The Amber Room by
H D Evans
Published by Pipeline
Š Hugh Evans 01 November 2011 & 20 August 2012
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This book is dedicated to my daughter Jessica Evans, without whose inspiration I would never have completed this work.
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Prologue
Smithsonian
Everything is about control; once you understand, then you have a chance. Late in the evening it was normally quiet, he didn't know it wouldn't be like that again. Tonight was different. The Smithsonian's 130 million artefacts of the liberal arts and sciences were the perfect place to hide a secret. A secret is something worth knowing; anything worthless can't be a secret. The location of the Amber Room valued at half a billion dollars, was a secret worth knowing. The secret was hidden in a number of places, each facet was unrecognisable in isolation, together only discernible by someone with the knowledge, the spirit, an illuminated master, someone who had inherited the code. This was the first time since the Amber Room had been made that it could all come together. He was almost sure that someone else had been looking for the secrets, at these pages in front of him‌. No, not possible. He had covered his tracks perfectly, every facet had been given numerous false trails, yet the interest in each part had been increasing recently. What was that? He sensed, rather than saw a movement, a presence. He looked about, it was dark, the only light came from his laptop screen and a few lamps about the office. The shadows in the dimly-lit room suddenly appeared sinister. LEDs winked at his paranoia; a fridge hummed in the next room. He folded down the laptop screen, closed the journal and stared into the darkness, sure now that someone was there, watching. The hairs rose on the back of his neck and his blood ran icy cold. He sat still, breath shallow, listening, pulse racing, blood pressure ratcheting up the stakes. His fingers reached over his desk and felt the familiar, silver embossed shapes on the leather bound journal, checking it was still there. He could read the letters by hand, like Braille: Libellus Marcus Aurelius Juvenis, the Journal of Marcus Aurelius. The unrelenting hunting, his patience, diplomacy, charm, ingenious trawling and the spider algorithm had finally allowed him to access and search the Vatican Archives. He knew it had been there all along. Did they? Perhaps. Must assume that they did. Only a few people knew he had borrowed this journal, but he felt sure no-one beyond his Order knew of the other one, its companion. He just wanted to be sure the author was the same, then all the suppositions subside, the doubts disappear. Maybe the Holy See allowed him to have it because they wanted to know where it would lead. He suspected they were using him, their electronic chatter had increased dramatically. Too late to worry about that now. He looked up at the security camera in the corner of the room and it blinked red back to him as if to warn someone was watching. If he could establish that the authors were the same it would mean
6 that the lineage was established beyond doubt, the connections to the Amber Room and that the spirit of the legends were not fiction, but fact. He stood up and walked across the room, down to the corner and peered around into the dark corridor. Nothing. He felt really uneasy about being here so late, sick, but he had to make the connection tonight, the cross-quarter day was nearly upon them. He had been way ahead for so long but he had found out that some negative group had been reworking his experiments and caught up, they weren't far behind. His assistants had been charting the planetary alignments for him and correlating these with historical events. All the other signs and stars were right, the probability was peaking at a high this November crossquarter day, there was still chance but it had to be now. He was certain that only he knew about the third and fourth journals, because the writer of the last had told him so, had given them both to him and him alone. For the first time, all four journals together, one in his hand, one as files on his laptop, one in his rucksack and the last one in his mind. This last journal was the cipher; he knew no-one else had this. But it wasn't a great leap for any sinister organisation to suppose that it existed, that he knew its contents and that they may want his mind, do anything for it. He had fielded all sorts of enquiries about the Amber Room, from the tabloid press to fabulously wealthy collectors to shadowy cults, more so recently. The titian-haired woman was a common subject in all the four journals, she occupied the mind of the author intimately. This beautiful, fair skinned, mystical woman had become the soul-mate of the authors, had children, had loved profoundly. It was the strength of this deeply shared love that had kept the dynasty on course for two millennia through the most difficult of times. When they were together everything was well with the world. Bruuuuup, bruuuuup, bruuuuup, the cell phone vibrated on the desk. It was snatched up and silenced, “John,” was whispered, his eyes darting about, checking the shadows. “Yeah dude, you sure you wanna go to the Nat History lecture again? We trashed that course last year, it stank, 'member?” “Yeah, I'm sure it'll be okay this time,” was the hushed response. “Okay, just checkin', you're on your own fella'. Okay...er Christina I think... anyway someone booked you in and bought the flights to Newark, times to JFK were lousy. I said that would be okay, okay?” “Great, what about the amber artefacts?” He hated travelling across town from Newark. “Should be there if you think so.” “Fine, I'll see you Friday.” “Sure, after we can go through the amber resonance data that arrived today, anyhoo, have a good trip buddy, give us a shout if you need anything.”
7 “Sure, thanks, bye,” call ended. Even John didn't know about the journals or the red headed woman. Couldn't talk about that sort of thing on the cell phone or email, best way of giving all your secrets away. No doubt someone's html spider was crawling over his electronic life reporting on keywords. The office was quiet. He waited a little longer then reopened his laptop. On the screen were encrypted images of the Journal from Jungingen. The paper was in very poor condition, but was legible, it was written in a mixture of Latin, which he knew, and ancient Alemanni, which he had to translate with a short, rough guide from the Romano-Germanic Museum in Cologne. The beautiful pale blue leather bound journal of Roman Army officer Tribune Marcus Aurelius Juvenis courtesy of Vatican Archives’ lend programme to the Smithsonian, was opened to the last entry. The Roman Emperors had become Popes who had ruled the Holy Roman Empire. This journal was found in Rome and been taken by the Vatican Library and hidden, it was now back in the light and the Latin was translated thus: 'By the Gods, bless my family this day and for ever more.... no doubt the quest beyond the mighty Rhine in Magna Germania will be hard, may the Gods look favourably upon my mission and allow success and safe return....The mysterious woman Mea, like the goddess Gaia, enthralling, maybe I will see her again when I cross the Rhine? Beauty, she has, more than a man could comprehend, rich, red hair like my long departed wife, my love, much missed. Time has passed, the memory, the grief fades, my body yearns for life. I think of Mea and my heart races She touched me, I felt something never before experienced. Full of life, calm, understanding, the world; so powerful, I need it again. I still have the amber gift she gave me, it is electric, it is warm, I can feel something about it, it has an aura, there is power inside, if only it could be unlocked, harnessed, the power could be used for great good.' He was sure it was the same handwriting, the signature and icons were definitely the same and the woman Mea was the same. He looked up at the screen and read to himself, “My beauty Mea...queen of the Alemanni, the forest...my life, my love....never ages....full of life....mother of my sons....” He scrolled down to a separate decorated page recognising the icons as a pagan funeral ceremony, there were images of a strange wheel with cranked spokes referred to as the Black Sun, and images of the Valkyrie and the chariots taking the dead from the battlefield, “Queen Mea, queen of beauty and life is taken this Full Moon Samhain....of the forest...found in the forest...gored by the forest....now returned to the forest.” There were hand written notes that followed, the words smeared by drops of water, “The queen
8 is dead, my grief overwhelms me. My love, my life, my amber queen, the eternal youth of our people has been taken from us by the wicked forest in a storm. She guided us through the droughts, the darkness, she kept the light, brought the Spring, knew the way...pulled me from the river...the strength in me to continue fades...We were one, now our sons will continue, I will soon join my love in the Alemanni Solar Mausoleum and the afterlife.� That was it, the link. The Spring Goddess Mea was the same woman and so was the author of the journals. He wanted to shout but kept it in, instead, punching his fist into the air. He got out the beautiful, light blue, silver-embossed, leather-bound journal from his tatty rucksack, the journal of Prussian Noble Marco von Jungingen and flipped through the pages. There was a loose leaf towards the end, it was a Funeral Order of Service. The same runes in gold and black decorated the edge of the page as the page shown on his laptop screen, the connection was certain. The funeral was for Mae von Jungingen, Marco's wife. The journal entry read in Gothic German, 'Now I enter the winter darkness, my love lost to God this Samhain. Joy remembering the time we had together, our children, bless them. She shone, glowed like amber, kept the light, her strength for me when times were hard, protected us through the plague my word on it, now darkness and grief.' The last journal was about the author's family heritage, the Nazis, the Second World War, his wife whom he had to leave behind as the war engulfed Europe, how she was beautiful, full of life, shone like her amber keepsake. That he saved her from the Russians and she had saved him from certain death as they flew away, having removed the Amber Room from Leningrad. How they stopped the Nazis gaining a weapon of awesome might, and eventually when he had given up hope of finding his wife and was forced to leave, that he was taken to America to start a new life. This light blue, leather-bound, silver escutcheoned and embossed journal contained the same drawings, the same amber descriptions, the same runes, the same star maps and lunar calendars. It described details of the Amber Room's location before RAF bombers obliterated and incinerated the trail. It also contained a photograph of a beautiful woman, embracing an army officer. His skin tingled; although the photograph was in black and white, now faded to sepia, his sense of connection with them was visceral. The descriptions of the author’s work, experiments and his intuition had helped him and he was sure there was much more contained within, that had yet to be of use. It was the stories of The Amber Room, the escape from Russia, the flight from Europe to America that had encouraged this scientist's devotion to amber and his progression to the Smithsonian. It was the stories of
9 the power of amber when conjoined with the Amber Room in the hands of good or evil, that had spurned him on to arrange the future and make the trip to New York tomorrow. What might happen would be as illuminating as what might not happen. The lecture at the National History Museum ‘Amber Artefacts and Anthropology’ would be the day after tomorrow, that would give him time to settle, rest and catch up with college friends in town tomorrow night. He felt relaxed. The energy in the room had changed, he no longer felt that he was being watched. Perhaps it had just been the spirits of the Amber keepers looking over his shoulder, maintaining their eternal vigil. He read from the journals and let his mind drift.
All the characters in this book are fictitious, no similarity is intended with any persons living or dead or any other works or copyrights. All rights reserved, no warranty implied. Copyright Hugh Evans 01 November 2011 and 20 August 2012
10 The Amber Room Synopsis 30 chapters in five periods. 1 Present day, 2-6 Roman, 7 Europe 1750, 8-14 WW2, 15-30 Present Day. Roman: [SPRING] Roman officer, ordered by Nero, goes in search of Amber, meets mysterious forest woman. Modern Roman civilisation and the barbarian German tribes, their different beliefs, their mutual conflicts and the ancient routes of the amber trade. Feasting, fighting, fornicating, murder, mystery, mayhem, ends with a major battle. Europe 1750: [WINTER] The inception and construction of The Amber Room set against the rise of the Prussian Empire and the battles in Europe over the Holy Roman Empire. WW2: [SUMMER] German Wehrmacht intelligence officer, ordered by Goebbels, goes off to Operation Barbarossa. Female Russian Museum Curator visits the Amber Room, Leningrad, surviving an air attack. The Officer captures the Amber Room and the Curator, and they return to Konigsberg, where they make a family. The tide of war turns, Lancasters bomb Konigsberg, the Russians advance andthe Amber Room is lost. Present Day: [AUTUMN] US researcher meets female publisher in New York with new evidence about the location of the Amber Room. Under threat, they travel to Berlin and visit the old Nazi buildings to find the Amber Room. Now monitored by British Intelligence, they go after a trail of clues left for them. They are split by a battle involving the German Police, British Agents and mysterious dark forces who abduct the female publisher and the Amber Room clues. The US researcher goes in search of the her, another battle occurs. They visit locations, castles and the chase intensifies at each stage. They are attacked, survive, develop their relationship and find the location of The Amber Room. They go to the location.... Prehistory (Epilogue): The eternal battle between good and evil, order and chaos, light and dark, procreation and destruction.
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11 Reviews
""The Amber Room" is an extraordinary achievement for a first-time author. From its primordial, primeval beginning, the novel races through time and space to a dramatic and almost apocalyptic conclusion. Heroes Mark and Ema battle against giant forces of Man and of Nature herself to reveal the truth about The Amber Room and its properties. But do they? May this reviewer beg the reader not to skip pages, but to wait for the last line which "explains" it all. An exciting, difficult and dangerous book that will keep you turning the pages."
Hugh Evans, the author of this well-researched story, takes us through a fascinating kaleidoscope of historical events surrounding the construction and subsequent disappearance of the Amber Room, cleverly intermingling fact and fiction from the beginnings of time to the present day. The pace of his tale is fast moving and it is with some regret that one has to leave the atmospheric intrigues of the various time periods and move on to the next. However the thread of the powerful connections with the main male and female characters echoing through the ages, compels and intrigues and pulls the reader along urgently, eager to see where this epic tale leads. Evans picks up the fictional trail of the Amber Room mystery in the present time, crafting tension and intrigue with surprising twists and turns in his story, culminating in an explosive clash of good versus evil, driven by the mysterious and powerful energy of the Amber Room. How it ‘ends’ is up to the reader to decide, but this is an allegorical tale containing all the elements of a ‘good read’ that will appeal to both men and women. A superb debut novel designed to entertain but also to challenge emotional and intellectual inertia - if you let it. Patricia Abercromby PGCE Freelance journalist and Co-Author of: Seated Acupressure Therapy