadnât had this favorite in longer than she could rememberâand returned with it to McGowan House. She took the last of the journals into the library where she removed a dusty sheet from an overstuffed chair and sat, reading and eating ice cream, long into the night.
For what had seemed to be hours, I dug through the dirt, where once bricks made of baked mud had formed walls. Upon the stone floor, beneath the sand, the mosaic outline of a woman was clear. With my hands, I brushed away the debris until the whole of her form was clear. She stood upon a lion, eagle talons where her toes should be and wings upon her back. In each hand she held an arrow, and upon her head was a tall crown. Around her, a ring of lapis lazuli formed a circle, and I knew immediately who she was, and what Iâd found.
The Queen of the Night. Ereshkigal, the goddess brought from Mesopotamia by the earliest settlers of the city. The Queen of the Underworld.
I felt the breath leave my lungs as I stared upon the face of the goddess, a face that had not been seen since the great earthquake buried Shandihar beneath the desert sandsâ¦
Daria blew out the breath sheâd been holding. The goddess Ereshkigal was well known to her, indeed, to anyone whoâd studied the early cultures of the Near East. In Mesopotamia, sheâd been the sister of Inana, one of three great goddesses. Once transported to Shandihar, however, she had become supreme, the only deity, one who demanded total fealty and expected nothing less than total devotion. Her priestesses had ruled the city in her name, and for several centuries, all passing through Shandihar had been required to pay a toll. It was said that by the time the desert had reclaimed the city, its treasure had rivaled that of Solomon.
Daria closed the journal and took another long look at the work notes Alistair had left behind, but the ink was far too faded to make much sense of them in this light. She finished the ice cream and took the cup and the journals into the kitchen. She closed up the house and took her belongings along with the canvas sack to the second floor. On the landing, she debated which room to sleep in.
âOh, why not?â she said aloud, then went into Ilianaâs room and switched on the light.
She took a long hot bath in the claw-foot tub, every word sheâd read that day and night etched in her brain. Her great-grandfather had found an uncommon treasure. Much like Heinrich Schliemann had done in Troy, Alistair McGowan had used the tale of an ancient storyteller to find an ancient city. That heâd never doubted himself was clear in his writings, from the time heâd made his first journal entry as a teenager, until he was a man in his forties standing at the brink of an immense treasure. Heâd never stopped believing that the city existed, and that he would be the one to find it. It had taken him four expeditions, but heâd been proven correct. Finding Shandihar had been his