I bit my lip. Clearly, nothing short of an ocean would be an acceptable excuse for Poe.
“However, they’ve been Tapped and, through the miracle of modern technology, we might actually be able to witness one going through his own Initiation Rites —Right, Barebones?”
One of the Diggers in the back gave him a thumbs-up. “We’re a go.”
Poe nodded. “And now, to introduce the newest Knights of the Order of Rose & Grave…”
“Angel.” Clarissa stepped up.
“Bond.” Dorian took his place by her side.
“Little Demon.” Odile sauntered over and struck a pose.
“Big Demon.” A center from the Eli basketball team who’d been lurking in the corner with some of the suited alumni came forward.
“Bugaboo.” My turn. I stepped into the forming circle. Lancelot met my eyes and grinned.
“Graverobber.” Another man from the group of silent suits, looking like gold-plated Eurotrash.
“Frodo.” Mr. Young Hollywood practically bounced into place.
“Kismet.” A tall black man stepped up.
“Puck.” George strolled into the circle, hands in pockets.
“Thorndike.” Demetria rolled her eyes at Puck as she joined him.
“Lucky.” Jennifer Santos shuffled in, keeping a safe distance between herself and her nearest neighbor.
“Keyser Soze.” Josh completed the circle, taking Lucky’s and Angel’s hands in his own.
Poe lowered his head, as if in reverence. “Welcome, my brothers…and my first sisters. You have been granted a Sacred Trust. The Knights that stand before me will be legendary in the Annals of the Order, for you are the first to count women amongst your ranks. The five females before us are the only women ever to be Initiated into the Mysteries of Rose & Grave.”
So that explained it. I
The older man I knew as “Uncle Tony,” now suited, stepped forward. “I would like to commend our departing seniors for having the strength and courage to drag this society into the 21st century. I know your path has not been an easy one, but I applaud your wills. You are truly a class of Brothers to be proud of.” Then he turned away from the hooded knights and toward the circle of taps. “As the presiding Patriarch of the Initiation Ceremony, I am honored to welcome you into our Order. I would like to take this opportunity to remind the ladies in the group that these boys have taken a great risk and a big leap of faith letting you in here. We expect you to be model women…so don’t blow it.”
Some welcome, schmuck! From across the circle, I saw Thorndike roll her eyes. “Go blow
As if sensing that things were going downhill, Lancelot piped up. “I think we’ve got the hook up to Sarmast.” He gestured to another Digger, who released a projector screen from the wall, while a third fiddled with his laptop and an overhead projector.
“Behold!” said Poe with a flourish. “The Initiation of Harun Sarmast.”
“Right. Whatever.” Lancelot clicked the projector on.
The picture was grainy, pixellated, but I could make out half a dozen men standing in a drab, corporate, pre-fab conference room lit by yellowish fluorescents. Some were in military uniforms, the rest in suits. They circled around a tall, gangly Middle Eastern young man, clapping and hooting undecipherable, static-filled phrases.
“Where is this?” Soze asked.
“U.S. embassy in Saudi Arabia.”
Soze whistled through his teeth. “Wow! Who’d you have to kill to get
Poe was clearly an expert at the deadpan look.
The boy in the picture was blindfolded, and considering the current political climate, the scene would have made me very uncomfortable if I hadn’t noted the enormous, shit-eating grin on his face. I wondered if that was the standard Rose & Grave M.O.—politically incorrect hazing scenes. After all, they’d done the whole “Diggers’ Whore” act on me.
“Sarmast is doing language work for the government this semester. We pulled some major strings at the embassy to tap him before Dragon’s Head could.”
One of the hooded Diggers sniggered. “Their pockets just…aren’t as deep.”
“What about the other two?” I asked.
“They’ve been…secured.”
“I thought you said they were tapped.”
Poe shot me a look like a cobra ready to strike. “I’ve got it covered, Bugaboo.”
“Don’t mind him,” Lancelot said. “He gets sore every time he’s reminded that he’s a mere mortal. Rest assured, if Poe couldn’t track them down, no one else will, either. We’ll get to them first. And you’ll get to be in on the initiations.”
“What if they reject the tap?” I asked, but Lancelot merely blinked at me as if such a predicament was inconceivable.
Poe pulled out a cell phone and began dialing. A moment later, one of the marines on-screen answered.
“Is this real-time streaming?” Lucky asked, joining in on the party at last.
The Digger manning the keyboard smiled and beckoned to her. “Yep. Come take a look.”
Lucky took a place behind the computer, her look of fear replaced with one of rapture. Now I remembered—Jenny Santos, who at the tender age of seventeen developed some amazing software, sold it off, then donated every last cent of her eight-figure proceeds to her church. No wonder Rose & Grave wanted her on their team.
“Okay,” Lancelot said to the man in Saudi Arabia. “Begin.” He passed the phone to Uncle Tony and joined me.
“I knew we’d win her over eventually,” he whispered in my ear, nodding his head at Lucky. “Just had to find the right apple with which to tempt her.”
“Pomegranate.”
“Huh?”
“Didn’t you take the Bible as Literature class?” I asked, pleased I could get back at him for his literary critic crack. “No such thing as apples in the Cradle of Civilization. Closest modern translators can come is that Eve ate a pomegranate. Just like your Persephone.”
Lancelot slipped his arm around my shoulders. “
I frowned. “And then they both got kicked out of Paradise.”
He sighed. “Don’t you get it yet, girl? This
“Shhh!” said Poe. “They’re starting.”
I turned back to the scene being beamed in from the Cradle of Civilization as Harun Sarmast was presented with his own pomegranate. The sound blipped in and out, but I caught enough to recognize that it was utterly incomprehensible.
“Are they speaking—German?” Angel asked, incredulous. Not surprising to me, though, considering my run-in with the Reaper. Hadn’t Angel been subjected to that tableau as well?
Poe nodded. “Our Saudi contingent is a little old-school.”
“And what are you?” I muttered under my breath. “A freakin’ progressive?”
Lancelot leaned in. “By Digger standards? Hell, yeah. It was all in German prior to the Second Rose & Grave Council.”
I laughed, earning yet another glare from Poe. What a killjoy.
Harun Sarmast proceeded along the path to initiation, and even without the wild costumes and the midnight-sky domed ceiling of the Inner Temple, it looked impressive. The Saudi-based alumni executed their roles with the type of military precision to be expected, considering their professions. Now that I was no longer the object of attention in the room, I could fully appreciate the earnest enthusiasm and joy the knights felt at showing the neophyte the overseas versions of the initiation players and paraphernalia. Even without the trappings of the tomb, the knights all raved about Persephone! Persephone! Persephone! (or at least a photocopy from a mythology book) Connubial Bliss! Connubial Bliss! Connubial Bliss! (crude reproduction) and Uncle Tony (whose Saudi incarnation was not wearing the elaborate rose mask) Cthony Carpathian…oh, bother. I forget the rest.
Every Digger in the room stood transfixed by the scene before us. They mouthed the words of the oaths as Harun took each one, they cheered along with the Saudi knights as he passed every stage of the initiation, they laughed when he spilled his third skull-full of pomegranate juice down the front of his shirt.
And then—here’s the really strange part—something blossomed inside my chest. I know, I know, I’d spent the evening being carried around in a coffin, tricked into thinking I was drowning, forced to drink fruit juice out of human remains, vowing to worship an ancient Greek goddess and to never tell a living soul about the whole shebang, and
As I watched another knight be brought within the Society of Rose & Grave, I could feel the circle being drawn, and I was inside of it. Camaraderie took over, and—dare I say it?—brotherhood.
Lucky ran her fingers across the keyboard and suddenly the picture got ten times better. I didn’t even want to know what she’d just hacked to pull it off.
I watched Harun stumble over the oath of fidelity once, say it again with a strange, subtle flicker of his gaze toward something off-camera, and then, with a deep breath, capitulate and say it a third time with such sincerity in his eyes that it shone through even the pixellated, grainy image. Was that what we all looked like at that