“I’ve been asking myself that question all day. Now it’s just a matter of pride. What’s yours?”
Sagan shrugged. “Seems to be my assigned job.”
“You were about to kill yourself in Florida. What changed for you?”
He saw that Sagan was surprised he knew that.
“I had a spy in Simon’s camp. He kept me better informed than Jamison. Simon needed you. He went after you. Your daughter lied to you. Yeah, man, I know the story. At least up to a point. Now here you are. This is more than a job. Much more. This is damn personal for you.”
“Your father alive?”
Strange question. “Been dead a long time.”
“Mine was to me, too, then he really died. I disappointed him.”
Now he could understand. “But not this time?”
“Something like that.”
“I know some of the story of the Jews’ treasure here. Maybe stuff you don’t know.”
And he told Sagan about the cave, Columbus’ grave, and the four objects that had been there, now gone.
“That cave where I went is not at Falcon Ridge. It’s a mile or so away.”
“Is there a river?”
He nodded. “Runs from one to the other.”
“Then we’re in the right place. My grandfather took those four objects out of there and moved them to Falcon Ridge.”
“So they could still be here?”
“We’ll soon find out.”
“How do you know I won’t kill you and keep them for myself?”
“I don’t. But, to be honest with you, Mr. Rowe, I don’t really give a damn. Like you said, I was ready to die a few days ago.”
He was liking this man more and more. “Call me Béne. No one calls me mister. And not to worry, Thomas—”
“I’m Tom. Almost nobody calls me Thomas.”
“Then not to worry, Tom, you’re in good hands with me.”
CHAPTER SEVENTY-ONE
ALLE SAT IN THE REAR SEAT AND WONDERED WHAT WAS HAPPENING. She’d felt safer with Zachariah in Prague, but did not have the same feeling here. Rócha still turned her stomach, his apology not nearly enough, and it had taken all she had to ride on the plane with him.
Thoughts of the Temple treasure filled her brain.
Her family had kept a secret for a long time. One that traced its roots straight back to Christopher Columbus. Now here they were, in Jamaica, where the Columbus family had ruled for 150 years. They’d kept the Inquisition out, creating a safe haven for Jews in the New World. Was it possible that the menorah, the divine table, and the silver trumpets still existed?
Zachariah certainly thought so.
She’d heard what Béne Rowe had said on the phone.
Falcon Ridge.
That was the place.
Where, apparently, her father was headed.
Still, she was apprehensive, her body coated in a cold sweat. Outside was dark but a full moon cast an eerie light, mummifying the world. They’d stopped at a convenience store and obtained a Jamaican road map, one showing that their destination was less than an hour ahead, paved roads most of the way. In the store Zachariah had also bought three flashlights and given her one, assuring her things were under control.
But she wondered.
Brian Jamison had claimed that he worked for Béne Rowe, then later changed that to being an American agent. Which was the truth? Zachariah had told her from the beginning that there would be people who would try to stop them. That was the nature of the prize they sought. Which was exactly why it had been hidden away for nearly two thousand years.
Would it be found tonight?
What a thought.
Almost enough to ease her fears.
———
TOM STEPPED FROM THE TRUCK. THE TROPICAL NIGHT WAS CLEAR and bright. They were parked at the top of a ridge, where a graveled parish road began its descent to a forested valley. Miles away, to the far north, shafts of silver moonlight shimmered off the sea.
“This is Falcon Ridge,” Rowe said. “Good thing for you I came prepared.”
Rowe reached into the pickup’s bed and found two flashlights. He handed over one, which Tom switched on. He saw that the truck bed was loaded with tools.
“I brought things,” Rowe said. “Just in case. I own a coffee plantation not far from here.”
“And what else do you do?”
“If you mean am I a criminal, no, I’m not. But I do have people who work for me who can cause a lot of harm. Lucky for you none of them is here tonight. This is between you, me, and the Simon.”
“And what makes you think he’s going to play by your rules?”
“He won’t. But we’re ahead of him, so let’s stay that way.”
Rowe snapped open a metal container and removed a shoulder holster and gun, which he donned.
The sight unnerved him, but was not unexpected.
“For Simon,” Rowe said.
———
BÉNE LED THE WAY INTO THE TREES. TRE HAD TOLD HIM WHERE the cave called Darby’s Hole was located. Not far. Down a precipitous ridge to the valley floor, where a tributary of the Flint River raced toward the sea.
He could hear the rushing water.
His eyes were adjusted to the dark, his ears attuned to the jungle whispers around him.
Which made him nervous.
He sensed they were not alone.
He stopped and signaled for Sagan to stand still.
In the sky overhead he watched the muted flutter of bats. A few insects made their presence known. The gun he’d brought was nestled close to his chest in the holster. His right hand gently caressed the weapon. Reassuring to know it was there. Still, he could not shake the feeling they were not alone.
All of the land for kilometers in every direction belonged to Maroons, part of what had been ceded to them two hundred years ago by the British. It had remained forest, unpopulated, controlled by the local Maroon council.
He motioned and they continued to clamber down, the ground slippery with pebbles and mud. He switched on his light and tried to locate the water cascade. The river was just below them, maybe ten meters wide, the flow extra swift.
They reached the wooded bank.
He plunged the light beneath the clear, blue-green water and saw that the stream was shallow, less than a meter deep. Typical of Jamaica’s many waterways.
Sagan activated his light and scanned right and left. “There.”
He saw that, fifty meters away, the river swung. At the bend rose a vertical cliff with a crack across its face, the jagged slit signaling a cave.
“That must be it,” he said. “We can follow the bank and get there.”
A long, low wail disturbed the night.
Its tone changed several times, but continued unabated for nearly a minute.
That sound he knew.
An abeng. Made from a cow’s horn. By blowing into holes and working the thumb, notes could be produced. He’d learned to play as a child. Maroons in the 17th and 18th centuries used the horns to communicate. A trained ear could decipher the notes, extracting messages that could be passed over long distances. It was one of several advantages they’d managed over the enemy. The British found the mournful sound terrifying, since it usually signaled death. But what did it mean tonight? He’d never heard one blown outside of a staged celebration.
“What is that?” Sagan asked.
The wail stopped.
Another started.
Much farther off.
His concern became fear.
Maroons were here.
———
TOM FOLLOWED ROWE AS THEY PARALLELED THE RIVER. TANGLED foliage blocked their way, the going slow. Dried twigs and leaves crackled underfoot. They finally made it to a point close to where the cave opened. Their lights scanned the black yawn across the river and he saw something strange.
A dam.
Fashioned of cemented rock, the rough joints thick. It rose two feet from the water and blocked the cave’s entrance, keeping water out.
“We’ll need to walk through the river to get there,” Rowe said as he slipped the gun from the holster and stepped into the swift-moving flow, which rose waist-high.