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Stones of Fire

Page 2

by Chloe Palov


  ‘Oh God.’

  Stunned to see the killer, Edie caught herself in mid-gasp. A behemoth of a man in grey overalls with a black ski mask pulled over his head, he was standing in front of the wall monitor and security keypad next to the door leading out of the administration area. In order to gain access to this area, each and every employee, regardless of rank, had to key a personal ID number into the security system, the procedure repeated when one left. The code activated the lock on the intimidating steel door. The computer system enabled museum security to monitor all employees’ whereabouts.

  It occurred to Edie that in order to enter the office suite, the murderer must have had a valid security code. How did he get a hold of a code?

  At the moment that didn’t matter. All that mattered was that she was stuck on the fourth floor with a murderer. To get to the lift or stairs, she had to pass through the steel door. Meaning she’d have to wait him out. Once he left the premises, she could escape the building.

  Wondering what the killer was doing, Edie watched his super-sized hand move across the keypad with surprising dexterity. She knew from experience that it took no more than two seconds to key in a fivedigit code and unlock the door, but by her reckoning the killer had been standing in front of the monitor and keypad a good thirty seconds.

  So just leave already.

  ‘Fucking shit!’ she heard the killer mutter as he removed a notepad and pencil from his breast pocket.

  As she watched him scribble something onto the notepad, Edie went slack-jawed. Although the monitor was too far away to be sure, she suspected the killer had accessed the computer security log. If true, that meant ‘E. Miller’ had just popped up on the monitor. Beside her name would be the exact date – 12/1/08 – and time – 13:38:01 – that she had entered the fourth floor. Even more damning, there would be no date or time indicated in the ‘Depart’ column.

  Edie had watched enough crime dramas on TV to know she’d been made.

  She had to find a hiding place. Now. This very instant.

  Terrified the Neanderthal in the grey overalls would somehow home in on her, Edie slowly eased away from the corner. She then ran down the hall grateful for the hideous maroon carpet that muffled her footfalls, past the office with the sprawled corpse on the floor.

  Turning right, she headed down another hall, this one dead-ending at a storeroom. Lined with shelving units stacked with boxes, it would make an excellent hiding place.

  Or would have made an excellent hiding place had it been open.

  She stared at the locked door.

  Now what?

  If she could get downstairs to the exhibition galleries, she could yank an artefact off the wall, instantly triggering the museum alarm system. The DC police would arrive within minutes, maybe even seconds if there happened to be a squad car in the area. But to do that, she’d have to first sneak past Dr Padgham’s killer.

  Too faint of heart to give this idea further consideration, Edie spun on her booted heel. As she did, she caught sight of a bright red sign with bold white lettering.

  The fire escape.

  Hope renewed at seeing the word EXIT, Edie rushed down the hall. When she reached the door, she grabbed the bar handle and pushed, bracing herself for what she assumed would be a very loud alarm.

  3

  ‘I think Isis is like the total embodiment of the wise woman. That’s why my magic circle practises a devotional ritual to invoke the power of Isis at each full moon.’

  Cædmon Aisquith glanced at the pierced and tattooed speaker, who clutched an autographed copy of Isis Revealed to her breast.

  ‘Do you by any chance mention the rites of Isis in your book?’

  About to answer with a terse negative, Cædmon caught himself. His American readers tended to fall into two categories: the erudite and the asinine. Not that it mattered, as he’d been ordered by his publicist – who looked on with the stern demeanour of an English headmistress – to treat all questions, no matter how inane or idiotic, with due consideration. Particularly if the questioner had already purchased a copy of his book.

  Cædmon schooled his features into an attentive expression. ‘Er, no. I am afraid there are no magical rituals detailed in the text. However, you are quite correct in that Isis, like her Greek counterpart Sophia, represents wisdom in all its myriad forms.’

  Apple polished, Cædmon thanked the young woman for her interest in ancient mysteries and cordially took his leave of her. A private man, he was uncomfortable in the role of public author, finding the meet-and-greet segment of book signings a tiresome exercise in the art of chinwagging, an art he’d never quite mastered.

  His belly aching from the cheap champagne and his facial muscles aching from the fool’s grin he’d been forced to wear since entering the bookshop, he was actually relieved when his mobile began to softly vibrate, the incoming call a perfect excuse to turn his back on the nattering group crowded into the diminutive confines of Dupont Books. To lessen his publicist’s displeasure, he made a big to-do of raising his mobile to his left ear, silently signaling that he needed to take the call. This being the last leg of a twelve-city tour, they’d had their fill of one another, Cædmon anxious to return to the quiet monotony of pen and ink.

  ‘Yes, hello,’ he said, always feeling like a bit of an ass speaking into, essentially, thin air.

  ‘Cædmon Aisquith?’

  Politely correcting the man’s butchered pronunciation of his name, he said, ‘Who’s calling, please?’

  The question met with a long silence followed by a click, the call abruptly disconnected.

  ‘Bloody hell,’ Cædmon muttered, yanking the mobile from his ear. The hairs on the back of his neck suddenly bristled. He didn’t give out his number. Hit with the unnerving sensation that he was being watched by someone who had no interest in discussing ancient lore or swilling free bubbly, he turned on his heel. Slowly. Calmly. A man with nothing to fear.

  Only he knew such posturing was an outright lie.

  Using the training ingrained from the eleven years he’d spent indentured in Her Majesty’s Security Service, he casually glanced about the bookshop, searching for the face that did not belong in the crowd, the telltale flush, the quick, breakaway glance of the guilty. No suspect characters prowling about, he next glanced out the plate-glass windows that opened onto Connecticut Avenue, the city pavement teeming with holiday shoppers.

  Nothing appearing out of the ordinary, he quietly released a pent-up breath.

  All quiet on the western front.

  Like most men with a price on his head, he didn’t know how it would end, if the day just lived would be his last. All he knew was that when the thugs of the Real Irish Republican Army did finally catch up with him, they would see to it that he died a barbaric death indeed. An eye for an eye and all that.

  Five years ago he had avenged the death of his lover by tracking down an RIRA chieftain and killing the bastard in the streets of Belfast. Such deeds did not go unpunished. Forced to go to ground, he’d spent the last several years living in Paris. A stranger in a strange land. Although he’d spent the time wisely, writing his first book, a treatise on the esoteric traditions of the ancient world. Lulled into a sense of security, he’d decided against using a pseudonym, thinking he’d fallen off the RIRA radar screen.

  Only now did it dawn on him that that bit of arrogance might cost him dearly.

  Ah, the folly of a first-born son still trying to impress the long-dead father.

  He rechecked the digital readout on his mobile. BLOCKED CALL was prominently displayed.

  ‘Why am I not surprised?’ he murmured. Again he scanned the bookshop, certain he was being stalked.

  His gaze fell on a volume of Byron propped on a nearby book shelf.

  ‘For the Angel of Death spread his wings on the blast…’

  As the long-forgotten line popped into his head, he bit back a caustic laugh, knowing he’d been that same dark angel. Once. A long time ago.

 
Still holding the mobile in his hand, he strolled over to his publicist. ‘My hotel just rang me,’ he blithely lied, falling back on lessons learned at MI5. ‘A bit of bother with the bill. Something about my credit card being refused.’ He pointedly glanced around the bookshop, the shelves littered with abandoned champagne flutes. ‘Seeing as how the festivities are winding down, you won’t mind if I dash off and take care of it?’

  His publicist, a touchy woman with the ironic surname of Huffman, stared at him from behind the frames of her ruby-red spectacles. ‘Do you need me to call the front desk for you?’

  ‘No problem,’ he replied with a shake of the head. ‘I’m a big boy. Although perhaps I should fortify myself before battling the dragon.’ He picked up a full champagne flute from a nearby tray, ignoring the fact that it had long since gone flat. ‘Cheers.’

  Taking his leave of her, the flute still clutched in his right hand, he headed to the back of the bookshop, veering down a hall marked EMPLOYEES ONLY. Blatantly ignoring the admonition, he continued until he came to a room stacked with cardboard boxes, the sole inhabitant a lank-haired young man unpacking a crate with the desultory air of an underpaid cog who didn’t much care if or when the wheel turned.

  Cædmon nodded, acting as though he had every right to be there. ‘The exit, if you please.’

  The young man jerked his head at the door opposite.

  On the other side of the service exit, Cædmon found himself standing on a cigarette-strewn pavement behind the bookshop, the concrete walls covered in ribald graffiti.

  No sooner did the exit door close behind him than he smashed his champagne flute against the wall.

  Weapon in hand, he waited.

  Come out, come out, wherever you are, he silently taunted, readying himself to do combat with his unseen nemesis.

  A full minute passed in tense silence.

  Realizing he’d given in to his fears, he derisively snorted.

  ‘The ghost of Irishmen past,’ he murmured, tossing the jagged-edged flute to the pavement.

  The moment of lunacy having passed, he flipped up the collar of his jacket, warding off the cold. He recalled seeing a coffee shop several blocks away. In dire need of caffeine, he headed in that direction.

  Although he knew he was being paranoid, Cædmon couldn’t shake off the unnerving feeling that an Irish militant who refused to accept the peace had tracked him to the far side of the Atlantic. Where he intended to settle a very old, yet still outstanding score.

  Who else would have called him on his mobile? As if to say, we can see you, but you can’t see us.

  4

  To Edie’s surprise, no fire alarm sounded. There was only the reverberating clunk of the bar handle as she swung open the fire door.

  The killer had disabled the alarm system.

  Hit by a blast of cold wintry air, she found herself over the precipice between the open door and an external fire escape that zigzagged down the rear of the museum. Completely enclosed in black chain link, the escape was designed so that only those inside the museum had access to it, keeping vagrants and thieves at bay.

  No time to worry that it was lightly snowing, that she had no coat or that she was afraid of heights, Edie stepped across the threshold into the caged stairwell, the fire door swinging shut behind her. She kept her gaze on the alley below, knowing that if she looked anywhere else but down, she’d get dizzy, maybe even faint. Like that time she watched the Fourth of July fireworks from a friend’s rooftop patio.

  A white-knuckled grip on the railing, she made her descent. The sound of her boots hitting the metal steps echoed in the alley below. At the bottom she opened the cage door, emerging into the alleyway. As with the emergency exit above, the door automatically closed and locked behind her.

  Hurriedly she glanced around, disoriented, uncertain in which direction to go. Like a weird nether world, the alley was filled with bins, skips, SUV-sized air conditioning condensers and parked vans. Against an adjacent building there was a tall pile of discarded office furniture, the offices recently remodelled, the old stuff still waiting to be taken away. Given it was December, every window that looked onto the alley was closed. And since no one wanted a bird’s eye view of big blue rubbish bins, the blinds were all pulled shut.

  From above her, Edie heard a door suddenly swing open.

  The killer had found the fire escape.

  Not wasting a second, she ducked behind a condenser, praying she hadn’t been spotted. If she hurried, she could escape the alley before he reached the bottom. But she couldn’t exit the alley without moving into the killer’s line of sight. That left only one option – she had to hide.

  Keeping to the shadows, she dashed some fifteen feet to the heap of jumbled chairs, their wooden arms and legs jutting into the air at odd angles. Like so many broken bones. As far as hiding places went, it was pretty pathetic. The pile wouldn’t stop a bullet. Or prevent a big, meaty fist from grabbing her. But it was the best that she could do at short notice.

  Espying a small opening at the bottom of the pile, she got down on her hands and knees and crawled into the hole. It was no more than twenty inches in height and she had to navigate with care. One wrong move and the heap of furniture could well tumble to the ground. With her underneath. Unable to crawl any farther into the pile, she came to a halt. Tucking her legs beneath her body, she made herself as small as possible. Invisible would have been better. Better because she knew with a sickening sense of certainty that the man on the fire escape wouldn’t hesitate to kill her.

  Hearing the rattle of a metal door, she peered through the jumble of furniture, watching as the killer exited the fire escape. He had removed his ski mask. Edie could see that he sported a military-style buzz cut. His face mottled with what looked like rage, he seemed on the verge of a steroid-induced rampage.

  In hunting mode, the killer swivelled his head from side to side, scanning the alley. Edie saw a large bulge at the back of his waist. The gun that had killed Dr Padgham. Methodically, the man’s gaze moved from target to target: blue bins, green condenser, white van. And then his gaze zeroed in on the furniture pile.

  These might very well be the last few moments before my death.

  Edie envisioned her bleeding body sprawled beneath a pile of discarded chairs. No doubt that’s who would find her, the orange-suited guys from the sanitation department.

  Holding her breath, Edie slowly counted backwards from ten.

  Ten, nine, eight, seven –

  The killer’s gaze suddenly swung to the other side of the alley, where a group of recycling bins overflowed with cans.

  She’d gone undetected.

  Surprisingly light-footed for such a large man, the killer walked all the way down the alley towards 21st Street before turning round and heading back to the fire escape. As he did, a police cruiser pulled into the alley from the opposite direction. Relieved beyond words, Edie released a pent-up breath. Opening the door to the fire escape had obviously triggered a silent alarm. The DC police had arrived to investigate.

  For some strange reason the killer didn’t seem the least bit perturbed by the sudden appearance of the cop car, actually raising his hand to flag down the cruiser. Why would he do that? she wondered. Might as well announce that he set off the alarm.

  A few seconds later she had her answer. A uniformed police officer got out of the cruiser and approached the killer, who removed a bag from his shoulder and handed it to the cop.

  The breastplate.

  The cop was in on it.

  The cavalry had come to kill her.

  ‘Looks like the op is a go,’ Edie overheard the cop say as he took custody of the stolen relic. ‘We fly to London at nineteen hundred hours.’

  The killer shook his head. ‘We’ve got loose ends. Someone else was in the museum besides Padgham and the two guards. The little shit escaped down the fire escape.’

  A resounding bang ensued as the cop slammed his fist down on the bonnet of the police cruiser. ‘S
hit! We’re fucked! The English fag was supposed to have been the only staff person in the building.’

  ‘It gets even worse,’ the killer said. Reaching into his breast pocket he removed the same notepad that Edie had seen earlier. ‘Padgham may have emailed photos of the breastplate. I notified the tac team at Rosemont. They’re hunting down the person at the other end of Padgham’s email.’

  Watching the exchange, Edie took slow, deep breaths, willing her cramped legs to stop quivering, her body protesting the straitjacket confinement.

  ‘This was supposed to have been a simple snatch and go,’ the cop muttered.

  ‘And sometimes a mission gets bogged down in the mire. What we need to do is find this fucker – what’s his name – E. Miller and get things tidied up.’

  Thank you, God. A small break. They thought she was a man. They would be looking for a man, not a woman. They also didn’t know that Padgham never sent the email. But that wasn’t her problem. Her problem was getting free and clear of the alley.

  ‘So far, there’s been no calls made to 911.’

  ‘When Miller does call, I want to know ASAP.’

  ‘Don’t worry. I’m on it,’ the cop said before getting into his cruiser.

  The knot in Edie’s stomach tightened painfully. If she contacted the police, the killer would know where to find her. And since one of the killer’s cohorts – maybe more – wore a police uniform, she’d have no way of distinguishing the good guys from the bad.

  More scared than ever, Edie watched as the cruiser drove away. The exchange ended, the killer walked over to the service entrance of the museum and punched in a code, the locked door buzzing open. Like he owned the place. Padgham’s killer went back inside the museum.

  Edie hurriedly backed out of her hidey-hole. Standing upright, she took a big gulp of air. The alley reeked of urine and rotting garbage, the stench so strong her eyes welled with tears.

  Hearing a loud mechanical rattle, she spun on her heel.

 

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