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"The Royalists backed the King?" Ronnie said.

"Right. They're the Cavaliers. There was a Royalist revolt at Pembroke Castle, with troops changing sides. Cromwell laid siege to Pembroke in 1648. That's probably when the man with the sword was killed. It has to be when the Ark was removed from the hiding place we found."

"So you think that Cromwell's men found the Ark," Nick said, "because the skeleton we found belongs to a Royalist."

"I think he was killed defending it."

"Then what happened to the Ark?"

"Oliver Cromwell was very serious about his religion, a Puritan. He wouldn't have wanted people worshipping it or making a big fuss over it."

"He could have destroyed it," Elizabeth said.

"I don't think he'd do that," Selena said. "But he could have hidden it."

"Where?"

"Well, that's the question."

"What happened after the siege of Pembroke?" Nick asked.

"Cromwell became Lord Protector of England in 1649. He had the King beheaded. Cromwell died in 1658. His son Richard took over, but he lasted less than a year. Richard went into exile and the monarchy was restored. Eventually he came back to England. He died in Hertfordshire, while staying on a friend's estate."

Harker had begun tapping her pen. "The history is interesting, but I don't see how it helps us."

"We only have assumptions," Selena said. "Guesses. My guess is that the Ark was found by Oliver Cromwell at Pembroke Castle and hidden by him. When the time came, Crowell knew he was dying. I think he would have passed the secret on to his son."

"If he did, the son would have kept a close eye on it," Nick said.

"And hidden it in turn," Ronnie said.

"Where?"

"I need to do some research," Selena said. "If Richard Cromwell hid the ark, there could be some reference in his papers that only makes sense with that idea in mind."

Nick saw the expression on her face. There's something about research that really turns her on, he thought.

"How do you plan to get the papers?"

"I can see some of them online, but I'll need to go to England."

"Take Nick and Ronnie with you," Harker said.

CHAPTER FIFTY-EIGHT

Richard Cromwell had spent his last days on an estate 50 miles northeast of London, near Cambridge University. Most of his letters and papers were in the Cambridgeshire Archives. If there was anything in Cromwell's correspondence that could shed light on the location of the Ark, it would be somewhere in those archives.

They checked into a hotel near the University early in the afternoon of a perfect English summer day, the kind of day that had inspired Shakespeare to compare. From there they went to the County Council record office, where Cromwell's papers were stored. The office was in Shire Hall, a massive building of stone that was a shrine to bureaucracy.

Selena had already examined the Cromwell letters that could be seen online and discovered nothing. Some of the fragile documents were available only for serious research and only by permission. Selena's academic credentials smoothed the way to the restricted section.

"This is going to take a while," she said. "You and Ronnie don't need to be here."

"We passed a pub down the road. Ronnie and I will go there. Call when you want us to come pick you up."

Three hours later she found what she was looking for. She called Nick and went outside to wait for him.

When they pulled up outside Shire Hall, they appeared unusually happy.

"We found a good pub," Nick said. "Had shepherd's pie for lunch. Good beer, too."

"Better let me drive," she said.

As they drove away from the Council offices, a dark blue Volvo started up in the parking lot and pulled out after them.

"They're headed back into town," the driver said into his radio link.

"Keep your distance. They're probably going back to their hotel."

"What's our next move?"

"We watch and wait. If they turned anything up, they'll go after it. It's getting late. Probably nothing's going to happen until tomorrow. Make sure you've got somebody on them all the time."

"Roger that," the man said.

"Don't screw up."

"Roger," the man said again.

CHAPTER FIFTY-NINE

Selena's room had a balcony and a view of Cambridge University's King's College. The chapel bell tower dominated the skyline. Nick and Ronnie sat on a couch in front of a low, glass-topped coffee table. Selena took a chair by the desk.

"Richard Cromwell was forced out of power in 1659," she said. "He went into exile in France in 1660. I found a letter he wrote from France to his daughter, Elizabeth. I think he had the Ark and hid it before he left and she was in on it. In the letter he begins with the usual Puritan thinking, telling her to be mindful of her place before God. Then he talks about his illness and having blood let. Doctors back then would bleed you for just about anything."

"Did it do any good?"

"Not enough. There are some who think his doctors killed him." She paused. "Cromwell was a Puritan. To understand the letter, you have to understand how the Puritans thought about things."

"Tall black hats," Ronnie said. "Blunderbusses. Thanksgiving."

Selena ignored him. "In Puritan society women and men were considered equal in a spiritual sense, but subservient to men in every other way, except with things that concerned the home and raising children. In the home, the women made the decisions."

"Took a while to change that, didn't it?" Ronnie said.

"Who said it's changed? Anyway, Richard appears to have had a great love for his daughter. He treated her in a way somewhat different than you might expect, more as an equal. She was devoted to him as well. In the letter he refers to the English Restoration of 1660. That was when the Anglican Church was restored to it's former position as the official Church of England."

"You should have been a history professor," Nick said.

"Sorry. The point is that when the Restoration took place, many of the churches that had been Presbyterian or Calvinist under Oliver Cromwell went back to being Anglican. I think Richard hid the Ark in a Presbyterian church when he was forced out of power. That church later became Anglican."

"Do you know which one it is?"

"My best guess is St. John's, near the town of Chesthunt. It's not far from London."

"Why there?"

"Chesthunt is where Richard Cromwell died. He had a wealthy friend there, a merchant named Thomas Pengally. Cromwell stayed on his estate before and after he came back from France. It makes sense that if he had the Ark he'd keep it nearby. The letter refers to 'That whiche is fairre to be tresr'd, nor cast before swine'. He cautions his daughter to remain silent about it before men and speak of it only to God. I think he means the Ark. In the next sentence he describes the pleasing simplicity of the altar at St. John's. It's an odd thing to put in where he did."

"That which is fair?" Nick said. "He could have been referring to his daughter."

"I don't think so. I think he could have hidden the Ark in that altar."

"Slim."

"It's all we've got and it's not that far away."

She waited.

"Like you say, it's all we've got. We'll go down there tonight and find out."

"I'll see what I can find out about the church online," Selena said.

In the hotel room directly below, a man put down a set of headphones. He turned to another figure standing nearby.

"Got it," the man with the headphones said.

Nigel McKenzie nodded. "Get the men ready."

CHAPTER SIXTY