“For what?”

  Green shook his head. “Makes little sense. There’s a hint, though, as to what might be at stake.”

  She was listening.

  “In one of the reports I saw, written in the margin was Genesis 13:14-17. You know it?”

  “I’m not that good with my Bible.”

  “The Lord said to Abram, lift up now your eyes and look from the place where you are northward and southward and eastward and westward, for all the land which you see,

  to you I will give it, and to your seed forever.”

  That she knew. A covenant that, for eons, had been the Jews’ biblical claim to the Holy Land.

  “Abram removed his tent and lived on the plain of Mamre and built there an altar to the Lord,” Green said. “Mamre is Hebron—today the West Bank—the land God gave to the Jews. Abram became Abraham. And that single biblical passage goes to the core of all Mideast disagreements.”

  That she knew, too. The conflict in the Middle East, between Jews and Arabs, was not a political battle, as many perceived. Instead it was a never-ending contest over the Word of God.

  “And there’s one other interesting fact,” Green said. “Shortly after Malone hid Haddad away, the Saudis sent bulldozers into west Arabia and obliterated whole towns. The destruction went on for three weeks. People were relocated. Buildings leveled. Not a remnant remained of those towns. Of course that’s a closed part of the country, so there was no press coverage, no attention drawn to it.”

  “Why would they do that? Seems extreme, even for the Saudis.”

  “No one ever came up with a good explanation. But they went about it quite deliberately.”

  “We need to know more, Brent. Cotton needs to know. He has a decision to make.”

  “I checked with the national security adviser an hour ago. Amazingly, he knows less about this than I do. He’s heard of the link, but suggested I talk with someone else.”

  She knew. “Larry Daley.”

  Lawrence Daley served as the deputy national security adviser, close to the president and vice president. Daley never appeared on the Sunday-morning talk-show circuit. Nor was he seen on CNN or Fox News. He was a behind-the-scenes power broker. A conduit between the upper echelons of the White House and the rest of the political world.

  But there was a problem.

  “I don’t trust that man,” she said.

  Green seemed to catch what else her tone suggested but said nothing, staring at her with penetrating gray eyes.

  “We have no control over Malone,” she made clear. “He’s going to do what he has to. And right now he’s running on anger.”

  “Cotton’s a pro.”

  “It’s different when it’s one of your own at risk.” She spoke from experience, having recently wrestled with ghosts of her own past.

  “He’s the only one who knows where George Haddad is,” Green said. “He holds all the cards.”

  “Which is precisely why they’re squeezing him.”

  Green kept his gaze locked on her.

  She knew her quandary was certainly being transmitted through suspicion she could not remove from her eyes.

  “Tell me, Stephanie, why don’t you trust me?”

  EIGHT

  OXFORDSHIRE, ENGLAND

  9:00 AM

  GEORGE HADDAD STOOD WITH THE CROWD AND LISTENED TO the experts, knowing they were wrong. The event was nothing more than a way to garner media attention for both the Thomas Bainbridge Museum and the little-praised cryptanalysts of Bletchley Park. True, those anonymous men and women had labored in total secrecy during the Second World War, eventually deciphering the German Enigma code and hastening an end to the war. But unfortunately their story wasn’t fully told until most of them were either dead or too old to care. Haddad could understand their frustration. He, too, was old, nearing eighty, and an academician. He, too, once labored in secrecy.

  He, too, had discovered a great revelation.

  He wasn’t even known any longer as George Haddad. In fact, he’d used too many aliases to remember them all. Five years he’d been gone to ground and not a word from anyone. In one respect, that was good. In another, the silence racked his nerves. Thank God only one man knew he was alive, and he trusted that person implicitly.

  In fact, he’d be dead but for him.

  Coming out today was taking a chance. But he wanted to hear what these so-called experts had to say. He’d read about the program in The Times and had to admire the British. They had a flair for media events—the scene set with the precision of a Hollywood movie. Lots of smiling faces and suits, plenty of cameras and recorders. So he made a point of staying behind their lenses. Which was easy since the focus of everyone’s attention was the monument.

  Eight stood scattered across the estate gardens, all erected in 1784 by the then earl, Thomas Bainbridge. Haddad knew the family history. The Bainbridges first bought the property, hidden in a fold of Oxfordshire and surrounded by beech woods, in 1624, erecting an enormous Jacobean mansion in the center of six hundred acres. More Bainbridges managed to retain ownership until 1848, when the Crown acquired the title through a tax sale and Queen Victoria opened the house and grounds as a museum. Ever since, visitors came to see the period furniture and sneak a glimpse of what it was like to live in luxury centuries ago. Its library had come to be regarded as one of the best anywhere on eighteenth-century furnishings. But in recent years most visited for the monument, since Bainbridge Hall possessed a puzzle, and twenty-first-century tourists loved secrets.

  He stared at the white marble arbor.

  The top, he knew, was Les Bergers d’Arcadie II, The Shepherds of Arcadia II, an unimportant work painted by Nicolas Poussin in 1640, the reverse image of his previous work The Shepherds of Arcadia. The pastoral scene depicted a woman watching as three shepherds gathered around a stone tomb, pointing at engraved letters. ET IN ARCADIA EGO. Haddad knew the translation. And in Arcadia I. An enigmatic inscription that made little sense. Beneath that image loomed another challenge. Random letters chiseled in a pattern.

  D O.V.O.S.V.A.V.V. M

  Haddad knew that new agers and conspiratorialists had labored over that combination for years, ever since they’d been rediscovered a decade before by a Guardian reporter visiting the museum.

  “To all of you here today,” a tall and portly man was saying into microphones, “we here at Bainbridge Hall welcome you. Perhaps now we will know the significance of whatever message Thomas Bainbridge left behind in this monument more than two hundred years ago.”

  Haddad knew the speaker to be the museum’s curator. Two people flanked the administrator—a man and a woman, both elderly. He’d seen their pictures in The Sunday Times. Both were former Bletchley Park cryptanalysts, commissioned to weigh the possibilities and decipher whatever code the monument supposedly contained. And the general consensus seemed to be that the monument was a code.

  What else could it be? many had asked.

  He listened as the curator explained how an announcement had been published concerning the monument, and 130 solutions had been offered by a variety of cryptographers, theologians, linguists, and historians.

  “Some were quite bizarre,” the curator said, “involving UFOs, the Holy Grail, and Nostradamus. Of course, these particular solutions came with little or no supporting evidence, so they were quickly discounted. A few of the entrants thought the letters an anagram, but the words they assembled made little sense.”

  Which Haddad could well understand.

  “One promising solution came from a former American military code breaker. He drew up eighty-two decryption matrices and ultimately extracted the letters SEJ from the sequencing. Reversed, this is JES. Applying a complex flag grid, he extracted Jesus H defy. Our Bletchley Park consultants thought this a message that denied the divine nature of Christ. This solution is a reach, to say the least, but intriguing.”

  Haddad smiled at such nonsense. Thomas Bainbridge had been a devoutly religious man. He woul
d not have denied Christ.

  The elderly lady beside the curator stepped to the podium. She was silver-haired and wore a powder-blue suit.

  “This monument presented a great opportunity for us,” she said in a melodious tone. “When I and others worked at Bletchley, we faced many challenges from the German codes. They were difficult. But if the human mind can conceive a code, it can also decipher it. The letters here are more complex. Personal. Which makes their interpretation difficult. Those of us retained to study all one hundred thirty possible solutions to this puzzle could not come to a clear consensus. Like the public, we were divided. But one possible meaning did make sense.” She turned and motioned to the monument behind her. “I think this is a love note.”

  She paused, seemingly allowing her words to take hold.

  “OVOSVAVV stands for ‘Optimae Uxoris Optimae Sororis Viduus Amantis-simus Vovit Virtutibus.’ Roughly, this means, ‘a devoted widower dedicated to the best of wives and the best of sisters.’ This is not a perfect translation. Sororis in classical Latin can mean ‘of companions’ as well as ‘of sisters.’ And vir, husband, would be better than viduus, widower. But the meaning is clear.”

  One of the reporters asked about the D and M that bookended the main clump of eight letters.

  “Quite simple,” she said. “Dis Manibus. A Roman inscription. ‘To the gods of the Underworld, hail.’ It’s akin to our Rest in Peace. You’ll find those letters on most Roman tombstones.”

  She seemed quite pleased with herself. Haddad wanted to pose a few pertinent inquiries that would burst her intellectual bubble, but he said nothing. He simply watched as the two Bletchley Park veterans were photographed before the monument with one of the German Enigma machines, borrowed for the occasion. Lots of smiles, questions, and laudatory comments.

  Thomas Bainbridge was indeed a brilliant man. Unfortunately Bainbridge had never been able to communicate his thoughts effectively, so his brilliance languished and ultimately vanished unappreciated. To the eighteenth-century mind, he seemed a fanatic. But to Haddad he seemed a prophet. Bainbridge did know something. And the curious monument standing before him, the reverse image of an obscure painting and an odd assortment of ten letters, had been erected for a reason.

  One Haddad knew.

  Not a love note, nor a code, nor a message.

  Something altogether different.

  A map.

  NINE

  KRONBORG SLOT

  10:20 AM

  MALONE PAID THE SIXTY-KRONER ADMISSION FOR HIM AND Pam to enter the castle. They followed a group that had poured off one of three buses.

  Inside, a photographic exhibit, which showed glimpses from the many productions of Hamlet, greeted them. He thought about the irony of the location. Hamlet had been about a son avenging his father, yet here he was, a father, fighting for his son. His heart ached for Gary. Never had he wanted him placed in jeopardy, and for twelve years, while he’d worked for the Billet, he’d always kept a clear line between work and home. Yet now, a year after he’d voluntarily walked away, his son was being held captive.

  “This what you used to do all the time?” Pam asked.

  “Part of it.”

  “How did you live like this? My guts are a wreck. I’m still shaking from last night.”

  “You get used to it.” And he meant it, though he’d long ago tired of lies, half-truths, improbable facts, and traitors.

  “You needed this rush, didn’t you?”

  His body was heavy with fatigue, and he wasn’t in the mood for this familiar fight. “No, Pam. I didn’t need it. But this was my job.”

  “Selfish. That’s what you were. Always.”

  “And you were just a ray of sunshine. The supportive wife who stood by her husband. So much so that you got pregnant by another man, had a son, and let me think it was mine for fifteen years.”

  “I’m not proud of what I did. But we don’t know how many of your women became pregnant, do we?”

  He stopped walking. This had to end. “If you don’t shut up, you’re going to get Gary killed. I’m his only hope and, right now, playing with my head is not productive.”

  That truth produced a momentary flash of understanding in her bitter eyes, an instant when the Pam Malone he’d once loved reappeared. He wished that woman could linger but, as always, her guard flew up and dead eyes glared back at him.

  “Lead the way,” she said.

  They entered the ballroom.

  The rectangular hall stretched two hundred feet. Windows lined both sides, each set deep in alcoves of thick masonry, the oblique light casting a subtle spell across a checkerboard floor. A dozen or so visitors milled about admiring huge oil canvases that dotted the pale yellow walls, mainly battle scenes.

  At the far end, before a hearth, Malone spotted a short, thin man with reddish brown hair. He recalled him from the Magellan Billet. Lee Durant. He’d talked with Durant a few times in Atlanta. The agent caught sight of him, then disappeared through a doorway.

  He headed across the hall.

  They passed through a series of rooms, each sparsely decorated with European Renaissance furniture and wall tapestries. Durant stayed fifty feet ahead.

  Malone saw him stop.

  He and Pam entered the room identified as the Corner Chamber. Hunting tapestries adorned plain white walls. Only a few pieces of furniture dotted the dull black-and-white tile floor.

  Malone shook Durant’s hand and introduced Pam. “Tell me what’s happening.”

  “Stephanie said to brief you, not her.”

  “As much as I’d like for her not to be here, she is, so don’t sweat it.”

  Durant seemed to consider the situation, then said, “I was also told to do whatever you ask.”

  “Glad to hear Stephanie’s being so accommodating.”

  “Get to the point,” Pam said. “We’re under a deadline.”

  Malone shook his head. “Ignore her. Tell me what’s happening.”

  “Access was gained to our secured files. No evidence of hacking or forced entry through the firewalls, so it had to be by password. That’s changed at regular intervals, but there are several hundred people with access.”

  “No traces to a particular computer?”

  “Zero. And no fingerprints in the data. Which indicates that whoever did it knew what they were doing.”

  “I assume somebody is investigating.”

  Durant nodded. “The FBI, but so far nothing. About a dozen files were viewed, one of which was the Alexandria Link.”

  Which might, Malone thought, explain why Stephanie had not immediately alerted him. There were other possibilities.

  “Here’s the interesting part. The Israelis are super-hyper right now, particularly during the last twenty-four hours. Our sources tell us that information was learned yesterday out of the West Bank from one of their Palestinian operatives.”

  “What does that have to do with this?”

  “The words Alexandria Link have been mentioned.”

  “How much do you know?”

  “I was just told this an hour ago by one of my contacts. I haven’t even fully reported to Stephanie yet.”

  “How is any of this helping?” Pam asked.

  He said to Durant, “I need to know more.”

  “I asked you a question,” Pam said, her voice rising.

  His civility ended. “I told you to let me handle this.”

  “You have no intention of giving anything to them, do you?” Her eyes blazed and she seemed ready to pounce.

  “My intention is to get Gary back.”

  “Are you willing to chance his life? All to protect some damn file?”

  A group of camera-clad visitors wandered into the room. He saw that Pam had the wisdom to hush, and he was grateful for the interruption. Definitely a mistake bringing her. He’d have to ditch her as soon as they left Kronborg, even if it meant locking her in a room at Thorvaldsen’s manor.

  The visitors wandered off.


  He faced Durant and said, “Tell me more about—”

  A bang startled him, then the ceiling-mounted camera in the corner exploded in a shower of sparks. Next came two more bangs. Durant lurched backward as blood roses blossomed from punctures in his olive-colored shirt.

  A third shot and Durant collapsed to the floor.

  Malone whirled.

  A man stood twenty feet away, holding a Glock. Malone stuffed his right arm under his jacket to find his own weapon.

  “No need,” the man calmly said, and he tossed the gun.

  Malone caught it. He gripped the pistol’s stock, finger on the trigger, aimed, and fired.

  Only a click came in response.

  His finger worked the trigger.

  More clicks.

  The man smiled. “You didn’t think I’d give it to you loaded.”

  Then the shooter fled the room.

  TEN

  WASHINGTON, DC

  4:40 AM

  STEPHANIE CONSIDERED BRENT GREEN’S INQUIRY—WHY DON’T you trust me?—and decided to be straight with her boss.

  “Everybody in this administration wants me gone. Why I’m still here, I don’t know. So I don’t trust anybody at the moment.”

  Green shook his head at her suspicion.

  “Those files were accessed by someone with a password,” she added. “Sure, they scanned through a dozen or more, but we both know the one they were after. Only a few of us are privy to the Alexandria Link. I don’t even know the details—just that we went to a lot of trouble for something that was seemingly meaningless. Lots of questions. No answers. Come on, Brent. You and I haven’t actually been asshole buddies, so why should I trust you now?”

  “Let’s be clear,” Green said. “I’m not your enemy. If I were, we wouldn’t be having this conversation.”

  “I’ve had friends in this business say that to me many times and not mean a word.”

  “Traitors are like that.”