Behind Zovastina, several of the troops walked by, each carrying a strange-looking contraption. One was deposited on the floor beside Zovastina. A funnel extended from its top and she’d spotted wheels beneath.
“This is a big house. It will take a little while to prepare it.”
“For what?” she asked.
“To burn,” Thorvaldsen answered.
“Quite right,” Zovastina said. “In the meantime I’m going to visit Mr. Malone and Ms. Vitt. Don’t go away.”
And Zovastina slammed the door.
EIGHTY-FOUR
MALONE LED THE WAY UP THE INCLINE AND NOTICED, AT PLACES, that steps had been chipped from the rock recently. Cassiopeia and Viktor followed, both keeping a lookout behind. The distant house remained quiet and Ptolemy’s riddle kept playing through his mind.
The trail leveled off on a ledge.
The power conduit continued to snake a path into a dark cleft in the rock wall. Narrow, but passable.
He led the way into the passage.
His eyes were not accustomed to the diminishing light and needed a few seconds to adjust. The path was short, maybe twenty feet, and he used the conduit as a guide. The corridor ended inside a larger chamber. Weak ambient light revealed that the power line hooked left and ended at a junction box. He stepped close and saw four flashlights piled on the floor. He flicked one on and used the bright beam to survey the room.
The chamber was maybe thirty feet long and that much or more wide, the ceiling a good twenty feet away. Then he noticed two pools about ten feet apart.
He heard a click and the room sprang to life with incandescent light.
He turned to see Viktor at the electrical box.
He switched off the flashlight. “I like to check things out before acting.”
“Since when?” Cassiopeia said.
“Take a look,” Viktor said, motioning at the pools.
Both were illuminated by underwater lights fed through ground cables. The one on the right was oblong shaped and carried a brown tint. The other was luminous with greenish phosphorescence.
“Gaze into the tawny eye,” Malone said.
He stepped close to the brown pool and noticed that the water was swimming-pool clear, its color coming from the tint of the rocks below the surface. He crouched down. Cassiopeia bent down beside him. He tested the water. “Warm, but not too bad. Like a hot tub. Must be thermal vented. These mountains are still active.”
Cassiopeia brought wet fingers to her lips. “No taste.”
“Look at the bottom.”
He watched as Cassiopeia registered what he’d just spotted. Maybe ten feet down in the crystalline water, carved from a slab of rock, lying flat, was the letter Z.
He walked to the green pool. Cassiopeia followed. More water clear as air, colored by tinted stone. At its bottom lay the letter H.
“From the medallion,” he said. “ZH. Life.”
“Seems this is the place.”
He noticed Viktor had stayed close to the electrical box, not all that concerned with their discovery. But there was something else. Now he knew what the last line of the riddle meant.
He returned to the brown pool. “Remember on the medallion, and at the bottom of that manuscript Ely found. That odd symbol.” With his finger he traced its outline in the sandy topsoil.
“I couldn’t determine what it was. Letters? Like two B’s joined to an A? Now I know exactly what it is. There.” He pointed at the rock wall six feet beneath the brown pool’s surface. “See that opening. Look familiar?”
Cassiopeia focused on what he’d already noticed. The opening appeared like two B’s joined to an A. “It does look like it.”
“
“No, Malone. Tell us what that means.”
He turned.
Irina Zovastina stood just outside the exit.
STEPHANIE NESTLED CLOSE TO THE DOOR AND LISTENED FOR ANY sound on the other side. She heard the whine of an electrical motor, starting, stopping, then a bump to the door. A hesitation, then the mechanical hum began again.
“It’s canvassing,” Thorvaldsen said. “The robots spread the potion before exploding and setting everything off.”
She noticed an odor. Sickeningly sweet. Strongest at the bottom of the door. “Greek fire?” she asked.
Thorvaldsen nodded, then said to Ely, “Your discovery.”
“That crazy bitch is going to fry us all,” Lyndsey said. “We’re trapped in here.”
“Tell us something we don’t know,” Stephanie muttered.
“Did she kill anyone with it?” Ely asked.
“Not that I know of,” Thorvaldsen said. “We may have the honor of being first. Though Cassiopeia certainly used it to her advantage in Venice.” The older man hesitated. “She killed three men.”
Ely seemed shocked. “Why?
“To avenge you.”
The younger man’s amiable face hardened into a puzzled frown.
“She was hurt. Angry. Once she found out Zovastina was behind things, there was no stopping her.”
Stephanie examined the door. Steel hinges top and bottom. Bolts held their pins in place and no screwdriver in sight. She pounded her hand against the wood. “Does Vincenti own this monstrosity?” she asked Lyndsey.
“He did. She shot him.”
“She’s apparently consolidating her power,” Thorvaldsen said.
“She’s a fool,” Lyndsey said. “There’s so much more happening here. I could have had it all. The frickin’ golden rainbow. He offered it to me.”
“Vincenti?” she asked.
Lyndsey nodded.
“Don’t you get it?” Stephanie said. “Zovastina has those computers with the data. She has her viruses. And you even told her there’s only one antiagent and where they can be found. You’re useless to her.”
“But she does need me,” he spit out. “She knows.”
Her patience was wearing thin. “Knows what?”
“Those bacteria. They’re the cure for AIDS.”
EIGHTY-FIVE