Mr. Drexler turned back just as suddenly as he?d turned away.
“By the way, I understand you discovered the artifact within a box. Was it locked?”
Weezy had her head down, stabbing her little spade into the dirt like an Aztec priestess cutting out a heart.
“No,” Jack said, “just hard to open.”
He leaned forward. “Who opened it?”
“Me.”
The blue eyes narrowed. “Really. How interesting.”
“Yeah. Seemed I was the only one who could. Oh, yeah, and Mister Brussard could too. But he?s, you know …”
“Yes. The late Brother Brussard …” He stared at Jack for what seemed like a long time, then motioned to him and Weezy. “Follow me now if you wish that tour.”
Mr. Drexler moved toward the rear of the Lodge. Baffled, Jack glanced at a very
shocked-looking Weezy. But the shock turned to wild anticipation as she sprang to her feet and started after him. Jack held her back a second.
“Remember,” he whispered. “I only thought I saw the pyramid. If we don?t see it inside, stay cool.”
She nodded and followed Mr. Drexler. Jack brought up the rear, wondering what had made him change his mind.
He led them through the rear door that opened into some sort of mud room.
“Only members are allowed entrance through the front.”
“Why is that?” Jack said.
“Because that is the way it has always been.” He gestured to the next room, a small kitchen with a stove and a fridge, but old-fashioned. “Antiquated, yes. A holdover from the days when the Lodge had residents. Eggers and I have used it on occasion, but it is by and large a vestigial space.”
They moved through a short hallway into a large room dominated by a long table flanked with leather chairs. The sigil on the ceiling confirmed it as the crowded room he?d peeked in on last night.
Weezy seemed to have lost her voice, but her wide eyes never stopped moving as her gaze lasered into every nook and cranny.
“This is the conference room, where the members meet to discuss matters of concern to the Order and themselves.”
Light through the barred windows reflected off the table?s smeared, dusty surface.
Messy, Jack thought.
He?d have figured a dapper guy like Mr. Drexler to be a neatnik.
As if reading Jack?s thoughts, the man said, “The premises need a thorough cleaning. I don?t wish to be bothered with anyone here during my stay, but a crew will be through as soon as I depart.”
“Really?”
Mr. Drexler looked at him. “You?re surprised that we?d want to keep the place clean?”
“No … just surprised you let anyone in.”
“The cleaning service is owned by a brother, and the workers will be personally supervised by him.”
Jack noticed the paintings lining the walls. Weezy stopped before the portrait of a stern-looking man in medieval clothing.
She found her voice. “Who?s that?”
“A former Arch of the worldwide High Council of the Seven.”
Jack repressed a laugh. “Well, that clears that up.”
Mr. Drexler allowed one of his tight smiles. “Briefly: The Order is ruled by the High Council of the Seven, and the leading member of the Council is known as the Arch. All the men you see here are former Arches. The portraits are not originals, of course. They are copies of archived paintings.”
Jack checked them out, one after the other.
“So all these guys—” she said.
“Arches, please. Show some respect.”
“Sorry. All these „Arches? knew the Secret History of the World?”
Mr. Drexler gave her an appraising look. “Do you really think such a history exists?”
She looked him square in the eye. “Absolutely.”
She?d often told Jack that the Septimus Order was guardian of certain truths that had been kept secret and passed on throughout the history of the world, and that knowledge of those truths allowed them to manipulate people and events—history itself.
Mr. Drexler?s lips twisted. “Perhaps you are right, but you will never find out.”
“Why not?”
“Because women are not allowed in the Order.” He turned to Jack. “But you can learn, should you ever be asked to join.”
“And accept.”
The man frowned. “Don?t make your father?s mistake and turn down the invitation. It is offered only once. Who knows how far he could have gone?” He gestured to the portraits. “He could have been here among the Movers.” He turned and pointed to one of the windows. “Instead he?s out there with the Moved. Such a shame.”
Jack had no idea what he was talking about, but couldn?t help smile. “Believe it or not, he seems to be bearing up pretty well.”
“Only because he doesn?t know what he is missing.”
Jack noticed other paintings interspersed among the portraits, mostly of buildings.
“What are these?”
“Other Lodges. The Septimus Order is global.”
Jack heard Weezy gasp as she stopped before a painting. “Look!”
Jack stepped over to see and suppressed a gasp of his own. She was staring at a painting of the pyramid cage in the woods, but this had no broken section. The faces of its megaliths were clean and smooth, and the glyphs carved into each were clearly visible—the same as on their little pyramid. It sat in a landscaped clearing under a sunny sky. The trees around it looked more like palms than pines.
“Is that a Lodge too?” Jack said, knowing it wasn?t.
Drexler came up behind them. “Oh, no. That is simply an ancient decorative structure.”
“Decorative?” Weezy pointed to a dark shape in the shadows within. “Then what?s that in there?”
“You?d have to ask the artist, and I?m afraid he?s long dead. Now come this way.”
Jack looked at Weezy and found her staring back. They both looked again at the painting. No question about it: The artist had painted something trapped in that cage. Something big.
The painting was one more connection between the Lodge and the pyramids—big and little.
Now … find the little one—
They followed Mr. Drexler into a large sitting room, the one Jack had peeked at through the front entrance. It was furnished with comfy-looking, overstuffed chairs. A rug woven with the sigil design covered most of the hardwood floor, and another sigil overhung a jumbo fireplace shielded by a brass fire screen decorated
with—surprise—another sigil.
“This room is for less formal gatherings,” Mr. Drexler said.
Jack barely heard him. His attention immediately fixed on the high mantel where he?d glimpsed the little black object, but now he saw no sign of it.
Weezy was staring too, a dismayed look on her face.
Had he imagined it, or had Mr. Drexler removed it before letting them in?
Motioning Weezy to stay in the center of the room, he wandered in that direction.
“Wow. Neat fireplace.”
Nothing the least bit special about it—he simply wanted a closer look at the mantel.
“It is still used on rare occasions,” he heard Mr. Drexler say behind him.
Jack made a show of peeking behind the fire screen. He checked out the large brass andirons, then straightened and stretched up onto his toes for a quick close look at the mantel. There, front and center on its dusty
