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“All finished,” the photographer announced. Popping open the digital camera, she removed the memory card and handed it to him.

He stared at the minuscule piece of stored data. “And what I am supposed to do with this? I asked you to take a photograph.”

“And I did just that. There’s your photograph. On the memory card.” She stuffed the digital camera into her pocket, her outlandish garb topped by a khaki-colored waistcoat.

Cheeky cow, Padgham thought, frustrated. Although he was only forty-two, he often felt as though the modern world and all its technical sleights of hand were passing him by at a dizzying speed.

As she dismantled the tripod, Padgham repeated his question. “What am I supposed to do with this?”

“You’re supposed to download it to your computer. Once you do that, you can print it, e-mail it, doctor it up, whatever.”

There being no staff available to assist him, Padgham was forced to grovel. “I would be most appreciative if—”

Just as he hoped, she snatched the memory card out of his hand. Bending at the waist, she inserted it into the computer tower under his desk.

Biting back a pleased smile, he pointed to a notepad inscribed with the museum logo. “I would like to send the photographs, via e-mail, to that address.”

“Yes, sire. I live to serve.”

Padgham turned a deaf ear on her disgruntled mumblings. “You’re most kind, Miss Miller.”

“You say that only because you don’t know me.” She seated herself at his carved mahogany desk. “All right, let me get this straight, you want me to send the pics to one C Aisquith at lycos dot com?” When he nodded, she said, “Probably best if we send the photos as jpegs.”

“Yes, well, I’ll leave it up to you.”

She quickly and deftly tapped away on the keyboard. Then, getting up from his executive-style chair, she said, “Okay, I want you to pull up your e-mail account.”

“I would be only too happy to oblige.” Padgham seated himself at the desk. “What the bloody hell!”

“What’s wrong?”

“Are you blind, woman? The screen has gone blank.” He pointed an accusing finger at the blackened monitor.

“Calm down. No need to have a conniption. It’s probably just a loose cable.”

“Hmm . . .” He glanced at the floor-bound computer, then at his Gieves & Hawkes hand-tailored trousers. The problem had but one solution. “Since you so easily diagnosed the problem, would you be a dear and . . . ?”

“You do know that this is not in my job description,” Edie Miller griped as she scrambled to her knees. There being no room to pull the computer tower forward, she was forced to wedge herself under the desk in order to check the cables. Padgham glanced at the Waterford candy dish on the nearby console, thinking he might offer her a cellophane-wrapped sweet. Recompense for a job well done.

As the woman under the desk silently went about her business, Padgham picked up the ancient breastplate, returning it to the incised bronze coffer.

“Ah, let there be light,” he murmured a moment later, pleased that a spark of life now emanated from his computer, the monitor flickering the familiar Dell logo.

Out of the corner of his eye, Padgham saw a third person enter the office.

Surprised to see a man attired in gray coveralls with a black balaclava pulled over his head, he imperiously demanded, “Who the devil are you?”

The man made no reply. Instead, he raised a gun and pointed it at Padgham’s head, his finger poised on the trigger.

Death was almost instantaneous. Padgham experienced a sharp, piercing pain in his right eye socket. Then, like the flickering lights on his computer monitor, he saw an explosion of color before the world around him turned a deep, impenetrable shade of black.

CHAPTER 2

“Who the devil are you?”

Pop.

Crash!

Thud.

Those sounds registered on Edie Miller’s brain in such quick succession that it wasn’t until she saw Dr. Padgham’s lifeless body sprawled on the Persian carpet, three feet from her huddled position under the desk, that she realized what had happened.

She stifled a shriek of terror. Like a freight train that had jumped the tracks, her heart slammed against her chest. Hearing a clang above her, she froze, the murderer having picked up her folded tripod from the top of the desk.

In a state of shock, her brain sent a series of urgent messages. Don’t move. Don’t speak. Don’t twitch so much as a finger.

Terrified, Edie heeded the commands.

And then her fear turned to joy.

Several seconds had passed since Dr. Padgham had hit the floor, and she was still alive. It was her lucky day. The killer didn’t know she was crouched in the knee well under the desk. Covered on three sides by antique mahogany, she was hidden from view. In order to find her, the killer would have to bend at the waist and peer under the desk.

From her low vantage point, Edie saw a pair of gray-clad legs suddenly come into view. At the end of those legs was a pair of tan military-style lug boots. Next to those legs she saw a large masculine hand wrapped around a pistol that had a silencer attached to the end of it. As though she were looking through the lens of a camera, she focused on that ham-fisted hand, noticing the hairy knuckles and the unusual silver ring made up of interconnected crosses. The notion that she and the killer might actually pray to the same God caused her to bite down on her lip, hard, a hysterical burst of laughter threatening to escape.

And that’s when the killer did the completely unexpected.

Stepping over Dr. Padgham’s body, he set the gun on top of the desk and, bending forward, began clicking away on the computer keyboard. A few seconds later, Edie heard him softly swear under his breath as he yanked open the desk drawer.

He was looking for something.

Edie barely had time to wrap her mind around that thought when the killer reached under the desk and removed the digital memory card from the computer.

She held her breath, praying to God, Jesus, anyone who would listen, that the killer didn’t see her. It stood to reason that you couldn’t plead with a man who sneaked up on his victims and killed in unpitying silence.

Only able to see the killer from the waist down, she watched as he unclipped a cell phone from his belt. Then she listened, and heard seven digital beeps. A local phone number. He was calling someone in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area.

“Let me speak to the colonel.” Several moments passed in silence before he again spoke. “Sir, I’ve got the breastplate. I’ve also got a problem.”

The breastplate, she belatedly realized. Dr. Padgham had been killed because of the bejeweled breastplate.

“I’m not sure, but I think the little English homo sent digital photos of the relic to someone outside the museum. I found a tripod on the desk, a memory card with photos of the breastplate, and an e-mail address.” Edie heard a sheet of paper being ripped from a pad. “C Aisquith at lycos dot com.” A short pause. The killer carefully spelled out the e-mail address. Another pause ensued. “No. I couldn’t find the camera . . . Yes, sir, I took care of the guards . . . don’t worry, sir, I’ll cover my tracks.”

Edie heard a digital beep as the call disconnected. She then heard the metallic whhsh! of a zipper. The killer was putting the bronze box with the bejeweled breastplate inside some sort of carrying case.

And then he was gone, exiting the office as unobtrusively as he had entered.

Edie slowly counted to twenty before she crawled out from under the desk. Forced to straddle Dr. Padgham’s corpse, she took one look at his bloody, mutilated eye socket . . . and promptly threw up. All over the Persian carpet. Not that it mattered; the carpet was already stained with blood and brain matter.