by Gregg Loomis
“Not him,” Jacob whispered at her elbow, startling her. She hadn’t realized he had followed in the wake she had left in the crowd like a passing ship. “Neither one of ’em.”
“How can you be sure?” she asked quietly.
“Those are the pair that came to my flat looking for him, the ones you doubt were the police. Looks like they caught up with him, after all.”
Gurt had not been aware she had been holding her breath. “Gott sei danke!” she muttered in an uncharacteristic lapse into German.
She was equally thankful she was not viewing the mortal remains of Langford Reilly and shocked at the thought he could have killed anybody. Lang had taken the Agency’s training in self-defense, even learned to kill, but he definitely was not the lethal type. He was a wiseass, not an assassin.
“We need to find him,” she said, turning away from the corpses. “Any ideas?”
Jacob was patting his pockets, no doubt searching for the pipe he had left in his apartment. “No more than I had a few minutes ago. I’m afraid.”
Gurt closed her eyes, a gesture several bystanders mistook for a horrified reaction to Americanlike violence on the streets. Shit. She had left her cigarettes in her purse in Jacob’s flat. If ever she could have used a Marlboro . . .
3
London, Piccadilly
The door at the top of Nellie’s stairs opened into what could have been the lobby of a tourist-class hotel: unmatched chairs scattered in view of a cheap television set, a certain worn quality to the few end tables, magazines carelessly tossed about. The girls were the ones who relaxed here. Customers rarely saw the room.
Had the place been done in antiques, the furniture still wouldn’t have gotten Lang’s first attention. Young women, most in their teens or early twenties, lounged. Every skin color the world had to offer was on display with a minimum of cover. Most wore short pajamas or bra and panties. A few were done up in more exotic garb such as embroidered kimonos or shifts in vibrant African colors. Nellie’s inventory reflected the ethnic diversity London embraced.
None of them gave Lang more than a bored glance. Nothing like being ignored by a roomful of partially dressed women to shrink the old ego.
Nellie emerged from a hallway opposite from him, squinting at Herr Schneller’s moustache and jowls. They inspected each other as warily as a couple of dogs meeting on the street. Lang was surprised she looked pretty much the same as he remembered. Not a thread of silver streaked the blue-black hair that seemed to sparkle with green and amber like a crow’s wing in the sun. Her face was smooth, devoid of the little wrinkles years try to sneak by. Her chin was sharp, unblunted by the wattles of age. Her only concession to the passage of time was a dress that reached her knees, instead of the microskirts Lang remembered. Even so, her calves were slender, well-turned and without the mapping of varicose veins.
Her important parts had defied gravity as well as old age.
Lang took her gently in his arms and planted a wet one on her cheek. “You’re still a young girl, Nellie.”
She displayed teeth that must have put at least one orthodontist’s kids through university. “You compliment both me and my unbelievably expensive plastic surgeon.”
There was still a trace of the Balkans in her voice. She cocked her head, leaned back and regarded him like a specimen in a jar. “But you . . . you don’t look the same.”
“Not all of us age as well as you.”
Her rich, thick hair had always been her best feature—or at least of those Lang could see. She shook her head, the silky strands caressing her shoulders. “That’s not what I mean, luv.”
Lang touched the moustache and padded cheeks. “Let’s just say you’re the only person in London I want to recognize me.”
A smile twitched the corners of a sensuous mouth. “I thought you had left your position with . . .”
He let her go and managed to drag his eyes off her long enough to make sure there wasn’t anybody there who didn’t belong. A little late. If Pegasus had been waiting for him, he’d be dead. He’d been far too interested in the scenery to notice potential danger. Death by carnal desire.
Lang stepped back and shut the door. “I did. It’s the cops I’m dodging.”
She treated him to those teeth again. “The police, is it, luv? You’ve come to the right place.”
“That’s what I hoped you’d say.”
A second look around the room and he didn’t see any familiar faces, faces from the past. Attrition was fierce in Nellie’s line of work.
“I’d like to spend the night,” Lang said. “Make a telephone call if I could.”
She raised manicured eyebrows. “Make a call and spend the night, would you?” She swept a hand in an arc. “Are my girls so ugly you need to call in talent?”
Lang grinned sheepishly. “No, no. I need to speak with a friend in the States, a priest, actually.”
Nellie laughed, a blunt coughing sound. “A priest? We know about priests, what they do. No wonder you never wanted any of my girls.”
She said it loud enough to get the attention of several of the young women nearby. If he hadn’t been so occupied with Pegasus, Lang might have blushed.
She took him by the hand to lead him into the hall she had come out of. It was lined with doors like a corridor in a hotel, except there were no numbers. They stopped in front of one while Nellie fished around in her blouse. Lang was about to make the obvious crude comment when she produced a key and unlocked the door.
“Sue Lee’s room,” she explained. “She’s on the coast of Spain with a client.”
She wrinkled her nose at a faint odor Lang couldn’t identify. “Been cooking in here on her wok. Vietnamese, Japanese, something like that. You’ll get used to the smell.” She ushered him inside. “Sure you don’t want company, luv?”
The room looked like one in a girls’ dorm. A vanity with light-studded mirror was built into one wall. A plain wooden chair, a metal chest of drawers and a single bed completed the furnishings. It wasn’t exactly the place Lang would have imagined a high-price hooker spending her off time.
Nellie had been following his appraising look around. “The girls don’t entertain in their rooms. The traffic would make it hard for the coppers to look the other way. They use hotel rooms or have their own flats. She pointed to a door on the other side of the vanity. “The loo. Connects with the next room. Mind that unless you want a surprise. Help yourself to the telephone.”
“Thanks.”
She started to close the door and stopped. “Sure there’s nothing I can get you?”
Lang smiled. “Thanks, but no.”
She looked at him as though seeing him for the first time. “On the run from the law, bet you haven’t eaten. Some of the girls always get fish and chips, Chinese, some sort of take-away. No trouble to get something for you.”
The mention of food reminded him he hadn’t eaten since . . . since Rachel’s gut-cramping Indian fare the night before. He must have fully recovered because he was suddenly hungry enough to risk another had it been available. Fortunately, it wasn’t.
“You talked me into it,” he said, pulling some bills out of his pocket. “Surprise me.”
Finally alone, Lang reached for the telephone, one of those cutesy ivory-and-gold ones that is supposed to look like an antique. He picked it up, happy to hear a very contemporary dial tone. He dialled 00, international, 1 for North America, and 404, one of Atlanta’s area codes, and then information. Never before had he paid particular notice to the toneless voice of the computerized information service. It had an American accent.
After a series of astral clicks and whirs, a familiar voice was on the line, words so clear they might have been spoken from across the room rather than across the Atlantic. “Lang?”
“It’s me, Francis, your favorite heretic.”
Francis’s chuckle was audible an ocean away. “Glad to hear from you, although I’ve been reading some pretty disturbing things in the local fish-w
rapper.”
Lang was thankful the phone’s cord extended to the bed. He stretched out. This was going to take awhile. “Fama volat, Frances, rumor travels fast. Besides, you know the media: accused on page one-A, acquitted somewhere in the obituaries.”
“I suppose,” the priest said, a rueful note clearly detectable. “They publish accusations but not the rebuttal.”
“If it bleeds, it leads,” Lang said. “Gotta pump the ratings for the six o’clock news and sell advertising for the paper.”
“Somehow, I don’t think you had your secretary have me wait for your call just so you could tell me you didn’t do it.”
Lang took a deep breath and exhaled. “No, you’re right as usual.”
“You’ve recognized your feet are set upon the road to hell and you want me to hear your confession.”
Even the fatigue that was beginning to fog Lang’s mind couldn’t suppress a chuckle. “You don’t have enough time left on this earth to hear my full confession.”
“Then it’s my pastoral skill and brilliant intellect you seek.”
“Don’t you guys take some sort of vow of humility? But, yeah, sort of. First, listen to what I have to tell you. Pay attention. There’ll be a test later.”
It took Lang the better part of twenty minutes to explain. He only paused to answer an occasional question and thank the young woman who brought him chopsticks, a box of steaming rice and another box of food, the contents of which he tried not to speculate about.
Lang finished his meal and story about the same time.
“Templars?” Francis asked skeptically. “Over a billion dollars a year from the Vatican?”
Lang was licking his fingers, more an effort to remove the inevitable grease than because he had enjoyed the meal. “I don’t suppose you know anything about that?”
“The money from the Vatican? Not likely that sort of thing would be shared with a lowly parish priest. I know a little about the Templars and this area of France, the . . .”
“Languedoc.”
“The Languedoc and the castle this monk Pietro mentions, Blanchefort. Some people think the holy grail is hidden somewhere in that area.”
Lang forgot greasy fingers. “Holy grail? Like, the cup Jesus used at the Last Supper?”
“That’s what it was to Richard Wagner and Steven Spielberg. Remember the opera and the Indiana Jones movie? It was a cup in Arthurian legend, too. But it could be anything. The earliest legends describe it as a stone with mystical properties and some scholars think it relates to the ark of the Covenant which disappeared from Jerusalem a thousand years before Christ. Hitler thought it was the lance of Longinus, the spear that pierced Christ’s side. No reason it couldn’t be the ‘vessel’ your friend Pietro found in the Gnostic document.”
“But you don’t think such a thing exists?” Lang asked.
Francis was just warming up. He always saved the best part of his arguments for last. “I don’t know the Church’s position on the subject, guess they haven’t had to address the matter in a few hundred years. Me, I say, why not? What I do know, there was a parish priest in the area we’re talking about, a little town called, called Rennes-le-Château, I think. I’m fairly sure the man’s name was Sauniêre and he lived around the middle, last part of the nineteenth century.”
“You remember all this like you do your catechism? I mean, that’s remarkable you could recall all that along with all the mumbo-jumbo you have to memorize.”
“I’ll ignore that, although it might calm your heathen breast to know I actually went to the place a couple of year ago, was in France as part of an international Church council and I traveled around for a couple of days until I could get the cheap airfare home. Saunière was pretty much a tourist industry. If you can keep still, I’ll tell you why.”
“I’m quieted, I’m quieted.”
“He, Sauniêre, was a poor priest in a poor parish. He was doing some minor restoration work in the church building himself because they couldn’t afford professional help. Anyway, part of the altar came loose. Inside was a sheaf of old parchments. He seemed excited, showed them around but wouldn’t let anyone read them. Not that the locals could have; they were supposedly in Latin or Hebrew or something. Maybe the Gnostic document that Templar was talking about.
“Almost immediately his little parish had funds to repair the church, build a hotel-size guest house, more money than anyone ever thought was in the whole Languedoc. A steady procession of cardinals began visiting. We’re talking about the ecclesiastical equivalent of Podunk, a place those cardinals would never have heard of a year earlier. Sauniêre’s personal lifestyle crossed the poverty line like a rocket on the way up, too. New vestments, housekeeper, wine cellar. All of those things a true prince of the church might have.”
“Like a choice of little boys or concubines?” Lang couldn’t help it. Francis was too easy a target for the church’s peccadillos.
“Any more vulgarities from infidels and I’m gonna hang up and say my rosary. Anyway, Saunière never revealed the source of his sudden wealth. He died under mysterious circumstances as did his housekeeper.”
“Don’t tell me,” Lang said, “let me guess: He died in some sort of accident involving fire.”
He could tell Francis was puzzled. “Actually, he drowned when a small boat turned over. Nobody ever knew what he was doing in the middle of a river. Why?”
“Pietro mentioned the four ancient elements of fire, wind, water and earth. Go on.”
“The locals speculate the parchments were some sort of treasure map, but they were never found. Once he died, both money and church dignitaries were never seen again in the area.”
Lang stretched, fighting the urge to simply go to sleep. “So the man got lucky, found a buried treasure or the altar was full of winning lottery tickets. What does that tell me about the Templars?”
Lang could barely hear Francis’s throaty chuckle. “Oh ye of little faith! The story goes on. In the sixties, the nineteen sixties, that is, somebody published a book speculating that Saunière had found treasure belonging to the Templars. They were active in that part of the Languedoc and this castle Pietro describes is one of theirs. Saunière could well have found some of the immense wealth those dead white boys left when they had to make a fast getaway.”
“Wealth? Treasure?” Lang asked. “Until I read that Oxford fellow’s translation, I had always thought the Templars were a monastic order, sworn to poverty, chastity and other unpleasantness.”
“They were, at least initially. They went to the Holy Land to protect pilgrims from the Moslems, joined in the Crusades and all that. Order was founded in the early eleven-hundreds, I think. Like other monks, they took a vow of poverty. Things changed in the next two hundred years. The Order acquired wealth, I mean a lot of it. Nobody really knows how or from where.
“A number of Europe’s kings noticed these fighting monks had castles, lands, even their own ships. By the time the last Christian outpost in Palestine fell and the Templars all returned to Europe, they were pretty much a nation unto themselves. A lot of rulers, Philip of France, the pope, were both covetous and a little fearful.
“In 1307, Philip had his sheriffs seize Templar castles in France and imprison the knights. The pope, Clement V, knew which side of his bread had the butter on it. Philip was the most powerful monarch in Europe and Clement wanted to make sure he stayed on the right side of him. So he issued a bull condemning the Templars on a number of trumped-up charges.
“As you can imagine, most of the other kings and emperors were eager to follow suit, since the Order’s holdings would become theirs. A number of the brothers were rounded up and tortured until they confessed to all sorts of things, homosexuality to blasphemy. Eventually, those who had been caught were burned at the stake, at least in France. Edward of England and Henry of Germany weren’t into confessions produced by torture and the Templars’ holdings there weren’t as rich as in France.
“A number of brothers es
caped by disappearing before Philip’s order, no doubt had advance warning. Anyway, their private fleet and whatever treasure they had were never found.”
Lang was quiet a moment, thinking. “And people think they left that treasure around the Languedoc?”
“People who really are into the subject are all over the board. Some think the escaped Templars made it to Scotland where the king, Robert the Bruce, was already excommunicated and therefore not on particularly good terms with Clement. Others think they took their treasure with them and sailed to an island off what’s now Nova Scotia. Even others don’t believe there ever was a treasure as such, that the Templars’ riches were their real estate holdings.”
“And what do you think?”
There was a sigh on Francis’s end of the line. “I’ve never really had an opinion. The Templars are an interesting bit of history as far as I’m concerned, but no more than that. As for their treasure, I think you could make a better investment in time and money by buying one of those reproductions of a map to the place Captain Kidd supposedly hid his treasure on Long Island Sound.”
“At least Captain Kidd isn’t killing people.”
“And the Templars are just as dead, although the Masons and Rosicrucians claim some relationship with the Order. They both have secrets supposedly guarded by members’ lives.”
Lang snorted in derision. “I don’t think I’m up against guys in funny hats or nutcases upset about Prozac and I haven’t read about throats slit at your neighborhood Masonic Temple. No, these Pegasus guys are serious. They very much have something they’re willing to kill to keep to themselves. I’d bet it has something to do with the money from the Vatican. And that just might be related somehow to this place in France where this guy . . .”
“Saunière.”