The crystalline crucible, p.1

The Crystalline Crucible, page 1

 

The Crystalline Crucible
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The Crystalline Crucible


  THE

  CRYSTALLINE CRUCIBLE

  ADAM ROWAN

  Copyright © Adam Rowan 2024

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this publication may be altered, reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form, by any means, including, but not limited to, scanning, duplicating, uploading, hosting, distributing, or reselling, without the express prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of reasonable quotations in features such as reviews, interviews, and certain other non-commercial uses currently permitted by copyright law.

  Disclaimer:

  This is a work of fiction. All characters, locations, and businesses are purely products of the author’s imagination and are entirely fictitious. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead, or to businesses, places, or events is completely coincidental.

  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 1

  The Woolly Mammoth Thief

  In the seven-decade-long existence of the Nottingham Natural History Museum, no break-in had ever occurred until five a.m. on one fateful Saturday. The trespasser’s name was Maxwell Oscar Jacobs, a local retail worker. In his spare time, he enjoyed playing Tetris, doing crossword puzzles, and—his preferred pastime—a spot of treasure hunting.

  With a stone he’d found on the pavement, Max had smashed the museum’s back window and climbed into it by balancing on a rubbish bin. Shortly thereafter, he padded warily through the geology exhibit surrounded by models of Earth, not enjoying the experience in the slightest. Surveillance cameras mounted above on the wall scanned him, but he dearly hoped the authorities hadn’t been despatched to arrest him. They shouldn’t be. After all, he hadn’t poured chocolate milk on the power box outside for nothing.

  Max was twenty-one years old, rather tall with stick insect limbs. Bright blond hair and a poorly cut fringe topped his head. He wore a grey Cookie Monster hoodie, straight-legged jeans, Mickey Mouse socks and a cheap, half-broken children’s watch with coloured numbers. He also wore blue trainers with the shoelaces undone and carried a Tony the Tiger rucksack in which to store the mammoth tusk he was after. To top it all, he had a scabbard that held a broadsword called Fleshrender, Max’s favourite possession.

  Pacing along, he thought passingly that he should have dressed the part more and put on a ski mask. His heart pounded as he passed by the dinosaur exhibit, unease assailing him. It was too late to go home at this point. He just had to find the mammoth tusk before daylight.

  He gathered himself, drew his sword and focused on not tripping while he navigated through the dark, winding corridors. Even the smallest of noises made him jump—broadsword at the ready—as he crept through the empty halls.

  With the lights off, the museum was practically a haunted house. While he tiptoed into the zoology section, glimmering rays of moonlight streamed in through the windows, falling gently over him. Shadowed model animals lined the walls, felt rabbits and plastic spiders sitting on table displays. A frightening bear stood with its paws raised and its sharp jaws wide open as if ready to pounce on him at a moment’s notice. Max’s eyes widened, but within seconds he discerned to his relief it was just taxidermy.

  At last, the mammoth appeared behind a red security barrier not far away. With every muscle tensed, he gazed in awe at its gigantic figure. But his jaw dropped as he realised, despite how carefully he had planned this mission, he’d forgotten one crucial part: how to extract the mammoth tusk out of the skeleton. It looked like it’d been screwed in tightly. Should’ve brought a screwdriver. Oh, bother.

  Pushing his shoulders back, he sheathed his weapon, strode right up to the mammoth and peered at the display label. It read:

  This woolly mammoth skeleton was discovered in 1925 by a team of esteemed archaeologists in rural Devon. It was the first almost entirely preserved specimen ever uncovered in England. It is a relic of priceless historical value. DO NOT TOUCH.

  Deciding to disobey and wrest the tusk out, Max stepped over the maroon rope that encircled the mammoth and wrapped his hands around it.

  Like Arthur pulling the sword from the stone, there was nothing else to do but pull really, really hard.

  After counting down from three, he tugged the mammoth tusk towards him with all his might. It took a few tries, but finally the tusk separated from the woolly mammoth skeleton with a nasty crack, and he fell on his backside. Yet before he could rejoice, he heard the sound of a creak.

  A door opened across the room.

  “PUT YOUR HANDS BEHIND YOUR BACK! LAY DOWN ON THE GROUND!”

  Max turned around and scrambled to his feet, mouth wide open. Police with intimidating weapons emerged out of nowhere, swarming him. He gaped at the approaching horde before looking back down at the tusk. This couldn’t be happening.

  The thought crossed his mind to run. But what was the point? There were too many police. He was toast!

  He dropped the mammoth tusk on the floor and unsheathed his sword. “Listen, this is all a b-big misunderstanding,” he stuttered.

  “NO MISUNDERSTANDING!” a second officer yelled, a woman in a navy tunic with a bulletproof vest. She inched over to him. “HANDS BEHIND YOUR BACK NOW!”

  Max stared at the police, aghast. They think I’m a criminal. How ridiculous. I’m just an innocent treasure hunter!

  “Let me e-explain. It’s v-very, very important for you to let me e-explain,” Max stammered.

  He pointed his sword at them threateningly, before spotting a paunchy man who held what looked like a laser pointer and was aiming it at him.

  Max swung the sword around as a warning. “Please. If you’d just give me a second to clear this up, I’m sure that—arghhh!”

  His words cut out with a bloodcurdling scream. Electricity surged through his body. The red dot he’d seen on his chest hadn’t been from a laser pointer at all, but a taser. Limbs spasming, Max fell onto the floor and crumpled into a ball as the police closed in on him.

  Chapter 2

  Consequences and Clues

  The officers at Nottingham Police Station didn’t seem to like Max much, but then again, it was rare to find anyone who did. Of course, on the surface, they had a good reason to dislike him. He knew what breaking into the Nottingham Natural History Museum with a broadsword to steal a priceless relic looked like. But he would have never dreamt of doing something so strange unless he’d thought it through long and hard and had a good reason.

  Unfortunately, nobody else seemed to appreciate that.

  After being tasered, he’d been handcuffed, loaded into a police car and driven to the station, where he was swiftly locked in an interrogation room with a gruff fellow by the name of Constable William Tomlinson.

  “Hold on, son,” Constable Tomlinson said, scratching his grey stubbly chin. He was a tall, middle-aged officer with weathered skin, cold eyes and a bemused curled lip stitched onto his face. He was also the one who had so rudely tasered Max. “What is this Crystalline Crucible you keep mentioning?”

  Max sighed. He longed to be comfy on the sofa at home and watching Miss Marple. “I could have told you that without the taser or these chafing handcuffs,” he muttered, caustic spite in his voice.

  “Well, you did break into a museum,” the constable insisted. “And tried to steal a mammoth tusk, damaging it in the process! And threatened police officers with a sword! Answer my question.”

  Max scanned the dusty interrogation room, a crooked light fixture flickering overhead. This police station was new to him. He lived in Stapleford, a town to the west of Nottingham. That police station he knew like the back of his hand. Although much like ice cream, pizza or chocolate, he didn’t like it at all. This one was just as bad.

  “The Crystalline Crucible is a treasure hunting competition or a puzzle quest, if you will,” he grumbled. “I would’ve thought you’d heard of it. It is the most famous one in the treasure hunting community presently. The reason I broke into the museum is to find the next clue.”

  “A blimmin’ clue? What are you talking about? Is this The Da Vinci Code or something?”

  Max closed his eyes, frustration getting the better of him. Am I brain-dead yet? Sure feels like it. I’ve been at this station for aeons. “A few months ago, a mysterious organisation posted ads online saying that they are looking to recruit highly intelligent individuals. They reportedly devised a test to find them, a treasure hunt that is said to be the most difficult one the world has ever seen. They call it The Crystalline Crucible.”

  “I’ve never heard of it,” Constable Tomlinson said with a thin frown. “I don’t keep up with the treasure hunting community. I didn’t even know there was one! Why did you think a cl

ue was in the museum? And what’s with the sword?”

  “The previous clue’s decrypted answer recently leaked, the words woolly mammoth tusk,” he clarified. “Knowing that the closest mammoth tusk in the country is stored in the local natural history museum, I wanted to have a close look. Before breaking in, I sent over fifty email requests to the museum’s director, Ms Smith, most of which were ignored. To be accurate, she replied to the last one instructing me to ‘stop harassing me or I’ll call the…’” He dropped the air quotes. “The point is that I had to get to the tusk alone. As for the broadsword, as well as moonlighting as a treasure hunter, I happen to be a self-trained swordsman. Indeed, I may well be the last true knight of England. I expect that explains everything.”

  It didn’t.

  “Blimey. Treasure hunting? Sounds like a waste of time,” Constable Tomlinson chided, standing. “And a swordsman? You from the Dark Ages, Maxwell? You belong in a loony bin. I’ve got to speak with my colleagues to decide what’s to be done with you. Back in a few.”

  Max yawned; his tongue felt drier than ash. “Am I going to be allowed to go home soon? If you’d like to continue asking me obvious questions, may I suggest a search engine?”

  “You’ll be here a long time if you continue speaking to me with that cheek,” the constable snapped, and stormed out.

  The interrogation room had a single barred window. Max approached it and looked out at the late afternoon sky over Nottingham’s cityscape. They’d kept him at the police station all day. It was spitting with rain out there. He listened to the drizzle’s relaxing rat-a-tat as he rested his chin on his arm. I needed that clue to win. What can I do now? The lottery? But I’m banned from it for attempted fraud!

  “The winner of The Crystalline Crucible will be gifted riches beyond their wildest dreams. All their earthly problems will be rendered null, and the mysteries of the world answered,” the contest had advertised on its website and in newspapers for the past couple of months.

  The enigma of it all had taken the treasure hunting community—and even some of the general public—by storm. Rumours had begun to spread online that the winner would become a member of the Illuminati. Even more intriguing was the priceless crystal trophy, the Jewelled Chalice, which was said to be presented to the winner by none other than the director general of MI6.

  Maxwell had been treasure hunting for years. All the same, the most he’d ever found was a limited-edition box of Jaffa Cakes from the eighties that offered free tickets to an arcade that was now regrettably closed. So, it was more important than ever that he win The Crystalline Crucible and make a success of his life’s work. The thought of this all made him groan, as he dwelled on the decade-plus he’d spent hunting without finding any treasure.

  Max had practically fallen asleep by the time Constable Tomlinson returned.

  “It’s decided: you’re getting bail. One hundred pounds,” the constable uttered grumpily. “Aren’t you lucky? Turns out the prison is full.”

  “Huzzah,” he drawled, forcing his head to stay upright. “But I’ve got no way to get home.”

  “We’ll contact your parents.”

  “You might have trouble with that unless you have a Ouija.”

  Constable Tomlinson’s eyes drooped pitifully. “Ouija board?”

  Max swallowed. “My mother died in a car accident on slippery ice when I was a child. The car plunged off a bridge and into the River Trent. The coroner said it was drunk driving, but I blame friction—or the lack of it.”

  “And your father?”

  “In prison. He’s not the nicest guy. Tortured and killed three prostitutes. Or so I’ve heard.”

  Constable Tomlinson’s face reddened slightly. “You must have a guardian. Or somebody to drive you home. I’m not doing it!”

  Max thought hard, rubbing his eyes. “Not a guardian per se, but I have a best friend by the name of Rosie Shaw.”

  “Right. We’ll give her a ring.” The constable unlocked the handcuffs on Max’s wrists. “But don’t think you’re out of trouble just because we’re letting you go. Bail doesn’t mean you’re off scot-free. You’ll have a court hearing. That’s a little thing called consequences.”

  Bail? Consequences? A court hearing?! Max stiffened. Oh, no. Am I gonna end up in prison for this? I swear I was gonna return the tusk eventually!

  Constable Tomlinson brought him into the waiting area to pay his bail while he rang Rosie. As he waited, Max grimaced and put his head in his hands as he anticipated how she would react. He couldn’t imagine a good outcome. It was never a pleasurable thing to be called by the police to pick up a friend.

  The moment Rosie set foot inside the station, Constable Tomlinson started to explain what was going on in an incredibly biased manner. She bit her nails, glancing disapprovingly at Max.

  “Your friend is quite a character,” the constable said, pointing at Max as if he were a naughty schoolboy. “He may well face serious charges for this in court. And if he does anything else like this again, he could end up in prison. If it were my choice, he’d be in the clink right now.”

  “I’m so sorry,” Rosie said briskly. Luscious brown hair flowed over her shoulders, and she wore her favourite bead necklace as usual. “Only a total man-child would be stupid enough to do something like this.”

  “A man-child?” Max interrupted, which caused them both to raise their eyebrows. “You do realise I haven’t gone deaf.”

  “What? I think it’s pretty accurate,” Constable Tomlinson said.

  After they returned his Tony the Tiger rucksack, the police station let him go. Yet there was one notable absence.

  “Wait. Where’s my broadsword?” Max asked, rifling through the Rubik’s Cube and Game Boy games in his rucksack.

  “You’re not getting that back, son. No way!” the constable sneered. “You’re too dangerous to have such a weapon. Not to mention, it’ll be evidence in your court hearing. I didn’t even know they still make swords.”

  “How totally and utterly ridiculous!” He flounced out, mouthing the word, “Scoundrel.”

  Once Max and Rosie were in her car, she did not seem at all pleased to see him, as expected. She drove him home with a furrowed brow and gripped the steering wheel so tightly her knuckles were almost white.

  Max supposed her name was something of a misnomer, as Rosie was certainly not rosy in any way, shape or form. Only once in a blue moon did he hear her say anything positive. She loved horror films, wouldn’t be able to see the genius of Miss Marple if it sucker-punched her and was writing a children’s book about a talking tabby. Still, they had known each other since secondary school.

  “Did you hear I was tasered?” Max revealed as he threaded his fingers and crossed his legs in the passenger seat. “Agonising. But another box ticked on the bucket list, I guess.”

  “So traumatic for you,” Rosie said, still not looking at him.

  This might have been one of those incidents where it was better to keep his mouth shut. He analysed her body language: taut muscles, jaw clenched. He had read about those signs of anger in Body Language for Dummies, a book his caretaker, Ms Kensington, had given him at the Children’s Society, the institution in which he’d been raised.

  “What did you think of that Constable Tomlinson fellow? I wonder if he’s related to Lucas Tomlinson. You like him, don’t you? Or is that just Henry Styles?” he continued.

  “It’s Louis Tomlinson and Harry Styles, and I liked him when I was about sixteen. Glad to see you care so much about my interests. You’re distracting me from driving.”

  “Let’s address the elephant in the room: you’re angry.”

  “Well observed, Sherlock,” Rosie barked, simmering as her nose twitched so violently that it might have been covered in spiders. “I had to come from school. I was working late, tutoring some boys who are struggling.”

  “Ah, I see. And how are the kids at Kiddy Winks? Can they do fractions yet?”

  “It’s a nursery. They can barely count.”

  Max stifled a breath, speculating whether the length of her grudge would beat his previous record: twenty-four days. “If it means anything, I can assure you it was absolutely not my intention to get in trouble. It was the whole getting arrested thing that really threw a spanner in the works. My faith in the English police system has been shattered.”

 

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