In the distance he heard a loud honking sound. A swan searching for its mate.
Bloody hell.
“Swans and geese,” he murmured, wondering if the answer to Philippa’s riddle could really be so simple. Hoping to curry favor, he turned to MacFarlane. “In the medieval lexicon, the two words are interchangeable, one and the same. And if you’ll recall, there were two geese depicted in the Canterbury window, symbolizing the fact that swans and geese mate for life.”
The older man’s brow furrowed. “I’m not following.”
“The name of this place is Swanley. In the Middle English of the fourteenth century, a ley was a meadowland.”
“I got the clue!” Edie exclaimed, realizing the significance of the place name. “The word Swanley would roughly translate as ‘swan meadow.’ Meaning that we need to start searching for a meadow. Or some swans. Or maybe even both.”
The furrow in MacFarlane’s forehead deepened. “What kind of bullshit are you trying to pull? Swans swim on the water. They don’t flap around on a grassy field,” he bristled, gesturing to the surrounding dell.
“I will be the first to admit that it’s a nonsensical word combination. But that doesn’t detract from the fact that it is highly significant. In the quatrains, Philippa referred to herself as the ‘trusted goose.’ At Canterbury, we discovered a stained glass window in which the Ark of the Covenant was depicted along with two geese in a basket. Now we find ourselves here at Swanley. Trust me. It does mean something.” He turned to Harliss, the keeper of the GPS navigation device. “Is there a lake or pond in the near vicinity?”
Given the go-ahead from his commander, the muscle-bound lackey consulted his handheld device. “Yeah, I got a body of water about two hundred meters east of here.”
“Then I suggest we proceed to said location with all due haste.”
When no objection was raised, he motioned to Harliss to lead the way. Sanchez remained behind at the cloister to pack up the equipment. Braxton, the pickax jauntily swung over his left shoulder, a powerful Desert Eagle pistol clutched in his right hand, pulled up the rear.
As they trooped toward the new destination, bare branches rustled in the damp breeze. Whispering. Warning.
“Please tell me that I’ve got more than thirtysome minutes to live,” Edie said in a lowered voice, furtively glancing at MacFarlane.
“You need to firm up,” he answered in an equally hushed tone, not wanting her to dwell upon that very narrow allotment of time. He knew from experience that it was best to deal with variables that one could command rather than obsess on something beyond one’s grasp.
“Yeah, yeah, I know. I need to stand tall. Or stand my ground. Or some silly cliché.” Though she appeared outwardly composed, Caedmon detected an underlying note of panic in her voice.
Worried that Edie might succumb to her fear, he reached over and squeezed her hand. “An opening will present itself. It always does. And when that happens, we must seize the moment. No time for second-guessing, right?”
The pep talk having taken hold, she nodded her head, a vengeful gleam in her brown eyes. Caedmon suspected that she, too, entertained a gruesome fantasy that involved a certain behemoth and a very sharp pickax.
A few moments later they arrived at a fish pond that he estimated to be a good ten acres in size. Toward the center of the pond was a spit of land. The swan meadow. In the middle of the small isle, a simple stone cross had been erected. It appeared to have taken root long centuries ago.
“This is looking really, really good,” Edie said, clearly relieved at seeing the cross. “The fish pond would certainly have come under Philippa’s domain as the priory cellaress. Do you think she had the cross placed in the middle of the island as a signpost?”
Caedmon shook his head, disavowing her of the notion. “I suspect the cross was erected before the construction of the priory. However, Philippa would certainly have recognized its significance. As with the Ark of the Covenant, the cross is a point of direct communication between heaven and earth.” He cast a quick sideways glance at MacFarlane, the older man intently staring at the lone cross. As though it were some sort of mystical beacon.
He’d made his case. Thank God.
“It could very well be that before the priory was built, this site was used as a religious shrine,” he continued. Then, gesturing to the surprisingly clear, glassy surface of the pond, he said, “Undoubtedly the fish pond is fed by a natural spring. Such springs were often dedicated to a local saint.”
“Making this a holy site, right?”
Caedmon nodded. “And that would have made the isle a fitting place for Philippa of Canterbury to hide the most sacred relic in all of Christendom.” He gestured to a quartet of small skiffs moored to the nearby bank. “I doubt the local anglers will mind if we make use of their vessels. That said, we should set sail. Groups of two, I think.”
MacFarlane walked over and inspected the small rowboats bobbing on the water. “Gunnery Sergeant, I want you to row across with the woman. Harliss, you wait for Sanchez to arrive with the equipment. Aisquith and I will take the lead.” Orders given, he untied one of the boats, brusquely gesturing for Caedmon to precede him into the vessel.
“Hopefully the old girl is seaworthy,” Caedmon muttered as he took hold of the oars and began the laborious business of rowing toward the isle.
MacFarlane made no reply, his unblinking gaze set upon the limestone Lorelei that stood sentry in the middle of the isle.
For the next several minutes the only sound shared between them was the creak and groan of wood oars repeatedly slicing through the chill water and the occasional honking of the resident swans. The rain had stopped and wispy tendrils of white vapor hovered over the surface of the water, wrapping the pond in a cloying embrace.
No sooner did the prow of the boat butt against the small isle than MacFarlane disembarked, the older man hurriedly sloshing through the calf-high water that lapped the grassy shoreline. Clearly impatient, he motioned for Caedmon to secure the fishing boat to a clump of nearby bushes. A few moments later, Edie and the behemoth docked beside them. Together the four of them made their way to the cross.
Well aware that he had only eighteen minutes left on the clock, Caedmon fingered the worn stone. If a clue had been carved into the cross, the rain gods and wind zephyrs had long since made certain of its erasure.
Undeterred, he walked around to the backside of the cross. As he did, he detected a rigid, nonpliable surface beneath his right wellie. Curious, he sank to his knees, shoving aside the overgrown grass.
“What are you doing?” MacFarlane hissed, hunkering beside him.
“There’s something embedded in the ground. I think it’s a. . . . yes, a plaque of some sort. Do you have a handkerchief or a piece of cloth? I need to wipe clean the surface.”
MacFarlane gestured to the behemoth, wordlessly ordering him to remove the black knit cap that he wore on his head.
Cap in hand, Caedmon began to vigorously rub at what looked to be a bronze plaque some ten inches square, with years of dirt accumulated on the incised surface. As he worked, a shadow fell over him. Glancing up, he saw Edie hovering over his right shoulder, an anxious look on her face. She knew, as did he, that her life still hung in the balance. That the decision as to whether she lived or died could very well hinge on the strangely placed bronze plaque. Fear being a powerful motivator, Caedmon rubbed that much harder.
It took several minutes of determined polishing to reveal a single line of Latin script.
As he stared at the plaque, Caedmon’s heart thudded against his breastbone, utterly staggered by that solitary line of Latin. Like a man who’d just seen a ghost flit past.