by Steve Berry
“Minister,” Viktor said. “I think it would be better if she stays here, with me. I can hold her until you’re away.”
She shook her head and pointed at Thorvaldsen. “Take him with you. Somewhere safe. Once I’m in the air, I’ll call and you can let him go. Any problems, kill him and make sure the body is never found.”
“Minister,” Michener said, “since I’m the cause of all this chaos, how about me as a hostage and let’s leave this gentleman out of it.”
“And how about taking me with you instead of her?” Malone asked. “Never been to the Central Asian Federation.”
She appraised the American. Tall and confident. Probably an agent. But she wanted to know more of the woman’s connection to Ely Lund. Anyone who knew Lund closely enough to risk her life to avenge him bore further investigation. But Michener. She could only hope Viktor was allowed the opportunity to kill the lying scum. “All right, priest, you go with Viktor. As for you, Mr. Malone, perhaps another time.”
FIFTY-SIX
SAMARKAND
Vincenti awoke.
He was reclined in the helicopter’s comfortable leather seat. Flying east, away from the city.
The phone lying in his lap was vibrating.
He read the LCD screen. Grant Lyndsey. Chief scientist at the China lab. He stuffed a fob into his ear and pushed “Phone.”
“We’re done,” his employee said to him. “Zovastina has all of the organisms and the lab is converted. Clean and complete.”
With what Zovastina had planned, he had no intention of the West, or the Chinese government, raiding his facility and linking him to anything. Only eight scientists had worked on the project, Lyndsey their head. All vestiges of their work were now gone.
“Pay everyone and send them on their way. O’Conner will visit them and provide for their retirement.” He heard the silence from the other end of the phone. “Not to worry, Grant. Gather the computer data and head to my house over the border. We’ll have to wait and see what the Supreme Minister actually does with her arsenal before we act.”
“I’ll leave immediately.”
That’s what he wanted to hear. “I’ll be seeing you before the day is out. We have work to do. Get moving.”
He clicked off the phone and lay back in the seat.
He thought again about the old dwarf in the Pamir mountains. Back then Tajikistan had been primitive and hostile. Little medical research had ever been done there. Few strangers visited. That was why the Iraqis thought the region a promising place to investigate for unknown zoonoses.
Two pools high in the mountains.
One green, the other brown.
And the plant whose leaves he’d chewed.
He recalled the water. Warm and clear. But when he’d pointed his flashlight into their shallow depths, he recalled an even stranger sight.
Two carved letters. One in each pool.
Z and H.
Chiseled from blocks of stone, lying on the bottom.
He thought of the medallion Stephanie Nelle had made a point to show him. One of the several Irina Zovastina seemed intent on acquiring.
And the microletters supposedly on its face.
ZH.
Coincidence? He doubted it. He knew what the letters meant since he’d sought out scholars who told him that in Old Greek they represented the concept of life. He’d thought his idea of labeling any future cure for HIV with that ancient designation clever. Now he wasn’t so sure. He felt like his world was collapsing and the anonymity that he’d once enjoyed was quickly evaporating. The Americans were after him. Zovastina was after him. The Venetian League itself might well be after him.
But he’d cast his die.
No going back.
Malone’s gaze alternated between Thorvaldsen and Cassiopeia. Neither of his friends showed the slightest concern with their predicament. Between him and Cassiopeia, they could take Zovastina and Viktor. He tried to voice that intent with his eyes, but no one seemed to be listening.
“Your pope doesn’t scare me,” Zovastina said to Michener.
“It’s not our intent to scare anyone.”
“You’re a sanctimonious hypocrite.”
Michener said nothing.
“Not much to say?” she asked.
“I’ll pray for you, Minister.”
She spit at his feet. “I don’t need your prayers, priest.” She motioned toward Cassiopeia. “Time to go. Leave the bow and arrows. You won’t be needing them.”
Cassiopeia dropped both to the floor.
“Here’s her gun,” Viktor said, and he handed over the weapon.
“Once we’re away, I’ll call. If you don’t hear from me in three hours, kill the priest. And Viktor,” she paused, “make sure he suffers.”
Viktor and Michener left the presbytery and walked through the darkened nave.
“Shall we?” Zovastina said to Cassiopeia. “I assume you’ll behave yourself?”
“Like I have a choice.”
“The priest will appreciate it.”
They left the presbytery.
Malone turned to Thorvaldsen. “And they’re just going to leave, with no response from us?”
“It had to be done,” Stephanie said, as she and another man stepped from the shadows of the south transept. She introduced the lean man as Edwin Davis, deputy national security adviser, the voice from the phone earlier. Everything about him was neat and restrained, from the pressed slacks and stiff cotton shirt, to his shiny, narrow calf-leather shoes. Malone ignored Davis and asked Stephanie, “Why did it have to be done?”
Thorvaldsen answered. “We weren’t sure what was going to happen. We were just trying to make something happen.”
“You wanted Cassiopeia to be taken?”
Thorvaldsen shook his head. “I didn’t. But Cassiopeia apparently did. I could see it in her eyes, so I seized the moment and accommodated her. That’s why I asked you to drop your weapon.”
“Are you nuts?”
Thorvaldsen stepped closer. “Cotton, three years ago I introduced Ely and Cassiopeia.”
“What does that have to do with anything?”
“When Ely was young, he foolishly experimented with drugs. He wasn’t careful with needles and, sadly, contracted HIV. He managed the disease well, taking various cocktail combinations, but the odds were not in his favor. Most of those infected eventually contract AIDS and die. He was lucky.”
He waited for more.
“Cassiopeia shares his illness.”
Had he heard right?
“A blood transfusion, ten years ago. She takes the symptomatic drugs and manages her disease, as well.”
He was shocked, but a lot of her comments now made sense. “How’s that possible? She’s so active. Strong.”
“Take the drugs every day and you can be, provided the virus cooperates.”
He stared at Stephanie. “You knew?”
“Edwin told me before we came out here. Henrik told him. He and Henrik have been waiting for us to arrive. That’s why Michener took me aside.”
“So what were me and Cassiopeia? Expendables? With deniability?” he asked Davis.
“Something like that. We had no idea what Zovastina would do.”
“You sorry son of a bitch.” He moved toward Davis.
“Cotton,” Thorvaldsen said, “I approved it. Be mad at me.”
He stopped and stared at his friend. “What gave you that right?”
“When you and Cassiopeia left Copenhagen, President Daniels called. He told me what happened to Stephanie in Amsterdam and asked what we knew. I told him. He suggested I could be useful here.”
“Along with me? That why you lied to me about Stephanie being in trouble?”
Thorvaldsen cast a glance toward Davis. “Actually, I’m a bit perturbed about that, too. I only told you what they told me. It seems the president wanted all of us involved.”
He looked at Davis. “I don’t like the way you do business.”
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p; “Fair enough. But I have to do what I have to do.”
“Cotton,” Thorvaldsen said, “there was little time to think this through. I was improvising as it happened.”
“You think?”
“But I didn’t believe Zovastina would do anything foolish here in the basilica. She couldn’t. And she’d be caught totally off guard. That’s why I agreed to challenge her. Of course, Cassiopeia was another matter. She killed two people.”
“And one more on Torcello.” He cautioned himself to stay focused. “What is all this about?”
“One part,” Stephanie said, “is to stop Zovastina. She’s planning a dirty war and has the resources to make it a costly one.”
“She contacted the Church and they tipped us off,” Davis said. “That’s why we’re here.”
“You could have told us all that,” he said to Davis.
“No, Mr. Malone, we couldn’t. I’ve read your service record. You were a superb agent. A long list of successful missions and commendations. You don’t strike me as naive. You, of all people, should understand how the game is played.”
“That’s just it,” he said. “I don’t play anymore.”
He paced about and allowed himself a moment to calm down. Then he approached the wooden box lying open on the floor. “Zovastina risked everything just to look at these bones?”
“That’s the other part to all of this,” Thorvaldsen said. “The more complicated portion. You read some of the manuscript pages Ely found about Alexander the Great and his draught. Ely came to believe, perhaps foolishly, that from the symptoms described, the draught might have some effect on viral pathogens.”
“Like HIV?” he asked.
Thorvaldsen nodded. “We know there are substances found in nature—tree bark, leafy plants, roots—that can combat bacteria and viruses, maybe even some cancers. He was hoping this might be one of those.”
His mind recalled the manuscript. Overcome by remorse and sensing that Ptolemy was sincere, Eumenes revealed the resting place, far away, in the mountains, where the Scythians taught Alexander about life. “The Scythians are the ones who showed Alexander the draught. Eumenes said Alexander was buried where the Scythians taught him about life.”
Something occurred to him. He said to Stephanie, “You have one of the medallions, don’t you?”
Stephanie handed him the coin. “From Amsterdam. We recovered it after Zovastina’s men tried to take it. We’re told it’s authentic.”
He held the decadrachm high in the light.
“Concealed within the warrior are tiny letters. ZH,” Stephanie said. “Old Greek for life.”
More of the History of Hieronymus of Cardia. Ptolemy then handed me a silver medallion that showed Alexander when he fought against elephants. He told me that, in honor of those battles, he’d minted the coins. He also told me to come back when I solved his riddle. But a month later Ptolemy lay dead.
Now he knew. “The coins and the riddle go together.”
“No question,” Thorvaldsen answered. “But how?”
He wasn’t ready to explain. “None of you ever answered me. Why did you just let them leave here?”
“Cassiopeia clearly wanted to go,” Thorvaldsen said. “Between her and me, we dangled enough information about Ely to intrigue Zovastina.”
“Is that why you called her outside on the phone?”
Thorvaldsen nodded. “She needed information. I had no idea what she would do. You have to understand, Cotton, Cassiopeia wants to know what happened to Ely and the answers are in Asia.”
That obsession bothered Malone. Why? He wasn’t sure. But it clearly did. As did her pain. And her illness. Too much to keep track of. Too many emotions for a man who worked hard at ignoring them. “What is she going to do when she gets to the Federation?”
Thorvaldsen shrugged. “I have no idea. Zovastina knows that I’m wise to her overall plan. I made that clear. She knows Cassiopeia is associated with me. She’ll use the opportunity we gave her to try and learn from Cassiopeia what she can—”
“Before she kills her.”
“Cotton,” Stephanie said, “that’s a chance Cassiopeia freely accepted. No one told her to go.”
More of his melancholy arose. “No. We just let her go. Is that priest involved?”
“He has a job to do,” Davis said. “That’s why he volunteered.”
“But there’s more,” Thorvaldsen said. “What Ely found, Ptolemy’s riddle, it’s real. And we now have all the pieces to discover its solution.”
He pointed to the box. “There’s nothing there. It’s a dead end.”
Thorvaldsen shook his head. “Not true. Those bones lay beneath us, in the crypt, for centuries, before they were moved up here.” Thorvaldsen motioned toward the open sarcophagus. “When they were first removed, in 1835, something else was found with them. Only a few know.” Thorvaldsen pointed toward the darkened south transept. “It’s in the treasury and has been for a long time.”
“And you needed Zovastina gone before taking a look?”
“Something like that.” The Dane held up a key. “Our ticket to see.”
“You realize Cassiopeia may have bitten off more than she can ever chew.”
Thorvaldsen nodded heavily. “Fully.”
He had to think, so he gazed toward the south transept and asked, “Do you know what to do with whatever is in there?”
Thorvaldsen shook his head. “Not me. But we have someone who might.”
He was puzzled.
“Henrik believes,” Stephanie said, “and Edwin seems to agree—”
“It’s Ely,” Thorvaldsen said. “We think he’s still alive.”
FIFTY-SEVEN
CENTRAL ASIAN FEDERATION
6:50 A.M.
Vincenti stepped from the helicopter. The trip from Samarkand had taken about an hour. Though there were new highways leading east all the way to the Fergana Valley, his estate lay farther south, in the old Tajikistan—and air travel remained the fastest and safest route.
He’d chosen his land with care, high in cloud-girdled mountains. No one had questioned the purchase, not even Zovastina. He’d explained only that he was tired of the flat, muddy, Venetian terrain, so he bought two hundred acres of forested valley and rocky Pamir highlands. This would be his world. Where he could not be seen nor heard, surrounded by servants, at a commanding height, amid scenery once wild but now shorn and shaven with touches of Italy, Byzantium, and China.
He’d christened the estate Attico, and noticed on the flight in that the main entrance now was crowned by an elaborate stone arch containing the label. He also noticed more scaffolding had been erected around the house, the exterior rapidly moving toward completion. Construction had been slow but constant, and he’d be glad when the walls stood totally finished.
He escaped the whirling blades and passed through a garden he’d taught to bloom upon a mountain slope so the estate would bristle with hints of the English countryside.
Peter O’Conner waited on the uneven stones of the rear terrace.
“Everything okay?” he asked his employee.
O’Conner nodded. “No problems here.”
He lingered outside, catching his breath. Storm clouds wreathed the distant eastern peaks into China. Crows patrolled the valley. He’d carefully orientated his castle in the air to maximize the spectacular view. So different from Venice. No uncomfortable miasma. Only crystalline air. He’d been told that the Asian spring had been unusually warm and dry and he was grateful for the respite.
“What about Zovastina?” he asked.
“She’s leaving Italy, as we speak, with another woman. Dark-skinned, attractive, provided the name Cassiopeia Vitt to Customs.”
He waited, knowing O’Conner had been thorough.
“Vitt lives in southern France. Is presently financing the reconstruction of a medieval castle. A big project. Expensive. Her father owned several Spanish manufacturing concerns. Huge conglomerates. She inherited it all.”
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“What about her? The person.”
“Muslim, but not devout. Highly educated. Engineering and history degrees. Unmarried. Thirty-eight years old. That’s about all I could get on short notice. You want more?”
He shook his head. “Not now. Any clue what’s she doing with Zovastina?”
“My people didn’t know. Zovastina left the basilica with her and went straight to the airport.”
“She on her way back here?”
O’Conner nodded. “Should arrive in another four to five hours.”
He saw there was more.
“Our men who went after Nelle. One was taken down by a rooftop sniper. The other escaped. Seems Nelle was prepared for us.”
He did not like the sound of that. But that problem would have to wait. He’d already leaped from the cliff. Too late to climb back now.
He entered the house.
A year ago he’d finished decorating, having spent millions on paintings, wall coverings, lacquered furniture, and objets d’art. But he’d insisted that comfort not be sacrificed for magnificence, so he’d included a theater, cozy parlors, private bedrooms, baths, and the garden. Unfortunately, he’d only been able to enjoy a precious few weeks here, staffing it with locals O’Conner personally vetted. Soon, though, Attico would become his personal refuge, a place of high living and plain thinking, and he’d provided for that eventuality by installing sophisticated alarms, state-of-the-art communications equipment, and an intricate network of concealed passages.
He passed through the ground-floor rooms, which flowed into one another in the French style, every corner of which seemed as cool and shadowy as the spring twilight. A fine atrium in the classical vein accommodated a winding marble staircase to the second floor.
He climbed.
Frescoes representing the march of the liberal sciences loomed overhead. This part of the house reminded him of Venice’s best, though the towering mullion windows framed mountain landscapes instead of the Grand Canal. His destination was the closed door to his left, just beyond the top of the staircase, one of several spacious guest rooms.