All three were members of Cask and Swords, a secret society that had formed in the early days of the University. Every nation in history had a ruling class based on wealth, connections and power. In America, many of that class belonged to Cask and Swords. Past and present swordsmen included presidents, cabinet officials, governors, military leaders, senators and congressmen. The financial direction of the country was currently in the hands of Cask and Swords members.
The exercise of power and the accumulation of wealth required sacrifices by the masses. The common people had never understood that, but Harrison and the others did. All three men considered it their birth right to shape the destiny of nations and wield power.
They had been making small talk while a servant laid out a light lunch and drinks. Harrison waited until the man left the room.
"The attempt to secure the Nostradamus manuscript failed," he said.
"Who did you use for the acquisition?" Croft asked.
"Marcel Sarti. The boss of L'Union Corse."
"I could have recommended someone better. The French mob is unreliable. They are much too crude."
"It makes no difference now. Needless to say, I am disappointed in Sarti. He had the arrogance to keep part of the fee, even though he failed. He thinks he's in control."
"What do you intend to do?" Boyd asked.
"About Sarti?" Harrison glanced at his watch, a gold Patek-Phillipe. "He won't be an annoyance much longer. I am more concerned about the manuscript. Bertrand sent it to a woman who works for the Project."
"Ah. The President's pet intelligence unit."
"Yes. She was a friend of Bertrand and happened to be visiting Paris. Bertrand sent it to her before he died. She is an accomplished martial artist. When Sarti's thugs tried to take it from her they ended up in a French hospital."
"Do you think she knows what's in the file?"
"Not yet." Harrison sipped white wine from one of his Italian vineyards. "She's an expert linguist. She'll be able to translate it. Once she does, she'll take it to her Director. It complicates things."
"What do you think they'll do?"
"I expect they'll follow up on the quatrains. It's what we'd do."
"What if they discover what we're looking for?"
"What if they do? It may work to our advantage."
Croft said, "This could all be a waste of time. I think we should go ahead with the alternative plan."
"We have to be patient," Harrison said. "It's been over 3000 years. We can wait a little longer."
"The election in Israel is getting closer and Weisner is still behind in the polls."
"As I said, Arthur, be patient. An opportunity will present itself, one way or another. If we need to take a different approach, we will. Everything is in place. It's much better if it works out the way we hope. The discovery will make Weisner a popular hero in Israel. His election will be assured. The rest will follow."
Boyd took a sip of water. "The EPA is causing trouble for me again. President Rice takes the law seriously."
"When the war starts there won't be any more problems with the EPA. Rice will need the oil." Harrison said.
The men began eating.
CHAPTER FIVE
Marcel Sarti stepped out of his favorite restaurant into the Marseilles evening, lit a Gitane and gave a deep sigh of satisfaction. Blue smoke from the cigarette curled upward in lazy spirals in the still air. From here Marcel was heading to one of his clubs, where there were discrepancies in the finances. Sarti didn't like discrepancies. He'd found out who was responsible and now intended to send a graphic message to anyone else who might have creative accounting ideas. For the moment, he was enjoying the night air and the afterglow of an excellent meal. The unpleasantness to come would keep a little longer. A bodyguard stood by the open door of Sarti's black Mercedes.
Down the street, two men sat on a dark blue BMW motorcycle. The bike idled with a soft rumble. The passenger held a MAC-10 machine pistol concealed under his jacket. Both men wore full face black helmets with smoked visors. The man at the controls was named Eric. The man with the gun was called Peter.
They watched Sarti emerge from the restaurant and light his cigarette.
"There he is."
Peter slipped the gun from under the jacket. Eric put the BMW in gear and pulled away from the curb.
Sarti glanced over at the motorcycle as it came alongside the Mercedes. Peter raised the gun and fired a long burst. The sound ripped a hole through the night. A bright red pattern appeared on Sarti's elegant yellow silk shirt. The cigarette fell from his fingers. He pitched forward onto the sidewalk.
The bodyguard fired as the bike went past, the shots echoing off the apartment buildings lining the street. The bike swerved. Peter grunted and let off another burst. The guard stumbled and fell. Eric twisted the throttle and the bike roared away.
Half an hour later, the BMW was parked in a rented garage on the outskirts of the city. The space was lit by a single, fly-specked bulb hanging from the ceiling. Peter lay on the oil-stained cement floor, his jacket slick with blood. The round had gone in low on the side. He'd managed to stay on the bike until they'd reached the garage. Now he was in shock, half conscious. His face looked white and pinched in the weak light. Blood leaked out from under him. Eric took out a cell phone and called.
"It's done," he said. "There was trouble."
"What trouble?"
"Peter is badly wounded. He needs a hospital."
"That's not possible."
"I know."
"You know what to do. Get back to the Embassy." The call ended.
Eric turned off his phone and knelt down next to the man on the floor. It was too bad, he'd started to like him.
"I'm sorry," he said. His voice was soft.
The knife was a silver flash in his hand. He drove it up under the sternum and twisted. Blood gushed from Peter's mouth. His eyes went wide, shocked. The body went rigid, then settled into stillness. A sewer stench filled the room.
Eric stood. He wiped off the knife on Peter's shirt and put it back in his pocket. He left the garage by a side door and walked to a car parked nearby. In six or seven hours he would be in Paris. By the time the police found the bike and the body he would be out of the country. The authorities would assume Sarti's death was part of a struggle for control of L'Union Corse. They would assume the dead man had been killed to keep him silent.
They would be right about that part, but they would never know the real reason behind the night's work.
CHAPTER SIX
The pages of the Nostradamus file were spread out on a work table in Selena's luxurious Washington condo. Nick spent a lot of time here, but he'd kept his apartment. Every time he thought about moving in with her, something held him back. Selena hadn't pushed for something more permanent. Whether that was because she was afraid of what would happen if she did or if she was as wary as he was, he didn't know. They didn't talk about it.
Lately, it felt as if something was changing between them. A sense of distance. He couldn't put his finger on what it was, exactly. Just a feeling. Sometimes he thought being with her was like being one of those rubber balls on a paddle that kept bouncing away and coming back again.
He looked at the manuscript pages on the table. Someone had tried to stick a knife in him on a Paris street because of them. Selena's friend was dead, because of them. What made them worth killing for?