forgiveness.
A shadow darkens the blazing air. Crispus cries out and clutches his side. Blood blooms in his tunic; an arrow hangs from his ribs. Archers have appeared on the roof of the eastern portico surrounding the courtyard. Another arrow hits him in the shoulder. He staggers back.
He hangs on the edge of the
Without a sound, he falls back through the hole. The arrows are still falling, clattering on the roof, but they don’t hit me. I crawl to the edge and peer down.
Far below, in an alcove against the back wall, I can see the huge porphyry sarcophagus waiting to receive Constantine’s body. In front of it, sprawled in the very heart of the starburst sun laid into the floor, lies a corpse. The marble rays splay out around him; through the
A fragment of shadow breaks the circle. After a moment, I realise it’s my own.
They hurried along the passages, following the footsteps they’d left in the soft mud floor. The detonator wire unspooled behind them. They hadn’t quite reached the first staircase when the man at the back called a halt.
‘No more wire,’ he said.
For the first time, Abby saw a hint of concern cross Dragovic’s face. ‘Are we far enough?’
The man pursed his lips. ‘This place is old – and we put a lot of plastic in there.’
‘You stay here,’ Dragovic told him. ‘Give us two minutes.’
The man pulled out the control box and plugged in the wires. Abby wondered if she could get at him, if she might detonate the explosives too soon and bring the roof down on Dragovic. But there was another man between them, and the tunnel was too narrow to get past.
‘Maybe five minutes is safer?’
‘Two. The carabinieri must be close.’
Dragovic led them on. They all felt the urgency now. Heavy boots kicked at Abby’s heels; several times, a hand on her back pushed her forward when she started to falter. She tried to count off seconds in her head, but the remorseless pace disrupted any rhythm.
They reached the stairs and hurried up to the second level. Here there was a wider chamber, a sort of crossroads where four tunnels intersected. The floor was rocky, the footprints harder to make out. Dragovic studied it for a second.
‘What’s that?’
The man beside Dragovic pointed down one of the tunnels. Abby followed his gaze. Around a bend, a dim light glowed, getting steadily brighter.
‘Carabinieri.’
‘Split up,’ Dragovic ordered. ‘We can lose them in the tunnels.’
They moved apart. Abby made to follow the guard behind her, but Dragovic grabbed her collar and pushed her in front of him.
‘You come with me. In case I need –’
A muted roar rose out of the depths of the catacomb.
She didn’t look; she didn’t wait. She turned her back – on the explosion, on Dragovic, on the pieces of rock that were shaking loose from the roof – and ran. Down the nearest tunnel, without thought for where it led, just so long as it was
But she wouldn’t escape that easily. Someone else had the same idea. Among the rumbling echoes of the explosion and shifting rubble, she heard the quickfire beat of footsteps chasing after her.
She couldn’t outrun him. All she could think of was to hide. The walls here were lined with
The rock pressed her like a vice. She turned her head ninety degrees, one cheek against the roof and the other against the floor. She pulled her arm as tight to her body as she could. She tried to breathe, but the rock beat down on her chest and forced the air out.
The footsteps came closer. A beam of light, dulled by dust or dying batteries, played along the stone corridor. Abby prayed he wouldn’t look down.
‘Abigail?’ Dust slurred Dragovic’s voice. ‘You think you can escape? You think Zoltan Dragovic ever forgets his enemies?’
He gave a cough that turned into a snarling laugh.
‘Let me give you a piece of advice, Abigail, from a man who has seen many dark places in this world. If you want to hide in the dark, you should not wear a reflective coat.’
Squeezed between the rock, she saw Dragovic’s boots stop six inches from her face. Even if she’d wanted to,