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Authors: Marjorie Thelen

BOOK: The Forty Column Castle
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“How will I ever know what happened to you?”

“I’ll get a message to you. We’ll rendezvous on that island you’re dreaming up for
us.”

Sixteen

Of course, I had no intention of letting him leave without me. Even though I harbored
doubts about what would happen to my aunt if Mr. Bellomo found Berengaria’s jewels,
I felt she was safe for the moment. On the other hand, I wanted to know who was smuggling
antiquities on the island of Cyprus. I was not going to sit idly by with the love
birds while Mr. Bellomo pulled some strings. Paying people off to drop the charges
against us wasn’t my way of clearing my name. Pieces of the puzzle were not fitting
together, and I had some hunches. I intended to hitch my wagon to Zachariah Lamont’s
star and hope that he would lead me to the answers.

After our interlude in the bath, Zach insisted I get into bed and tucked me in with
the tenderness of a mother with a new born babe. I thought for an instant that he’d
change his mind and crawl in beside me, but he left after a wistful look back. Something
was driving him, and I wanted to find out what that was.

As soon as I heard the door close and click, I was out of bed and into my black dress.
He thought that locking the hall door would keep me in. Wrong I figured if I could
make it to the dock and gazebo before he did, half my battle would be won. I scurried
down the back steps to the pool area and, keeping to the shadows, ran to the beach
and out onto the dock. I kept looking back as I ran, to see if anyone was following.
I made it to the gazebo half-way out on the water and crouched down, looking to see
if Zach were on the beach. Nothing. Something must have delayed him. I ran the final
distance to the yacht where it sat at anchor, leaped up the steps and on board. This
was a big boat. Sixty feet long, easy.

The secured area around Mr. Bellomo’s house included the beach and, in my opinion,
was the weakest point in the defense of the Bellomo fortress. No one guarded the boat
as far as I could see. I watched the house, crouched inside the well that housed the
cockpit. I wondered if the police were watching Bellomo’s house. I couldn’t see the
main street. There were no other boats anchored on the water.

Two figures emerged from the pool area, walking slowly. The one with white hair gestured
with his hands and the other, much taller, was intent on listening. They paused at
the water’s edge and faced each other, still engaged in conversation. They shook hands,
and Zach walked out onto the dock that led to the yacht. Mr. Bellomo waved and headed
back to the house. What had they been discussing?

I had to find a better hiding place on a boat that was so sleek and smooth, it looked
like something from outer space. The cabin door was unlocked. I slipped inside where
I could watch Zach through the cabin windows. He went to the cockpit and started the
engine, then expertly cast off. He didn’t turn on lights, not even the running lights.
The light of the moon and stars were bright enough. The sleek yacht headed straight
out to sea instead of turning toward the east. Zach was headed west toward Pafos but
had to go quite a distance out before he cleared the cape just west of Limasol.

Of course, I didn’t want him to find me so he could turn around and dump me off. I
searched for someplace to hide. I was in the living area, furnished with a big, cream
leather couch and matching chairs. A long galley and dining area ran the length of
one side and doors opened off the other. The last door looked the most promising.
I opened that one and entered the master suite replete with its own bath and king
size bed. The room had a new smell to it. The carpet was thick and furnishings were
Italian Rococo. I kicked off my sandals and lay down on the bed. Zach would stay at
the helm, I figured. I could get some rest.

But sleep wouldn’t come. I stared at the ceiling, watching the play of water shadows.
Somewhere out there were thieves who had started all this. Thieves to whom Zach had
a connection. I wondered what he would to do now. My bet was that he was going to
rendezvous with a few more thieves since his objective was retrieving Berengaria’s
jewels.

Footsteps jarred me from my reverie, and before I could move, the door opened. Zach
walked to the bed and turned on the lamp. A curious glow lit his eyes. The lamplight
cast shadows across his face. Discoloration from the fight lingered around his eye.

“You don’t listen,” he said with his hands stuffed in his pockets. Somewhere he had
found clean pressed khaki pants and crisp white short sleeve shirt.

“I couldn’t let you continue on by yourself. Who would bail you out, if you got into
trouble?”

I scooted over on the bed. He joined me, putting his arm around my shoulders. The
bedclothes rustled as he settled in beside me and leaned against the headboard.

“Who’s piloting the boat?” I asked.

“The computer.”

“How did you know I was here?”

“I watched you run across the beach from the house. I was waiting for Sal in his study,
the one that fronts on the pool area. You looked like a gazelle, fleeing the lions.
Were you fleeing?” He looked at me, his eyes questioning. “Or were you running toward
me?”

“I was coming to help you. My aunt will be safe with Mr. Bellomo for the moment. I
couldn’t let you go by yourself.”

He kissed the top of my head. I wanted to think that was a show of appreciation.

“You don’t understand the stakes in this game,” he said. “Sal’s been trying to buffer
us, but his reach only extends so far into the underworld. He had to step back and
leave me to my own devices. This trip will be dangerous.”

I snuggled closer, hugging his mid-section, like that was going to keep us safe. “Where
are we going?”

“To Pafos to get Berengaria’s jewels.”

“Who has them?”

“The American couple.” He paused. “Or that is my best guess.

I sat up to look at him better. “The American couple?”

“They head the smuggling operation.”

He had my full attention. With my palm I turned his face so I could see his eyes.
“They’re with the group of excavators at the Forty Column Castle.”

“The excavation is a front. They come to Cyprus on a regular basis with the archeology
project and arrange their smuggling ventures on the side. They’ll deal with anybody,
including terrorists. Not smart on their part.”

“So they’re responsible for planting the statues on Aunt Elizabeth.”

“That’s my bet -- to throw the police off their scent.”

Pieces of the puzzle that had been troubling me started to fit into place. But I still
didn’t understand how Zach got beat up and why. “Where did you really go this morning?”

He smiled ruefully. “You aren’t going to let it go, are you? All right. To Max and
Irene’s place to retrieve the jewels.”

“Max and Irene had the jewels?”

“Not exactly. I hid the jewels in the wood shed.”

“Max and Irene didn’t know,” I said.

He shook his head. “No, they didn’t.” It was his sigh that said he regretted what
happened to Max and Irene.

“The jewels weren’t where I hid them. The American couple must have figured out where
I had stashed them. Max and Irene got in the way, and they killed them. We showed
up too late to stop the murders and the theft. This morning Bruno and friend tailed
us and tried to rub me out, so their American bosses wouldn’t have to pay for the
jewels. You see, the American couple neglected to pay me. I had approached them about
the jewels, and they wanted them. But they wanted them for nothing so they stole them.
I’m going to find them and collect.

With his big, warm hand against my ribs, he eased me onto my back. “But all this talk
is tiring me. Let’s not talk anymore. For some reason, my dearest Princess, I cannot
get enough of you.”

I pulled him to me. “This time I will have my way with you.” Soon I had him calling
on the whole Roman and Greek pantheon of gods to help him bear what I was doing to
him. Never, ever was I going to meet a man like this again. I couldn’t shake the feeling
I would not see him after tonight. Later we helped each other dress, savoring the
act like a fine glass of Dom Perignon.

He took my hand. “We need to go topside so I can steer this magnificent craft. Who
knows? After that session, we may have made it across the Atlantic to Brazil.”

I followed him to the cockpit and looked around. The scene took my breath away. Moonbeams
bounced off the waves of the Mediterranean. I leaned into the breeze created by the
yacht and inhaled the sea air into my lungs. Looking across the water, the line of
the waves seemed to go on forever. I fantasized that we owned this proud vessel. We’d
sail off to some obscure island and never be heard from again.

“What’s her name?” I shouted to Zach over the hum of the motor and rush of the wind.
The yacht was a beauty, cutting through the waves like a knife of fine honed steel,
like she owned the sea.

“The Elizabeth,” he shouted back.

“You’re kidding.” I moved back under the protection of the canopy. “Zach, do you really
think Mr. Bellomo loves my aunt?”

“I think he is bonkers over her. He bought this yacht and named it after her. There’s
a wedding in the making.”

“I find it hard to believe, but I hope for her sake it works out,” I said, a squishy
feeling welling around my heart. To think she had fallen in love at this late stage
of her life. There’s hope for all of us.

He cut back on the throttle and started a wide sweeping turn. “I’m going to show you
Aphrodite’s birthplace from the sea.”

“Petra Tou Romiou where Aphrodite emerged from the foaming waves. What a romantic
setting. Are we going to do something romantic there?”

“No, we’re going to meet someone there.”

“In the middle of the night? In the water? With all those rocks?”

“Correct.”

The plot thickened.

I had to admit I had never seen Aphrodite’s birthplace from the sea. Many times I
had walked the beach and imagined her emerging from huge, foaming waves, the mist
of the water her robes, voluptuous arms outstretched, the Goddess of Love. The moon
cast its silver glow on the white cliffs along the shore, outlining the two giant
rocks where Aphrodite emerged from the waves. Having swam around and climbed those
rocks, I knew how dangerous they could be, especially with the collection of smaller
rocks scattered about.

Zach cut the engine, and the yacht sat off shore rocking in the gentle waves. He put
his arm around me and pulled me close. We listened to the sea and the waves against
the boat. The night was still and washed by the moon.

“Do you see Aphrodite yet?” he asked. “They say she walks these beaches looking for
hapless lovers.”

The road along the cliffs was empty. The beach was quiet. There was no movement anywhere.

“I guess this is her night off,” I said. “Who are we looking for besides Aphrodite?”

“A rubber raft with my partner in it. She’s going to join us.”

I turned to look at him. “A partner? The one you made the mysterious calls to? A partner
in crime? A female?”

“Yes. What’s wrong with a female partner?” He sounded rather defensive.

“Nothing, I’m just surprised, I guess, I think.”

Sure enough, like a phantom conjured out of the night, a figure emerged from the rocks
along the beach, as if she had been hiding and on cue from Zach she let herself be
seen. She was tugging a small rubber raft and the way she pulled, it was loaded. She
maneuvered the raft into the water, got in, and started rowing toward us. She was
dressed in black, maybe a wet suite, and rowed with strong, swift strokes.

Zach’s attention focused on the raft. He moved to the rail to follow its progress,
everything else forgotten.

I’d stay true to my promise to help him if I could and hope in the bargain I didn’t
serve time for aiding and abetting a criminal and his female partner. Had I known
he was going to have help, I might have stayed with my aunt. But he didn’t tell me,
and he didn’t try to stop me. If he was using me, I was a big girl and it was my choice
now, wasn’t it?

The raft came along side the stern. Zach lifted in two duffle bags and his partner.
She was small and built like a gymnast. The wet suit outlined her trim figure. Zach
gave her a quick hug and turned to me.

“Helena, this is Marie-Claude, who’s come along to help.”

Helena gave Zach an are-you-crazy glance and then stared at me. She looked Cypriot
which was all the more unusual because my idea of Cypriot women was more traditional.
They wouldn’t be out on a caper in the middle of the night. She was a young sprite
with a mane of black curls that were tamed with a loose ribbon at the nape of her
neck. Her facial features were stark, sharp nose and chin, winged eyebrows and dark,
dark eyes.

She held out her hand. “My pleasure. Zach didn’t mention a helper.” She looked back
at him, shook her head, and said, “Does she know?”

If Zach shook his head, I didn’t catch it. He was preoccupied with unzipping the bags
and searching them. He pulled out what he sought. A very large gun. Back we were in
that world I only read about and saw in the movies. I was living it. We watched him,
waiting to see what he would do, waiting for orders from the commander, because it
was clear that Zach was the one who called the shots.

“Helena, you have a gun?”

She nodded and patted the black bulge on her hip.

“All right, help me haul the raft up, and we’ll be under way.”

They sprang into action and stowed the raft. Zach powered up the yacht and turned
out to sea.

Helena stood by him at the wheel. They talked in low voices, and I couldn’t hear a
word of what they said. But I knew the next step. We were going to Pafos to find Berengaria’s
jewels.

Seventeen

Darkness still reigned over Pafos Harbor when we motored in. Some pre-dawn fishermen
were on their way out to sea, caught up in their own world and not interested in the
domain of the wealthy and the criminal. Zach dropped anchor at a long dock filled
with fishing boats. Helena had changed into shorts and tank top. She was all business
and had spoken only a few words to me for the remainder of the short trip to Pafos
Harbor like she was afraid she would give away secrets.

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