The Snake Stone (35 page)

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Authors: Jason Goodwin

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Historical, #Mystery & Detective, #General

BOOK: The Snake Stone
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115

T
HE
sou naziry blinked. He stooped and touched the ball of wax with his finger.

The wax broke away easily from the stone. The sou naziry picked it up and felt the tug of the thread between his fingers.

He put out his tongue and moistened his lips.

He had thought, until this moment, that the job was done.

The sou naziry picked up his lantern and loosened the dagger in his belt. The dagger had a jeweled hilt and its blade was curved.

The sou naziry picked up the line of thread and entered the tunnel.

116

A
MÉLIE
fought the weight of her skirts trailing in the water as she zigzagged to and fro between the great columns, tracing their cold outlines with her fingers, searching for the sign she knew would be there.

Not five hundred yards away Yashim felt a change in the atmosphere of the tunnel, the dampness lifting as he blindly approached the cistern. He looked back: there was no doubt that someone was coming down the tunnel behind him now. He felt the faintest tugging of the thread in his hand, and saw the lamp swaying as it grew closer. Whoever it was could move faster through the cramped tunnel than he could. Someone practiced. Someone prepared.

Yashim hesitated. Sooner or later, the man would track him down—unless he found some side passage where he could hide. But in the dark his chances of finding one were slim. And what if he did? What if he saved his skin—and the waterman went on to discover Amélie?

He let the thread drop from his fingers. Without it he could move faster, trusting to luck that the tunnel would not fork again, or that when it did he would be able to retrieve the thread and find out which branch the Frenchwoman had taken.

His fingers trailed against the walls. For several yards he felt the rough serrated brick beneath his fingertips and then, quite suddenly on the left side, his hand trailed through the thin air. Gingerly he traced the opening with his fingers. He slid one foot, and then another, into the gap. There was a step up.

Yashim wasted no more time. He scrambled into the opening and up several steps, then flattened himself against the wall, and waited.

He saw the darkness gradually dissolve.

He heard the splash of the waterman’s feet as he ran through the shallow stream.

Then the light was blinding and Yashim could see nothing at all, only the light and the sparkle of the light as it bounced from the curving surface of a steel blade.

And somewhere, hundreds of yards away, up a bad-smelling side tunnel that had been blocked now for almost a day, a thin trickle of water began to seep through a bloated lump of meat and bone, and stones, and sodden wool.

Yashim flung himself back against the steps and kicked up at the waterman’s lantern with both feet. It exploded as it smashed against the roof of the tunnel and the light went out, but he and the sou naziry had recognized each other. As Yashim’s feet hit the ground he twisted and struck out with his right hand, knuckles bent.

He hit something, he couldn’t tell what, and whirled around. He slipped his cloak from his shoulders and held it out like a screen in the tunnel.

He felt the drag on his fingers as the naziry’s knife sliced into the cloth; then he brought both hands down as hard as he could, trying to bundle the man by his wrists and pin them to the ground.

But the naziry was quick: the bundle was empty. Yashim fell sideways on his knees, onto the steps, and felt the pressure of the naziry’s foot against the torn cloak.

He sprang for the steps again on one leg, the other kicking out into the darkness. It touched something, but without force. As he tried to pull it away the naziry seized hold. Yashim kicked down with his free leg, but his strength collapsed as a searing pain tore through his calf.

He bent forward, his outstretched hands colliding with the second blow aimed at his body. Yashim felt the blade slice through the joint of his thumb. He grabbed in the dark and found a wrist. For a second his grip held; he pulled up his right leg and slammed it down as hard as he could along the line of the naziry’s knife arm, catching him on the side of his head.

The wrist slid violently from his grasp. Yashim scrambled backward, up the steps, and listened, with one leg raised. In the other he could feel the blood pulsing through a wound in his calf.

He heard nothing: no breath, no splash. Nothing but a sound like a gentle smack that seemed to come from far away. A sound that meant nothing to him, couldn’t help him win.

And then silence.

A faint breeze hit his face.

Yashim kicked out with all his strength, into the darkness.

He realized that the naziry had been closer than he’d thought when he caught him on the shoulder before his knees unbent. He followed through with a mighty heave, and had the satisfaction of hearing the naziry fall back with a grunt.

Which was the last thing Yashim heard before the tunnel erupted with a roar that seemed to fill the darkness, echoing from wall to wall like a cannon shot. A foam-flecked wind rushed over him, dragging at his legs. Something struck at his foot. He heard a screech like metal.

Then nothing. Only a rumble, far away, and a soft gurgling in the tunnel below.

Yashim lay perfectly still. The event had been so sudden that he could not understand it.

But two hundred feet away Amélie turned in terror as a vast jet of water surged from the mouth of the tunnel, shattering against the nearest column in an explosion of spray and flying debris with a noise like thunder.

Bits of rubbish slapped into the water all around her, and then the water stopped. Something that could almost have been a human figure slid from the column, crashed onto the plinth, and toppled with a splash into the dark lake.

As Amélie reached up to brush a streak of slime from her cheek, she noticed something very pale and tentacled bobbing beside her in the water. She lowered her lamp for a better look.

Motionless on the hard steps, Yashim heard her scream.

117

H
E
saw Amélie first, bathed in a halo of light from the lamp she had set beside her on the plinth. She had a hand to her mouth.

He called out: “Amélie!
C’est moi
. Yashim!”

Amélie moved back against the plinth. Her skirts spread around her like a lily pad.

Yashim started down the steps. He barely noticed the water until he stumbled over the naziry, floating facedown.

He waded past the corpse.

Amélie was crying as he approached, her hands at her neck not trying to stop the tears.

Yashim took her silently into his arms. She seemed to be rattling against him. He squeezed her tight, absorbing the convulsions that had gripped her.

Very slowly, holding her against his chest, he turned around. Her head moved as if she were staring at something; then it relaxed and fell against his shoulder. Yashim looked down, through her hair, at the hem of her skirt in the water. In the dim light he could make out a human hand.

He shivered and squeezed the girl hard. How it had happened he did not properly know, but Enver Xani, long since dead, had saved his life a second time.

Amélie calmed down gradually. First she stopped shaking; then she lifted her head.

“We’re very close,” she said, and she pulled away.

“Close? To each other?” Yashim said stupidly. He was aware of a throbbing in his leg, and when he lifted his hand to the light he saw it was black with running blood.

“To the relics,” Amélie said. Her eyes shone in the lamplight.

Yashim felt dizzy. He heaved his way through the water and found the steps. He unwound his turban and began to tear it into strips, binding them around his calf. Amélie waded up to him. She helped him to tie the bandage and wrap another around his hand.

“I—I didn’t mean you to come.”

“No.” He felt terribly tired. “Except for you I would have stayed behind.”

Her hands were shaking. He watched her try to tie the knot with fingers that were stiff with cold.

“I’ve found the relics now,” she said.

He knew it wasn’t true. Not yet.

“He was coming to kill you,” he said.

He watched her straighten up, the bandage done. She put up a hand and pushed a lock of hair from her forehead.

“You can still help,” she said.

She waded away, with the lamp in her hand. Wearily Yashim stumbled to his feet.

“He would have killed you!” His shout sounded very faint, there in that eerie dark forest. “The way he killed the others. The way he killed your husband.”

She didn’t stop, just turned her head over her shoulder and said: “I’m doing this for Max. It’s what he’d want.”

Yashim shivered from the cold.

“You went to Millingen, didn’t you?” He called. “That’s where you were. You locked me in.”

Amélie didn’t answer. Her skirts trailed behind her like a train.

“Look,” she said at last. She lifted the lamp, and its glow fell on a plinth, supporting a column that vanished into the darkness overhead. The joint was concealed by a band of greenish copper dappled with moisture, and on the plinth itself, partly submerged in the black water, Yashim recognized a chiseled head.

Even though it was upside down, the brow lost underwater, Yashim found himself transfixed. Majestic in their classical symmetry were the great blind eyes, the flaring nostrils, the full curving lips—but demonic, too, was the expression of agony and command. It was the face of a woman. Her hair was thick and knotted.

Yashim moved closer, forgetting the cold, while the lamplight trembled in Amélie’s hand and cast shadows that flickered and ran across deep incisions in the stone. Then he pulled back with a gasp: for a moment the strands of those knotted locks had seemed to twist and writhe like living things.

“The Medusa,” he murmured with a shiver.

“Don’t you see?” Amélie gave a sudden peal of shaky laughter. “Max guessed—the myths! The Medusa turns men into stone. Her gaze is a lock. It confers a kind of immortality.”

“The emperor,” Yashim stammered. “Turned to stone.”

The snakes reared again as Amélie wheeled on him. “Yes! The emperor dies, and the emperor will awake. Something hidden will one day reappear and shake the world.” She set the lamp on the plinth. “The emperor was just a poor, brave man who could do nothing to stop the Turks. But in myth—he’s an idea! God’s agent on this earth. The idea of sacred power.”

She ran her hands over the sculpted marble. “It’s about suspending time. Freezing it.”

She put her hands on the top of the plinth and began stirring the water with her feet. “They’re here. I know it. The relics are here.”

“I don’t think so, Amélie.”

She didn’t answer, but moved slowly round the plinth, feeling the ground with her feet.

“It’s too cold! I can’t feel anything. Yashim, for God’s sake, help me.”

Yashim didn’t move.

“We can do this for Max. We must do it, can’t you see? After this there’ll never be another chance.”

He thought she was going to wring her hands. Instead, she waded through the water and put her arms around his neck.

She drew him down and kissed him with her cold lips.

“Not for Max, Yashim. Do it for me.”

He felt her thigh pressing against his. She kissed him again.

She broke away slowly and sank down into the water, kneeling. Her skirts billowed around her like the scalloped edge of a fountain.

She gathered them toward her, then plunged her hands into the water, groping around the base of the plinth.

Yashim closed his eyes. For a moment he saw Maximilien Lefèvre on his knees, in Yashim’s apartment, tipping the contents of his bag onto the floor.

He stepped up to the plinth and began to circle its base, scudding his icy feet across the floor of the underground lake. They met on the far side, in the shadow, and when Yashim raised her up she came up dripping and shaking.


Ça suffit
,” he said. It’s enough. “We have to think now, how to get out of here.”

Her teeth were chattering now too hard for her to speak. She tried to pull away, but Yashim had her by the waist and she was shaking. He picked up the lamp.

Halfway across the lake, Amélie fainted in his arms.

Her head dropped back and her weight fell on his arm. His other arm shot up to keep his balance and the lamp flew from his hand. For a moment it blazed in an arc above the sunken cistern, throwing its light across the hall of columns, across the black water, before it cracked audibly against a plinth and vanished.

Yashim watched it go.

He stood for a few moments in the dark.

And a sound he had not heard for what seemed like a very long time broke the impenetrable silence of the cistern.

It was weak and shaky, but it was, after all, his own.

Yashim’s laugh.

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