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What he didn’t mention—why invite additional scorn? — was his suspicion that no sooner did the beautiful bastard revive from the head bashing than he went on a murderous rampage. A predator, their adversary had a marked predilection for defenseless victims.

Like Edie Miller.

The reason why they were en route to Baltimore-Washington International Airport. According to the concierge at the Willard, there was a flight for London boarding at four o’clock the next morning. Six hours hence. He’d already contacted his old group leader at Five and made arrangements for Edie to be picked up at Gatwick and taken to a safe house. Yet another reason for her ire: She didn’t like being shuttled across the Atlantic and orphaned out to strangers.

Caedmon flipped the turn signal and veered onto the northbound ramp of Rock Creek Parkway. This late at night, there were few motorists on the winding, tree-lined thoroughfare.

“If you were just tilting at windmills, I could accept that,” Edie said out of the proverbial blue. “But you actually found the Emerald Tablet and because you couldn’t keep the discovery to yourself, an innocent old man was murdered. His death is on your hands.”

“Oh, for pity’s sake! That’s total nonsense.”

“From where I’m sitting, the flame is high and your fiddle is seriously out of tune.”

Patience tried, he tightened his grip on the steering wheel. “Rather than trade barbs, we need to take stock.”

“Just listen to you. You’re like a junkie in denial.” Accusation leveled, Edie ponderously sighed. “It’s my own damned fault. I loved the fact that you were a brainiac. An iconoclast. A Renaissance man.”

It didn’t escape his notice that Edie used the past tense for that most cherished of verbs. “And ‘hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.’ ”

“Can the literary quotes.”

“Quotations.”

The instant he said it, he felt like a bastard, the conversation having devolved into a juvenile tit-for-tat. “I know that you’re angry, Edie. However, you will get on that plane tomorrow morning and you will—Christ!” he abruptly hissed, furiously pumping the brake pedal with his right foot. No resistance! None whatsoever.

His spine stiffened, levering away from the car seat. He shot Edie a quick sideways glance. “Are you securely belted into your seat?”

“Why, what’s the matter?”

Still stomping on the malfunctioning pedal, he shifted into a lower gear. “The brakes just went out on the Mini.”

“But we’re going downhill!” There was no mistaking the terror in her voice. “If we crash into a tree, we’ll never survive.”

“As I’m well aware,” he grated through clenched teeth. With the wet road conditions, if he yanked on the emergency brake they’d jackknife for certain. He sucked in a loud, choppy breath.

He glanced at the speedometer. Bugger! Twenty-five hundred pounds of steel picking up speed with each passing second.

Edie frantically pointed to the right side of the windscreen. “There’s a grassy field at the bottom of the hill. That might be a good place to stop this sucker.”

“Right.” He flipped on the high beams, which enabled him to see that the grassy expanse was bordered in dense shrubbery. He could use the terrain to advantage. “Is the Mini equipped with airbags?”

“Passenger’s and driver’s side.”

Thank God. They might actually survive the ordeal. Assuming he could plow into a thick hedgerow rather than a sturdy oak.

As they raced toward the bottom of the hill, the trees that lined the parkway passed in a dizzying blur. The downshifting had slowed the Mini a bit, but not enough that he could safely engage the emergency brake.

They hit the bottom of the hill going 42 mph. A snail’s pace by Formula 1 standards. A potentially deadly speed without brakes. Spotting a clearing between the trees, he forcefully yanked on the steering wheel. The Mini jumped the concrete curb, momentarily airborne. A split second later, the car shook on its frame, hitting the grassy expanse with a bone-jarring impact. Caedmon immediately jerked on the steering wheel, first one direction, then the other, trying to create enough friction to slow the Mini.

“Damn!”

He’d yanked too hard, the car whirling into a dizzying spin.

“We’re going to crash!” Edie shrieked — right before she leaned over and pulled on the emergency brake.

All four tires instantly locked, the Mini skidding sideways. On a crash course with a cluster of saplings.

“Brace for impact!” he hollered as the vehicle smashed into the spindly grove of young trees, both airbags exploding on contact.

The collision happened too quickly to process. Shattered glass. Sheared wood. Crunched metal. An ear-splitting scream. As the engine stalled, the Mini came to a shuddering halt.

“Edie, are you all right?”

“I… I think so,” she feebly replied, her voice muffled by the airbag.

His eyes filled with grateful tears. “If I can remove the ignition key, I might be able to punch a hole in the—”

Without warning, the driver’s-side door flew open. An instant later, his airbag deflated with a loud whoosh. Movements slowed by pain, he turned to the Good Samaritan who’d come to their assistance.

Christ!

Battered face illuminated by a piercing beam of light, his nemesis leaned into the car.

“Surprise,” the once beautiful bastard intoned in a slurred voice, dragging the word out to three syllables. While the right side of his face was still comely, the left side was disfigured by a bruised jaw and an ugly gash on his upper cheek. A malevolent two-faced Janus.

Caedmon made a quick grab for the ignition keys.

Only to stop in mid-motion when he felt the barrel of a revolver shoved against his left temple. Uncomprehending at first, it suddenly dawned on him that the bastard was responsible for the brake failure.

Very slowly, remove the car keys and hand them to me.”

Forced to acquiesce, a loaded gun an effective means of ensuring compliance, Caedmon did as ordered.

“What’s going on?” Edie asked, her inflated airbag obstructing the view.

Still holding the revolver to Caedmon’s head, the other man punctured a hole in Edie’s airbag with the sharp blade that he had clutched in his left hand. That done, he stepped back from the open door.

Beside him, Caedmon heard a terrified gasp.

Whatever you do, Edie, don’t give the bastard a reason to pull the trigger.

“Englishman, out!” The other man roughly gestured, using his gun like a traffic baton.

Biting back a groan, Caedmon slowly hoisted himself out of the wrecked vehicle, every muscle in his body protesting the movement. Breathing heavily, he stood beside the demolished front end, his knees unsteadily wobbling, hit with a nauseating bolt of pain. The pouring rain felt like tiny shards of glass pelting him in the face.

He surreptitiously glanced about. Parked behind the mangled Mini was an Audi A6. The engine still running, its halogen headlamps illuminated the crash scene, the ethereal glow revealing wisps of smoke and saw-toothed saplings.

Revolver held at the ready, the bastard walked over to Edie’s side of the Mini and yanked open the door. “Give me the leather bag at your feet.”

Edie wordlessly complied, handing over the satchel. The contents were riffled through. Moments later, he shoved the bag at her chest. Muttering a curse, the bastard stormed to the back of the Mini and opened the trunk. He removed two soft-sided pieces of luggage, which he unzipped and impolitely dumped onto the ground, strewing the contents all over the wet grass.