made. The jury really liked it, although you looked a little stiff in your brand-new suit. Let’s see, what else can I tell you? Oh yes, you were supposed to go to Jerusalem tomorrow.”
“That can’t be,” Sophie moaned. You can’t…”
“But it is. Are you sure you don’t want to tell me anything? I can go on. Your thesis director found you that job. He has many friends, or should I say brothers ?”
Sophie tried to get up, but the baton came down on her. She cried out in pain and clutched her shoulder.
“Quiet, or I’ll break your other shoulder blade.”
“Please.”
“Where are they?”
“I don’t know,” Sophie cried out. “I don’t know anything.”
The woman’s voice became more sinister. “You shouldn’t lie,” she whispered. “Perhaps I have not made myself entirely clear.”
She swung the black ebony instrument in the air and brought it down on Sophie’s neck. Sophie lost all the feeling in her legs.
The voice was singsong now. “You cannot move anymore, but you can still talk. This is your last chance.”
Sophie Dawes knew that the final blow would be fatal if she kept silent. She would die right here. Although she was just above a room filled with more than a hundred guests, no one would take notice, and no one would help.
“At the Hilton. My room, number 326. Please don’t hurt me,” she said, staring into her torturer’s almond-shaped eyes. They were keen and distant. Sophie had fallen for this woman at the party. She had introduced herself as Helen and told Sophie that she was studying for an advanced degree in art history. They had talked with passion about Renaissance painters. Sophie thought she was graceful and exciting. She couldn’t resist when the beautiful blonde suggested that they go someplace quiet, far from the crowd, to explore the frescos.
The two women had slipped upstairs as the uninterested security guards looked on. The nightmare had begun as soon as Helen closed the door behind them. The blonde had pulled her close as if to kiss her. Then Sophie saw the small black instrument, felt the electric shock, and fell to the floor. The woman then lifted her onto a sofa.
Sophie had come to quickly. She kicked her attacker in the ribs and ran toward the library.
Now Sophie had lost. She prayed that her attacker would just leave. It wasn’t fair. She was only twenty-eight. Helen smiled. Her expression looked affectionate, and Sophie felt relief.
“Thank you. Your death will be quicker.”
The angel of death kissed Sophie gently on the forehead and swung the baton.
Sophie heard it coming and lifted a hand to shield her face. Her fingers broke under the blow. She collapsed,
her eyebrow split open. Her blood flowing onto the polished floor.
Below her, a quartet was playing selections from an opera. The sounds of the party rose through the floorboards and slipped along the ancient walls, filling the private chambers and gilded sitting rooms.
Sophie recognized the Donizetti aria, “Una furtive lagrima,” just as she understood the full significance of
the three blows: one to the shoulder, one to the neck, and one to the forehead.
6
The first pages of Descartes’s Discourse on Method had always fascinated Marek: a philosopher holed up in his room with his stove, who, by the sole power of reasoning, had found a solution to every problem. For Marek, this was a key life lesson, a personal approach. Now, in his deserted lab, Marek talked to himself. He bounced ideas off the walls, waiting for order to rise from chaos.
He typed out his thoughts regarding the stone as they took form. “Based on similar ritual formulas found in texts from the same period, this would appear to be written by a temple intendant. It contains a list of materials, including two types of wood—cedar and juniper.”
Marek reached for a Bible. The construction of Solomon’s Temple was described in the first Book of Kings . It was all there: the dimensions, the interior