by Maggie Hall
“Beijing?” I squinted at my father through the morning sun. “I thought Johannesburg was next. The Konings.” That was who I’d hoped to postpone for a few days. Until after Greece.
“Yes.” My father shifted. Across the table, Cole downed his espresso in one gulp. “There’s been a change of plans.”
I looked at Lydia, but she was staring intently at her menu. “What kind of change of plans?” I said.
My father cleared his throat. “In light of recent events, our time line needs to change. The Wang family in Beijing. The Fredericks in Washington. And that will be all.”
I put my cup back down in its saucer with a clatter. “What about the other families?” He couldn’t mean what I thought he meant.
“We won’t be visiting the others. After meeting these final two, we’ll take a day to consider the options, and then you’ll choose one.”
The coffee turned bitter in my throat. “You said I had two weeks. It’s only been five days.”
My father reached into his briefcase and pulled out a newspaper. He set it on the table in front of me. Murders Around the Globe: Coincidence or Conspiracy? said the headline. “This is getting out of hand. There isn’t time to consider families who aren’t real options.”
I tried to pick up my espresso cup again, but my hands were shaking too hard. “But what about my clues? Finding the tomb? Saving my mom?” I looked around for Jack, but he was posted at the entrance to the restaurant, too far away to hear.
Lydia was still avoiding my gaze. I tried not to be hurt that she hadn’t warned me about this.
My father refolded the newspaper. “I do hope we’ll be able to get your mother back once the mandate is fulfilled. Since your clues haven’t produced anything concrete, this appears to be the only way.”
The clues were producing something concrete. I just couldn’t tell them about it—at least not until my mom was safe. A vaporetto passed with a low hum and the quiet splashing of propellers. “I’m not coming, then,” I said.
My father took off his sunglasses. “Avery.”
“No.” If they were really going to do this, I had to get to Greece as soon as possible. “If I don’t want to get married, and you’re not even going to let me meet all the candidates, why bother pretending you care who or what I choose?”
Lydia finally spoke up. “You’ll like Alex Frederick,” she pleaded. At least I could hear the guilt in her voice. “He’s really nice. And—”
I shook my head. Maybe he was, but that wasn’t the point. And I could no longer afford to take the Saxons’ feelings into consideration.
“You can go to Beijing and Washington alone.” I injected a little extra venom into the words so they wouldn’t question my motives. “Colette LeGrand’s invited me to spend some time on her yacht, and I’m going. I’ll be there until you get back.”
“No,” Lydia said. “Even if you don’t come with us, you being alone is too dangerous—”
“Jack will come with me.” I pushed back from the table, and my father started to get up, too. I held out one hand. “Just stop. You’re getting exactly what you want. I won’t even be there to argue while you decide what to do with my life.”
I stalked out of the restaurant and didn’t look back, not wanting to see the hurt on my sister’s face or the disappointment on my father’s. We’d better be right about Delphi. It was my last chance.
• • •
A few hours later, Jack and I were on Colette’s private plane. The second we touched down, three missed calls pinged on my phone, the number showing up only as UNAVAILABLE. The Order. As we taxied to a stop, I put the phone on speaker and called back, Jack tense in the seat beside me.
“I was beginning to think you were ignoring my calls.” Scarface. I hadn’t heard his voice for a while. They hadn’t called since we were in Paris—it had just been those texts.
Jack leaned forward, elbows on his knees.
“I’m not ignoring anything. We’ve found some clues,” I said. “We’re looking into the next one right now.”
“Where are you?”
I met Jack’s eyes. They probably had ways of finding out where we were even if we didn’t tell them. I didn’t want to lie and give them any reason to take it out on my mom. “Greece,” I said.
“Hmm. You’d better hope it’s lucky for you. The Commander is getting restless.”
I huffed out a breath. “I need to talk to my mom,” I said. “That was part of the deal.”
There was some shuffling, and then a voice. “Avery?”
My breath caught, and I clawed for Jack’s hand. “Mom. I love you. I—”
“That’s enough,” Scarface said, and a door slammed on the other end of the phone.
I gulped back a tightness in my throat. She was okay. “I’m not going to marry anyone,” I said suddenly. “Killing those boys is just making the Circle more determined to find you. It’s not helping.”
Scarface chuckled. “You have seven days.” With that, he hung up.
• • •
Last chance, my brain kept repeating as we walked through the Athens airport. Last chance. My mom was alive and okay, for now. According to the Order we had seven days, but I only had four until I was expected to do my Circle duty.
Elodie and Stellan and Luc had arrived minutes after we did. Walking out of the airport, we passed a magazine stand, and I realized exactly why Colette had been hiding. Colette LeGrand’s Pain, said one of the headlines in English. All the magazines had paparazzi photos of her coming out of an apartment building, her heart-shaped face drawn and sad and framed by her famous tumble of auburn curls, looking straight into the camera like the photographer was the one who had killed her boyfriend.
“Are you sure she’s okay with us being here?” I felt bad having to bring her into our schemes so soon after her boyfriend’s death.
“I think she wants the distraction,” Luc said. “She’s been all alone, hiding out before she has to make an appearance at Cannes.”
I nodded. It wasn’t like we had much of a choice, anyway.
The Mediterranean was a color of aqua I didn’t realize water could be in real life. Colette’s yacht was in a marina near Athens, where dozens of white boats bobbed on the sparkling water, backed by whitewashed cliffs.
Colette greeted us from under a wide-brimmed hat and sunglasses, her hair as wild as ever, but her smile noticeably dimmed. She ushered us up the gangplank and onto the boat, where she’d arranged a spread of cheese and fruit and bread and olives that covered every surface in the yacht’s small, well-appointed kitchen. She must have had every grocery store in Greece on speed dial.
Luc sat down at the booth table, digging in like he hadn’t eaten for weeks. I blinked, letting my eyes adjust, and Colette grabbed my hand.
“Come in, cherie,” she said, wrapping me in a hug. I was surprised again, even though I’d met her before, to realize she wasn’t any taller than me. And just like I’d thought when we’d met in Istanbul, despite being one of the world’s biggest movie stars and on the top of every men’s magazine’s Hottest List year after year, she was soft and warm and welcoming and almost momlike in a way that nearly brought tears to my eyes, not least because she was the one we should be comforting. It was only then I realized I was expecting to see blame in her eyes, or at least that horrible hope. But she just pulled away and looked me up and down. “Eat. You look thin. What have these ruffians been feeding you?”
She thrust a plate in my hands—she must have also bought out the Anthropologie kitchen department—and perched on a bar stool, watching us all anxiously. Last time I’d seen her, she’d been so relaxed, joking around with her boyfriend Liam even though the Order was attacking Circle members all over the globe.
Later that night, they’d gotten to Liam, too. And Colette hadn’t escaped unscathed. When their car’s brakes had gone o
ut and the gas tank exploded, she’d gotten out alive, but the lace tunic she wore exposed the angry red scar on her neck and shoulder.
“Thanks,” I said, filling the plate with fruit. Jack, Stellan, and Elodie gradually wandered over, too, picking at the spread.
“Lucien told me a little, but what exactly are you all doing in Greece?” Colette said in her soft accent.
Elodie glanced at Jack and me, and I shrugged. Just by coming here, we’d obviously decided to trust her.
Jack told our story, and Stellan added details until we got to the part about Delphi.
Colette had taken it all in surprisingly easily. “What’s the plan?” she asked. “What can I do?”
“Get us to Delphi,” Jack said.
“The captain of the boat is just up in the village. I’ll make a call.” Colette disappeared and was back a few minutes later. “Done. We’ll be outside Delphi by morning. Now what?”
Elodie unzipped her bag and pulled out a bathing suit. “Now come sit out on the deck and let’s enjoy Greece.”
• • •
A few hours later, I set my knife on a lounge chair on the upper deck and angrily flicked back the strands of hair that had come loose from my ponytail. Jack and I had decided to take the free afternoon to train. I had a scrape on my arm that was smarting from sweat, and I’d narrowly missed giving Jack a black eye with my elbow.
As usual, the knife training was not going well. It was like my hands weren’t meant to hold it. The second I tried a move, I’d drop it, or fumble, or forget everything I’d learned about blocking and leave myself open to attack.
I leaned on the railing, watching the wake behind the boat as we chugged toward Delphi. Elodie, Colette, and Luc were sunbathing on the next deck down. Elodie looked even taller and thinner than usual in her sleek black one-piece, and Colette was her opposite, a modern-day Marilyn Monroe, curvy and soft in a white crochet bikini, her hair pulled back in a boho headband and topped with sunglasses big enough to cover her entire face. She looked more relaxed already, and I was glad we were at least able to do that for her. But it wasn’t them that made me laugh out loud. Luc lounged on a chair between the girls, gesturing animatedly with a cigarette. I had forgotten how many European men wore Speedos instead of swim trunks, and Luc was wearing a tiny one, turquoise with white flowers. If I was seeing correctly, the earpieces of his mirrored sunglasses matched.
“Oh wow,” I said.
Colette heard me, and waved. “Come down! We only have a few more minutes of good sun.”
“I don’t have a bathing suit,” I called, and then turned to Jack. “Do you?”
He shook his head and gestured to Luc. “And I would not be able to compete with that if I did.”
I’d seen Jack with no shirt on, and flowered Speedo or no, Luc had nothing on him. But I didn’t say that.
“We should go in,” I said instead. I shoved my knife back into the makeshift sheath I’d made of cardboard and stuck it in my bag. “I have to call Alistair and Lydia back.” My father and sister had both left me messages earlier. I couldn’t tell whether they genuinely felt bad about our fight, or were worried about me, or were just trying to make sure I hadn’t run away. I tried not to care, but I couldn’t help hoping they hadn’t given up on me. If we found the tomb—when we found it—everything could be different.
That made me remember something I’d been meaning to ask Jack for days. More important stuff had kept crowding it out. “Dev Rajesh—” I bit my lip. If talking about every dead person we knew was going to be this difficult, I was in for a hard time. “Dev said something, at dinner the other day. About an Oliver Saxon.”
Jack, who was picking his jacket up off the railing, stiffened. “What did he say?”
“He just mentioned the name, and I didn’t get a chance to ask any more.”
Jack’s face had gone blank as a mask. “It doesn’t matter. It’s not something you need to worry about.” His words were clipped.
“But—”
“I’m going inside. I think Elodie wanted to do dinner soon.”
The cabin door swung shut behind him before I could respond, and I was left trying to talk to empty air. What was that?
I made my way out of the sun and back into the boat’s cabin, and I heard Stellan’s voice.
“Why don’t you tell her anything? You can only keep her in a bubble for so long.”
I stopped, holding the door so it wouldn’t slam and give me away.
Something banged on the counter. “I’m keeping her safe.” It was Jack. “You know what the Circle can do to people.”
“I do. That’s why you shouldn’t keep things from her. Let her make her own decisions.”
“I don’t recall asking for your opinion.”
“You used to.” Stellan’s voice was mock wistful. “Remember those days when we were in things together?”
“No.” I heard the refrigerator close and footsteps recede.
“I’m just saying,” Stellan called, “If you’re not careful, she’s going to realize she has other options. You see how they all look at her. It’s not even just the eyes. She’s so little and pretty. It’s like blood in the water.”
A cabinet door banged shut so loudly, I jumped.
“I said they,” said Stellan, but it was obvious he was goading Jack on purpose. “This is just business for me. A business transaction with historically wide-reaching political, moral, and personal implications. The usual.”
“Would you please stop talking?”
“Only saying you don’t have to worry. Wide-eyed innocent isn’t my type. I wouldn’t touch your not-girlfriend.” Stellan paused, and I could hear a grin in his voice when he said, “Unless she asked me to.”
Okay, enough.
I made a show of slamming the door and clomping loudly down the stairs, and not a moment too soon. Jack looked ready to punch him. “Elodie was talking earlier about getting dressed up for dinner,” I said, so cheerful I’m sure I sounded fake. “Are we stopping somewhere?”
Jack shot one more glare at Stellan, who sat at the dining table, his legs stretched out along the booth on one side, a laptop open in front of him.
“I assume Elodie wants to do a formal dinner on the boat. She loves family dinners,” Stellan said. “We don’t get to do it that often.”
The sun was starting to set, and as I watched, the strings of white lights flickered to life out on the deck. Elodie appeared, still in her bathing suit, holding an armload of flowers and candles that she plunked down on the long table in the outdoor dining room. Colette flitted in after her, with napkins and silverware.
I squeezed Jack’s arm. “Let’s go help,” I said, and pulled him outside. I wondered what Stellan had been talking about.
“Wait.” Jack stopped me in the breezeway. He chewed his lower lip. “Oliver Saxon was Lydia and Cole’s older brother. He was killed in an accident two years ago.”
I froze. “What?”
Jack tugged on the sleeve of his T-shirt, obviously uncomfortable.
“The oldest son of the Saxon family was killed?” I repeated. “Does that not sound exactly like what’s going on now?”
“It was a freak accident. I don’t think it has anything to do with the current attacks, which is why I didn’t tell you. No need for extra worries.” An unconvincing smile touched his lips. “Shall we go help Elodie with dinner?”
I nodded and followed him slowly, trying to picture the half brother I’d never know.
CHAPTER 13
The next morning, we woke up docked outside Delphi. The cries of seagulls and the light metallic ting of ropes hanging off the sailboats bobbing alongside our yacht normally would have been calming, but I was too tense to even eat breakfast. The bracelet had to be here, or we were finished.
We headed inland, where the air was arid and hot. I’d i
magined Greece green and tropical, but the part of the country near Delphi wasn’t like that at all. Gnarled shrubbery and rocky outcroppings gave way to spring grass dotted with modestly sized pines and olive trees, with sage green leaves and twisted trunks straight out of a fairy tale. Towns dotted the hillsides, all whitewashed walls and red roofs.
At the Oracle site, I thought there’d be a single temple, but built into the dramatic hillside were ruins of several temples and a large amphitheater. We had a way bigger area to search than I’d anticipated.
When we got out of the cab, Stellan touched my arm. “There’s a car that looked like it was tailing us,” he murmured. “Stay close.”
I cursed under my breath. It wouldn’t be my father’s people, so if someone was following us now, it was the Order. “Luc?” I said. He was ahead of us, standing in the shade of an olive tree with Jack.
“I told him, too. He’ll be careful.”
I glanced over my shoulder, but all I saw was a tour bus with a stream of elderly people climbing on. “Let’s go, then.”
Colette and Elodie had already gone one way, toward a circular temple with just a few columns still standing that seemed to be on all the tourist brochures. The rest of us spread out around the main temples. Stellan stuck close to Luc, and they headed up the hill to an amphitheater, while Jack and I scrambled down a fall of white stones gone gray with age and onto the foundation of a mostly destroyed structure.
The temple was fenced off with a single rope running along the edge of the path. Since there was no one else around, we stepped over it. Spears of bright green grass pierced the stone, like the earth thought the temple was part of it now, after all these years. It was eerily quiet. I glanced back toward the parking lot before kneeling down and inspecting one of the columns. “Where would he have hidden a bracelet? This place is huge.”
“I would assume one of two possibilities,” Jack said. “He could have buried it, in which case we’re looking for a marker or the entrance to a tunnel. Or he could have hidden it inside something. A secret space in one of these columns, maybe?”