Read The Solomon Scroll Online

Authors: Alex Lukeman

Tags: #Fiction & Literature, #Action Suspense, #Mystery & Suspense, #Espionage, #Thrillers

The Solomon Scroll (8 page)

BOOK: The Solomon Scroll
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The Quad .50 consisted of four Browning .50 caliber machine guns controlled by a motorized turret mounted on a truck or platform. Once those guns opened up, anything in front of them was chopped into mincemeat. Low-flying planes, vehicles, buildings and people stood no chance against it.

"Think it's operational?"

"Bet on it," Nick said. "If we end up going in there we'd better make sure nobody gets a chance to use it."

"That wall must be sixteen feet high if it's an inch," Ronnie said. "That razor wire looks tough."

"The cliff might be the best way in," Diego said. "Looks like about an hour climb, maybe more, depending on the rock. He's got wire there, too, on the edge of the pool."

"You've done a lot of climbing?" Nick asked.

"Free and roped," Diego said. "I like the challenge."

Selena listen to the interchange and thought Diego was fitting right in. He'd proved himself in Beirut. Still it was odd without Lamont here. She wondered if Ramirez had any dive training. With Lamont gone, she was the only one on the team with any serious experience. No one else was qualified for the deep work.

Elizabeth interrupted her thoughts.

"This is early days and we need more Intel. Just the same, I want to begin thinking about what it would take to get into that compound and interview Bayati."

"You make it sound like something for the evening news," Ronnie said.

"You know exactly what I mean," Elizabeth said. "Nick, I want you and Selena to leave for London tonight and check out that scroll in the British Museum. You'll fly commercial on your own passports."

"What about weapons? Every time we check our weapons and get to England there's a hassle about claiming them."

"Leave them. You're just going to the museum. I'll arrange something with the embassy just in case. If you start shooting people over there the Brits won't be the only ones that are unhappy. I'll be unhappy. I don't think you want that."

"Diego and Ronnie?" Nick said.

"I want Ronnie here working with Sergeant Ramirez. Ronnie, bring him up to speed on how we do everything around here. There are lots of things he needs to know. Diego, you and Ronnie start working out how you would take that villa if it becomes necessary. When Nick and Selena get back, we'll go over it."

"Copy that, Director."

"Any questions?"

There weren't any.

"Have a good flight, Nick."

 

CHAPTER 15

 

 

Nazar Al-Bayati sat on the patio of his fortified compound and looked out over the Mediterranean at the blazing ball of the sun dropping toward the horizon. He never got tired of the Mediterranean sunsets, especially when the fiery colors were partly obscured by black clouds, as if the world burned. It reminded him of pleasant times spent in the presence of heat and darkness, fire and the sweet smoke of incense.

The scroll was never far from his mind. Solomon had been one of the great ancient magicians, in the tradition of Bayati's ancestors. It was said that objects of power had been buried with him. There was one in particular Bayati sought. If it was in the tomb and if he could find it, the world would be his. Bayati believed in magic. He had seen too many strange phenomenon in his life to think that magic wasn't real. Of course it required great skill and preparation to hold and use it. He knew what was required.

Rituals and sacrifices, rites that were older than the pyramids.

Today began a new lunar cycle. Nazar absentmindedly fingered his crotch in anticipation of the ceremony that would take place later. Before then there was business to attend to.

He rose, went into the house and beckoned a servant.

"Find Rhoades and send him to my study."

"At once, Abu."

The man scurried away. Al-Bayati went to a sideboard of rosewood inlaid with gold that stood by the near wall, a piece that had once graced the Emperor Napoleon's private study. He pressed a carved rosette on the corner and a panel slid down on the end, revealing a hidden compartment. A dozen foil wrapped balls the size of marbles rested on a tray inside. Beside them were six glass vials containing tablets of an odd brown color. The last item inside the cabinet was an ancient green bottle.

Al-Bayati took one of the balls and placed it on top of the sideboard on a silver tray. He opened a vial, shook two pills onto his hand and set the vial down. He took two more pills and set them down next to the ball. He took the cork out of the green bottle and washed down the pills with a swallow of the liquid it contained. The liquor burned on its way down. Al-Bayati put the cork back in the bottle, the bottle and the vial back into the cabinet, and touched the rosette again. The panel sprang upward and locked with a sharp click. Al-Bayati sat down in a broad leather chair.

Addison Rhoades came into the room. Al-Bayati felt the first rush of the drugs ripple through him in a wave. The main effect was still an hour away. By then everything would be ready.

"You sent for me?"

"You know about Yusuf?"

Rhoades nodded.

"What happened?"

Rhoades shrugged. "Perhaps he made a deal with the wrong people or gave them the wrong goods."

"I want you to find out who killed him."

"It shouldn't be too hard," Rhoades said. "He was approached by a woman in the club. There are cameras. Nothing in the alley where he died. Plenty of tape from inside."

"Get the tapes. I don't think it was an unhappy client."

"Who else would it be?"

"Who knows? The Israelis, perhaps? However I think they would be more subtle. It may have been someone with an interest in my affairs."

"It's possible," Rhoades said. "I'll look into it."

"Something else. There is another scroll," Al-Bayati said. "I want you to obtain it. It may help us find the tomb."

"Another? Where is it?"

"In the British Museum. Locate it and bring it to me."

Rhoades looked nervous. "It's too late to go today..."

Al-Bayati laughed. "Don't worry, you don't have to go until tomorrow. You know I need you to assist me. Is everything prepared?"

"Yes. The new moon will rise in about forty minutes."

"The boy?"

"In his room. He has already received the drug."

"Good. Go over to the sideboard. You'll find what you need there."

Rhoades walked over to the sideboard and picked up the foil wrapped ball. He popped the pills into his mouth and swallowed them dry.

"Get the boy ready and bring him to my bedroom."

Rhoades left the room and Al-Bayati leaned back in the comfortable chair and closed his eyes, feeling the power of the ancient drugs begin to lift him into a different realm.

The formulas Al-Bayati used to create his heightened awareness dated back thousands of years, to a time when Carthage had been as great as her rival Rome. Nazar believed he was descended from a high priest of Carthage. It was as his father had taught him, as his father had been taught as well, going back in an unbroken line through the millennia

Carthage had long since turned to dust but the true religion had been kept alive in secret throughout the centuries. There had always been worshipers and priests to serve the god. Now, most of the followers were gone. Nazar was the last of his line, the last who knew the true mysteries. He'd been unable to sire a male heir. If there was one thing in his life he regretted, it was that. Not long ago he had come to the realization that time was running out for him. The women he had coupled with in the past had failed to produce a male child, always it was a girl. The women disappeared. He'd found another use for the girls who were born.

No one had ever bothered to ask what happened to the women. They wouldn't have dared. People didn't ask Nazar Al-Bayati about things like that. He had his eye on a new candidate. If she didn't produce, Al-Bayati had come to the conclusion he would have to choose a successor not of his blood. It was a difficult realization, one he did not want to accept. Tonight's sacrifice would be special, meant to draw the god's favor to him. Surely, his prayer would be answered.

He stood and swayed for a moment as his body adjusted to the drugs.  Everything in the room glowed with light and color. The soft touch of his silk robe was like a caress. He could feel the blood coursing through his veins and heat in his groin. The god was not jealous. The boy's virginity was not a requirement.

The power of his youthful blood was what counted.

 

 

CHAPTER 16

 

 

Selena's reputation as a renowned lecturer in ancient Middle Eastern and Oriental languages opened doors at the British Museum kept closed to the public. The museum housed one of the greatest collections in existence of Middle Eastern artifacts. There had been a time when British expeditions bent on exploration and discovery had covered the globe. Crumbling ruins no one cared about turned out to be treasure houses of statuary, treasure, carvings and cultural items from lost civilizations.

The world had changed since the days of empire. Many of the acquisitions had become controversial. As far as Nick knew, the scroll they were interested in wasn't one of them.

Nick and Selena were met by a man in his fifties wearing a conservative worsted suit. He wore glasses with designer frames that had probably cost close to a thousand dollars. He had a thin, aristocratic face with an expression as though there had been too much lemon in his tea and sported a thin, sandy mustache that reminded Nick of pictures he'd seen of British officers during World War I. He introduced himself as Sir Peter Wainwright. Wainwright was the man in charge of the Department of the Middle East.

"I must say, it's a genuine pleasure to meet you, Doctor Connor. I haven't seen much in the journals from you lately. Your treatise a few years ago on classical Greek was quite intriguing."

"Thank you, Sir Peter. I've been looking forward to meeting you. This is my personal secretary, Nicholas Carter."

Nick and Selena had agreed before going in that he would play the role of gofer and assistant. She'd laughed at his look and promised not to send him out for coffee.

"How do you do?" Wainwright shook hands with Nick.

"Pleasure," Nick said.

Wainwright's handshake was limp and slightly damp. Wainwright turned back to Selena, dismissing him. Nick resisted the urge to dry his hand on his pants.

"I understand you're interested in our scroll by Ephram."

"That's correct."

"May I ask why that scroll in particular? We have many fine examples of Aramaic scrolls."

"I was curious about the reference to the Queen of Sheba," Selena said. "The museum catalog mentions its presence. There's no further information except to date it to the first century CE."

Wainwright pursed his lips. "Space in the catalog is at something of a premium. It was felt that it merited only a listing."

"And the content?" Selena probed.

"It's a rather uninspired travel diary. Perhaps it's better if you look at it yourself. I confess that I have never read it."

"Then how do you know what's in it?" Nick said.

Selena gave him a warning look.

Wainwright sniffed.

"There are good people under me upon whom I rely," he said. "My specialty is cunieform."

"Of course," Nick said. "A foolish question."

Selena looked at him again. He smiled at her.

"This way," Wainwright said.

He led them past two winged lions with human heads flanking a short hall. The hall ended at a magnificent wooden gate placed against the wall.

"Those are from Nimrud in Iraq," Wainwright said. "About 860 BCE or thereabouts."

"Impressive," Nick said. "Those lions would look pretty good on the entrance to somebody's driveway."

Selena rolled her eyes. Wainwright ignored him. They came to an unmarked door . Wainwright took out a set of keys and opened it. He led them through a room filled with shelves stacked with packaged and boxed and numbered artifacts. They came to a wooden work table. Wainwright reached up to a shelf above it.

"Here we are," Wainwright said. "You're in luck. The Ephram scroll was recently prepared for display as an example of the day to day tedium of a trading caravan from the period and writing typical of the era. And of course there's the brief mention of the Queen of Sheba. That adds interest. There's damage, however I'm told it's quite readable."

The ancient parchment had been unrolled and mounted flat in a glass box filled with inert gas. It was about four feet long and a little over a foot high. Rips and holes broke up the narrative in several places. The last part of the scroll was little more than fragments. Narrow lines of tiny writing covered the visible surface.

"Where was it discovered?" Selena asked.

"In Egypt, during the nineteenth century," Wainwright said. "It was found with several other scrolls in a villa dating from the time of Cleopatra."

"When the Romans were there."

"Yes."

"Do the Egyptians want it back?"

"They do. They've been waiting for it, along with everything else we have here that came from Egypt. I'm afraid they'll have rather a long wait."

"This is a very odd construction," Selena said. She pointed at a section of writing where something seemed to have eaten part of the parchment. "I've never seen anything quite like it before."

"I don't read Aramaic," Wainwright said. "I'll take your word for it."

"I'd like to photograph this if it's all right with you. It's going to take some time for me to make an accurate translation. I'll be sure to send you my results and comments if you'd like."

"Of course, Doctor Connor." Wainwright looked at his watch. "Tea time. Would the two of you care for a cup of tea?"

"That would be wonderful. Thank you, Sir Peter."

"How do you take it?"

"Milk on the bottom, please."

Wainwright nodded approvingly. "And you, Mister Carter?"

"I'll take a coffee if you have one," Nick said. "Black."

Wainwright sniffed again. "I'll see what I can do. Let me go find someone to get it for us."

He left them at the table and disappeared between the shelves.

BOOK: The Solomon Scroll
3.16Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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