SIXTY-TWO

MALONE WAS THE LAST TO CLIMB UP. WHEN HE STEPPED FROM THE ladder he saw that the church was occupied by six armed men along with de Roquefort. Outside, the sun was gone. Inside was now illuminated from the glow of two small fires, the smoke rushing out into the night through the open window slits.

"Mr. Malone, we finally meet in person," Raymond de Roquefort said. "You handled yourself well in the Roskilde cathedral."

"Glad to know you're a fan."

"How did you find us?" Mark asked.

"Certainly no thanks to that phony journal of your father's, clever though he was. He spoke to the obvious and changed the details just enough to make them worthless. When monsieur Claridon deciphered the cryptogram within it, the message, of course, was of no help. He told us that he concealed the secrets of God. Tell me, since you've been down there, does he conceal those secrets?"

"Never got a chance to find out," Malone said.

"Then we should remedy that. But to answer your question-"

"Geoffrey betrayed us," Thorvaldsen said.

Astonishment clouded Mark's face. "What?"

Malone had already noticed the gun in Geoffrey's hand. "That true?"

"I'm a brother in the Temple, loyal to my master. I did my duty."

"Your duty?" Mark screamed. "You lying son of a bitch." Mark lurched toward Geoffrey, but two brothers blocked the way. Geoffrey stayed rooted. "You led me on this whole thing just so de Roquefort could win? Is that what our master meant to you? He trusted you. I trusted you."

"I knew you were a problem," Cassiopeia declared. "Everything about you signaled trouble."

"And you should know," de Roquefort said, "as that's what you have been to me. Leaving Lars Nelle's journal for me to find in Avignon. You thought that would occupy me for a while. But you see, mademoiselle, the loyalty of our brotherhood takes precedence. So your efforts have all been for naught." De Roquefort faced Malone. "I have six men here, six outside-and they know how to handle themselves. You have no weapons, or so brother Geoffrey has informed me. But to be safe." De Roquefort motioned and one of the men frisked Malone, then moved to the others.

"What did you do, call the abbey when you left here to get supplies?" Mark asked Geoffrey. "I wondered why you volunteered. You haven't let me out of your sight in two days."

Geoffrey continued to stand, his face stiff with conviction.

"You're a disgusting excuse for a man," Mark spat out.

"I agree," de Roquefort said, and Malone watched as de Roquefort's gun came level and he fired three shots into Geoffrey's chest. The bullets staggered the younger man back, and de Roquefort finished his assassination with a bullet to head.

Geoffrey's body collapsed to the floor. Blood poured from the wounds. Malone bit his lip. There was nothing he could do.

Mark lunged at de Roquefort.

The gun was aimed at Mark's chest.

He stopped.

"He assaulted me at the abbey," de Roquefort said. "Attacking the master is punishable by death."

"Not in five hundred years," Mark yelled.

"He was a traitor. To you and to me. Neither of us has any use for him. That's the occupational hazard of being a spy. He surely knew the risk he was taking."

"Do you know the risks you're taking?"

"A strange question coming from a man who killed a brother of this Order. That act is punishable by death, too."

Malone realized this show was for the others present. De Roquefort needed his enemy, at least for the moment.

"I did what I had to," Mark spit out.

De Roquefort clicked the hammer of the automatic into place. "So will I."

Stephanie stepped between the two men, her body blocking Mark's. "And will you kill me, too?"

"If need be."

"But I'm a Christian and I haven't harmed any brothers."

"Words, dear lady. Only words."

She reached up and fished out a chain with a medal from around her neck. "The Virgin. She goes with me wherever I go."

Malone knew de Roquefort could not shoot her. She'd sensed the theater, too, and called his bluff before his men. De Roquefort could not afford to be a hypocrite. He was impressed. It took balls to face down a loaded gun. Not bad for a desk jockey.

De Roquefort lowered the weapon.

Malone rushed toward Geoffrey's bleeding body. One of the men raised a hand to stop him. "I'd drop that arm if I were you," he made clear.

"Let him pass," de Roquefort said.

He came close to the body. Henrik stood staring down at the corpse. A pained look filled the Dane's face and he saw something he'd not seen in the year he'd known him.

Tears.

"You and I will go back down," de Roquefort said to Mark, "and you'll show me what you found. The others will stay here."

"Screw yourself."

De Roquefort shrugged and aimed his gun at Thorvaldsen. "He's a Jew. Different rules."

"Don't push it," Malone said to Mark. "Do as he says." He hoped Mark understood that there was a time to hold and a time to fold.

"All right. We'll go down," Mark said.

"I'd like to come," Malone said.

"No," de Roquefort said. "This is a matter for the brotherhood. Though I never considered Nelle one of us, he took the oath, and that counts for something. Besides, his expertise might be needed. You, on the other hand, could become a problem."

"How do you know Mark will behave?"

"He will. Otherwise, Christians or no, all of you will die before he could ever climb out that hole."


MARK DESCENDED THE LADDER, FOLLOWED BY DE ROQUEFORT. HE pointed left and told de Roquefort about the chamber they'd found.

De Roquefort slid his gun back into a shoulder holster and aimed his flashlight ahead. "You lead the way. And you know what happens if there are any problems."

Mark started walking, his flashlight added to de Roquefort's beam. They eased their way around the staked hole that had almost claimed Stephanie.

"Ingenious," de Roquefort said as he examined the pit.

They found the open grille.

Mark recalled Malone's warning about more traps and took only baby steps forward. The passage beyond narrowed to about a yard wide, then angled sharply right. After only a few feet, another angle back to the left. One step at a time, he inched ahead.

He made the final turn and stopped.

He shone his light and saw before him a chamber, perhaps ten yards square with a high rounded ceiling. Cassiopeia's assessment that the subterranean vaults might be of Roman origin seemed correct. The gallery formed a perfect repository, and as his light dissolved the darkness, a multitude of wonders came into view.

He first saw statuary. Small colorful pieces. Several enthroned Virgins and Child. Gilded pietas. Angels. Busts. All in straight rows, like soldiers, across the rear wall. Then the glint of gold from rectangular chests. Some overlaid with ivory panels, others sheathed in a mosaic of onyx and gilt, a few gilded in copper and decorated with coats of arms and religious scenes. Each was too precious for simple storage. They were reliquary caskets, made for the remains of holy saints, probably commandeered in the rush, anything to hold what they needed to transport.

He heard de Roquefort slip off the backpack he was wearing, and suddenly the room was engulfed in a bright orange glow from a battery-powered light bar. De Roquefort handed him one. "These will work better."

He didn't like cooperating with the monster, but knew he was right. He grabbed the light, and they fanned out to see what the room contained.


"COVER HIM UP," MALONE SAID TO ONE OF THE BROTHERS, MOTIONING at Geoffrey.

"With what?" came the question.

"The power cords for the light bars are wrapped in a blanket. I can use that." He motioned across the church, past one of the burning fires.

The man seemed to consider the inquiry a moment, then said, "Oui. Do it."

Malone stomped across the uneven floor and found the blanket, all the while assessing their situation. He returned and draped Geoffrey's body. Three guards had withdrawn to the other fire. The remaining three were stationed near the exit.

"He wasn't a traitor," Henrik whispered.

They all stared at him. "He came in alone and told me that de Roquefort was here. He called him. He had to. The former master made him pledge that, once the Devise was found, de Roquefort would be told. He had no choice. He didn't want to do it, but he trusted the old man. He told me to play along, begged my forgiveness, and said he'd look after me. Unfortunately, I couldn't return the favor."

"That was foolish of him," Cassiopeia said.

"Maybe," Thorvaldsen said. "But his word meant something to him."

"Did he say why he had to tell him?" Stephanie muttered.

"Only that the master foretold a confrontation between Mark and de Roquefort. Geoffrey's task was to ensure one."

"Mark's no match for that man," Malone said. "He's going to need help."

"I agree," Cassiopeia added, talking through her teeth, her mouth not moving.

"The odds aren't good," Malone said. "Twelve men armed, and we're not."

"I wouldn't say that," Cassiopeia whispered.

And he liked the twinkle in her eye.


MARK STUDIED THE TREASURE THAT SURROUNDED HIM. HE'D never seen so much wealth. The reliquary caskets contained a variety of silver and gold, either in coinage or as unminted raw metal. There were gold dinars, silver drachmas, and Byzantine coins, all stacked in neat rows. And jewels. Three chests brimmed with rough stones. Too many to even imagine. Chalices and reliquary vessels caught his gaze, most of ebony, glass, silver, and parcel-gilt. Some were coated with relief figures and dotted in precious stones. He wondered whose remnants they supposedly contained. One he knew for sure. He read the engraving and whispered, "De Molay," as he stared into the reliquary's rock crystal tube.

De Roquefort came close.

Inside the reliquary were bits of blackened bone. Mark knew the tale. Jacques de Molay was roasted alive on an island in the Seine, in the shadow of Notre Dame, shrieking his innocence and cursing Philip IV, who'd dispassionately watched the execution. During the night brothers swam the river and scrounged through the hot ashes. They swam back with the acrid bones of de Molay in their mouths. Now he was staring at one of those mementos.

De Roquefort crossed himself and mumbled a prayer. "Look what they did."

But Mark realized an even greater significance. "This means someone visited this place after March 1314. They must have kept coming back until they all died. Five of them knew about this place. The Black Death surely took them in the mid-1300s. But they never told a soul, and this vault was lost forever." A sadness swept over him at the thought.

He turned and his light revealed crucifixes and statuary of ebonized wood dotting one wall, about forty, the styles varying from Romanesque, to German, to Byzantine, to high Gothic, the intricately carved physical undulations so perfect they seemed to almost breathe.

"It's spectacular," de Roquefort said.

The tally was incalculable, the stone niches that spanned two walls were packed full. Mark had studied in detail the history and purpose of medieval carving from the pieces that survived in museums, but here before him was a broad, spectacular display of Middle Age craftsmanship.

To his right, on a stone pedestal, he spotted an oversized book. The cover still gleamed-gold foil, he surmised-and was dotted with pearls. Someone had apparently opened the volume before, as crumbled parchment lay beneath, scattered like leaves. He bent down, brought the light close to the scraps, and saw Latin. He could read some of the script and quickly determined that it had once been an inventory ledger.

De Roquefort noticed his interest. "What is it?"

"An accounting. Sauniere probably tried to examine it when he found this place. But you have to careful with parchment."

"Thief. That's what he was. Nothing but a common thief. He had no right to take any of this."

"And we do?"

"It's ours. Left for us by de Molay himself. He was crucified on a door, yet told them nothing. His bones are here. This is ours."

Mark's attention was diverted to a partially open chest. He shone his light and saw more parchment. He slowly hinged open the lid, which only slightly resisted. He dared not touch the sheets stacked together. So he strained to decipher what was on the top page. Old French, he quickly concluded. He could read enough to know that it was a will.

"Papers the Order was safekeeping. This chest is probably full of thirteenth- and fourteenth-century wills and deeds." He shook his head. "To the end, the brothers made sure their duty was done." He considered the possibilities that lay before him. "What we could learn from these documents."

"This is not all of it," de Roquefort suddenly declared. "No books. Not one. Where's the knowledge?"

"What you see is it."

"You're lying. There's more. Where?"

He faced de Roquefort. "This is it."

"Don't be coy with me. Our brothers secreted away their knowledge. You know that. Philip never found it. So it has to be here. I can see it in your eyes. There's more." De Roquefort reached for his gun and raised the barrel to Mark's brow. "Tell me."

"I'd rather die."

"But would you rather have your mother die? Or your friends up there? Because that's who I'll kill first, while you watch, until I learn what I want to know."

Mark considered the possibility. It wasn't that he was afraid of de Roquefort-strangely, no fear coursed through him-it was simply that he wanted to know, too. His father had searched for years and found nothing. What had the master told his mother about him? He doesn't possess the resolve needed to complete his battles. Bullshit. The solution to his father's quest was a short walk away.

"All right. Come with me."


"IT'S AWFUL GLOOMY IN HERE," MALONE SAID TO THE BROTHER who appeared in charge. "Mind if we get the generator going and fire up those lights?"

"We wait for the master to return."

"They're going to need those lights down there, and it takes a few minutes to set things up. Your master may not be inclined to wait when he calls for them." He was hoping the prediction might affect the man's judgment. "What's it going to hurt? We're just rigging up some lights."

"Okay. Go ahead."

Malone withdrew back to where the others stood. "He bought it. Let's set 'em up."

Stephanie and Malone moved toward one set, while Henrik and Cassiopeia grabbed another. The bars consisted of two halogen flood lamps atop an orange tripod. The generator was a small gasoline-powered unit. They positioned the tripods at opposite ends of the church and angled the bulbs upward. Power cords were connected and run back to where the generator sat, near the altar.

A tool bag lay beside the generator. Cassiopeia was reaching inside when one of the guards stopped her.

"I need to hot-wire the power cords. Can't use plugs for this kind of ampage. I'm only going to get a screwdriver."

The man hesitated then stepped back, gun at his side, seemingly ready. Cassiopeia reached into the bag and carefully removed the screwdriver. By the light of the fires, she attached the cords to leads on the generator.

"Let's check out the connections to the lights," she said to Malone.

They casually walked to the first tripod. "My dart gun is in the tool bag," she whispered.

"I assume those are the same little darlings used in Copenhagen?" He kept his lips still as a ventriloquist's.

"They work fast. I just need a few seconds to fire the shots."

She was fiddling with the tripod, not doing anything.

"And how many shots do you have?"

She seemingly finished what she was doing. "Four."

They headed for the other tripod. "We have six guests."

"The other two are your problem."

They stopped at the second tripod. He breathed out, "We'll need a moment of distraction to confuse everybody. I have an idea."

She tinkered with the back of the lights. "About time."

Загрузка...