The Alexandria Link
The Israeli stopped, perhaps sensing that this was not the time to challenge.
“The bedroom,” Stephanie said.
Dixon hesitated.
“Now.”
Dixon retreated to the top of the stairs. Stephanie gathered up the Israeli’s clothes, including her shoes. “You wouldn’t dare risk public exposure,” she said to Daley, “coming after us. But she might. This will at least slow her down.”
And they left.
FORTY-NINE
VIENNA
6:40 PM
THORVALDSEN DONNED THE CRIMSON VESTMENT. ALL MEMBERS were required to wear their robe during Assembly. The first session would begin at seven, and he wasn’t looking forward to it. Too much talk, usually, and little action. He’d never needed a cooperative to accomplish his goals. But he enjoyed the fellowship that came after the gatherings.
Gary was sitting in one of the upholstered chairs.
“How do I look?” he asked in a jovial tone.
“Like a king.”
The regal robes were ankle-length, made of velvet and richly embroidered in gold thread with the Order’s motto, JE L’AY EMPRINS. I have dared. The ensemble dated from the fifteenth century and the original Order of the Golden Fleece.
He reached for the neck chain. Solid gold with a black enameled flint forming fire steels. An ornate golden fleece hung from its center.
“This is presented to each member when inducted. Our symbol.”
“Looks expensive.”
“It is.”
“This really important to you?”
He shrugged. “It’s something I enjoy. But it’s not like a religion.”
“Dad told me you’re Jewish.”
He nodded.
“I don’t know much about Jews. Only that millions were killed in World War II. It’s not something I really understand.”
“You’re not alone. Gentiles have wrestled with our existence for centuries.”
“Why do people hate Jews?”
He’d many times pondered that question—along with the philosophers, theologians, and politicians who’d debated it for centuries. “It started for us with Abraham. Ninety-nine years old when God visited him and made a covenant, creating a Chosen People, the ones to inherit the land of Canaan. But unfortunately, that honor came with responsibility.”
He could see the boy was interested.
“Have you ever read the Bible?”
Gary shook his head.
“You should. A great book. On the one hand, God granted to the Israelites a blessing. To become the Chosen People. But it was their response to that blessing that ultimately determined their fate.”
“What happened?”
“The Old Testament says they rebelled, burned incense, credited idols for their good fortune, walked according to the dictates of their own hearts. So God scattered them among the Gentiles as punishment.”
“That why people hate them?”
He finished fastening his mantle. “Hard to say. But Jews have faced persecution ever since that time.”
“God sounds like He has a temper.”
“The God of the Old Testament is far different from the one in the New.”
“I’m not sure I like that one.”
“You’re not alone.” He paused. “Jews were the first to insist that man is responsible for his own acts. Not the gods’ fault life went bad. Your fault. And that made us different. Christians took it farther. Man brought his exile from Eden on himself, but because God loved man He redeemed us with the blood of His son. The Jewish God is angry. Justice is His aim. The Christian God is one of mercy. Huge difference.”
“God should be kind, shouldn’t He?”
He smiled, then looked around the elegant room. Time to bring things to a head. “Tell me what you think about what happened in the pavilion?”
“I’m not sure Mr. Hermann will appreciate you taking his daughter.”
“Just as your parents didn’t appreciate what happened to you. The difference is, she’s a grown woman and you’re a teenager.”
“Why is all this happening?”
“I imagine we’ll know that soon.”
The bedchamber door suddenly swung open and Alfred Hermann stormed inside. He, too, sported a regal robe with a gold medallion, his mantle adorned with a blue silk.
“You have my daughter?” Hermann said, face full of fury.
Thorvaldsen stood rigid. “I do.”
“And you obviously know this room is wired for sound.”
“That didn’t require much intelligence.”
He could see the tension building. Hermann was in uncharted territory.
“Henrik, I will not tolerate this.”
“What do you plan to do? Recall the Talons of the Eagle to deal with me?”
Hermann hesitated. “That’s what you want, isn’t it?”
Thorvaldsen stepped close. “You crossed the line when you kidnapped this young man.” He pointed at Gary.
“Where is Margarete?”
“Safe.”
“You don’t have the stomach to hurt her.”
“I have the stomach to do whatever is needed. You should know that about me.”
Hermann’s intense gaze gripped him like a hook. He’d always thought the Austrian’s bony face more fitting for a farmer than an aristocrat. “I thought we were friends.”
“I did, too. But apparently that meant nothing when you took this young man from his mother and destroyed his father’s bookshop.”
The Assembly’s first session was about to begin, which was why he’d timed his revelation with care. Hermann, as Blue Chair, must at all times exhibit discipline and confidence. Never could he allow the members to know of his personal predicaments.
Nor could he be late.
“We must go,” Hermann finally said. “This is not over, Henrik.”
“I agree. For you, it’s only beginning.”
FIFTY
WASHINGTON, DC
1:30 PM
“WOULDN’T YOU SAY YOU PUSHED DALEY TO THE MAX?” GREEN asked Stephanie.
She and Cassiopeia were riding in Green’s limousine, the rear compartment soundproofed from the front seat by a sheet of Plexiglas. Green had picked them up downtown after they’d left Daley’s house.
“He wouldn’t have come after us. Heather might have been able to wear his clothes, but not his shoes. I doubt she’d be chasing us barefoot and unarmed.”
Green did not seemed convinced. “I assume there’s a purpose for letting Daley know you were there?”
“I’d be interested to hear that one, too,” Cassiopeia added. “We could have been out without him ever knowing.”
“And I’d still be in the crosshairs. This way he has to be careful. I have something he wants. And if nothing else, Daley’s a dealer.”
Green pointed at the copy of Hardball. “What’s so vital?”
Stephanie reached for the laptop she’d told Green to bring. She slid one of the flash drives into an empty port and typed AUNT B’S into the space for a password.
“Your girl learn that, too?” Cassiopeia asked.
She nodded. “An eatery out in Maryland. Daley goes there a lot on weekends. Country-style food. One of his favorites. Struck me as odd—I considered Daley a five-star-restaurant connoisseur.”
The screen displayed a list of files, each labeled with one-word identifiers.
“Congress,” she said.
She clicked on one.
“I learned that Daley is a master of dates and times. When he squeezes a member for a vote, he has precise information about every cash contribution ever sent that member’s way. It’s odd, because he never funnels money directly. Instead lobbyists who like the idea that they’re currying favor with the White House do the dirty work. That led me to think he keeps records. Nobody’s memory is that good.” She pointed at the screen. “Here’s an example.” She counted. “Fourteen payments to this guy totaling a hundred eighty-seven thousand dolla
rs over a six-year period. Here’s the date, place, and time of each payment.” She shook her head. “Nothing frightens a politician more than details.”
“We’re talking bribes?” Green asked.
She nodded. “Cash payments. Pocket money. Not enough to draw attention, but enough to keep the lines of communication open. Simple and sweet, but it’s the kind of political capital Daley accumulates. The kind this White House uses. They’ve managed to pass some pretty sweet legislation.”
Green stared at the screen. “Must be a hundred or more House members.”
“He’s effective. I’ll give him that. The money is spread around. Both sides of the aisle.”
She clicked another file, which displayed a list of senators. Thirty or so. “He also has a cadre of federal judges. They get into financial trouble, just like everybody else, and he has people right there to help out. I found one in Michigan who talked. He was on the verge of bankruptcy until one of his friends appeared with money. His conscience finally got to him, especially after Daley wanted him to rule a particular way. Seems a lawyer in a case before him was a big party contributor and needed a little guarantee on victory.”
“Federal courts are a hotbed of corruption,” Green muttered. “I’ve said that for years. Give somebody a lifetime appointment and you’re asking for trouble. Too much power, too little oversight.”
She grabbed another of the flash drives. “One of these is enough to indict several of those turkey buzzards.”
“Such an eloquent description.”
“It’s the black robes. They look just like buzzards, perched on a limb, waiting to pick a carcass clean.”
“Such little respect for our judiciary,” he said with a grin.
“Respect is earned.”
“Might I interject something,” Cassiopeia said. “Why don’t we just go public? Draw attention. Not the way I usually handle things, but it seems like it would work here.”
Green shook his head. “As you noted earlier, I don’t know much about the Israelis. And you don’t understand the PR machine of this administration. It’s a master of spin. They’d cloud the issue to the point of obscurity, and we’d lose Daley and the traitor.”
“He’s right,” Stephanie said. “That won’t work. We have to do this ourselves.”
Traffic stopped the car and Green’s cell phone rang a soft chime. He reached into his suit pocket and removed the unit, studying the LCD. “This should prove interesting.” He pressed two buttons and talked into the speakerphone. “I’ve been waiting for your call.”
“Bet you have,” Daley said.
“Seems I might not make it to that box in Vermont after all.”
“That’s the thing about chess, Brent. Every move is an adventure. Okay, I’ll give you credit, yours was a good one.”
“You have to give Stephanie credit for that.”
“I’m sure she’s there, so well done, Stephanie.”
“Anytime, Larry.”
“This changes little,” Daley made clear. “Those elements I mentioned are still agitated.”
“You need to calm them down,” Stephanie said.
“Do you want to talk?” Daley asked.
Stephanie started to speak, but Green held up his hand. “And the benefit of that?”
“Could be great. There’s a lot at stake.”
She couldn’t resist. “More than your ass?”
“Much more.”
“You lied when you said you knew nothing about the Alexandria Link, didn’t you?” Green asked.
“Lie is such a harsh word. More that I concealed facts in the interest of national security. That the price I’m going to have to pay?”
“I think it’s reasonable, considering.”
Stephanie knew Daley would realize they could disseminate his secrets at will. Both she and Green possessed contacts in the media, ones that would love to dirty this administration.
“All right.” Resignation filled Daley’s tone. “How do you want to do this?”
Stephanie knew the answer. “Public. Lots of people.”
“That’s not a good idea.”
“It’s the only way we’re going to do it.”
The speaker was quiet for a moment before Daley said, “Tell me where and when.”
FIFTY-ONE
LISBON
7:40 PM
MALONE AWOKE, SITTING PROPPED AGAINST A ROUGH STONE wall.
“It’s after seven thirty,” Pam whispered in his ear.
“How long was I out?”
“An hour.”
He could not see her face. Total darkness engulfed them. He recalled their situation. “Everything okay up there?” he said quietly to McCollum.
“Nice and quiet.”
They’d left the church just before five and hustled to the upper choir, where another doorway led out into the cloister. Visitors had been slow in leaving, taking advantage of the late-afternoon sun for a few last photos of the opulent Moorish-style decorations. The upper gallery had offered no safe refuges, but running along the church’s north wall at ground level they’d found eleven wooden doors. A placard explained that the compact spaces had once served as confessionals.
Though the doors to ten confessionals had been locked, McCollum had managed to open one thanks to a hole drilled beneath the locking bolt. Apparently the lock was faulty, and the hole was how the staff gained entrance. McCollum had used an impressive knife from his pocket to slide the bolt, relocking it after they’d entered. Malone had not known the man was armed. No way he’d carried the knife on the airplane, but McCollum had checked a small bag at the London airport, now stored in a locker at the Lisbon airport. Malone, too, had stored the satchel from Haddad’s apartment in a Lisbon locker. McCollum’s not mentioning the knife only raised Malone’s level of suspicion.
Inside the confessional, a screened iron grate opened into another dark cubbyhole. A door in the second chamber led into the church, allowing the penitent to enter. The screen separated the two so that penance could be administered.
Malone had grown up Catholic and recalled a similar arrangement, though simpler in construction, at his church. He’d never understood why he couldn’t see the priest who was absolving him of sin. When he’d asked, the nuns who’d taught him had simply said separation was required. He came to learn that the Catholic Church was big on what to do, but didn’t particularly like to explain why. Which partly explained why he no longer practiced the religion.
He glanced at the luminous dial of Pam’s TAG watch. Nearly eight PM. Early, but the site had now been closed three hours.
“Any movement outside?” he asked McCollum softly.
“Not a sound.”
“Let’s do it,” he whispered through the dark. “No use sitting here any longer.”
He heard McCollum’s knife again snap into place, then the scraping of metal on metal.
The confessional’s door creaked open.
He came to his feet but had to crouch against the low ceiling.
McCollum swung the door inward. They stepped out into the lower gallery, the cool night air welcome after three hours in what amounted to a closet. Across the open cloister, in the upper and lower galleries, incandescent fixtures burned softly, the elaborate tracery between the arches more shadow than detail. Malone stepped into the nearest arch and stared up at the night sky. The gloom of the shadowy cloister seemed accented by a starless night.
He headed straight for the stairway that led to the upper choir. He hoped the door that opened into the church—the one he’d earlier used to find the choir from the nave—remained unlocked.
He was glad to discover that it stood open.
The nave was cemetery-quiet.
Light from the exterior floods that bathed the outer façade backlit the stained-glass windows. A handful of weak bulbs broke the thick darkness only in the lower choir.
“This place is different at night,” Pam said.
He agreed, and his guard was up.
br /> He headed straight for the chancel and hopped over the velvet ropes. At the high altar, he climbed five risers and stood before the sacrarium.
He turned and focused back toward the upper choir at the far end.
The pale gray iris of the rose window stared back at him, no longer alive with the sun.
McCollum seemed to have anticipated what he’d need and appeared beside him holding a candle and matches. “Offering rack, back near the baptismal font. I saw it earlier.”
He grabbed the candle and McCollum lit the wick. He brought the dim glow close to the sacrarium and studied the image molded into the door.
Mary sat with the infant in her lap, Joseph behind her, all three crowned by halos. Three bearded men, one kneeling before the child, paid homage. Three other men—one strangely wearing what appeared to be a military helmet—gazed on. Above the scene, with clouds parted, a five-pointed star shone down.
“It’s the Nativity,” Pam said from behind him.
He agreed. “Sure looks like it. The three Magi following the star, coming to praise the newborn king.”
He recalled the quest and what they should be looking for here, where silver turned to gold. Find the place that forms an address with no place, where is found another place.
A challenging riddle.
“We need to get out of here, but we also need a picture of this. Since none of us has a camera, any ideas?”
“After I bought the tickets,” McCollum said, “I walked upstairs. There’s a gift shop. Full of books and postcards. Bound to be a picture there.”
“Good thought,” he said. “Lead the way.”
SABRE CLIMBED THE STAIRS TO THE UPPER GALLERY, PLEASED that he’d made the right choice. When Alfred Hermann had tasked him with finding the library, his ultimate plan had quickly formed in his mind, and the Israeli surveillance team’s elimination in Germany had cemented his course.
Hermann would never have sanctioned deliberately provoking the Jews, and it would have been impossible to explain why those murders had been necessary, which was simply to throw the other side off balance for the few days he’d need to accomplish his goal.