- Home
- Smith, Dean Wesley
Library of Atlantis: A Poker Boy Story
Library of Atlantis: A Poker Boy Story Read online
Copyright Information
The Library of Atlantis
Copyright © 2015 by Dean Wesley Smith
Published by WMG Publishing
Cover and layout copyright © 2015 by WMG Publishing
Cover design by Allyson Longueira/WMG Publishing
Cover art copyright © Editor77/Dreamstime
Uncollected Anthology logo art © Tanya Borozenets/Dreamstime
Uncollected Anthology logo design © Stephanie Writt
This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. All rights reserved. This is a work of fiction. All characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission.
Contents
Start Reading
About the Author
More Magical Libraries Stories
Copyright Information
ONE
“There is a god of the Internet?” I asked, knowing instantly that my blurted out question was flat stupid. Of course there was, there was a god for everything that existed it seemed.
Stan, the God of Poker and my direct boss, just gave me the look he always gives me when I have asked a question beyond my normal stupid. Then he shook his head. He had on his usual gray sweater vest, gray slacks and open shirt, also a non-color. Stan was the dullest dresser I had ever met and he never altered what he wore.
Of course, I wasn’t much better considering I only wore jeans, a dress shirt, a black leather coat and a fedora-like hat. I considered the coat and hat my superpower costume. Stan shook his head every time I mentioned that as well.
Patty, aka Front Desk Girl and my girlfriend, patted my leg and laughed lightly. She had her long brown hair pulled back and had on a wonderful white blouse and tan slacks. She had added color to the outfit with a turquoise necklace and earrings. When she patted my leg like that, I knew the question was beyond stupid.
I started to ask who it was, then just shut my mouth and decided one foot in my mouth at a time was enough, especially right before lunch on a warm summer’s day.
The three of us were sitting in the large diner booth in the center of my office. My office was invisible and floated about a thousand feet above the Las Vegas strip. It had four glass walls, which made the view of the desert and subdivisions and mountains surrounding Las Vegas just stunning. And at night, the lights of the city were fantastic.
Patty and I liked to come up here at times and just sit with our feet up on the wood railing around the entire office and stare out at the stars above and the lights below. Just saying, that view had started many a romantic evening.
Besides a few chairs, the only furniture in the square room was a replica of a diner’s booth with a tan Formica tabletop and a red vinyl bench seat that wrapped around three sides. At the moment, Patty and I were sharing a vanilla milkshake in a tall glass and Stan was working all by himself on a massive chocolate milkshake that he seemed to be studying more than drinking.
Madge would be bringing us lunch shortly. She was a superhero in food service and owned the diner in downtown Vegas where my team used to meet. When this office was built, we put in a connection to the diner from this office that she uses to bring us food and drinks. And team members without teleporting powers use that entrance as well.
Madge liked having us up here in this office better than in her restaurant, since we didn’t clog up a booth for regular customers and didn’t spook people by teleporting in and out all the time. She said it had been like expanding her restaurant by one table without all the costs and construction problems.
Suddenly Ben appeared in front of the table. Ben was the oldest-looking god I had ever met and looked like anyone’s short, balding grandfather, right down to the too-large suit jacket and pants that didn’t match. His brown leather shoes looked like he had bought them a hundred years ago and never even dusted them off.
He had been the God of Lamplighters, but as that profession faded, Stan and I saved him, got him to join my team and also got him a new job as one of the Gods of Books and Libraries.
I considered Ben our brains. Because his job for centuries had been so dull, he had been an avid reader of every text he could find, and he could remember everything, and I do mean everything, no matter how many centuries ago he had read it.
“Join us,” Patty said, smiling at Ben and motioning for me to scoot over which I did. Lunch in my office often turned into a team affair and I honestly liked that.
Ben shook his head. “Got a problem.”
At that, Stan seemed to come back into his eyes and pointed to the open spot beside Patty. “Sit and tell us about it.”
Ben nodded. Then as he slid in, he said, “Maybe I should tell Laverne at the same time.”
At that point my warning bells were going off in full seven-alarm mode in the back of my mind. Laverne was one of the most powerful gods in the world. She was also known by the name Lady Luck.
“Laverne?” Stan said into the air, slight worry creeping into his eyes. Stan had a perfect poker face. Me being able to see worry on it just made my alarm bells ring louder.
Patty touched my leg and I calmed some. She had the wonderful gift of being able to keep me calm through just about anything. I loved that superpower of hers.
“Right here,” Laverne said, appearing and pulling over a chair so she could sit at the end of the table. She had on her standard gray silk business suit. Her hair was pulled back tight giving her thin face a stark look and the entire outfit made her seem even more powerful than she was, if that was possible.
She turned to Ben. “So what’s the problem?”
“The Library of Atlantis,” he said, looking distraught.
Stan sat forward, clearly worried.
Laverne did the same.
I wanted to ask how Atlantis could have a library since the entire continent sunk a whole bunch of centuries ago, but decided now was not the time for my second really dumb question of the day.
“Is there something wrong at the library?” Laverne asked.
Ben nodded. “Very wrong.”
If I didn’t know better, I would have sworn old Ben was about to burst into tears. He normally was the coolest, the calmest of anyone on my team.
We all stayed silent until Ben took a deep breath, gathered himself, and looked directly at Laverne.
“A book is missing.”
Now, if this had been April 1st, I would have fallen out of the booth laughing. And luckily for me, I didn’t even snort because Patty, Stan, and Laverne were acting as if this really was the end of the world as they knew it.
“How is that possible?” Laverne asked.
“I don’t know,” Ben said. “None of us do. It just isn’t possible, yet it happened.”
“It can’t happen,” Laverne said, her voice almost angry.
When Lady Luck got angry, you didn’t want to be anywhere around.
“We know that,” Ben said. “But it did happen and that’s why I came here. We searched everywhere. This is a last resort before the entire fabric of everything we know starts to unravel.”
Unravel?
Fabric of everything?
Now he had my attention.
TWO
I sat there silently, something fairly unusual for me, as Laverne and Stan peppered Ben with questions about what he and the other Gods of Books and Libraries and all the superhero librarians working for them had done to find this missing book.
It seems they had looked everywhere. They had searched all recently filed books in case the missing book had been misfiled.
Then they had done the unthinkable to Ben. They had run an entire inventory of the entire library, physically checking to make sure every book was in place with no extra book anywhere.
It seemed the book had left the library and that was a very, very, very bad thing for reasons I had yet to figure out.
Finally Laverne stood. “We need to go to the Fates.”
With that, she and Ben were gone.
“We are so screwed,” Stan said, going back to staring at his milkshake.
At that point Madge came in carrying our lunch. She had on her typical too-tight pink uniform with a white apron that I swore had stains on it from the last century. And she always wore far, far too much makeup for any human face.
She looked around and frowned which managed to not crack her makeup. “I thought Ben and Laverne were here as well.”
“They were,” Patty said. “They had to go. There is a problem at the Library of Atlantis.”
Madge set a wonderful-smelling cheeseburger in front of me nestled on a basket of fries. She gave Patty her club sandwich, and then Stan his cheeseburger. She might look the part of a back-road waitress gone to seed, but she was the best short-order cook I had ever had the pleasure to meet.
“So what’s the problem at the library?” she asked.
“A book is missing,” Stan said, his voice low.
Madge sort of froze in mid-step. Then she looked back at Stan.
“You are kidding, right?”
“Nope,” Stan said.
“We are so screwed,” Madge said, heading for the entrance to the diner.
That was enough for me. I needed some answers and I needed them fast, no matter how stupid my questions sounded.
“Stan, could you jump and tell Screamer we are having an emergency meeting. Have him bring Sherrie.”
He nodded and vanished.
I turned to Patty. “I’m going to need to ask more than my normal number of really stupid questions here very soon if we’re going to help with this. Stick with me, all right?’
She nodded.
At that moment Stan came back. A moment later Screamer and Sherrie appeared.
Screamer was about my height at six foot and wore jeans and a dress shirt and a light sports jacket. He normally worked for the police because his main superpower was the ability to get into people’s minds with a touch.
Sherrie was Screamer’s wife and worked as a superhero for food and beverage tending bar in Reno. She was also one of Lady Luck’s four daughters. Today she had on a short black skirt, a white blouse, and an apron with the name of a casino on it. Clearly she had been at work.
“So what’s emergency,” Screamer asked as Stan let him and Sherrie scoot into the booth and then took his spot back in front of his untouched milkshake and cheeseburger.
I nodded to Stan and he said simply, “A book is missing from the Library of Atlantis.”
Sherrie just turned white and her hand went to cover her mouth. Screamer shook his head and repeated what Stan and Madge had said.
“Now, time to fill in the new kid on the block,” I said. “First off, someone please tell me what the Library of Atlantis is?”
“It started as the great library of Atlantis,” Stan said. “All the knowledge of the world from the time of Atlantis was stored in that great building.”
“When Atlantis was destroyed,” Patty said, “no one wanted to see all that knowledge go away, so with the help of hundreds of gods, the Gods of the Library protected the library with a vast dome sort of like this office, a half-turn out of phase with the real world.”
“So where is this located now?” I asked, fearing that the answer would be under the Atlantic.
“Under about a hundred feet of rock in central Oregon,” Stan said.
“Oregon?” I asked.
“It wasn’t Oregon when they buried it,” Stan said, not looking at me.
The Library of Atlantis was in Oregon. How strange was that? I would leave that bit of information until later to digest.
“So what is this library like now?” I asked.
“The problem came up about a century after Atlantis went down,” Stan said. “The Gods of the Library decided since civilization was at a very low ebb, they would try to get at least one copy of every printed work in existence in the library. All written human knowledge in one place. So they started expanding and after another thousand years or so, they managed the task.”
“Damn dumb idea,” Screamer said, shaking his head.
“So what happened when they got all written human knowledge in one place?” I asked.
“No one really knows,” Stan said. “Those a lot smarter than me say that it somehow tied together things about humanity that had never been tied together before, and created a powerful force that has been growing every century as millions more books are added into the library.”
A couple things that I flat didn’t understand, so I decided to ask the dumbest question first. “How does this library keep up with all the millions of books being published around the world today? And the electronic ones as well?”
“They just appear in the library,” Ben said, a moment after he appeared in front of us. “They are already sorted and filed and the library expands as room is needed and the library shelves all of its own books now. No one ever really touches most of the books.”
“Where is Laverne?” Stan asked as Ben sat down.
“Talking with the other gods who have been with the library from the beginning,” Ben said, sitting down next to me in the booth. “They are all watching to see what will unravel first, try to stop it to buy more time.”
“What is this unraveling?” I asked.
“From what I understand, you can think of it like a freeway,” Stan said. “As long as all the traffic is moving along at the same speed, and the freeway can hold the number of cars at any moment, then nothing happens. But imagine one car suddenly stopping in one lane.”
“A mess,” I said. “So having one book missing will cause this?”
“And more,” Screamer said. “It has never happened, but from what I’m told, a hell of a lot more.”
Sherrie and Patty both nodded.
“And that’s what is going to happen,” Ben said, nodding. “It won’t be pleasant for the human race and could set everything back by thousands of years.”
“I hated the Dark Ages,” Stan said.
I looked at him and made a note to ask him what exactly his job was in the Dark Ages. I don’t think poker was in existence just yet.
“So this library is sort of magic,” I said.
“Not magic anymore than nature and weather or your powers are magic,” Ben said. “Just a force. A human binding force that has helped us for centuries.”
“So did you ever think of asking the library what happened to the book?” I asked.
Silence.
So I decided to follow up with two more dumb questions. “And what book exactly is missing? And if no one touches anything anymore, how do you even know it’s missing?”
Ben opened his mouth to answer, then shut it, clearly not having an answer to any of the three questions.
“Excuse me for a moment,” he said, finally. He scooted out of the booth and vanished.
Seemed my three stupid questions might have hit a sore spot or two.
I glanced around at the four remaining. “Any of you ever seen this library?”
All of them shook their heads no.
I turned to Stan. “I don’t have a library card, but I would love to see this place. Can you jump us there?”
He shook his head. “It’s protected. Locked up tight.”
Now that really bothered me. What was the point of having all written human knowledge in one place if humans couldn’t even get to it?
That was one question I didn’t think was so stupid.
THREE
“Mind calling Laverne?” I asked Stan. “I assume she could get us in the place.”
“Why would you wa
nt to see such a vast repository of books?” Laverne asked, appearing in front of the table and again sitting down in a chair facing the table.
“Why do you keep all that knowledge locked away from the people who created it?” I asked. “Seems like the place shouldn’t be called a library, but more like a book graveyard. It is underground, after all.”
She frowned and said, “I don’t know the answer to that question, but I will find out.”
“Ask the library itself if it likes being locked away from people,” I said, just as Laverne vanished.
Stan just shook his head. “As normal, your questions tend to get right to the heart of the problems.”
“Only if no one knows the answers,” I said, staring at my slowly getting cold cheeseburger and fries. My stomach was rumbling, but everyone considered this library thing a major disaster, so I figured that eating a normal lunch might be a little on the rude side.
I decided taking a sip of the melting milkshake might not be too far wrong, and maybe munching on a fry. I was just, deep down, having trouble taking one book being missing as a serious problem, especially since no one really knew what book it was that was missing.
A how-to-build-hydrogen-bombs book I might be concerned about, but a book on basket weaving, or a Zane Grey western would be another matter, even with this unraveling everyone seemed so afraid of, but had never seen in centuries.
I was about to take a second fry when I found myself standing near the center of a giant room, the polished marble ceiling towering far, far over my head.
I kind of choked down the first fry and gawked at the place.
The walls were at least three stories tall before curving up into the dome and were covered in dark wood bookcases, with walkways all the way around at every level, and the arches and pillars holding up the vast room were made of marble, polished to a shine.
The room had to be the size of a major college football stadium, and a hundred tunnels, at least, led off in all directions from this main room.
Stunning didn’t even begin to describe this library.