“I have neither the time nor the patience for dog-and-pony shows.”
Stephanie was not impressed. “I’ve had my fill of lies. Malone’s boy was taken because of me. Cotton is in London right now with an Israeli assassination squad. I can’t find him, so I can’t warn him. George Haddad’s life may be at stake. Then I learn that my boss leaves me bare-ass to the wind, knowing the Saudis want to kill me? What am I supposed to think?”
“That your friend, Henrik Thorvaldsen, thought enough to send you help. That your other friend, me, decided the help needed to work alone. How about that? Make sense?”
She considered his words.
“And one other thing,” Green said.
She glared at him.
“This friend particularly cares what happens to you.”
MALONE WAS ANNOYED. HE’D COME TO BAINBRIDGE HALL hoping for answers. Haddad’s notes had pointed them straight here. Yet nothing.
“Maybe there’s another drawing room?” Pam said.
But he checked the brochure and determined that this was the only space so labeled. What was he missing? Then he spotted something. Adjacent to one of the window alcoves, where elaborate stained-glass panes waited for the morning sun, a section of wall shone bare. Portraits filled every other available space. But not there. And the faint outline of a rectangle loomed clear on the wall covering.
He hurried to the bare spot. “One’s gone.”
“Cotton, I’m not trying to be difficult, but this could have been a wild goose chase.”
He shook his head. “George wanted us here.”
He paced the room in thought and realized they couldn’t linger. One of the cleaning crew might come this way. Though he carried Haddad’s and String Bean’s guns, he didn’t want to use either.
Pam was examining the tables that backed the two sofas. Books and magazines were decoratively stacked amid sculptures and potted plants. She was studying one of the small bronzes-an older man, his skin wizened, his body muscular, dressed in a waist cloth. The figure was perched on a rock, his bearded face concentrating on a book.
“You need to see this,” she said.
He approached and saw what was etched at the statue’s base.
ST. JEROME
DOCTOR OF THE CHURCH
He’d been so busy trying to find complicated pieces that the obvious had escaped him. Pam motioned to a book just beneath the sculpture.
He examined the spine. “Good eye.”
She smiled. “I can be useful.”
He gripped the heavy bronze and lifted. “So be useful and grab the book.”
STEPHANIE WASN’T SURE HOW TO TAKE BRENT GREEN’S REMARK. “What do you mean? This
“It’s a bit difficult to discuss at the moment.”
And she spotted something curious in Green’s eyes. Anxiety. For five years he had been the administration’s bulldog in many a battle with Congress, the press, and special-interest groups. He was a consummate pro. A lawyer who pleaded the administration’s case on a national stage. But he was also deeply religious and, to her knowledge, never even a hint of scandal had been attached to his name.
“Let’s just say,” Green said in a half whisper, “that I wouldn’t have wanted the Saudis to kill you.”
“Not a great comfort to me at the moment.”
“What about his security detail?” Cassiopeia asked. “I have the feeling he’s not bluffing on that one.”
“Check the front and keep an eye on the street,” she said, making clear through her gaze that she wanted a moment alone with Green.
Cassiopeia left the kitchen.
“Okay, Brent. What do you have to say that you couldn’t say in front of her?”
“What are you, Stephanie, sixty-one years old?”
“I don’t talk about my age.”
“Your husband has been dead a dozen years. That has to be tough. I never married, so I wouldn’t know what it’s like to lose a spouse.”
“It’s not easy. What does that have to do with anything?”
“I know you and Lars were estranged when he died. It’s time you start trusting somebody.”
“Gee, tell you what. I’ll schedule interviews and everyone, including those trying to kill me, will get a chance to convince me of their trustworthiness.”
“Henrik’s not trying to kill you. Cassiopeia isn’t. Cotton Malone’s not.” He paused. “I’m not.”
“You called off my backup, knowing I was in trouble.”
“And what would have happened if I hadn’t? Your two agents would have burst onto the scene, gunfire would have ensued, and what would have been solved?”
“I’d have Heather Dixon in custody.”
“And by morning she would have been released, after surely the secretary of state and probably the president himself intervened. Then you would have been fired and the Saudis would kill you at their leisure. And you know why? Because nobody would have cared.”
His words made sense. Damn him.
“You moved too fast and you didn’t think it through.” Green’s eyes had softened, and she saw something else she’d never seen before.
Concern.
“Earlier I offered my help. You refused. Now I’m going to tell you what you don’t know. What I didn’t tell you then.”
She waited.
“I allowed the file on the Alexandria Link to be compromised.”
MALONE OPENED THE BOOK ABOUT ST. JEROME, A THIN VOLUME, only seventy-three yellowed leaves, with an 1845 printing date. He paged through and absorbed a few details.
Jerome lived from 342 to 420 CE. He was fluent in Latin and Greek and, as a young man, made little effort to check his pleasure-loving instincts. Baptized by the pope in 360, he dedicated himself to God. For the next sixty years he traveled, wrote treatises, defended the faith, and became a recognized father of the Christian religion. He first translated the New Testament then, toward the end of his life, translated the Old directly from Hebrew into Latin, creating the Vulgate, which the Council of Trent eleven hundred years later proclaimed the authoritative text of the Catholic Church.
Three words caught Malone’s eye.
Jerome’s birth name.
He thought of the novel from the leather satchel.
Apparently Thomas Bainbridge had chosen his pen name with great care.
“Anything?” Pam asked.
“Everything.” But his excitement faded, replaced by the chill of an unpleasant realization. “We need to get out of here.”
He rushed to the doors, switched off the lights, and eased them open. The marble hall loomed, quiet. The radio continued to play in some far-off room, now a sporting event of some sort, the crowd and commentator loud. The floor polisher was silent.
He led Pam to the top of the stairs.
Three men burst into the hall below, weapons in hand.
One raised and fired.
He shoved Pam to the floor.