Ark of Fire (43 page)

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Authors: C. M. Palov

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #General

BOOK: Ark of Fire
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CHAPTER 66
“Not to worry,” Caedmon announced, affecting a tone of bluff good cheer. “The fact that the priory was destroyed will not impede our progress in the least. In fact, it will make the task at hand far easier to execute.”
“Do you think I suddenly went loco? There’s nothing here,” MacFarlane argued, gesturing to the empty space abutting the three stone walls.
“Ah! ‘They have eyes, but they do not see.’”
“And what does King David have to do with anything?”
Knowing that he needed to produce a rabbit from his top hat, Caedmon replied, “The good king’s observation is most apropos. For though the untrained eye sees nothing but overgrown grass and three stone walls, the trained eye sees the nunnery as it once stood.”
Several seconds passed in terse silence.
“Go ahead. I’m listening,” MacFarlane said, rather grudgingly.
Relieved that he’d passed the initial audition, Caedmon cast Edie a quick, reassuring glance.
Don’t worry, love. I can do this. I can buy us the time we need.
He gestured to the meadow adjacent to the stone walls. “If you care to join me, I would like to take what the archaeologists call a ‘field walk.’ Since we don’t have the benefit of an aerial photograph, by slowly walking the site, we should be able to detect slight fluctuations and anomalies in the ground surface. These fluctuations and anomalies will enable us to piece together the perimeter boundary of the original nunnery. Once we’ve done that, we’ll be in a much better position to know where to begin the search.”
Although MacFarlane nodded his assent, a silent addendum was included—the gadabout had better produce some tangible results.
The rabbit trick suddenly becoming that much more difficult, he commenced the tour by saying, “First, a quick primer in monastic layout. The majority of medieval priories followed a standard prototype of three buildings, usually two stories in height, arranged in a U shape. This U-shaped configuration would have abutted a church.” Caedmon gestured to the three stone walls. “As you can see, the demolished church is all that remains of the Priory of the Blessed Virgin Mary.”
“If I’m imagining this correctly, the church and the U-shaped buildings would have enclosed some sort of courtyard,” Edie remarked.
“Quite correct. The garth, or cloister as it is more commonly called, was the large open space within the enclosed buildings. The cloister was primarily used for gardening and the interment of the dead.”
A definite spark of interest in his eyes, MacFarlane clearly recognized the possibilities that the cloister presented. “I’m guessing that no one would have thought twice about a deep hole being dug inside the enclosed courtyard.”
“We are of like mind. Furthermore, only nuns and novices were permitted inside the cloister, thus making it the perfect place for Philippa to bury the Ark of the Covenant.” Arms spread wide, Caedmon gestured to the vacant meadow that moments ago MacFarlane had been so quick to dismiss. “Here, Philippa could have safeguarded the Ark from the outside world while at the same time keeping a watchful eye on it. Shall we begin our stroll around the cloister?”
Taking the lead, he walked to the other side of the small meadow, MacFarlane on his heels, Edie and the henchmen also in tow.
“This, I believe, is where the refectory would have been situated,” he said, gesturing with his hands to an area of overgrown weeds and tangled grass. “The refectory was, as you undoubtedly know, the dining hall where all meals were taken.”
“. . . aka the penguins’ mess tent,” one of the henchmen snickered.
Ignoring the jibe, Caedmon marched forward approximately fifteen meters. “And this would have been the
lavatorium
.”
“The wash area, right?”
He nodded at Edie. “That’s correct.” He then walked another fifteen meters. “Here would have stood the kitchen area.”
“And just how is it that you know all of this?” MacFarlane suspiciously asked, glancing back and forth between the last two areas delineated.
Caedmon knowingly smiled, about to divulge how he’d pulled a rabbit out of thin air. “If you’ll look carefully, you’ll see a slightly raised furrow.” He pointed to the ground. “That is what’s known as a kitchen midden. Or what the layman might refer to as a buried trash heap. And if you were to search the
lavatorium
, you would see a depressed furrow rather than a raised furrow.”
“Caused by centuries of running water,” Edie correctly deduced.
“Satisfied?” He directed the question to the man who held their fate in his hand.
Again, MacFarlane glanced back and forth between the “kitchen” and the
“lavatorium
.

Appeased, he jutted his head at the small meadow. “Keep walking.”
Caedmon continued with the tour. “Across from us, on the other side of the cloister, would have been the nuns’ dormitory. And directly opposite the church would have been the chapter house and abbess’s quarters.” Raising his arm, he motioned in four separate directions. “With each of the four nunnery buildings accounted for, we can now extrapolate the cloister boundaries.”
MacFarlane surveyed the area in question. “And you’re certain that the Ark would have been buried somewhere within the cloister?”
Caedmon hesitated, the question inherently a tricky one. “I have strong reason to believe that Philippa would have deemed the cloister the safest place to hide the Ark. Although where in the cloister, I couldn’t begin to speculate.”
To his surprise, the admission garnered an unconcerned shrug. Turning to his men, MacFarlane commenced to give orders.
“Sanchez, I want you on the metal detector. Gunnery Sergeant, you’ve got the GPR. And, Harliss, you’re on guard duty.” The orders met with a deferential chorus.
His input no longer needed, Caedmon was ordered to stand beside Edie, the two of them placed under the watchful eye of the unintelligible southerner. A man prone to toothy grins that conveyed a dark malevolence, Harliss let it be known that he had disabled the safety mechanism on his H&K MP5 machine gun. “Meanin’ I can shoot y’all all the sooner,” as he had so obligingly informed them.
Scanning the landscape, Caedmon could sight no avenue of escape, no farmhouse that he and Edie could run to; the Priory of the Blessed Virgin Mary was situated in a remote milieu. If they could somehow make their way to the country lane where the Range Rovers were parked, they might be able to flag down a passing motorist. But getting to the roadway amid a hail of bullets was a remote possibility at best.
Which left only one viable option: He had to disarm one of MacFarlane’s henchmen.
No easy feat, given that all three men were sturdily constructed and no doubt knew how to comport themselves.
“What’s going on?” Edie asked, nudging him with her elbow. Sanchez’s sweep of the cloister already underway, the ground was littered with several small flags.
“Each time his metal detector finds any buried metal, the device beeps. Whereupon the spot is marked with a flag, the color of which designates the type of metal detected.”
“Oh, I get it. So, I’m guessing that gray is for silver, orange is for bronze, black is for lead, and yellow is for gold.”
He nodded. “Since a metal detector can’t fully identify the buried object, Braxton will use ground-penetrating radar to survey all areas that tested positive for gold. The working assumption is that the Ark of the Covenant was indeed made of pure gold.”
Edie raised a quizzical brow. “Radar? You mean like the guys in the airport tower use?”
“Not exactly. Rather than sending radio waves into the air, these waves are directed into the ground. The electronic signals then bounce back into a receiver.” He nodded toward the small laptop computer that Braxton had set up on top of the GPR receiver. “A computerized map will be generated based on the density and position of the returned signals. It should enable them to determine the size and depth of any buried object.”
“Normally, I’d say, ‘Way cool,’ but I’ve got a funny feeling this ground-penetrating radar is going to make or break us.”
Caedmon made no reply, having reached the same conclusion.
Worried about their immediate future, he wordlessly stared at Edie. At the curls covered in a bridal veil of morning mist. At the mottled purple bruise on her right cheek. He thought that she resembled nothing so much as a bedraggled street urchin. Something straight out of Dickens. Brave and vulnerable in the face of danger.
“I’ve got something!” Braxton suddenly hollered.
At hearing that, Caedmon inwardly breathed a sigh of relief. “I’d say we’re bang on target.” Then, his interest getting the better of him, he called out, “May I have a look?”
When MacFarlane nodded his assent, Harliss happily did the honors of escorting them over to the laptop computer, prodding them forward with a negligently held machine gun pointed at their backs.
“I’m getting a whole bunch of little unidentified objects,” Braxton said, pointing to the computer screen.
Caedmon studied the monitor; the computer-generated image resembling nothing so much as a black-and-white photograph of the moon. And the dark side of the moon at that.
He tapped his finger at several small spots on the computer screen. “I believe these are miscellaneous stones left hither and yon when the nunnery was destroyed. But this looks promising,” he said, pointing to what appeared to be a large, solid object buried some two meters below the surface.
“Whatever it is, it’s a big mother. Sir, you want me to dig it up?”
A definite gleam in his eyes, MacFarlane nodded.
Moments later, pickax in hand, the behemoth began swinging like a brigand in search of gold doubloons, no thought given whatsoever to properly excavating the site, of carefully slicing away section by section in order to recover any historic artifacts that might be nestled in the soil. For these men, there was only
one
artifact of any import.
While Braxton attacked with his pickax, Sanchez assisted with a hand shovel, the two men making fast work of it. Donning a pair of knee pads, MacFarlane perched himself on the edge of the hole. His gaze intent, he peered into the deepening chasm, putting Caedmon in mind of a large bird of prey about to swoop upon its quarry.
Overhead the clouds bumped and collided, fusing together and releasing a cold drizzle on their uncovered heads. The light sprinkling soaked MacFarlane’s gray hair, the spiky tufts clinging to his head like a skullcap. Seen in profile, he resembled a fierce Celtic warrior come to life. Although Caedmon suspected the reality was far worse than anything produced by that warlike race of men.
“Yeah, boy! We got it!” Braxton jubilantly shouted.
Sanchez heaved himself out of the hole and rushed over to one of the canvas equipment bags, retrieving a length of rope. He tossed the coiled length at his digging partner.
Edie slipped her hand into his. “I can’t believe it . . . they actually found it,” she whispered.
As Sanchez and Braxton pulled their find to the surface, Caedmon held his breath, about to set his gaze on the most sought-after relic in the history of mankind.
It could have been mine,
he jealously thought.
Had I but played the game differently.
After several loud grunts and a muttered curse, the box was hauled out of the hole.
Its appearance was met with a stunned silence.
“I don’t think it’s made of gold,” Edie said, garnering a damning glare from Stanford MacFarlane.
“No, it isn’t made of gold,” Caedmon concurred. “A lesser metal. Bronze perhaps. Difficult to say what’s under all the grime.” Moreover, the box was secured on the outside with a large lock for which there was no key.
Braxton ran the back of his hand over his dirt-smudged brow, still panting from his labors. “Maybe the Ark is inside.”
“Open it,” MacFarlane ordered.
With one strong-armed swing of the pickax, the behemoth broke the lock.
His jaw tightly clenched, his gaze resolute, MacFarlane threw back the lid. Everyone stared wide-eyed at the uncovered treasure trove.
Everyone save for Stanford MacFarlane.
“What are
those
?” MacFarlane pointed an accusing finger at the golden objects that filled the box.
Extending a hand, Caedmon lifted a finely wrought candle-stick out of the chest. Next, he examined a bejeweled gold chalice.
“These are the altar vessels from the destroyed church,” he said, running his hand over an exquisitely fashioned paten. “No doubt the nuns had advance warning that the king’s men were en route to the priory. I imagine they hid these vessels so they wouldn’t be confiscated.” He gestured to the gold objects. “Not exactly a king’s ransom, I admit, but still valuable. You should have no problem finding a buyer for—”
“I’m not interested in earthly profit,” MacFarlane interjected. “My reward will come in the next life.” Turning his head, he pointedly set his gaze upon Edie. Then, like an Old Testament patriarch of old, he very quietly and calmly said, “Kill her.”
The order of execution given, the behemoth raised his pickax.
Caedmon lurched forward.
But anticipating the move, Harliss and Sanchez seized hold of him, barring him from intervening.
“No!” he shouted, violently struggling to free himself.
Not like this! God in heaven, not like this!

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