A Steampunk Guide to Hunting Monsters 3 | Page 12

Thursday, May the Twentieth So, Hargrave began packing, shipping, and selling all of the goods in the tomb. He claims some of them are going to the museums, but I am certain I witnessed him selling, chiefly, the canopic jars (which Mr. Longville explains as jars containing the most important organs of the deceased Queen). Sunday, May the Twenty-Third Today Hargrave sent me a note saying he was building the mummy new mechanical organs as well—to replace the original ones preserved inside the canopic jars. After some hemming and hawing, I returned to the dig, and found, to my great surprise, the place nearly deserted! I headed to Hargrave's tent only to discover it abandoned as well, the man's belongings strewn about as though he had been violently interrupted while packing. I turned to find the Egyptian historian waving frantically at me. "Please, Miss, there has been a great disaster. The mummy is cursed!” I only then noticed the large bloodstained rips in the back of the tent. He pulled aside the torn sections of tent, and we looked down upon the corpse of an Egyptian worker. I recognized him, though his face and chest were horribly distorted—it was the man Hargrave had kicked out of the way upon entering the tomb! "That man is dead," I gasped. "His lungs have been stolen!" cried the historian. I spun on my heels, revulsion welling up inside me, and collided with someone. I recognized that firm chest, having collided with it before. "Percy! There is a murderous mummy on the loose!" Mr. Longville's first reaction was to take me to the safety of our tents. He then consulted a large book on Egyptian curses that he (of course) just happened to have upon his person. "A mummy is revived through magic, according to the ancient Egyptian Book of the Dead. It says that to lay the dead to rest, we will require this book and a... it's like a scarab-covered jewel," Mr. Longville said. Mr. Longville looked at me, and together we said: "An amulet!" "We found such an amulet in the tomb!" I said. Where had it gone? Shortly after, the lights flickered out. We rushed outside to see generators giving out, sparking in the dark. Our surprise was interrupted by a horrible scream. Mr. Longville and I ran toward it, but we were too late. The historian's body lay on the other side of the dig, torn nearly in half. Above him crouched the emaciated figure of the mummy, pulling gore out of the ruined torso. "Hetepheres," I said. It was nearly a whisper. She stood and I saw in her eyes a deep, eerie gleam. Bloody pieces of flesh hung between her shriveled fingers, and then she turned those fingers toward herself, thrusting what they held inside the glowing mechanical pieces of her own body! But glowing more mystical than the machines was a cracked scarab over her heart. I wished to rush forward and capture her, but my horror was much too strong. I could only watch as she left the historian's body and disappeared once more into the desert. His dead hand gripping the amulet! Torches were lit and the other monster hunters arrived. It seems Sir Hammerhorn had found another worker with his own stomach removed nearby! Oh that poor man—and that stomach to have never tasted sausage, egg, and chips! They examined the body of the poor historian. We discovered Hetepheres had taken his liver. "What can this theft of body parts mean?" I asked. "She is trying to reconstitute herself," Mr. Longville said, while examining the amulet. “To