“And what about Sir Walter Ralegh? Still convinced he took Yawgoog’s Stone to London?”
“Oh, yes,” he quietly avowed, blue eyes glimmering.
“I noticed you didn’t volunteer
“While the purpose of Yawgoog’s sacred stone is still a mystery, any number of men have killed to possess it.”
A dire thought. One that she preferred
Up ahead, Edie caught sight of a beat-up truck. The blue jalopy had to have been at least thirty years old. And, no surprise, there was a gun rack mounted to the back window.
Caedmon caught up to their guide. “Our vehicle is parked near the eastern border of the wilderness area,” he said, diplomatically requesting a lift.
“Somebody slashed the tires on your little piece of Japanese crap.”
Edie groaned. She had a pretty good idea who wielded the knife.
“Not entirely unexpected,” Caedmon said calmly, taking the news in stride. “I’ll need to get some items out of the boot.” He cleared his throat, giving Sinclair ample opportunity to offer them a ride. When no invitation was forthcoming, Caedmon, a tight smile on his lips, said, “Would it be too much of an inconvenience to drive Miss Miller and me to the airport at Providence?”
Sinclair pulled his car keys out his pocket. “You paying for the gas?”
CHAPTER 40
A total butt-fuck!
Sobbing, barely able to pull breath into his lungs, Saviour collapsed on the ground, the tinder-dry foliage crunching beneath him.
Deeply humiliated, he hugged his knees and rocked back and forth. Still able to smell the smoldering nylon jacket that he’d flung aside.
Angry tears scorching his cheeks, Saviour gave vent to his rage.
He needed to check his emotions at the door and focus.
It took a week of blow jobs and picking pockets on the docks of Piraeus before he could purchase a train ticket.
Afraid he would be hunted for Evangelos Danielides’s murder, he’d kept to the shadows. He became so skittish that he’d physically lurch when he heard a siren or a police whistle. Even a barking dog. To his surprise, there was no mention of the murder in the Greek newspapers. Although he read that an elaborate funeral was held in Athens, the cause of death officially reported as cardiac arrest. A cover-up. He didn’t even shoot the bastard in the heart. Obviously, the powerful Danielides family didn’t want their son’s predilections made public. Nonetheless, he feared that same powerful family would seek revenge for the murder of their only son.
Like a fugitive on the run, Saviour spent his nights roaming the Leoforos Nikis for quick pickups and hiding out in Thessaloniki’s churches during the daylight hours. The last place the guns hired by the Danielides family would look for him. As though it were fated, at the Agia Sophia, the Church of Holy Wisdom, he met
A beautiful memory.
Revived somewhat, he used his sweater sleeve to dry his face. He had to get a grip. Another American phrase. Shoving himself upright, he walked over to the stone slab where the English
There on the screen was a reservation confirmation: airline tickets for two to London, including a three-night stay at the St. Martin’s Lane Hotel.
Overjoyed, he threw back his head and merrily laughed aloud.
CHAPTER 41
“A first brain! The Englishman is
While Mercurius could not say whether Caedmon Aisquith merited the damning praise that Sherlock Holmes had heaped upon his nemesis, Professor Moriarty, it was obvious that the man was no idiot. Far from it.
“Do you want me to go to London?”
“And confront the powers of darkness?” he countered, injecting a touch of humor into his voice.
“You often tell me to look to the Light.”
“So I do,” he murmured.
Faced with a conundrum, Mercurius said, “Let me think on this,
Hanging up the telephone, Mercurius wandered into the kitchen.
For sixty years, he’d been haunted by the parting remarks of his father, Osman de Leon, and his milk brother, Moshe Benaroya. And because he’d been haunted, when he was sixty-five years of age, he
From the grungy window of the airport taxi, he’d caught his first glimpse of the city, disappointed to see that it had changed greatly in the intervening years. Where once there had been graceful cypress trees, there were now garish billboards that advertised everything from yogurt to motorcycles. And blocks of hideous postwar apartment