What game was she playing?
He read her bio on the British Museum website. She was from Florida, her B.S. in computer science from Yale, M.S. in science of information security from Yale, a Rhodes Scholar, she’d achieved her doctorate in cryptography at Oxford, and was now doing a supplemental year of research on ancient coded manuscripts at the British Museum, developing a new methodology to translate the texts. She’d been awarded several prestigious internships before this new position—translating runes on newly discovered sarsens in Sweden, interesting, but who cared? She loved to travel, blah, blah, blah. So she was smart, knew computers, and an American—the bio gave him nothing more.
He scrolled further and stopped cold at a photo, dated last year, of Isabella Marin accepting the Best Paper Award from the International Association for Cryptologic Research.
She was accepting the very award Roman himself had been awarded several years before, and that meant she was indeed an expert in cryptology. But it wasn’t the award that stunned him, it was something in her face. Yes, she was dark, beautiful, exotic—like the women from his homeland—but there was something more to her. What was going on here?
Roman walked to the large window in his office that looked over the Thames to the London Eye making its slow circle, and Parliament, shadowed in the darkening afternoon clouds. He thumbed an LSD tablet onto his tongue, waited a moment, then unboxed a disposable cell phone, added his encryption software, and made a call to the British Museum, a number he knew by heart. A pleasant female voice answered on the second ring. Never the first, always the second. Roman envisioned her there, long legs tucked under the desk, crossed at the ankle, her clear plastic umbrella sitting in the stand to her right and a cooling cup of tea on the desk in front of her.
“Dr. Wynn-Jones’s office, how may I help you?”
He slid seamlessly into his alter ego, his voice changed, became slightly higher, his speech more pedantic. “Hello, Phyllis. It’s Dr. Laurence Bruce. I need to speak to Persy, please.”
“Oh, hello, Dr. Bruce,” she said, her voice now infinitely warmer. “I—we’ve missed seeing you. How have you been? Both Dr. Wynn-Jones and I loved your piece in Anthropology Today last month—what a discovery. Hold for a moment, I’ll get him.”
Seconds later, Persy came on with a hearty, “Laurence! It’s been too long. How are you, my boy? Still ticking along on those John Dee diaries you discovered? Read your piece in AT, by the way. Phyllis couldn’t stop talking about it.”
“Thank you for the kind words. I am quite well. I hear you’ve had a bit of excitement today. Why didn’t you share with the rest of the class?”
“Oh-ho, you know how it goes. Close to the vest, make a big splash, get some extra funding. A real coup for the museum to have discovered a piece of the Voynich, especially after the original manuscript went missing last year. But you know all that already. The truth is, I wanted my brilliant young colleague to have a chance to shine. Tough to believe anyone could find those missing Voynich pages, but she did. Yes, yes, I’ll admit she tossed a bit of mysticism in there, what with the loose pages needing to be reunited with the manuscript, but it made for good drama.
“And yes, before you ask, they’ve been fully authenticated, by Hoag, that windbag, or we wouldn’t have announced otherwise. You need to watch the video of the announcement, you’ll find out everything. You’re actually the tenth call I’ve fielded in the past hour. My goodness, we even had a member of Parliament—I’m sure you’ve heard of her, Melinda St. Germaine, a former student of mine at Oxford—she and an FBI agent came in to see the pages this afternoon.”
Roman’s pulse jumped. An FBI agent? Could it be Drummond? No, that posturing nob was dead someone where on A14, his partner with him. But why hadn’t he heard yet from Radu? Not important at the moment—he kept his voice cool, disinterested.
“The FBI? It didn’t take them long to show up. I suppose after they bungled the case last year, when the Voynich was stolen, they need to make a good show of it. I wonder how they found out about the discovery beforehand.”
“Oh, this was nothing official. He and Melinda happened to be in the lobby when we called the press conference. Capital fellow, art history buff, here on vacation, ah, might be some interest there between him and Melinda. He was quite excited, quite excited indeed.”
“What was his name?”
“I’ll tell you, Laurence, I’ve heard so many names today I can’t keep them all straight. I do remember his name was the same as one of those sprawling big oil cities in Texas, but the day’s gotten away from me, so many things, so many calls. Exciting times, Laurence, exciting times.”
Roman stored this information away for later. He dropped his voice, made it low, conspiratorial. “I’d love to see the pages, Persy.”
“Of course, of course, and we’d love to have you. I’m sorry we weren’t able to arrange a private exhibit before the announcement, Laurence, truly I am. As I said, I wanted to give Dr. Marin a big splash, let her shine. And did she ever—shine, that is. All the reporters were eating out of her hand. When would you like to come by?”
“I’m already in London. I can’t spend all my time working. Came up to see the retrospective on”—he tapped the keyboard of his tablet and picked an exhibit at random—“Giacometti. At the Tate.”
“Oh, I had no idea you had an attraction to that modern trash I find so appalling and depressing. Ah, well, it’s something I’m sure I’ll never understand nor appreciate.”
This startled a real laugh out of Roman. “Man can’t sustain himself on antiquities alone, Persy. We must look ahead, as well as behind. I can be by in an hour.”
Persy said with a small laugh, “You know Phyllis will be ready for you.”
CHAPTER NINETEEN
To the military, they are UAVs (Unmanned Aerial Vehicles) or RPAS (Remotely Piloted Aerial System). However, they are more commonly known as drones. Drones are used in situations where manned flight is considered too risky or difficult.
—BBC.com
Drummond House
Barton Street, Westminster
London
Nicholas and Mike were questioned by Penderley at Scotland Yard until the drone attack began to feel surreal to Mike, like it had happened to someone else, someone in a training film, perhaps. But after two hours of questions from Penderley and his minions, all she wanted was a glass of wine, maybe a hot shower to wash the rest of the glass out of her hair, maybe even change the Band-Aid on her neck, but she knew she had to hold it together a while longer.
It was another eon before Penderley released them, saying, “You two have really poked the gorilla this time. Shall I assign some men to stick close, Drummond?”
Nicholas turned this down, and they shook Penderley’s hand and those of his two inspectors. Ten minutes later, they climbed into his banged-up, well-photographed, debulleted Beemer and made good time to Nicholas’s house in Westminster. Mike spent the drive absently picking more glass out of her hair and straightening the temples of her glasses again, even though they didn’t need it. He reached over, patted her hand. “You feeling all right, Agent Caine?”
“Right as rain. Hmm, I never understood that saying.” She looked out the window. “Speaking of rain, any minute now.”
Nigel met them at the door to Drummond House, tall, shoulders straight, immaculately dressed, and he wasn’t happy. He looked out to the BMW—the sides and roof littered with bullet holes, the windshield cracked, the side window shattered. Mike saw a muscle twitch in his jaw. He turned back to them, ushered them into the house, and gave them both one long look.