Hal nodded. 'Rhedae - the old name for Rennes-le-Château - was at the heart of the Visigoth empire in the south. Fifth, sixth and early seventh centuries.' He glanced at her, then back to the road. 'But from your professional standpoint, doesn't it seem a long time - too long - for something to lie undiscovered? If there was anything genuine to find - Visigoth or even earlier, Roman, I guess - surely it would have come to light before 1891?'
'Not necessarily,' Meredith replied. 'Think of the Dead Sea Scrolls. It's surprising how some things turn up, while others stay hidden for thousands of years. According to the guidebook, there are the remains of a Visigoth watchtower nearby in the village of Fa and Visigoth crosses in the cemetery at the village of Cassaignes, both discovered pretty recently.' 'Crosses?' said Hal. 'They were Christians? I'm not sure I knew that.' Meredith nodded. 'Weird, huh. The interesting thing is that it was Visigoth practice to bury their kings and noblemen with their treasure in hidden graves rather than in graveyards round a church building. Swords, buckle clasps, jewellery, fibulae, drinking cups, crosses, you name it. Of course, this brought with it the same problems as the Ancient Egyptians.' 'How to deter grave robbers.'
'Exactly. So the Visigoths developed a way of constructing secret chambers below riverbeds. The technique was to dam the river and temporarily divert its course while the site was excavated and the burial chamber prepared. Once the king or warrior and his treasure were safely stowed, the chamber would be sealed and camouflaged with mud, sand, gravel, whatever, then the dam demolished. The water rushes back and the king and his treasure is hidden for eternity'
A couple of minutes later, they parked in a dusty lot with views over the entire southern expanse of the Haute Vallée, and got out of the car. Meredith took in the panoramic view of the mountains and the valleys below, then turned around to look at the village itself.
Immediately behind them there was a circular stone water tower that stood in the centre of the dusty parking lot. A square sundial painted on the south-facing curve marked the summer and winter solstices.
At the edge of the parking lot was a map mounted on a viewing board. Hal jumped up on to the low wall and began to point things out: the mountain peaks of Bugarach, Soularac and Bézu, the towns of Quillan to the south, Espéraza to the southwest, Arques and Rennes-les-Bains to the east.
Meredith breathed out deeply. The endless sky, the outline of the peaks behind, the distinctive profile of the fir trees, the mountain flowers at the side of the road, the tower in the distance. It was awe-inspiring, reminiscent, she suddenly realised, of the background she remembered on La Fille d'Epées. The Tarot cards could easily have been painted with this landscape in mind.
'The Tour Magdala,' he replied, following the direction of her glance. 'Saunière built the belvedere, the stone walkway that runs along the south side of his gardens, with this incredible view, at the very end of the renovation programme, 1898,1899. The tower was to house his library.'
'I doubt it,' he said. 'I suspect they've done what my dad did at the Domaine de la Cade, put a few replacement volumes in the cases, for atmosphere. He called, really pleased with himself, after he'd managed to buy a whole load of second-hand books from a vide grenier in Quillan.'
Hal's face clouded over again. 'Dad was the money, came over from the UK from time to time. It was my uncle's project. He found the place, persuaded my father to put up the cash, supervised the renovation, made all the decisions.' He paused. 'Until this year, that is. Dad retired and changed. For the better, really. Relaxed, enjoying himself. He came over quite a few times in January and February, then moved over for good in May'
Hal raised his head. 'That's it. It's not that we were that close. My mother died when I was eight and I was packed off to boarding school. Even when I was home in the holidays, Dad was always working. I can't say we really knew each other.' He paused. 'But we'd been starting to see a little more of each other in the past couple of years. I feel I owe it to him.'
Sensing Hal needed to go at his own pace, Meredith didn't press him on what he meant by that. Instead she asked a perfectly innocuous question to help him build up to the serious stuff.
'An excuse, rather than a reason.' He paused. 'My uncle wants to buy me out. Not that he's said as much, but he does. But I keep thinking that maybe Dad would want me to get involved. Take over where he left off.'
They had been walking slowly while they were talking and were now standing outside an elegant villa giving directly on to the narrow street. Opposite was a pretty, formal garden with a generous stone pond and a café. The wooden shutters were down.
'I first came here with Dad,' Hal said, 'sixteen, seventeen years ago. Way before he and my uncle had ever thought of going into business together.'
Meredith smiled to herself, now understanding why Hal knew so much about Rennes-le-Château when he knew pretty much nothing about the rest of the region. The place was special to him because of the bond it gave him with his father.
'It's all been completely done up now, but then it was pretty derelict. The church was open for a couple of hours a day, watched over by a terrifying gardienne dressed all in black, who scared the living daylights out of me. The Villa Béthania here,' he pointed up at the impressive house they were standing next to, 'Saunière built for guests rather than for himself. When I came with Dad, it was open to the public, but in a totally haphazard way. You'd wander into one of the rooms and see a waxwork figure of Saunière sitting up in bed.'
'Now, as you can see, the place is a major tourist attraction. The cemetery itself, where Saunière is buried next to his housekeeper, was closed to the public in December 2004, when The Da Vinci Code took off and the number of visitors coming to Rennes-le-Château went through the roof. It's down here.'
'Dust to dust,' she said. A shiver went down her spine. There was something about the place that made her uncomfortable. A brooding quality in the air, a watchfulness despite the deserted streets. She dug out her notepad and copied down the Latin. 'Do you write everything down?' 'Sure do. Occupational hazard.'
She smiled at him and caught the smile he threw back. Meredith was glad to leave the graveyard behind them. She followed Hal past a stone Calvary, then doubled back up another tiny path to a small statue dedicated to Notre Dame de Lourdes behind wrought-iron railings.
'Crazy that they would leave it sitting here,' Meredith said. 'If this place is such a magnet for conspiracy theorists and treasure-hunters, you'd think the authorities would worry someone would take it.'
Meredith looked attentively at the benign eyes and silent lips of the statue standing on top of the pillar. As she gazed as the stone features, imperceptibly at first, then deeper and more insistent, she saw scratch marks begin to appear on the gentle face. Ridges and furrows, like someone was gouging at the surface with a chisel. What the hell?
'Is something wrong?' he asked. Only that I'm starting to see things. 'I'm fine,' she said firmly. 'That sun sure is bright.' Hal looked concerned, which Meredith realised she kind of liked. 'Anyhow, what happened to the parchments after Saunière found them?' she asked.
'He was supposed to have taken them to Paris to have them verified.' She frowned. 'That makes no sense. Why would he go to Paris? The logical thing for a Catholic priest would be to head straight to the Vatican.' He laughed. 'I can see you don't read much fiction!' 'Although playing devil's advocate for a moment,' she continued, thinking aloud, 'the
counter-explanation would be, presumably, that he didn't trust the Church not to destroy the documents.'
Hal nodded. 'That's the most popular theory. Dad made the point that if a parish priest in a far corner of France really had stumbled upon some amazing secret - such as a marriage document or proof of descendants going back to the first century AD - then it would have been simpler for the Church to get rid of him rather than go to all the trouble of paying him off.'
Meredith felt a kick in her stomach. 'Covering up what?' 'Saunière was known to be a friend of the family who owned the Domaine de la Cade. There was a run of unexplained deaths in the region - some kind of wolf, mountain cat most likely - but rumours built up about there being some sort of devil marauding across the countryside' Claw marks.
Although the cause of the fire that destroyed much of the original house in 1897 was never proved, there's strong evidence that it was started deliberately. Maybe to rid the area of this devil they believed was being harboured in the grounds of the Domaine de la Cade. There was also something about a deck of Tarot cards associated with the Domaine. Saunière was supposed to have been involved in that too.' The Bousquet Tarot.
'All I do know is that my uncle and Dad fell out over it,' Hal said. Meredith forced herself to keep her voice steady. 'Fell out?' 'At the end of April, just before my dad made the decision to come out here for good. I was staying with him in his London flat. I came into the room to catch the tail-end of the conversation. Argument, really. I didn't hear much of it: something about the interior of Saunière's church being a copy of an earlier tomb.'
'He didn't want to talk about it. All he would say was that he'd learnt there was a Visigoth mausoleum within the grounds of the Domaine de la Cade, a sepulchre, which was destroyed at the same time as the house caught fire. All that is left is a few old stones, ruins.'