Having disarmed the cop and stowed him out of sight, Saviour moved to the edge of the small clearing and peered down at the exedra. Only able to see a humongous pile of dirt and the abandoned backhoe.
The Brit and his woman were gone!
Enraged, he ran toward the exedra, the cop’s gun clutched in his hand. A few moments later, standing at the earthen pile, he turned full circle, hoping to catch a glimpse. A blurred bit of motion.
He could see nothing but lengthening shadows. In every direction.
He removed the PDA smartphone from his pocket and checked the GPS map.
There were any number of ways that he could send the Brit and his woman to the eternal black void.
CHAPTER 80
“One hazelnut, one Swiss almond, right?”
Not waiting for a confirmation, the gangly waiter placed two chipped mugs on the Formica tabletop, hot coffee sloshing over the rims. Given the soiled apron tied around the young man’s waist, Caedmon assumed that spilled coffee was a regular occurrence.
“And heavy on the whipped cream,” Edie implored with a winsome smile as she snatched the sugar dispenser from the end of the table.
“No problem. I’ll have your waffle out in a jiff,” the amiable, if maladroit, waiter assured her before departing for the kitchen.
“People come from miles away to eat at Chow Hounds. Waffles are the specialty of the house.” She measured out two teaspoons of sugar, stirring the granules into her Swiss almond coffee. “Trust me, you
In the process of reviewing the digital photos that Edie took of the Emerald Tablet, Caedmon stopped what he was doing and glanced across the table. “I doubt it.”
Particularly since she’d ordered something called a Belgian S’more. Billed as a “variation on a campfire favorite”—whatever
Edie deeply inhaled the coffee’s aroma before taking a sip of the sweetened brew. “After what we just went through, I’m in dire need of a fix and Chow Hounds is my favorite sugar shack. I love eating here. Plus, it’s only a mile or so from the house.”
His gaze moved across the crowded space, astonished that anyone could enjoy dining in a restaurant with tangerine-and-turquoise-colored walls. The boisterous atmosphere was not to his liking either; patrons had to raise their voices to be heard over the rockabilly music blaring from the sound system. Although a conversation held in a crowded eatery was always the safest. A lesson learned at the hands of his old MI5 taskmasters.
“While you’re understandably anxious to return home, I think we should spend one more night at the Willard.” When Edie opened her mouth to protest, he raised a hand, forestalling the objection. “Since we can’t put the Emerald Tablet in your safe deposit box until the bank opens in the morning, I will secure it in the hotel safe.”
At the mention of the relic, Edie’s gaze went to the leather satchel that he wore bandolier-style around his chest for safekeeping. “That’s gotta be uncomfortable.”
Caedmon assumed she referred to the fact that the metal case containing the Emerald Tablet was stuffed inside the satchel. “I’ll manage.” He shifted slightly on the cane-bottomed chair, allowing more room on his lap before returning his attention to the digital camera.
“Here. It’ll be easier to view the photos on the netbook,” Edie said, sliding the portable laptop across the table.
Anxious to examine the photos, he popped the memory chip out of one slot and into another, hoping the photographs would do the relic justice.
They did,
“You’re frowning.”
“Am I? My apologies. I’m bewildered by the inlaid lettering on the tablet. Quite honestly, I had expected to see more Egyptian hieroglyphs. There’s only the one ibis glyph on the backside underneath the entwined circle.”
“Well, the ibis is the symbol for Thoth, and since the ibis-headed Thoth supposedly authored the Emerald Tablet, maybe it’s some sort of signature.”
He stared at the inlaid glyph positioned at the bottom of the tablet. “As a shore-dwelling bird, the ibis lives in that nebulous realm between land and water. More important, it’s symbolic of Thoth’s ability to straddle the unconscious and the conscious mind, that being the gateway to enlightenment.”
“Okay, but you’re still frowning.”
He rearranged his facial muscles into what he hoped was a more congenial expression. “I’m irked by the fact that while the script is clearly of ancient origin, I’ve never seen this alphabet before.”
“I have.”
His head jerked, surprised by the revelation.
“You’ve seen it, too.” Shoving her coffee mug aside, Edie slid the netbook to her side of the table.
Craning his neck, Caedmon watched as Edie deftly accessed the computer file that contained her archived photos.
“When we were at Jason Lovett’s cottage in Arcadia, we found a sheet of paper in the fax machine with some funky writing on it. Remember?”
He thought back to that day: the ransacked rooms, the octogram star brazenly scrawled on the wall, the hidden artifacts, and yes, an overlooked sheet of paper still in the fax machine. “As I recall, Dr. Lovett sent a fax to a professor at Catholic University. At the time, I didn’t think it significant, since Lovett mentioned on his digital voice recorder that he’d discovered an inscription on a foundation stone.”
“Look familiar?” Edie turned the computer in his direction.

“My God… you’re absolutely correct. It
“
“Yes, by all means go to the university site,” he interjected.
Out of the corner of his eye, he saw the gangly waiter approach with a laden tray.
“A Belgian S’more, right?” As with the coffee, the young man didn’t wait for a reply before setting the plate on the table.
“Waiter!” a portly man at the next table loudly bellowed. “That’s
Faced with a thorny dilemma, the waiter nervously glanced from table to table.
Edie stopped typing long enough to turn her head and peer across the aisle. At seeing a florid-faced man built like a sumo wrestler straddling not one, but two, rickety cane chairs, she picked up the plate and passed the whipped-cream-topped confection to the next table.
“Thanks!” the young waiter gushed, clearly relieved that he didn’t have to battle the hefty dragon. “I’ll put a rush on your waffle.”
“No hurry.” Edie turned her attention to the computer screen. “According to the university site, Dr. Lyon is