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We sat in the back, under the apple-cheeked statue of the Christ child and the adoring face of his mother. The chapel smelled of wet wool and frankincense, and of old age, of camphor and lavender soap and garlic. The antiphon that night was O Oriens.

“O Radiant Dawn,” Heloise sang beside me, “brightness of light eternal, and sun of all justice; O come and illumine those who live in deep darkness, in the shadow of death.”

I sat in the hard pew and watched my new friend, the snow melting in her dark hair. It was such a rich memory, so immediate, so lush with detail, each bead of water reflecting the altar candles. Heloise looked over at me and smiled, and her face brightened as if by magic. How lucky, I thought, how incredibly lucky I was to have been found by these women.

* * *

Heloise was with me all the way to Ourzazate and down into the oases of the Draa Valley, not an angel but an escort, a guide through the dark terrain of memory. She was with me when we arrived at the palmeraie, at my side as Salim and Hassan carried me in through the doors of the great red Casbah and down into the cool warren of dark rooms. She remained there through the first two nights of desmopressin and Hassan’s foul concoction, a nightmare from which I thought I might never awaken. Sometimes she perched in the far corner of my cell, and sometimes she lay beside me in the narrow cot that served as my bed, her hips touching mine, her fingers stroking my hair.

It was dead silent in my small room, the thick mud walls and heavy door damping the sounds of the house. A tiny, grated window high up in one corner let in just enough light to allow me to differentiate between day and night. A single bare bulb, of which I thankfully had control, offered respite from the terrifying darkness.

I’d seen Werner’s black Mercedes when we’d first arrived, and I had no doubt he was somewhere in the Casbah. In my more lucid moments I wondered if Brian was there as well, or if his betrayal had served an interest other than that of my host. I had a feeling Werner wasn’t the only one with a stake in whatever treasure Leila Brightman had disappeared with.

I was left alone for some time after my arrival, and eventually the drugs wore off enough for me to relieve myself in the plastic bucket I’d been given for that purpose. Then, toward what my best instincts told me was late evening, there was a knock on the door, and Salim appeared with a tray of food and a bottle of mineral water.

“Eat!” he said, setting the tray down on the floor next to my cot. “We don’t want you to die.”

He was just a few inches from me. I worked up what little saliva was left in my mouth and spit in his face.

“Not yet, at least,” he leered, wiping my spittle from his cheek.

I watched him go, then took a swig of the water and poured out the remainder of the bottle on the floor. As thirsty as I was, I didn’t trust myself not to drink the whole thing. Of the food, I ate just enough to quell my hunger pangs, then scraped the rest into my rudimentary chamber pot.

I had no doubt Hassan would come to medicate me again, and I wanted to be as ready as possible this time. When he did come, there was no knock. I heard the door latch click; then Salim and the doctor stepped into my cell.

During my time at the abbey, I often wondered at the lives of the saints, so many of them martyred, tortured and killed for their faith. How did they do it? I wanted to know. How did they survive the searings, the drownings, the rapes, the stretching of their bodies, the slow disembowelments, the desolate years in some cramped hole not fit for a rat? When Hassan came for me again, I began to see how they withstood it all.

There’s a certain bleak comfort in the familiar, an advantage in knowing exactly what has to be endured. As I watched Hassan come toward me with the needle and the inhaler, I had a fleeting memory of a beach somewhere, great blue curls of surf moving in to shore. Here’s how you do it, I thought, take a deep breath and duck your head to the wild tussle of the waves. I could feel the water close on me, the sand scraping my legs, the inescapable pull of the sea. Just ride, just ride, I told myself, my lungs aching, my arms fighting to pull myself up. And then, when I thought I couldn’t hold my breath for a second longer, I shot up and out. I would come out of this, too, I reminded myself, as Hassan’s cocktail hurried to my heart, and the desmopressin rushed toward my brain.

* * *

Imagine the wind-scoured contents of a prairie tornado, a roll of barbed wire, a half dozen fence posts, a tire, a bale of hay, part of a roof, a single high-heeled shoe lifted from the bedroom of a trailer, each tumbling momentarily into view, then snatched back into the whirlwind. Or a garden spied through a picket fence, narrow glimpses of green grass, a rosebush, a white chaise lounge, seen, then unseen, then seen again.

That’s how everything came to me that first night in the Casbah, a great tumult of places and things clicking in and out of focus. Here was an endless expanse of dry scrubland, the dark shards of mountains in the distance, the wind blowing sage and smoke. Here I was hurtling through Burgundy, past newly stripped vineyards, past a long stone wall and a field of milk cows. Here was the ditch, and the man beside me with the gun. Then there was a loud crack, the door swung open, and I tumbled forward onto the road.

For a brief moment I was on the train with Pat, smiling for the camera, trying to blink the sleep from my eyes. I was in the abbey kitchen, weighing dough. Then the melee turned again, and I was back at Werner’s house in Marrakech, with the photograph of Les Trois Singes in my hands, the three young friends, the rickshaw driver waiting for a fare. Though even here my memory failed me: the woman in the white shift was missing.

For the most part, the things that came to me were trivial-a lake at dusk, a golden retriever chasing a stick, the smell of bread baking, a baby’s fist on my breast-while what I most desired to remember still refused to reveal itself.

Of my three nights at the Casbah, the first was the best. When the desmopressin wave crested and started its slow downward slide, I figured I was invincible. I could do this. I could beat them, I thought.

* * *

A different man came in the morning with food and water and a clean bucket. He was older than my two regular visitors, his skin tanned and weathered beneath the hood of his brown burnoose. He set the tray on the floor and leaned in close to me.

“Eat, Mademoiselle,” he whispered in cultured French. “The others won’t come until tonight.” Catching my eyes with his, he nodded almost imperceptibly, then rose and, taking the soiled bucket with him, turned and walked to the door.

I listened to the latch close and lock. Logic told me not to trust him, but my instincts and my stomach begged me to believe what he’d said. My muscles ached from dehydration. I picked up the bottle and gulped half the water, then fell greedily on the food. Another day without sustenance, I reasoned, and I’d be too weak to fight the drugs anyway.

In the end, the man proved honest in his kindness. Salim and Hassan didn’t come to my room until late that evening. They weren’t alone this time. Werner came in with them and stood in the corner while the doctor did his business. Then my two tormenters left, and my host remained behind.

“How long are you going to keep me here?” I asked. It was a vain question, the answer most likely a lie or meaningless truth. It had long ago dawned on me that he had no intention of letting me leave alive.

Werner didn’t answer. He stepped forward, put his hand on my scalp, and tilted my head back so my face was turned up to his. Then he brought his other hand up and ran his fingers along my neck and across the side of my cheek. He seemed at the same time to be looking for something and to have found it.