"The Venetian Betrayal" - читать интересную книгу автора (Berry Steve)FOURTEENCOPENHAGEN 8:30 A.M. MALONE STARED AT THE HOUSE. HE, THORVALDSEN, AND CASSIOPEIA had left his bookshop a half hour ago and driven north, following a seaside route. Ten minutes south of Thorvaldsen’s palatial estate, they’d veered off the main highway and parked before a modest one-story dwelling nestled among a grove of gnarly beechwoods. Spring daffodils and hyacinths wrapped its walls, the brick and wood topped by a lopsided gabled roof. Gray-brown waters of the Øresund lapped a rocky beach fifty yards behind. “As if I have to ask who owns this place.” “It’s run-down,” Thorvaldsen said. “It abuts my land. I bought it for a bargain, but the waterfront location is wonderful.” Malone agreed. Prime real estate. “And who’s supposed to live here?” Cassiopeia grinned. “The owner of the museum. Who else?” He noticed that her mood was lightening. But his two friends were clearly on edge. He’d changed clothes before leaving town and retrieved his Magellan Billet-issue Beretta from beneath his bed. He’d been ordered twice by the local police to surrender it, but Thorvaldsen had used connections with the Danish prime minister to block both attempts. Over the past year, even though retired, he’d found a lot of uses for the weapon. Which was troubling. One reason he’d quit the government was to stop carrying a gun. They stepped inside the house. Sunlight poured through windows clouded with salt film. The interior was decorated with a mishmash of old and new-a combination of styles that seemed pleasant by merely being itself. He noticed the condition. Lots of repairs were needed. Cassiopeia searched the house. Thorvaldsen sat on a dusty tweed-covered couch. “Everything in that museum last night was a copy. I removed the originals after I bought the place. None of it was particularly valuable, but I couldn’t allow it to be destroyed.” “You went to a lot of trouble,” Malone said. Cassiopeia returned from her reconnoiter. “There’s a lot at stake.” Like he needed to hear that. “While we wait for someone to come and try to kill us-the individual you talked to on the phone three hours ago-could you at least explain why we gave them that much prep time?” “I’m well aware of what I’ve done,” Thorvaldsen said. “Why are these medallions so important?” “Do you know much about Hephaestion?” Thorvaldsen asked. He did. “He was Alexander’s closest companion. Probably his lover. Died a few months before Alexander.” “The molecular manuscript,” Cassiopeia said, “that was discovered in Samarkand actually fills in the historical record with some new information. We now know that Alexander was so guilt-ridden over Hephaestion’s death that he ordered the execution of his personal physician, a man named Glaucias. Had him torn apart between two trees tied to the ground.” “And what did the doctor do to deserve that?” “He failed to save Hephaestion,” Thorvaldsen said. “Seems Alexander possessed a cure. Something that had, at least once before, arrested the same fever that killed Hephaestion. It’s described in the manuscript simply as the Cassiopeia removed a folded page from her pocket. “Read it for yourself.” “The court historian,” Cassiopeia said, “a man who also lost someone he loved when Alexander ordered Callisthenes executed four years previous, recorded that account. Callisthenes was Aristotle’s nephew. He served as court historian until spring 327 BCE. That’s when he got caught up in an assassination plot. By then, Alexander’s paranoia had amplified to dangerous levels. So he ordered Callisthenes’ death. Aristotle was said never to have forgiven Alexander.” Malone nodded. “Some say Aristotle sent the poison that supposedly killed Alexander.” Thorvaldsen scoffed at the comment. “The king wasn’t poisoned. That manuscript proves it. Alexander died of an infection. Probably malaria. He’d been trudging through swamps a few weeks prior. But it’s hard to say for sure. And this drink, the “Did you catch those symptoms?” Cassiopeia asked. “Fever, neck swelling, mucus, fatigue, lesions. That sounds viral. Yet this liquid totally cured the assistant.” He was not impressed. “You can’t place much credence in a two-thousand-plus-year-old manuscript. You have no idea if it’s authentic.” “It is,” Cassiopeia said. He waited for her to explain. “My friend was an expert. The technique he used to find the writing is state of the art and doesn’t lend itself to forgeries. We’re talking about reading words at a molecular level.” “Cotton,” Thorvaldsen said. “Alexander knew there’d be a battle for his body. He’s known to have said, in the days before he died, that He’d caught something else and wanted to know from Cassiopeia, “You said your friend at the museum “He’s dead.” And now he knew the source of her pain. “You were close?” Cassiopeia did not answer. “You could have told me,” he said to her. “No, I couldn’t.” Her words stung. “Suffice it to say,” Thorvaldsen said, “that all this intrigue involves locating Alexander’s body.” “Good luck. It’s not been seen in fifteen hundred years.” “That’s the catch,” Cassiopeia coldly replied. “We might know where it is, and the man coming here to kill us doesn’t.” |
||
|