The Templar's Code (49 page)

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Authors: C. M. Palov

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“Possibly.” He recalled the anagram that the original Triad members had cleverly concealed within their Great Seal motto, the meaning of which was still unclear. “Or perhaps an All-Seeing Eye. It has been popping up with annoying frequency.” Stepping away from the balustrade, he slowly turned full circle. “I say, the park is much larger than I expected.”
“Twelve acres of statuary, fountains, urns, and ferns.” For the first time since entering the park, Edie’s perky optimism dimmed as evidenced by the incised lines that suddenly appeared between her brows. “Yeah, I know, a Herculean task.”
CHAPTER 75
Saviour tugged on the baseball cap bill, pulling it lower, obscuring his features. That done, he turned to the muscular Jamaican beside him. Together they swayed and bobbed to the hypnotic percussion beat. Nearly a hundred bystanders swayed and bobbed along with them.
Without a doubt, Meridian Hill was a mystical and magical place.
Utterly seduced by the pulse of the drums and the teeming bodies that moved as one glorious, undulating beast, Saviour put a hand on the other man’s shoulder to steady himself. Afraid his legs might actually collapse beneath him. Both sensual
and
martial, this was the rhythm of the sex act fused to the soldiers’ call to arms.
He glanced at the nearby statue of an armored woman astride a bronze horse, charging into battle. Arm raised, leg muscles clenched. Exuberantly riding into the face of danger.
The Brit liked to court danger. To charge into battle. That’s why Mercurius wanted Aisquith to take all the risk in this hunt. Let the Brit do all the tedious legwork and backbreaking exertion. Saviour was simply to follow in the Brit’s shadow and collect the prize. Then, when the Brit and his woman no longer served a purpose, they would find themselves faced with a danger they could not escape.
As Saviour moved his body to the rhythmic percussion, he felt the sexual energy move up his spine, the pulsating beat animating his entire body. His entire being. The fierce pounding created a jubilant, primal sound that had but one purpose—to incite a man’s bloodlust.
Exhilarated, he smiled at the dark-skinned man in front of him.
Returning the smile, the swaying Jamaican grasped him by the wrist. “See di blood, mon?” He raised Saviour’s hand a few inches to show him the crimson smear on the base of his thumb.
Ranger Walker’s blood.
“Me think yah a hot stepper.”
Excited by the contact, Saviour glanced at the red smudge. “A hot stepper? What is that?”
“Yah is a bad boy, I think.”
Hearing that, he envisioned Ranger Walker propped against the Jefferson Pier, stabbed straight through the heart. A similar fate awaited the Brit and his woman. Soon enough he would have
their
blood on his hands.
Saviour stepped closer to the Jamaican. “Yes . . . I’m
very
bad.”
CHAPTER 76
“Okay, here’s the plan.” Exhausted, Edie slumped against the balustrade before continuing. “We come back in the morning,
when we’re rested
, and search the park with fresh eyes, full bellies, and maybe even a metal detector. There’s a place in town that rents them by the day.” Having read every inscription on every statue, examined the fountains at close wet range, and walked the entire circumference of the park three times, they hadn’t found anything even remotely promising.
Caedmon, who showed no sign of calling retreat, grasped the concrete balustrade and moodily stared at the terrace below.
Last man standing
. Twilight fast approaching, the drummers and their colorful entourage had already left the premises and the park was now nearly deserted.
Feet aching from all the walking, Edie closed her eyes and concentrated on the serene tweeter of birdsong rather than the sonorous rumble of city buses.
“Serene and urban don’t usually go together in the same sentence, but I’ve always thought that Meridian Hill Park managed to strike the perfect balance.”
The chatty remark met with silence.
Edie glanced at the notebook she’d earlier set on top of the balustrade. The open page had a hand-drawn park design, the schematic inundated with checkmarks and dashes and circled Xs. “Look, Caedmon, I know that you’re frustrated, but hey, we fought the good fight. And in the words of my favorite Southern belle, ‘Tomorrow
is
another day.’ ”
“Spare me.”
“Fine,” she retorted, shrugging away his ill humor.
Trying to revive herself with a bit of forced blood flow, Edie vigorously shook her hands. When that didn’t work, she took a half dozen slow, deep breaths.
“Two hundred years ago, the view from the escarpment must have been spectacular.” Glancing at her tall, redheaded companion, she could easily envision the tall, redheaded Thomas Jefferson standing in the same spot as he cast his gaze along the seventy-seventh meridian, all the way to the Potomac River. “Wonder if Jefferson felt it.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“The vibe. We’ve been here for hours. Surely, you’ve sensed the vibratory energy of the place.”
“Otherwise engaged, I did not sense the, er, vibe.”
“Before the incursion of white settlers, this was a sacred spot for Native Americans,” she remarked, choosing to ignore his sarcasm. “They used to gather here and—”
“Bang the drum all day?”
“Funny. But there is a reason why people are drawn to this place. And, quite frankly, I’m surprised you can’t feel it.”
“The ‘vibe,’ as you call it, is the energy generated by the ley line that runs beneath the seventy-seventh meridian,” Caedmon informed her sans sarcasm. “While it’s true that such energy can incite a positive response, as we saw earlier today with the drum circle, Dr. Franklin witnessed firsthand how that same occult energy could be perverted in a most demoralizing fashion. That’s why the wily bastard and his cunning minions hid the Emerald Tablet.” He angrily slapped the palm of his right hand against the top of the balustrade. “Damn them!”
“The Triad had no choice in the matter,” Edie argued, quick to come to her countrymen’s defense. “Nine Freemasons signed the Declaration of Independence. Who knows how many more signed the Constitution. And the namesake of this occult Wonderland was, yes, that’s right, a Freemason.” As if that weren’t enough, from where they stood, they could see the stepped pyramid that adorned the top of the House of the Temple and the Washington Monument beyond. One Egyptian-styled structure juxtaposed in front of the other. “You read
The Book of Moses
. Benjamin Franklin’s dark premonition had merit.”
“Still does, I’m afraid. The Emerald Tablet contains a secret worth killing for.”
A thought she preferred not thinking about. At least not at the moment. “The irony is that the fellas at the House of the Temple have no idea the Emerald Tablet is hidden in their own backyard.”
“Yes, bloody brilliant of the Triad,” Caedmon muttered, back to being crotchety.
A strained silence ensued.
Deciding the time had come to acknowledge the elephant in the park, Edie said, “You’re not going to like hearing this, but it’s entirely possible that the Triad decided
not
to leave the last signpost. Or if there was one, it was intentionally removed. Someone went to a lot of trouble to chisel out the inscription on the Jefferson Pier. It could be that at some point in time the Freemasons got too close for—Caedmon, are you all right?”
Cheeks flushed red, knuckles drained white, Caedmon stood trembling. Then, to her utter surprise, he grinned from ear to ear.
“I just found the bloody signpost.”
CHAPTER 77
“You’re kidding, right?”
Wide-eyed, Edie gaped as though he’d just gone bonkers.
Of sound mind, Caedmon stared at the Italianate garden clearly visible from their elevated position at the edge of the escarpment. Raising his right hand, he quoted from the Jefferson letter: “ ‘For I will stand on the top of the hill with the rod of God in mine hand.’ ” Then, raising his left hand, he turned to her and said triumphantly, “And an ankh in mine other.”
“An ankh?” Edie peered down the hill, her head swiveling from side to side.
“Where?”
“It’s embedded in the landscape architecture, part of the original park design. Clever bastards,” he grudgingly muttered under his breath, impressed with the masterful subterfuge. Assuming a later generation of the Triad was responsible for the optical illusion, he went on to say, “They put the ankh in plain sight. Yet one can stand in this spot and stare upon that scene”—he gestured to the cascading fountain, the reflecting pool, and the adjacent exedra—“and never see the blasted signpost.”
He snatched the open notebook from the top of the balustrade. Pencil in hand, he quickly drew the hidden ankh.
“Ohmygosh! I see it!” Ecstatic, Edie threw herself at his chest. “ ‘One small step for mankind.’ ”
“God willing, we can channel this knowledge to brilliant effect.”
Assuming a more sedate demeanor, his companion stepped back. “Any ideas where on this gigantic ankh we should look for the Emerald Tablet?”
“Haven’t a clue, love.” In a jovial mood, he examined the hastily drawn image. “In ancient Egypt, the ankh symbolized life.”
“And we know that it was one of Thoth’s two attributes.”
“Interestingly enough, during the Middle Ages, astrologists used the ankh to symbolize the planet Venus. And their esoteric compatriots, the alchemists, used the ankh as a shorthand symbol for the element copper.”
“Yeah, damned shame about that copper sphere being stolen. Got a light?”
Caedmon spun on his heel, taken aback to find an older dreadlocked gentleman with a Brazilian atabaque drum slung over his shoulder standing directly behind them. Tucked behind his ear was an unlit cigarette.
“Sorry, neither of us smoke,” Edie said with an apologetic shrug.
The stranger turned to leave.
“Sir, a moment of your time, if you would be so kind. You mentioned a copper sphere.”

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