Gabriel Hunt - Hunt Through Napoleons Web
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- Year:2011
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Amun unrolled the print, weighing down one corner with Gabriels gun. It showed a black-and-white photograph of a stone tablet covered in hieroglyphics. One corner of the tablet was broken off.
Do you recognize it, Mister Hunt? Amun asked.
Of course, Gabriel said. Its the Rosetta Stone.
Amun stretched out a finger and traced it along the edge of the Rosetta Stone. As you can see, there is a piece missing. Broken off. Lost forever. Who knows what additional information it might have contained, what secrets.
Whats your point?
What if I were to tell you, Mister Hunt, that a second entire tablet exists, twice the size of this missing piece, one that contains even more preciousmore powerfulinformation than the stone in the British Museum? Information that could, quite simply, change the world... ?
Enjoy these other Gabriel Hunt adventures:
HUNT AT THE WELL OF ETERNITY
HUNT THROUGH THE CRADLE OF FEAR
HUNT AT WORLDS END
HUNT BEYOND THE FROZEN FIRE
HUNT AMONG THE KILLERS OF MEN
HUNT
Through Napoleons
Web
AS TOLD TO RAYMOND BENSON
DORCHESTER PUBLISHING
August 2011
Published by
Dorchester Publishing Co., Inc.
200 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10016
in collaboration with Winterfall LLC
Copyright 2010 by Winterfall LLC
Cover painting copyright 2010 by Glen Orbik
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, without the written permission of the publisher, except where permitted by law. The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the authors rights is appreciated.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
GABRIEL HUNT was created by Charles Ardai and is a trademark of Winterfall LLC.
ISBN 13: 978-1-4285-1130-9
E-ISBN: 978-1-4285-0943-6
The DP logo is the property of Dorchester Publishing Co., Inc.
Printed in the United States of America.
Visit us online at www.dorchesterpub.com or www.HuntForAdventure.com .
The coauthor wishes to thank Gabriel and Michael Hunt for allowing me to pen this exploit, as well as Peter Miller, Kevin Collette, Cornell Stamoran, Marc Wolff, everyone at Hard Case Crime, and, of course, Randi and Max.
Gabriel Hunts grip on his pickax was slipping.
He had been in worse scrapes before; its just that he didnt particularly relish the thought of dying while caving for fun and practice. That would be an embarrassment. When it was truly his time to check out, Gabriel would much rather have his obituary say that hed been eaten alive by an angry tiger or felled by gunshots from enemy assailants. Or old age. That wouldnt be so bad.
But to fall into a gaping pit because he had slipped on bat guano? Preposterous!
Gabriel called down to his friend and caving partner, How you hanging, Manny?
Horizontal and belly-down, Manuel Rodriguez dangled in midair on the end of the static nylon rope, fifteen feet below Gabriels legs. His only hope for survival was Gabriels grip on the pickax.
Is that a joke, amigo? Manny shouted. He was trying to keep the terror out of his voice but wasnt doing a very good job.
It had happened quite innocently. Every two or three years, Gabriel made an excursion to one of various caves around the country so that he could hone his skills. His travels sometimes required that he perform a bit of spelunkingan outdated term, but Gabriel liked the sound of the word. It had a certain romance to it.
Dangling within an inch of ones life over a dark abyss, though, didnt have any romance to it at all.
Manny lived in New Mexico near Carlsbad Caverns National Park. Besides the exceptional landmark that was open to the public to tour on a daily basis, there were several other caverns in the park that were available only to experienced cavers. All it took to access them were a small fee and a license. Gabriel had done it many times, very often with Manny, a fifty-eight-year-old former ranger at the park and an expert spelunker.
They had been in one of the more challenging (as Manny had described it) caves for a little more than three hours when Gabriel and Mannysecured to each other by a fifteen-foot-long buddy ropesat down to rest on a ledge above a black pit that supposedly led to a chamber of noteworthy formations. The hole was ninety-six feet to the bottom. They had come equipped with all the right gear. They each wore the necessary helmets, grubby clothing, knee and elbow pads, sturdy boots. Both men carried plenty of light sources and extra batteries, as well as water, snacks, trash bags, empty bottles in which to urinate, and a first aid kit. For the vertical descent, Manny had brought along an assortment of tools such as carabiners, rope, waist and chest harnesses, Petzl stops, rappel racks, handled ascenders, pitons, chocks, hammers, and a couple of pickaxes. The goal, however, was to accomplish the journey without damaging the cave at all. Hammering pitons into the rock face was to be avoided if possible. It was best to use noninvasive tools such as Spring-Loaded Camming Devices that wedged into already-existing cracks or in between stone protrusions. Leave nothing but footprints was the motto among serious cavers.
Gabriel had finished eating a power bar, coiled a long section of rope around his shoulder and back, and stood on the ledge to locate a convenient spot to install a chock or SLCD for what was called an SRTSingle Rope Techniquedescent into the hole. The plan was that Manny would follow him, staying tethered to him throughout the excursion. But when Gabriel had stooped to examine a possible position, his boot slipped on something wet and slick. He slammed hard into the ledge, facedown, and continued to slide across the slimy ridge until his body was falling through space. He must have plummeted twenty feet or so before he realized that he had pulled Manny off the ledge as well. Another dozen feet shot past before Gabriel swung the pickax that was, miraculously, still in his right hand. He chopped the rock face in front of him as hard as he couldand broke his fall. Hanging on to the axs handle was another thing altogether. It had a ridged rubber grip and a lip at the bottom against which the side of his right hand collided painfullybut it was enough to enable him to hold on. He gripped the ax handle as tightly as he could with both hands, but already he could feel the strain in his fingers and arms. Making matters worse, his palms were moist from the sudden shock. And when Manny reached the end of the tether with a violent jerk, Gabriel really did damn near lose his grasp.
Then Gabriel was presented with the ultimate insulthe smelled the stuff he had slid across. It was all over the front of his pants and shirt.
Bat turd.
Gabriel winced, remembering a cave full of bats hed found himself in half a year earlier in China. The smell was the same all over the world.
This is the last time I go caving with you! Manny called. His added weight dangling at the end of the line was slowly pulling Gabriels shoulders from their sockets. Im a fool for letting you talk me into this again!
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