Rogue Angel 49: The Devil's Chord (13 page)

BOOK: Rogue Angel 49: The Devil's Chord
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Roux tsk-tsked and at the nearest side street wrenched the wheel to the right. Alone apart from the vehicle still following, Roux produced a pistol from below his seat and handed it to her. “Do show those idiots who they are dealing with, will you?”

She did not like to fire in the city, whether there weren’t any people visible or not. Still, when the next bullet shattered the back window, Annja turned to eye her target, using her seat as a shield. She aimed at the vehicle’s hood.

Direct hit.

But the bullet hadn’t done any real damage, since the vehicle kept advancing on them.

One of the vehicle’s passengers leaned out the window, gun arm extended, and fired another round. Annja ducked low behind the seat. The bullet pierced her headrest.

“He’s an excellent shot.”

“They’re not trying to slow me down,” Roux said. “Which riles me. They want to kill me.”

“Yeah, well, I’ve no intention of bleeding all over your car today.”

“Thoughtful of you. But don’t fret over it much. It’s a rental.”

“Your compassion really touches me,” she replied.

“I’m turning right...now.”

As Roux swung the car around a corner, Annja aimed, both hands clasping the gun, at the SUV’s front tires. Firing twice, she succeeded in hitting the driver-side tire. The SUV swung out of control and crashed into a lamppost.

“You hungry?” Roux asked casually as he turned onto another street. “I’m hungry. My hotel is nearby. Let’s go in for a nice meal.”

“And then we’ll talk, yes?”

He nodded, not verbally committing to a reply.

“We’ll talk,” Annja said. “Or I walk.”

Chapter 17

The hotel Roux was staying in was a fifteenth-century convent that had been converted into a luxury respite in downtown Milan. The moment he handed the keys to the valet, Roux was treated like a king. A hotel employee escorted them into the restaurant and to a private table overlooking the luscious garden. The chef immediately arrived to introduce himself and describe the day’s special, which Roux opted for. Roux then ordered a four-hundred-euro bottle of wine.

As Annja sipped the wine, she decided that the expensive stuff was definitely worth it. Much as her budget didn’t allow for such extravagances, she was grateful when it was on offer. Roux was well-off financially and sometimes she had the impression that he enjoyed spoiling her. On occasion they seemed like a father and daughter. However, she was always quick to correct the relationship. She never forgot that Roux could treat people ruthlessly at times, especially if his wants were under threat.

The first course, featuring zucchini ricotta, was so creamy she thought she’d gone to heaven. But she wasn’t about to let the food distract her from finding out what she wanted to know.

“You said you would tell me everything,” she prompted between bites. “So tell.”

“Not going to allow me to enjoy my meal?”

She shook her head, leveling a stern gaze on the old man who always knew how to manipulate a person.

“I still don’t understand what it is we’re after,” she said. “Is it something beyond the Lorraine cross?”

“It is.”

“Then what is it? Something supposedly invented by Leonardo da Vinci? Does it possess destroy-the-world power or is it a cozy painting to hang over the fireplace?”

“Annja, I can’t believe you’d suggest hanging a da Vinci over a smoky hearth.” He mocked a shudder. “Sacrilege.”

She smirked. There was the playful side to the man she enjoyed seeing. Though Roux could also appear as fierce and strong as a man thirty years younger. His ability to switch personas at the drop of a hat both comforted and bothered her.

“Very well.” He finished his first goblet of wine and poured another. “The cross is a key.”

“That’s what Scout said. A key to what?”

“Why, a time-shifting device, of course.”

Upon Roux’s casual announcement, Annja almost choked on her wine. Instead, she pressed the linen napkin to her mouth so she could awkwardly swallow.

“When the key is placed in the device I seek—which is a music box, by the way—the user shifts in time with another person.”

“Time travel?” she managed to gasp. “You are kidding me. Of all the crazy gadgets and things I’ve chased over the years, they have all, at the very least, been real.”

“It’s not time travel but time
shifting,
” Roux insisted. “Big difference.”

Annja couldn’t prevent a chuckle. “How so?”

“Apparently when you place the key, which is the cross, in its lock in the music box—yes, supposedly designed by Leonardo—the bearer shifts places in time with another person.”

Annja knew her jaw had dropped open, but she couldn’t find the words to counter that explanation. He’d spoken it so plainly. And with total belief.

“Fine, Annja, it isn’t real. Time shifting is not real,” Roux admitted.

“Glad we agree on something.”

He promptly shook off her admonishment. “But the idea of shifting time is appealing, you have to admit that.”

“More appealing than having a sword in the otherwhere? More appealing than being able to live through the centuries?”

“Well, yes.”

She wasn’t completely convinced by his reply. Still, he was more of a hopeful believer than she would ever be.

“It is unique in its power. And a curiosity to me.”

“How are you even sure what this device is and what it’s supposed to do?”

“Annja, trust me when I say I know of what I speak.”

“Did somebody show it to you? Demonstrate it? Have you already time shifted, Roux?”

“No, no and no. Annja, really?”

She shrugged and dragged her fork across the plate, cleaning up the last traces of food.

“I saw the device,” Roux said. “And I saw the drawings in the notebook that detailed its use.”

“Right.” Annja set aside her empty plate and immediately a server appeared to whisk it away. “So this is all speculation based on a drawing made by a man who is known for having sketched thousands of intricate and fantastical devices that were never built because of their impossibility?”

“Exactly.” Roux’s glee added a lilt to his voice. And that worried Annja. Did she need to have the old man committed?

“Let’s say a person really could shift places with someone from another time period—for example, you,” she said. “How would the person ever get back?”

The man had no immediate reply to that one.

“And would that person you’d switched with suddenly appear in this time to replace you? How would
they
return? Would your atoms collide in the process and destroy you both?”

She waited for his eager response, but he only remained silent.

“Exactly. And what’s to say there is a return lock and device in the other time period?” Annja chuckled. “Was more than one device created? There can’t be two at any given time. Or can there?”

“Annja, all time revolves on a continuum.”

“I’ve heard the theories. If you’re going to launch into hypothetical notions of imagined outcomes, then I’m out of here. But I will grant that the idea of someone having made a time-travel device is a good one.”

“A time-
shifting
device.”

“Semantics.”

“We’ll never see eye to eye on this.”

“And that makes me one happy skeptic.”

“You could go back and meet Joan of Arc,” he encouraged, as if it was something easily arranged.

“Swell...”

“Sarcasm isn’t your forte, Annja.”

The next course was delivered. A fancy plate of pasta, mushrooms and peppers. Annja stabbed a fork into the dish and tasted. Not bad.

She leaned forward and said in a low voice, “Do you want to travel back through time to see Joan, Roux?”

“I’ve already met her. Nice gal. Tragic ending.”

“Then I don’t understand your quest for this device.”

“It is a relic wrapped in a fascinating concept possibly constructed by one of the great Renaissance masters. Isn’t that enough?”

It should be, but Annja sensed Roux’s reasons for obtaining it were more than mere fascination or historical significance. If it wasn’t at all related to Joan of Arc, would he have been even slightly interested in the far-out legend?

“Don’t you want to discover if it holds an iota of truth?” he asked.

“No, I—” She forced herself to stop the diatribe and blew out a long, relaxing breath. She took another few bites before she said, “If the cross wasn’t of some importance, I’d walk away from this project right now.”

“That’s not the enterprising young archaeologist I know.”

The man was right. Why was she having such a tough time with this? The idea of time travel was crazy. But merely finding the cross would be accomplishment enough for her. It was a link to Joan, after all.

And it was stolen property. She’d been close to it. She was closer than most and gave herself good odds of finding it and returning it to the museum.

“If and when the cross is located,” she said, “and whether or not it is a key to shift time...”

“Leonardo knew man could fly. And he had the science to back it up. Do you think it’s so
out there
that we board tin canisters and soar across oceans nowadays?”

Annja sighed.

“I stand by what I’ve said about the device,” Roux huffed.

“Which you got from whom?”

“Personal knowledge,”

“Well, someone else knows what it is, because Scout is hot on the trail, as well. He’s already got the cross—”

“Unless,” Roux said.

Annja set down the wine goblet. “Unless?”

“Da Vinci kept extensive notes on everything. He always carried a notebook with him. Was scribbling in one on the night I first met him.”

“And...someone out there has that notebook. It’s possible. And the only probable answer to some of our questions.”

“Whoever has that notebook is a thief,” he said. “Wouldn’t you say?”

“Yes. Unless they don’t know what they have.”

“But what if they did? What if the notebook for the time-shifting device was paired with the cross?”

“You think there was a notebook in the attaché case we brought up from the Venetian canal?”

“Roberts must have the notebook
and
the cross.” Roux sounded half angry, half peeved. “Who is that man?”

“And who is he working for now?”

“You have to ask?” Roux smirked and raised his goblet to his lips for a swallow of wine. Finally, he said, “Garin Braden.”

Chapter 18

“There are only two people in the world who know exactly what the device may be capable of doing,” Roux said.

“Two people?” Annja started to think about it, but she didn’t have to think long. He’d just told her the man’s name. “You and Garin. So you both saw the sketch for this music box back in the day?”

“We did. And actually, Garin was the one who had a conversation with Leonardo about the box. He didn’t mention it to me until much later. Couple hundred years, maybe.”

To exist in a world in which conversations were ordered by which century they had taken place stymied Annja.

“As usual,” Annja commented.

“What is that supposed to mean? We are not always at one another’s throats. We’ve worked together many a time.”

“Then why not work together to locate this particular artifact?”

“I don’t want to share, Annja. A man is allowed that right, isn’t he?”

“You’ve moved beyond turning it in to the rightful authorities, haven’t you?”

“I didn’t say that. I want to look at it. Hold it in my hands.”

“Time travel?”

He shrugged and quickly sipped more wine.

The man actually thought he could travel through time? Perhaps the centuries had not been kind to his brain after all.

“So you think Garin is the one who hired Scout away from you? Or maybe he hired Scout to press you into funding the dive?”

Roux flashed her a look that told her he hadn’t considered that underhanded switch. He turned his attention to the windows that lined the restaurant and looked out over the sharply carved hedges and trees. “Anything is possible.”

“Anything indeed. Did you and Garin spend a lot of time with Leonardo?”

“I spoke to him on a few occasions.” He frowned. “Garin I can’t vouch for.”

Annja read the man’s stiff, defensive body language with ease. This was a sore point between Roux and Garin. And that would make this quest all the more dangerous if they were pitted against one another. “So the two of you weren’t speaking at the time in history when this item was revealed to you both?”

“Is that your best guess?”

“Yes. It makes sense.”

“It does?” He leaned his elbows on the table and gestured for her to continue.

“What better reason to be on opposite sides now? Is there more to the lock on the music box besides the key?”

“The cross somehow fits into the lock on the music box and...I’m not sure how it works, exactly. It is what I remember Garin telling me.”

Hmm. What she wouldn’t give for a little hard data and findings her scientific mind could appreciate.

She had always known Roux to be sharp, wise and smart. He used common sense and his vast wealth of knowledge to keep one step ahead of the usual in life’s game.

“Have you heard of the devil’s chord, Annja?”

Interesting change of topic. But she could go with it. “It was a tritone of musical notes that in the Middle Ages the Catholic Church banned from being played or used in musical scores because it was thought to be evil and of the devil. When played, its quality is dissonant.”

“Diabolus in musica.”
Roux recited the Latin term.

“The devil in music,” Annja translated. “It’s certainly not worthy of excommunicating someone or even worse, wherever it may have been used. So what does the devil’s chord have to do with a cross that once belonged to Joan of Arc? And time travel?”

“Nothing. And everything.”

Intrigued, Annja waited patiently for Roux’s answer.

“The Lorraine cross is the key to activating the devil’s chord.”

“If you’re going to try to explain how this is tied to time travel—”

Again, Roux flashed her a startled look. “Is Roberts aware the key works with a time-shifting device?”

“I don’t think he had any idea what he was really looking for. However, he clearly knows some of the details. He’s bested us at every turn.”

“Yes, but I can’t imagine Garin would have provided Roberts with the full picuture. Doing so would expose his position, make himself vulnerable, things Garin would never do.”

“But...Roux, really? Time travel? It’s all fun and games until someone actually does it only to realize it’s a one-way ticket.”

“Annja, please, can you set aside your skepticism for one moment?”

“Sure. I’m doing it right now. What you’ve said is now in the past. Me sitting here is the present, but my words— Oops, there they go, fading into the past. And the future is right after my next words.”

“Touché.”

“Why would you want to time travel anyway? What’s the draw? It must be important, since it’s compelled you to seek this fantastical music box that will play you back to another time.”

“I’m not at all concerned with revisiting the years I have already walked through.”

“Then what is it?”

Roux checked the wine bottle. Empty. He tapped the base of his goblet a few times. Seconds later, the waiter appeared with profuse apologies and poured a fresh goblet for Roux. Annja refused. She’d had enough to drink but she wouldn’t argue against more food. She’d inhaled the main course.

When the waiter had gone, leaving the new bottle of wine at the table, Roux leaned forward to confide.

“I saw the device once. In the fifteenth century. At least, I’m pretty sure that what I saw was the time-shifting device. I was in a hurry and didn’t have a chance to really examine it. Garin almost stole it.”

“So Garin was with you when you saw the device? Interesting.”

“Yes, well, I do recall a fistfight and much arguing. He didn’t leave with the thing. It wasn’t what I was there for.”

“There? Where was
there?

“I intend to visit the mysterious
there
quite soon. After we’ve finished dessert, in fact.”

Dessert? Yes, more food!

“And what will we find at this mysterious
there?
” she asked. “The time-travel device?”

“We can hope. Although, I wouldn’t place any bets on it. It’s been centuries.”

Roux gestured to the waiter, who, seeming to know the old man’s wishes, appeared with the dessert tray. He chose for them both.

“It’s not important. It’s the past, Annja. And as you’ve said, there is no reason to venture into one’s past.”

He was obviously eluding the question. Now more than ever Annja wanted to discover what it was Roux had been “there for.”

* * *

A
N
HOUR
LATER
, they pulled up to a graveyard tucked within the southern interior of the city and parked outside the black iron fence. Roux didn’t seem interested in leaving the vehicle. He scanned the visible tombstones and the backs of mausoleum walls that edged up close to the fence.

“How will we find what we’re looking for if we don’t go in?” Annja asked carefully, as if addressing a reluctant child.

Roux merely nodded toward the cemetery.

Annja’s gaze landed on a person exiting a four-by-eight mausoleum. He bent to brush dust from his jeans, then clapped his hands, and as he did so—his eyes fixed on Annja.

The man using Scout Roberts’s name smiled that ridiculous charming smile of his. He strode toward their vehicle, stepping over tombstones that lay flat on the ground and squeezing between two stone statues. He grabbed the fence posts near the pointed tops and peered between the iron bars.

“Annja! We meet again.”

Casting a questioning glance at Roux, she received a nod from him. The teacher directing the student.

She got out of the car and stepped up onto the curb. “Last time I saw you, you were close to death by tea,” she offered. “You recovered nicely.”

The man patted his abs to indicate his fitness. “Sorry about that. It was necessary.”

“To foist the blame on me and make me a suspect of a poisoning in Venice?”

“Sounds like the plotline from a medieval thriller, eh?”

She reached between the iron bars and gripped his T-shirt. “You’ve got some nerve smiling like that. If you wanted to get away from me so badly you’d risk poison, then what’s up now? Why the casual conversation? Where’s the cross?”

He put up his hands to show his palms. “What cross?”

She tugged his shirt, and just when his forehead would have connected with the bars, he managed to get his hand in front of it. He yelped at the pain of his skull pressing into his fingers.

“The cross your guy stole from the palazzo while you were in the hospital,” Annja clarified. “The same palazzo that you stole.”

“You checked into that, eh?”

“The owner had never heard of you.”

“It was a sweet place, Annja. Much better than that cheap old hotel Roux put you up in. Hey, Roux!” He waved to the immortal waiting in the car.

“You should be thankful you’re on the other side of this fence,” Annja said. She released his shirt. “You know your thief is dead?”

“I do.”

“That means you either never got the stolen goods, or you sent someone else to claim them to further obliterate the trail that leads back to you. Or—”

“Give it up, Creed. It’ll just make your head spin.”

Annja grimaced. She couldn’t help it; she wanted to vault over the fence and knock the truth out of him. But would that really get her any closer to the music box and Lorraine cross? No.

“Who are you?” she asked. “Scout Roberts died two months ago.”

“I was nervous you’d catch on to that sooner than I could ditch you. Roux wrecked my original plans by sending in the babysitter.”

“Happy to make your life miserable.”

“Not so much miserable as challenging. But I met the challenge with style. You know I’ve always been allergic to dandelion? Had a few close encounters with the emergency room as a child. Whew! I nailed that one.”

“Risky.”

“I was pretty sure it wouldn’t kill me. Mostly. But how awesome was that when I suggested poisoning to the doctor and he picked that one up and ran with it?”

“You’re avoiding the question about your identity.”

“I’ll leave that for you to figure out. Apparently you still haven’t researched all the paperwork related to this situation. I’m disappointed in you, Creed.”

Annja gripped the iron bars and bowed her head. She hadn’t been briefed on everything, including the infamously ungettable police report. Was that the key detail she was still missing?

“Braden knows,” Scout volunteered. “Sent me here, expecting the two of you would show. Said this would be the first place Roux would check. I didn’t see anything inside the mausoleum beyond dusty old crypt drawers, but you’re welcome to take a look.”

Annja glanced at Roux. The old man could hear their conversation, but he kept silent and gave her no indication. “What was supposed to be in the mausoleum?” she asked Roux.

He ignored her and turned forward, resting a wrist on the steering wheel.

It had to be the time-travel device. But how would they find anything here now? Surely the graveyard had been built up and remodeled since Roux had been here. Possibly some graves had been moved or even destroyed in the process.

“Well, I’ve a good idea what the old men are after. And they are very old, aren’t they?” Scout offered. “At least, Roux is.” He winked at Annja.

“You’ll hit seventy soon enough,” Annja said. “And I sure hope you drink the wrong tea then.”

“Seventy.” Scout grinned. “I think Roux has gone well beyond that age. But then, you don’t know him all that well, so I won’t bother you with the details. You figure out what the key is for yet?”

“I have. Roux’s explained it to me.”

“So my work here is done.” Scout stepped back and slipped between the two closest mausoleums. “Catch you later, Creed!”

“Track him,” Roux called to her. “I’ll follow in the car. We need to tail him to Braden.”

Taking a moment to vacillate with her own warring need to chase the villain or reach inside the car and twist the other villain’s neck, Annja quickly took off in the direction she’d seen Scout turn.

Dodging around an ancient oak tree with bulging roots that had cracked the curb, she managed a look between gravestones and mausoleums and spied Scout’s blue shirt. The cemetery ended just farther up the road. She stopped at the next corner and peered around to see a black SUV waiting at the front gates.

She glanced backward. Roux was driving slowly toward her and she gestured that he pick up speed, but he did not.

Scout got into the SUV and it took off, gliding away like the last car in a funeral procession, and not much faster.

Annja jumped into Roux’s vehicle. “He’s leaving in a black SUV, just around the corner.”

“We’ll give them a head start.”

“Fine. Wouldn’t want him to think we’re following, when that’s exactly what he expects.”

“Annja, I know what I’m doing.”

“Well, since you’re not in a rush, now would be the perfect time to tell me what we’re doing at a cemetery and what, exactly, should have been in the mausoleum Scout just checked.”

“It was once a hiding place used by da Vinci. He kept valuables in the mausoleum. Had fashioned a nifty safe, which I’m sure Scout destroyed in order to get it open.”

“If it was even still there. I realize he could be lying, but he said he didn’t find anything.”

“And it is possible the safe was long ago removed or destroyed.”

“What was in it?”

“Nothing, apparently.”

“Before,” she insisted. “In the fifteenth century. You must have known about this from when you knew da Vinci.”

“He used to keep the device in there. I assume he must have moved it to a safer location.”

“Safer location? Why? For what reason, if he’d initially thought the mausoleum a safe hiding spot, would he have reason to then move the object?”

Roux shrugged. “Does it matter, Annja? It’s been five centuries. Of course it wouldn’t still be there.”

He was talking in circles.

“Well, where is it now?”

“That will prove the interesting part.”

“Because you don’t have a clue? What about Garin?”

“I’m not sure what he knows. But we’ll stay on his lackey, won’t we?”

He turned the corner and slowly drove before the cemetery gates. A quarter of a mile ahead, the black SUV turned right.

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