around the world. It made a rapid circle of the farmhouse, then came to a hover and landed about a hundred feet from the Land Rover.
Chase waited for the rotors to slow, then walked over. Hajjar had brought company. As well as the pilot, there were three other people in the Jet Ranger. He rolled his shoulders, feeling the weight of the Wildey.45 Winchester Magnum in its holster under his jacket, ready for use in an instant. Just in case.
The helicopter’s rear doors opened, two large, bearded men in dark suits and sunglasses jumping out and surveying the area before fixing their black-hole stares on Chase. He stared back, unintimidated. From the way they held themselves he could tell they were ex-military-but just regular soldiers, not special forces. Definitely nowhere near SAS level. He could handle them.
One of the men leaned closer to the helicopter and spoke in Farsi. The door opened, and Failak Hajjar emerged.
Unlike his bodyguards, Hajjar was dressed in traditional Arab robes. But like them, he was wearing sunglasses-though his were far more expensive.
Another man followed him out. He was white, with short spiky hair, several days’ growth of stubble and a distinctly wary air. Chase guessed it was Yuri Volgan.
“Are you Chase?” Hajjar called.
“Yes!”
“Where is Ms. Frost?”
“Where’s the artifact?” Chase demanded. Hajjar glowered, then reached back into the Jet Ranger and took out a small black leather briefcase. Nodding, Chase backed away, heading to the Land Rover.
“In the house,” said Hajjar, gesturing with the briefcase. “Out of the wind, yes?”
“What wind?” Chase muttered. Now that the rotors had stopped, there was only an intermittent breeze. He checked the area once more for signs that they weren’t alone, but saw none.
He reached the Land Rover. “Well?” Kari asked.
“Looks okay, but…” He glanced around again, surveying the landscape. No sign of anyone-not that somebody
“You don’t trust him?” said Nina.
“Christ, no. I’m just not sure exactly how
“I will.” Hafez reached under the dashboard and pulled out a revolver, which he placed on his lap.
Chase opened the door for Nina, Castille doing the same for Kari. “I’ve got to say, I’m a bit nervous about all the guns,” Nina told Chase.
“What? Thought you archaeology types were always running around shooting people, like Indiana Jones.”
She narrowed her eyes. “Hardly. The only shooting I do is with a camera.”
“I hope it stays that way,” said Kari as she headed for the farmhouse, the hem of her white coat flaring out around her as she walked. Hajjar and his companions stopped outside the door of the little building, unable to take their eyes off her. “After you,” she told them, gesturing inside with her own slim steel briefcase.
The interior of the farmhouse was dark, the only light coming from a single window. Although the room’s contents had mostly been cleared out when its owners abandoned it, there was still a long table made from roughly hewn wood in the center.
Castille took a large glow stick from his jacket and bent it to crack the glass inside, chemicals mixing to release a vivid orange light like a fireside glow. Such a strong reaction, Nina knew, would only be able to sustain itself for fifteen minutes at most, so presumably the entire transaction was expected to be completed before then. She didn’t feel comfortable about that. It meant she would have to determine the authenticity of the artifact in a rush-and if she was wrong, the Frosts would be down ten million dollars. She could do without that kind of pressure.
So she would just have to be right.
Hajjar and his bodyguards stood at one end of the table, Chase, Kari and Castille at the other. Nina found herself facing Volgan. The Russian seemed worried, fingers jittering with nervous energy.
“Are you ready to make the money transfer?” Hajjar asked.
“Once we see the piece,” Kari replied coolly. “And once Dr. Wilde has confirmed that it’s genuine.”
“Wilde?” Volgan asked, shocked. Nina noticed he was suddenly unwilling to look directly at her. “Related to Henry and Laura Wilde?”
“Yes, they were my parents. Why?”
Volgan didn’t answer, but Hajjar impatiently interrupted before Nina could ask any more questions. “The item is genuine. Here.” He placed his briefcase on the table and operated the combination locks. Nina was surprised to see that his right hand was missing, replaced by a steel hook. She couldn’t help staring at it.
“You think I’m a thief, perhaps?” he asked coldly.
“Uh, no, I…”
Hajjar shook his head. “Westerners, always with their cliches and preconceptions,” he said as he opened the locks. “I lost it in a motorbike accident. I am no thief.”
“Well, not the petty kind,” Chase remarked cheerily. “Or so I’ve heard.”
Hajjar paused and glared at him. “Are you trying to insult me, Mr. Chase?”
“Nah. You’d
“May we see the piece now?” prompted Kari. Hajjar gave Chase a last angry glance before clicking the catch and opening the briefcase.
Inside, resting in a bed of protective foam, was the artifact.
It
It had been carefully and diligently polished. There was not a mark on it, no fingerprints or smudges. The only flaw was the small nick in one side, from where Volgan had carved a sample of the metal. It was without a doubt the same piece she had seen as a hologram.
And now she could see the whole thing. On its front, directly above the protrusion on the underside, was a small angled slot. And below it were markings…
“Can I examine it?” she asked Hajjar, her voice almost an awed whisper.
“Of course.”
Nina snapped on a pair of latex surgical gloves and carefully lifted the artifact from the briefcase. It was heavier than it looked, consistent with a high gold content. An arrowhead was inscribed into the curved end of the piece, as well as a wavering line with some sort of tiny markings on either side running up its length, but what caught her attention was the lettering parallel to it. She turned the bar to catch the light from the window.
“What are they?” Kari asked.
“They’re Glozel characters, or a very close variant. At least most of them are.” Nina pointed out certain symbols with the tip of her gloved forefinger. “But these are something else. A different alphabet.”
“Do you know which one?”
“It looks familiar, but I can’t quite place it. It’s another variant, though, not a standard alphabet. Maybe a regional offshoot, or something from a slightly different time period? I’d need to check my references.”
“Whatever you need, you’ll have,” said Kari. “But is it a genuine piece?”
Nina turned the artifact over. The underside was just as she had seen in the hologram, the metal nub protruding from the upper end. Apart from that, it was devoid of markings.
Her fingertips pressed against the curved end as she turned it over again.
The shape reminded her of something, the curve of the metal almost instinctually familiar…
“Dr. Wilde?” Kari lightly touched her arm, and she flinched, realizing she had been staring at the artifact for several seconds, lost in thought. “Is it genuine?”
“Uh, it certainly looks as though it is. But you should really do a metallurgical analysis to confirm it.”
“I’m afraid I didn’t bring my crucible and spectrograph,” Kari said with a faint smile. “It’s your opinion that counts.”