else in mind. They had more than enough Top Gun wannabes; what they needed were lawyers. The recruiters did their best to get him to join the Judge Advocate General Corps, and Reilly flirted with the idea for a while, but ultimately decided against it and went back to focus on passing the Indiana bar exam.

It was a chance meeting in a secondhand bookstore that diverted his path again, this time for good.

That was where he met a retired FBI agent who was only too happy to talk to him about the Bureau and encourage him to apply, which he did as soon as he passed the bar. His mother wasn't too thrilled with the idea of his spending seven years in college to end up as what she called 'a glorified cop,' but Reilly knew it was right for him.

He was barely a year into his rookie stint in the Chicago office, logging some street duty on robbery and drug-trafficking squads, when on the twenty-sixth of February 1993 everything changed. That was the day a bomb exploded in a parking lot underneath the World Trade Center, killing six people and injuring over a thousand. The conspirators had actually planned to topple one of the towers onto the other while simultaneously releasing a cloud of cyanide gas. Only financial limitations had prevented them from achieving their objective; they simply ran out of money. They didn't have enough gas canisters for the bomb that, apart from being too meager to fulfill its nefarious purpose, was also placed alongside the wrong column, one that wasn't of critical structural importance.

The attack, although a failure, was nevertheless a serious wake-up call. It demonstrated that a small group of unsophisticated, low-level terrorists with very little funding or resources could cause a huge amount of damage. Intelligence agencies scrambled to re-allocate their resources to meet this new threat.

And so less than a year after joining the Bureau, Reilly found himself working out of the Bureau's New York City field office. The office had long had the reputation of being the worst place to work because of the high cost of living, the traffic problems, and the need to live quite a way out of the city if one wanted anything more spacious than a broom closet. But given that the city had always generated more action than anywhere else in the country, it was the dream posting of most new, and naive, special agents. Reilly was such an agent when he'd been assigned to the city.

He wasn't new, or naive, anymore.

As he looked around, Reilly knew the chaos surrounding him was going to monopolize his life for the foreseeable future. He made a mental note to call Father Bragg in the morning and let him know he wouldn't be able to make softball practice. He felt bad about that; he hated to disappoint the kids.

If there was one thing he tried not to allow his work to trespass, it was those Sundays in the park.

He'd probably be in the park this Sunday, only it would be for other, less congenial reasons.

'You want to have a look inside?' Aparo asked.

'Yeah.' Reilly shrugged, casting one last sweeping look at the surreal scene around him.

Chapter 5

A s he and Aparo stepped carefully over the scattered debris, Reilly's gaze took in the devastation inside the museum.

Priceless relics lay strewn everywhere, most of them damaged beyond repair. No yellow and black tape in here. The whole building was a crime scene. The floor of the museum's Great Hall was an ugly still life of destruction: chips of marble, slivers of glass, smears of blood, all of it grist to the crime scene investigators' mill. Any of it was capable of providing a clue; then again, all of it could fail to offer a single damn thing.

As he glanced briefly at the dozen or so white-suited CSIs who were working their way 15

systematically through the debris and who, on this occasion, were joined by agents from the ERT—the FBI's Evidence Response Team—Reilly mentally checked off what they knew. Four horsemen.

Five dead bodies. Three cops, one guard, and one civilian. Another four cops and over a dozen civilians with bullet wounds, two of them critical. A couple of dozen cut by flying glass, and twice that number bruised and banged about. And enough cases of shock to keep rotating teams of counselors busy for months.

Across the lobby, Assistant Director in Charge Tom Jansson was talking with the rail-thin captain of detectives from the Nineteenth Precinct. They were arguing over jurisdiction, but it was a moot point. The Vatican connection and the distinct possibility that what had happened here involved terrorists meant that overall command of the investigation was promptly transferred from the NYPD to the FBI. The sweetener was that, years earlier, an understanding had been reached between the two organizations. When any arrest was to take place, the NYPD would publicly take credit for the collar, regardless of who actually made it happen. The FBI would only get its share of the plaudits once the case went to court, ostensibly for helping secure the conviction. Still, egos often came in the way of sensible cooperation, which seemed to be the case tonight.

Aparo called over a man Reilly didn't recognize, and introduced him as Detective Steve Buchinski.

'Steve's happy to help us out while the dick-measuring contest's sorted out,' Aparo said, nodding over to the ongoing debate between their superiors.

'Just let me know what you need,' Buchinski said. 'I'm as keen as you are to nail the sons of bitches who did this.'

That was a good start, Reilly thought gratefully, smiling at the blunt-featured cop. 'Eyes and ears on the street. That's what we need right now,' he said. 'You guys have the manpower and the networks.'

'We're already running it down. I'll borrow a few more shields from the CPP, that shouldn't be a problem,' Buchinski promised. The precinct adjoining the Nineteenth was Central Park; horseback patrols were a daily feature of their work. Reilly wondered briefly if there might be a link and made a mental note to check on that later.

'We could also use some extra bodies for the follow-up interviews,' Reilly told the cop.

'Yeah, we're up to our eyeballs in witnesses,' Aparo added, motioning up at the Grand Staircase.

Most of the offices above were being used as makeshift processing rooms.

Reilly looked over and spotted Agent Amelia Gaines coming down the stairs from the gallery.

Jansson had put the striking, ambitious redhead in charge of interviewing witnesses. Which made sense, since everybody loved talking to Amelia Gaines. Following her was a blonde who was carrying a small replica of herself. Her daughter, Reilly guessed. The child looked like she was fast asleep.

Reilly looked again at the blonde's face. Usually, Amelia's alluring presence made other women pale into insignificance.

Not this one.

Even in her current state, something about her was simply mesmeric. Her eyes connected briefly with his before looking down to the clutter under her feet. Whoever she was, she was seriously shaken.

Reilly watched as she headed for die door, picking her way through the debris with unease. Another woman, older but with a vague physical resemblance, was close behind. Together, they walked out of the museum.

Reilly turned, refocusing. 'The first sort-through's always a huge waste of time, but we've still got to go through the motions and talk to everybody. Can't afford not to.'

'Probably more of a waste of time in this case. The whole damn thing's on tape.' Buchinski pointed at a video camera, then another. Part of the museum's security system. 'To say nothing of all the footage from the TV crews outside.'

Reilly knew from experience that high security was all very well for high-tech crimes, but no one had allowed for low-tech raiders on horseback. 'Great.' He nodded. 'I'll get the popcorn.'

Chapter 6

From his seat at a large mahogany table, Cardinal Mauro Brugnone glanced around the high-ceilinged room that was located close to the heart of the Vatican, studying his fellow cardinals.

Although, as the only cardinal-bishop present, Brugnone outranked the others, he deliberately avoided sitting at the head of the table. He liked to maintain an air of democracy here, even though he knew that they would all defer to him. He knew it and accepted it, not with pride, but through pragmatism. Committees without leaders never achieved anything.

This unfortunate situation, however, called for neither a leader nor a committee. It was something Brugnone would have to deal with himself. That much was clear to him from the moment he had seen the news footage that had been broadcast around the world.

His eyes eventually settled on Cardinal Pasquale Rienzi. Although he was the youngest of them all and only a

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