by Mark Anthony
Before Grace could move, King Kel caught her in meaty arms, picked her up off the ground, and proceeded to crush her to jelly while his booming laughter filled the night.
37.
Deirdre Falling Hawk stared out the window of her flat as rain drizzled down from a gray London sky.
“Where are you?” she murmured. “Whoever you are, whatever it is you want, I need you to contact me. Please.”
Below, a black car sped down the street. Her heart leaped in her chest. Then, with a splash of rainwater, the car swung around a corner and vanished. She sighed, then sat again at the table. The computer the Seekers had given her whirred quietly. Emerald words pulsed on the screen.
What do you want to do?
“I wish I knew,” she muttered, picking up the photograph of the clay tablet. The photograph that had mysteriously appeared on her desk after someone had broken into the office she shared with Anders. Her eyes blurred, and the symbols in the photo rearranged themselves into new patterns, ones she felt she could almost understand.
Only she couldn't. She had some skill with Old English, and she knew a fair amount of Gaelic, but she was no expert on lost languages. That was why she had given a copy of the photograph to Paul Jacoby. He had the reputation as one of the finest classical archaeologists in the Seekers, and he had made a specialty of ancient writing systems.
Luckily, Jacoby had been so thrilled to see the photograph, he had been more than willing to swear an oath on the Book not to tell anyone else about it. Deirdre hoped she could trust him; she thought she could. Then again, she wasn't certain if she could trust anyone right now.
Or maybe it's you that can't be trusted, Deirdre.
Was that really why Nakamura had assigned Anders to be her new partner? After all, it provided a convenient way to keep a former security guard close to her at all times. And gods knew Anders had a way of showing up at her door at odd hours. She had left the Charterhouse early yesterday, grumbling something about having a headache, and he had shown up at her door at half past six with a bottle of porter and another of aspirin.
“If one doesn't solve the problem, the other will,” he had said in his incessantly cheery voice.
Every instinct in her had told her to send him away, but it was hard to believe he was really here to spy on her. She had opened the door, and they had sat on the couch—she in baggy sweats, he in the designer suit he had worn to work—watching reruns of Are You Being Served? While she wasn't certain if she had the porter or aspirin to thank, by the time Anders had gone, her headache had as well.
It was only after he left that she noticed her computer had been switched on the whole time, sitting on the table next to the folder with the photograph. Had he seen what she was working on? He would have had a few moments to himself while she poured the beer in the kitchen.
Stop it, Deirdre. Farr's the renegade, not you. He's the one they're keeping watch for.
“I wish you were here, Hadrian,” she said, setting down the photograph. “You'd know what to do.”
Her fingers hovered over the keyboard of the computer, then fell to her lap. There was no point in doing another search. She had tried every possible combination of keywords, but even with Echelon 7 access she had found nothing. Which left only one possibility.
The tablet was part of the Philosophers' private collection.
There was no other answer. Echelon 7 granted her access to everything in the Seekers' catalogues—everything except what the Philosophers kept secret for themselves. Which meant whoever had left the photograph on her desk had access to the vaults of the Philosophers. And that could only mean . . .
“You're a Philosopher yourself,” she said, touching the keyboard.
Of course, Deirdre had no evidence that the individual who had spoken to her using her computer was one with the person who had placed the photograph of the tablet on her desk. However, she couldn't believe otherwise.
I know you're out there, she typed on the computer. I know you're watching me. What do you want me to do?
She hit Enter, and the computer let out a chime.
Error. Search request not understood.
Deirdre slammed the computer shut, shoved it into her satchel, and stood. It was long past time to get to work.
She was drenched by the time she reached the Charterhouse.
“Good morning, Miss Falling Hawk,” Madeleine said. She paused in her typing, peering at the wall clock. “Wait just a moment—there we go. Good afternoon.”
Deirdre winced. “I sent an e-mail. I said I was working at home.”
“E-mail is for barbarians,” Madeleine said. “Where is your umbrella?”
“I don't have one.”
The receptionist made a clucking sound. No doubt only barbarians failed to purchase umbrellas when in London.
Deirdre headed down to her office, expecting to find Anders pounding away at his computer, but he wasn't there. Most likely he was out at lunch. It was just as well. This way she could have a bit of quiet to get some work done, though she would miss his coffee. She lifted the pot, but it was cold and empty.
Settling for a glass of water, she sat at her desk, opened her computer, and brought up the files concerning the Thomas Atwater case.
Atwater was the journeyman who, in 1619, had broken the Seventh Desideratum by returning to a former place of employment that the Philosophers had forbidden him to enter. However, as far as she could tell, there was no record of any punitive action. In fact, according to the fragmented accounts she had managed to find, Atwater had quickly risen in the Seekers, becoming a master before his untimely death at the age of twenty-nine.
Deirdre hadn't been particularly excited when Nakamura had assigned her this task, but perhaps he was onto something. Had the Philosophers evolved in their application of the Desiderata over the centuries? If so, understanding the various historical precedents might give the Seekers some power to argue interpretation of the Desiderata with the Philosophers, and that could give them more flexibility in their investigations.
However, over the last couple of days, Deirdre had run into something of a brick wall with regard to the research. There was nothing in the old records that indicated why Atwater hadn't been punished for his infraction. She performed several more searches as the clock ticked away the silent minutes, but to no avail.
She was still staring at the screen when Anders stepped into the office. On reflex she slammed the computer shut. He seemed not to notice, and he shot her a broad smile.
“Afternoon, mate. Glad to see you made it in. Is the head better?”
“Yes,” she said, then winced and held a hand to her forehead.
He clucked his tongue and moved to the coffeepot. “Looks like you mean no. We'd better get some caffeine in your system. I imagine the Seekers want your mind in tip-top shape.”
Once again she chided herself for being so suspicious of Anders. He had been nothing but friendly and helpful these last days. She opened her computer, and when he brought her a steaming mug, she accepted it with a genuine smile.
By six o'clock, the effects of the coffee had worn off. Deirdre had followed a few more leads in the Thomas Atwater case, but all of them had been dead ends. As interesting as this case was, she was going to have to move on. The fact was, she would probably never know the full story of Atwater's transgression and why the Philosophers hadn't punished him.
Anders put on his jacket and announced he was off to the pub for a pint with some friends. He invited her along, but she declined. After Anders headed out, Deirdre began packing up her own gear. All she wanted was to spend a quiet evening on the couch in front of the television.
A knock on the door startled her. She looked up and saw Paul Jacoby standing in the open doorway.
“Hello, Deirdre. Do you have a moment?”
“Of course, Paul.” She noticed the folder in his hands. “Do you have something for me?”
“I think so.” He hurried into the room. Jacoby was a sma
ll, balding, bespectacled man of around fifty. His graying mustache, crooked bow tie, and worn corduroy coat lent him a comfortable, scholarly look. He fumbled with the folders, pulling out papers and setting them on her desk. “This is fascinating. Quite extraordinary. In fact, I've never seen anything like it.”
“Nothing at all?” Deirdre said, her hopes falling.
“Oh, I don't mean this part, of course.” He pointed at the photograph of the clay tablet. “The inscription at the top here is clearly written in Linear A.”
“Linear A?”
“It's one of the earliest writing systems we know of. It was developed by the Minoan civilization that arose on Crete about three thousand years ago, and it was used to write an early form of Greek. This is a nice example of it. However, it's this inscription that astounds me.” He pointed to the runelike symbols on the bottom half of the tablet. “I've never seen writing like this before. I did a full search of the linguistic databases, but there was no match. These symbols are of utterly unknown origin. There is nothing else like them.”
Deirdre touched the silver ring on her hand. What would Jacoby think if he knew those same symbols were engraved inside the ring, as well as on the old keystone in the photo she found—the keystone taken from the building that would one day house Surrender Dorothy?
“Can you read the lower inscription?”
Jacoby shook his head. “No, though I might be able to in time. Whoever made this tablet wrote the same inscription twice, in two different writing systems. I was able to translate the passage written in Linear A.” He fumbled with more papers. “Here we go. Mind you, this is only my preliminary translation. I'll need time to refine it. But in general, it reads, ‘Forget not the Sleeping Ones. In their blood lies the key.' ”
Deirdre gripped the edge of the desk to keep from staggering, hoping Jacoby—focused as he was on the papers—didn't notice her reaction. According to the report she had read, traces of blood had been found on the keystone. Blood with otherworldly origins. But what did it mean? And who were the Sleeping Ones?
Jacoby was still talking excitedly. “You don't have access to the original tablet, do you? It would help enormously to get chemical composition data to help place its geographic origin.” He flipped back to the photograph and brushed a finger over the lower inscription. “In a way, as different as it is, the two languages appear not entirely unrelated. I can't be certain, but my supposition is that you could actually derive Linear A from this lower language. That would be exciting news. We believed Linear A was the oldest writing system in the Aegean region, but it may be that another system preceded it.”
Deirdre took the folder and closed it, forcing her hands not to tremble. “Thanks, Paul. You've been a big help.”
He smiled and adjusted his glasses. “You're quite welcome, Deirdre. And I trust you'll be so kind as to inform me if you find any more examples of this new writing system. We'll need more samples if we're to decode it.”
“Of course,” she said, hardly hearing her own words.
Jacoby nodded and left the room. Deirdre stared at the folder in her hands. An idea buzzed like a bee in her brain, insistent, but too swift to catch hold of.
“So what was that all about?” said a smoky voice.
Deirdre turned around. Sasha stood in the doorway. She wore stirrup pants and a tweed jacket with elbow patches. All she needed were jodhpurs and a riding crop to complete the faux jockey look.
Deirdre sighed. “Sasha. You startled me.”
Sasha sauntered into the room. “It's unusual to see Paul Jacoby over here.” She ran long fingers through a bouquet of lilies Anders had brought in and bent down to smell them.
“I had asked a small favor of him,” Deirdre said, not sure how much she should say. It was just Sasha. Then again, Sasha seemed to know more about what was going on in the Seekers than Deirdre ever did.
Sasha looked up from the flowers. “Paul Jacoby is a specialist in linguistics, right? Only I thought you were researching historical violations of the Desiderata.”
“It's a little side project.”
Sasha gave her a sharp look. “I thought as much. You have a sneaky look about you.”
“I do not,” Deirdre said, crossing her arms, hunching her shoulders, and taking a step back. Belatedly, she realized that probably made her look even sneakier.
“Be careful, Deirdre,” Sasha said, wagging a finger at her.
“Be careful of what?”
“I don't know. I think . . .” Sasha cast a glance at the open door. “All I know is they keep watch, all right?”
A shiver ran up Deirdre's spine. “Who's keeping watch? Do you mean Anders? Is that why they assigned him as my new partner—to keep watch in case Farr contacts me?”
Sasha shook her head. “I don't know, and I don't intend to know. And if you're a smart girl like I think you are, Deirdre, you won't start turning up stones that are better left untouched. I've learned it's best to keep your curiosity outside of the Seekers, no matter the access number on your ID card.”
Deirdre didn't know how to respond to that. Sasha was attaché to some pretty high-up people in the Seekers. What did she know that Deirdre didn't? Before she could ask, Sasha headed to the door, then glanced back over her shoulder.
“I love you, Deirdre, and I don't want you to come to harm. So be a good girl. I mean it.”
Then Sasha was gone.
An hour later, Deirdre stumbled through the door of her flat, cold and drenched once again. Maybe Madeleine was right about the whole umbrella thing. She shucked off her wet clothes and spent the next twenty minutes under a hot shower. As she toweled off, she thought again about what Sasha had said, only it didn't make any more sense than it did the first time around. Besides, Deirdre had other matters on her mind.
Forget not the Sleeping Ones. In their blood lies the key.
Only the key to what? The inscription was important, Deirdre was sure of it. But how? Blood had been found on the old keystone—blood with a DNA signature similar to Glinda's and the other denizens of Surrender Dorothy. Fairy blood.
Connections sizzled—that was it. Travis and Grace had used the blood of the fairy they rescued from Duratek to activate the gate artifact and step through to the world AU-3. Could it be possible the keystone was similar in nature to the gate? Was it part of a doorway—not a door to another room, but one to another world? Maybe. But what did that have to do with anything she was working on now?
The bee in the back of her brain finally buzzed close enough for her to catch it. She had been so focused on understanding why Atwater hadn't been punished that she had forgotten to consider the infraction itself. The place he had been forbidden to return to was an establishment called Greenfellow's. She had assumed it was simply a shop of some sort, named after its proprietor. But what if it was something else?
She threw on a robe and slippers and hurried out to the dining room. Her computer lay on the table, powered on and waiting. She sat down and typed several commands. Minutes later, she sat back, staring at the screen. Once again she had found a link where she had thought none existed.
A search on the word Greenfellow's had brought up a list of several results. The only one that mattered was a reference to a seventeenth-century London drinking house. She had superimposed the location of the tavern on a modern map, and the result glowed on the screen in front of her.
Brixton. The establishment Atwater had been forbidden by the Philosophers to return to was a tavern located in what was now Brixton. It was the same spot where the keystone had been found. And the same spot where Surrender Dorothy would stand nearly four centuries later, where Glinda and Arion and the others with fairy blood in their veins would die at the hands of Duratek.
But what did it mean? The connection couldn't be random. The Philosophers must have known about the tavern—and the strange nature of the people who inhabited it—for centuries. So why had they kept it a secret all this time? And what did the tavern and the keystone ha
ve to do with Linear A and the civilization of ancient Crete?
The phone rang. Deirdre stared as it rang a second time, a third. Then she snatched up the handset.
“Hello?”
A hissing, then a voice spoke. “They're back.”
Fear jolted through her, and excitement. She had never heard his voice before, but all the same she knew it was him.
“Who are you?” she said, cupping the phone to her ear. “Why did you give me the photo of the tablet?”
“There's no time for that, Agent Falling Hawk. In a few moments the Seekers will realize I've blocked their wiretapping device and they'll grow suspicious.” The man's voice was hollow, tinny; it was being digitally altered. “The ones I spoke of are nearly here, and it's imperative that no one else learns of their arrival. Do you understand?”
She clutched the phone. “Who are you talking about? Who's nearly here?”
There was a click, and static filled her ear. At the same moment, a knock sounded at the door. Deirdre was so startled she dropped the phone. She scrambled to pick it up and place it back on the base. Another knock. Clutching her robe around her, she hurried to the door and opened it.
A man and a woman stood on the other side. The man was tall and rangy, with green eyes and longish, thinning blond hair. He wore jeans and a dark turtleneck sweater, but it was easier to picture him in chain mail, a sword at his side. The woman was exotically beautiful, her dark hair slicked back, her gold eyes vivid. Her overcoat could not entirely conceal the sleek black leathers she wore beneath.
Before Deirdre could speak, Vani pushed past her into the flat and glanced at Beltan.
“Shut the door. Quickly.”
The blond man stepped inside and closed the door. He eyed Deirdre hopefully. “You don't have anything to eat, do you?”
“Food is not important now,” Vani said.
The blond man snorted. “Food is always important.”
“Not if you're dead. We must be certain we were not followed.” Vani moved to the window, peered out, and jerked the curtains shut.