The Jefferson Key: A Novel

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The Jefferson Key: A Novel Page 31

by Steve Berry


  He had to contact Knox and deal with the situation in Virginia. That had now become even more critical than what was happening in Nova Scotia.

  “You honestly think that would sway me?” she said. “A promise of marriage? I don’t need a husband, Quentin.”

  “What do you need?”

  “How about an answer to a question. Are you holding a woman prisoner here named Stephanie Nelle?”

  He considered lying, but again decided against it. “She is part of that enemy. Sent here to destroy us. I captured her in self-defense.”

  “I’m not asking you to justify it, Quentin. I simply want to know if she’s here.”

  Alarm bells rang in his brain.

  How would she know to ask that question?

  Only one way. Someone told her. Someone in the know. If she wasn’t naked he’d be worried she was wired. Her clothing and overnight bag were not a concern either since they were in the next room, a closed door between here and there.

  “Shirley, you must understand that these are extraordinary times. I did what I had to do. You would have done the same. In fact, is that not what you are doing now? Defending yourself, however you can.”

  CASSIOPEIA WANTED TO ARGUE WITH EDWIN DAVIS BUT KNEW that she had to trust both his and Cotton’s instincts.

  But there was still a problem.

  “We need to contact Kaiser,” she said to Davis.

  “I’m not sure that’s possible. What are we going to do? Call her?”

  “Not us. But there’s someone who could make the call.”

  She saw that he understood.

  Davis found his phone and dialed.

  HALE WAITED FOR SHIRLEY TO ANSWER HIM. SHE SEEMED TO BE considering his inquiry.

  “You used me,” she finally said.

  A fresh burst of wind and rain pounded the house.

  Which startled her.

  He used the moment to slam his fist into her face.

  CASSIOPEIA LISTENED AS DAVIS INFORMED PAULINE DANIELS what Shirley Kaiser had done.

  “I can’t believe she went there,” the First Lady said.

  They’d retreated into the dining room to make the call, clearing the house of agents.

  “She feels horrible about this,” the First Lady said. “She was so angry at being used. Still, she should have never gone there.”

  But there was something even more serious to consider. The shooting that had just happened would make the local news. Once Hale learned of the fate of his two men he would know Kaiser had been compromised. Which meant she just became a problem.

  “Pauline,” Davis said. “Call her. Now. See if she answers.”

  “Hold on.”

  “There’s no way to keep what happened here quiet,” Cassiopeia whispered to Davis.

  “I know. The clock’s ticking for Shirley Kaiser.”

  “Edwin,” Pauline said through the speaker. “No answer. It went to her voice mail. I didn’t think you’d want me to leave a message.”

  “We have to go,” Davis said to the phone.

  Cassiopeia caught the frustration in his voice.

  “Edwin, I didn’t—”

  Davis ended the call.

  “That was rude,” she said.

  “She wouldn’t have liked what I would have said next. At some point everyone is going to have stop making stupid mistakes.” He paused. “Myself included.”

  “That woman’s life is in jeopardy,” she said. “Get me down there fast.”

  And he didn’t argue.

  HALE STOOD FROM THE BED.

  Kaiser lay unconscious from the blow to her face.

  His hand hurt. Had he broken her cheekbone? He retrieved the gun and checked. Indeed, the next round would have caused much damage.

  His mind reeled.

  Had his men been caught at Kaiser’s residence? He had to know. Knox remained inaccessible, most likely still on Paw Island.

  He found his robe and slipped it on.

  He glanced at the bedside clock. 9:35 PM. He reached for the phone and punched the house intercom. His secretary answered after the second buzz in his ear.

  “Have two men come to my bedroom immediately. I have a new guest for our prison.”

  SIXTY-EIGHT

  NOVA SCOTIA

  10:20 PM

  MALONE OPENED HIS EYES. HIS BODY ACHED. PAIN RADIATED throughout his legs. He was lying on his back, his gaze shooting upward back through the gaping hole of rotting wood that he and Wyatt had plunged through.

  He tested his limbs and discovered that nothing seemed broken.

  Shafts of moonlight spilled down from above, enough for him to see that they’d fallen about thirty feet. The spongy wood had cushioned the landing. Rock lay beneath him.

  Along with chilly water.

  The walls around him glistened a silvery sheen in the faint light, signaling that they were damp.

  He heard surf and smelled the birds again.

  Where was Wyatt?

  He pushed himself up. A light switched on. Bright, singular, a few feet away. He shielded his eyes with an arm.

  The light moved away from his face.

  In the ambient glow he saw Wyatt holding the flashlight.

  KNOX ARRIVED AT THE PRIVATE AIRSTRIP WHERE HE’D LANDED the Hale Enterprises corporate jet, just south of Halifax, the facility catering to tourists who could afford the luxury of owning their own planes.

  He’d made it out of Mahone Bay and back north without incident.

  His phone vibrated in his pocket. He checked the display. Hale. Might as well deal with this now.

  He answered, told the captain what had happened, then said, “Carbonell lied to you. Again. There was another person here. Wyatt called him Cotton Malone. He was definitely not on our team. From what Wyatt implied, he was from the government. I can’t be responsible for all of this—”

  “I understand,” Hale said.

  Which surprised him. Hale generally comprehended nothing other than success.

  “Carbonell is a liar,” Hale said, bitterness in his tone. “She’s playing us all. You were right, and I have to now wonder if the information she provided about the cipher was even real.”

  “It still could be true. Wyatt said to tell you that once he had those two pages, he’ll sell them to you. He specifically wanted that message brought back.”

  “So we have to hope that this renegade, whom Carbonell obviously dislikes and distrusts, is right and will cooperate.”

  “We’ve also got two dead crewmen here,” he made clear.

  “And we have an even worse problem.”

  He listened as Hale told him about Shirley Kaiser and what may have gone wrong at her residence.

  He decided to take a chance and said, “Captain Hale, Carbonell is using us. She’s complicating an already complicated problem. She said only she and Wyatt knew about this location, yet this Cotton Malone was there. Did she send him, too? If not, then who the hell else knows about this? How much more risk are we going to take? How much do we gamble?”

  Silence on the other end of the phone signaled that Hale was thinking about that question.

  “I agree,” Hale finally said. “She needs to pay.”

  Excellent. Her death would right all his mistakes. He’d be right back where he started.

  “First,” Hale said. “Find out if we have a problem in Virginia. I need to know. Then, you have my permission to deal with NIA as you see fit.”

  Finally.

  Freedom to act.

  He ended the call and trotted toward the plane. He’d check the weather and receive clearance for takeoff once on board. No tower existed here, Halifax controlled ingress and egress. He popped the hatch on the jet and climbed into its spacious cabin.

  “Leave the light off,” a female voice said.

  He froze.

  His gaze raked the blackened scene. In the glow from the outside tarmac lights he caught three forms sitting in the leather seats.

  The voice was instantly recogn
izable.

  Andrea Carbonell.

  “As you can see,” she said, “I didn’t come alone. So be a good boy and close the cabin door.”

  CASSIOPEIA SAT IN THE PASSENGER COMPARTMENT OF AN AIR force transport chopper, flying south from Virginia to the North Carolina coast. Edwin Davis sat beside her. Weeks ago he’d reconnoitered the Commonwealth’s compound and was able to provide her with a detailed satellite image of the acreage. The Secret Service had arranged through the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation for a boat to be waiting on the Pamlico’s south shore. From there, she’d motor across to the north bank and Hale’s land. Avoiding local law enforcement seemed the safest course for now, as there was no way to determine how far the Commonwealth’s reach stretched.

  It was approaching midnight. Local news outlets in Fredericksburg would be reporting the shooting at Kaiser’s residence early tomorrow. Assuming that no one else had been around to report back the disaster, she should have a few hours in which to operate.

  Surely the Commonwealth compound was monitored electronically, as cameras would offer a far better line of defense than guards. Unfortunately, Davis had little intel on what awaited her on the ground. She’d been told of a nasty storm engulfing the entire coastal region, which should offer cover.

  The Secret Service agents watching Paw Island had reported all quiet there for the past hour.

  And Cotton?

  She couldn’t shake the thought that he was in trouble.

  WYATT STARED DOWN AT MALONE, WHO WAS SLOWLY COMING to his feet. Thankfully, he’d awakened first and managed to find a flashlight that Malone had apparently been carrying, which survived the fall.

  “You happy now?” Malone said.

  He said nothing.

  “Oh, I forgot. You don’t speak much. What was it they called you? The Sphinx? You hated that nickname.”

  “I still do.”

  Malone stood in ankle-deep water and worked out some kinks in his shoulder, stretching his back. Wyatt had already studied their surroundings. The chamber was about thirty feet high and half that wide. The walls were wet limestone, the rock floor engulfed by water, agate and jasper pebbles glistening in his beam.

  “It’s from the bay,” he said, motioning to the water.

  “Where the hell else would it come from?”

  But Wyatt watched as Malone comprehended the significance of his comment. He’d apparently read the history on this place, too. Seventy-four British soldiers died at Fort Dominion in a subterranean chamber subject to the tides.

  “That’s right,” he said. “We’re trapped in here, too.”

  SIXTY-NINE

  BATH, NORTH CAROLINA

  HALE WATCHED AS TWO CREWMEN YANKED SHIRLEY KAISER from an electric cart and dragged her through the rain into the prison. He’d called ahead and told them to be ready for another occupant. She remained groggy from his blow to her face, a nasty bruise on her left cheek.

  She tugged at the grip of her two minders as they forced her inside.

  He entered and slammed the door shut.

  He’d ordered Stephanie Nelle roused from her sleep and brought downstairs to new accommodations. He intended on placing these two women together since you never know what they might say to each other. Electronic monitoring would not miss a word.

  Nelle stood in the cell, watching as they approached. The door was unlocked and Kaiser shoved inside.

  “Your new roommate,” he told Nelle.

  The older woman was examining the bruise on Kaiser’s face.

  “Your doing?” Nelle asked.

  “She was being most disagreeable. She had a gun pointed at me.”

  “I should have shot you,” Kaiser spit out.

  “You had your chance,” he said. “And you were wondering about Stephanie Nelle. Here she is.” He faced Nelle. “Do you know a man named Cotton Malone?”

  “Why?”

  “No reason, other than he appeared somewhere he was not expected.”

  “If Malone’s there,” Nelle said, “you’ve got a problem.”

  He shrugged. “I doubt that.”

  “You think you could get this woman an ice pack?” Nelle asked. “She has a nasty knot.”

  Not an unreasonable request, so he ordered it done. “After all, she must look her best.”

  “What does that mean?” Nelle asked.

  “As soon as the storm passes, the two of you are taking a sail. Your last voyage. Out to sea, where you will stay.”

  CASSIOPEIA NAVIGATED THE CHURNING BLACK WATERS OF THE Pamlico River. She’d arrived from the west, deposited by helicopter a kilometer or two from the south shore. The State Bureau of Investigation agents who’d waited for her and Davis had pointed across the nearly three-kilometer black expanse. Though she could see nothing, she’d been told about a dock that extended into the river, at the end of which should be moored a sixty-meter sailing yacht, Adventure, that belonged to Hale. If she wanted to gain entrance to the property, that was the place. Just maintain the right heading, which they’d provided—but it was proving difficult. A gale had blown in off the Atlantic. Not quite a tropical storm, but strong enough with high winds and sheeting rain. The last few minutes of her helicopter ride had not been pleasant. Davis would be nearby, waiting either for her signal or dawn, whichever came first. Then he’d move in with Secret Service agents who were amassing north of Bath.

  Rain pelted her.

  She cut the motor and allowed the boat to drift closer to Hale’s dock. She’d found it exactly where they’d predicted. Swells rose in the meter-plus range, and she had to be careful not to crash into anything. The yacht tied to the dock was indeed impressive. Three masts, their stout size and shape indicating that they housed one of those automated sail systems she’d seen before. No lights burned anywhere, which was unusual. But it could be the storm. Power may have been affected.

  Through the rain she caught movement on the deck.

  And on the dock.

  Men.

  Running toward shore.

  MALONE ASKED WYATT, “WHY IS ALL THIS NECESSARY? WHAT happened between us was a long time ago.”

  “I thought I owed you.”

  “So you involved me in an assassination attempt? What if I hadn’t stopped the guns?”

  “I knew you’d do something. Then maybe you’d either get the blame or get shot.”

  He wanted to smack the SOB in the jaw but realized that would be fruitless. He stared around at their confines. The water level on the floor remained at ankle level.

  “So why not just kill me? Why all the drama?”

  “It doesn’t matter anymore.”

  “Which means you now owe somebody else more.”

  “It means it doesn’t matter anymore.”

  He shook his head. “You’re a strange bird. You always have been.”

  “There’s something you should see,” Wyatt said. “I found it while you were sleeping.”

  Wyatt angled the beam down the rock corridor. Twenty feet away, carved into the stone, gleaming from moisture and encrusted with algae, was a symbol.

  Malone instantly recognized it as one from Jackson’s message. “Any more?”

  “We can find out.”

  He glanced upward from where they’d fallen. No way to climb back up. A good thirty feet of air stretched overhead, the walls a slick mass of slime. Not a handhold anywhere.

  So why not. What the hell else was he going to do?

  “Lead the way,” he said.

  HALE DECIDED TO GRAB A FEW HOURS OF SLEEP. THERE WAS NO way they could make it to sea in this weather. Adventure was good, but every ship had its limits. He’d already ordered Kaiser’s rental car locked away, off premises, where it could not be found. He still hadn’t heard from the two men sent to Kaiser’s residence and he had to assume that they were either dead or captured. But if they had been captured, why hadn’t law enforcement already descended on him?

  He left the prison and headed for his cart.

&nb
sp; An alarm sounded.

  His gaze shot to the darkened trees surrounding him, in the direction of his house. No lights could be seen.

  A man burst from the prison and sloshed through the standing water, running his way.

  “Captain Hale, there are intruders on the premises.”

  CASSIOPEIA HEARD THE ALARM, THEN THE STEADY RAT-TAT-TAT of automatic weapons fire.

  What was happening?

  She leaped from the boat, taking a line with her, which she tied to a piling.

  At the top of the ladder she found her weapon and turned for shore.

  HALE RUSHED BACK INTO THE PRISON. HE’D HEARD THE DISTANT gunfire. A disturbing sound within his fortress of solitude. He found a phone and called the security center.

  “Ten men entered the estate from the north perimeter,” he was told. “They tripped motion sensors and we spotted them on camera.”

  “Police? FBI? Who are they?”

  “We don’t know. But they’re here, shooting, and they don’t act like police. They’ve cut power to the main house and dock.”

  He knew who they were.

  NIA.

  Andrea Carbonell.

  Who else?

  KNOX WANTED TO LEAVE NOVA SCOTIA, BUT CARBONELL AND her two companions seemed in no hurry. He decided not to try their patience, at least not yet, and sat in the plane.

  “Did you find what you came for?” she asked him.

  He wasn’t going to answer her. “Two of my men are dead in that fort. Your man Wyatt is battling it out with someone named Cotton Malone. You send him, too?”

  “Malone is there? Interesting. He’s from the White House.”

  He then realized why she was here. “You were going to take back whatever I found. You had no intention of letting the captains have the solution.”

  “I need those two missing pages in my possession.”

  “You still don’t get it, do you? The Commonwealth is not your enemy. But you’ve gone out of your way to make it one.”

  “Your Commonwealth is radioactive. CIA, NSA, the White House, they’re all closing in.”

 

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