CHAPTER 10

The American soul is hard, isolate, stoic, and a killer.

The thought popped into Caedmon’s head as he reentered the Masonic reading room, D. H. Lawrence’s assessment strangely apropos.

Although he wasn’t altogether certain that Jason Lovett’s assassin was an American. The audacious young man had the air of a fashionable boulevardier combined with the physical beauty of a Mediterranean gigolo. Not exactly the image that came to mind when envisioning a cold-blooded American hit man.

Edie, her face streaked with tears, rushed toward him. The crimson-red shawl that was tied at her waist flared behind her like an unfurled sail.

“Thank God, you’re all right!” she exclaimed, flinging herself at his chest. “Lovett didn’t… he didn’t make it.”

Caedmon wrapped his arms around her quivering backside, belatedly realizing that he was shaking as well. For several moments they held each other, both of them murmuring words of comfort.

Hearing the shrill blare of sirens outside the building, he pulled away and awkwardly patted her shoulder. Four months ago, fate had literally thrown them together when they were both marked for execution by a religious zealot intent on finding the Ark of the Covenant. Had it not been for that dangerous episode, their paths would never have crossed. Given that he maintained a flat in Paris and Edie lived in Washington, their paths didn’t cross on a regular basis. In fact, he’d just flown in to Dulles last evening — the first time in nearly four weeks that they’d seen one another. He supposed that a bit of bumbling was to be expected.

“Yes, right.” He cleared his throat, directing his attention to Jason Lovett’s sprawled body. “Where is everyone? A brutal murder usually brings out the morbidly curious.”

“The security guard has the lecture-goers cordoned in the banquet hall.” Edie scowled at him. “I know that you got your book smarts from Oxford and your street smarts from MI5, but seeing you chase after the killer scared the bejesus out of me. Who do you think you are — Superman?”

“My apologies for scaring the lady. Unfortunately, my superpowers left something to be desired,” he confessed. Like any male of middling years, it pricked his ego that he’d been bested by a younger man. Stronger of both wind and limb. “The bastard made a clean go of it. Like chasing the Artful Dodger.”

Gnawing on her lower lips, Edie glanced over her shoulder at the dead archaeologist. “Before he died, I thought Lovett was about to pull a gun on me.” Slipping a hand into her dress pocket, she removed a small chrome-colored device, which she wielded like a hand-gun. “Bang-bang! This is what I mistook for a loaded weapon,” she said, handing him a digital voice recorder.

“How curious. Given the tragedy that just transpired, I suspect Jason Lovett wasn’t the only person actively searching for the Templar treasure. Although his unfortunate death makes me think that—” Suddenly noticing the jeweled knife hilt protruding from Lovett’s back, he stopped in midsentence.

Good God. Surely, he was seeing things.

Well aware that the authorities would arrive at any moment, Caedmon walked over to the corpse. Going down on bent knee, he examined what appeared to be a finely crafted centuries-old dagger.

“I don’t believe it.”

Clearly perplexed by his reaction, Edie stared at the jeweled hilt. “What is it?”

Taking care not to touch the murder weapon, he indicated the small inset rubies that formed a distinctive eight-pointed star.

“It’s an octogram star, the age-old symbol of creation.” Perplexed at seeing the symbol on a murder weapon, he stood upright. “In ancient Egypt, the octogram star was known as the ogdoad and was used by the creation cult that sprang up at Hermopolis. The number eight is highly significant in many esoteric traditions — the Gnostics, the Kabbalists — and, of course, there are eight points—”

“On the famous Templar cross,” Edie said, beating him to the punch. A split second later, her brow furrowed. “Do you think this star has something to do with the Knights Templar?”

“I think that Dr. Lovett’s murder has something to do with the Knights Templar. As for the star… I don’t know.” Caedmon shrugged, wishing he had a better answer. The eight-pointed star was one of the most complicated symbols in history. Two interlaced squares. The seven days of Creation followed by the eighth day of regeneration. Paradise regained.

Lost in thought, he glanced upward, his gaze alighting on the Egyptian hieroglyphics that adorned the ceiling. The unusual motif reiterated the premise of his Oxford dissertation — that the Knights Templars’ exposure to the Egyptian mysteries was at the heart of their brutal demise. And though he’d been derided for a lack of corroborating evidence, he still held firm to the belief.

The Templar treasure. The Octogram star. The Egyptian ogdoad. A dead archaeologist.

Was there a connection between the seemingly separate sine qua non?

“The Knights Templar are at the heart of this mystery. I can feel it in my blood.”

Edie waved a hand in front of his face. “Hel-lo. Jason Lovett was murdered before our very eyes. I suppose you’re going to tell me that’s an occupational hazard of being an archaeologist.” She shook her head, putting Caedmon in mind of a harried mother chiding her ill-behaved child. “Until now, I thought your obsession with the Knights Templar was relatively harmless.”

“I am not obsessed,” he replied, taking issue with her word choice.

“Well, if you aren’t obsessed, why did you chase Lovett’s killer?”

“Strangely enough, I had a great many questions to put to the brute. First and foremost, I wanted to know why he executed Jason Lovett.”

Edie’s brown eyes opened wide, as though he’d just made the most outlandish of statements. “Man’s greed knows no bounds. Money is the root of all evil. Yo-ho, yo-ho, a pirate’s life for me. Take your pick.”

Before he could reply, a bevy of uniformed police officers and a medical emergency team, stretcher in tow, rushed into the reading room.

“What about the digital voice recorder? Should we turn it over to the police?” Edie worriedly inquired.

Caedmon glanced at the uniformed policemen shoving their way through the crowd. Then he glanced at the small digital voice recorder that he still held in his right hand. Finally his gaze landed on the open book that was on the floor beside the dead archaeologist.

The Templars brought the Ark to the New World in the fourteenth century. I have the proof!

“Mention the digital recorder to no one. Our slain acquaintance bequeathed it to us for a reason.” With the tip of his shoe, he closed the book.

Hopefully, no one would think to open it.

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