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The way to the sea was pleasant. Casca and his men were honored wherever they stopped. Food was always ready and willing maidens added some bloodlines to their tribes.

Casca, though, refused all women. Metah was still too close.

The hills gave way to jungle. And finally to one last rise. Here Casca led the way and pointed down. "The sea. We are here."

His men spent that night in revelry, telling the story of their adventures to those left behind on the ships, filling them with envy that was soon dispersed when those who had to remain behind were shown the baskets of wealth of which they would receive a full share. The next morning the ships were hauled back into the surf and lay at anchor. Supplies were loaded all that day and the next. The ships swung on their anchors as if eager to be off from these strange waters and to return to the more familiar fjords where they were born.

When the ships were loaded and the tide favorable, Casca bade farewell to the escorting Serpent soldiers and sent them back to their city where so much had happened to him and to them, then he returned to the ship. The Vikings were ready. The cargo was stowed. Casca stood at the tiller. The sun reflected silver spots on the small waves.

"Set oars and begin the stroke!" he ordered. "We sail for home."

The oars sliced into the water and the dragon ships began to move, slowly at first, and then with greater speed. They entered the open waters and turned north. North, back the long way they had come. Many of their brothers would not make this voyage with the Vikings, but surely they were already in Valhalla drinking and boasting of their feats in this strange land of temples and birds. Wassail would be sung for the dead when the Vikings returned to home fires. The striped red and white sails were set. They filled. The wind was now the master. The dragon ships rode like well-trained stallions, sliding and slipping through the waters, homeward bound.

The night was warm, but the sails were filled, and the bows of the dragon ships cut through the phosphorescent water. In the leading ship, Casca, forward, looked across the dark waters.

Home… he thought. Where is home for me? Everyone else has a place to which he belongs. I do not…

Beyond the silver phosphorescence of the bow wave the sea waters were black… like death…

Would that I could lose myself in you… Would that the wetness might cover me forever. Surely everything must end in time… and my time cannot be much longer…

Moving his hand against the smooth railing, he muttered aloud:

"When will it end?"

A shiver ran over him as the Jew's voice came, unbidden:

"Till we meet again…"

FIFTEEN

"Sir… sir!" The voice was insistent. It was as if the lights had been turned on. Goldman turned to the voice. He saw Johnson, the museum guard, standing there with a confused look on his face.

"Are you all right, sir?" Johnson asked. "You've been standing there for hours. Your friend said that you weren't to be disturbed, that you were studying the article. But it's closing time now, and we have to shut up until tomorrow. You can come back then if you haven't finished examining the mask."

Goldman's mouth was dry. Closing time. That meant he had been here seven hours. "Yes. Thank you." He read the guard's metal name plate. "Thank you, Mr. Johnson. Yes. I'm quite all right, thank you. May I have just one more moment, please alone? Then I'll leave."

Johnson nodded. "All right. But five minutes more is all I can let you have." Leaving Goldman, he shook his head. What the hell could be so interesting about an old jade mask from Mexico? These brain types. I'll never figure them out. How can they stand in one spot for hours looking at something that doesn't move or talk? Just sits there. Well, that's their business…

Not waiting until the guard had left, Goldman had turned back to the mask. Where had Casca gone this time? Would he return? Somehow, Casca, I think we will meet again. I don't believe you've yet finished what you started.

He gave one last look at the jade mask. It seemed to mock him. The thin hairline scar running from the corner of the left eye to the mouth gave the immobile jade the same slightly sardonic look as Casca… as if it knew a secret… some as yet untold joke.

Goldman straightened, twisting his head to ease the stiffness in his neck.

He left the museum, the closing doors separating him from another world.

As Goldman was leaving, another man was standing in a line waiting to get airline tickets that would take him from Boston to Johannesburg and from there to Salisbury in Rhodesia. As he stood, patiently, he checked his papers, including the Spanish passport identifying him as Carlos Romano, of Sevilla. Everything was in order. He nodded wearily. Several people in the line tried to put some distance between themselves and the man with the scarred face, but he didn't notice.