‘Just thinking.’
‘Too hard, I’d wager.’
‘Perhaps.’
‘So what are you thinking about?’
‘How good it is to see you again.’
Lourds grinned at her, that little-boy expression that was pure guile and mischief and innocence all at once. ‘You’re a married woman, Frau Von Volker.’
She frowned at him and felt a momentary flicker of anger. ‘Don’t call me that.’ Her voice came out sharper than she’d intended.
Genuine regret marked Lourds’s face. ‘I apologize, Alice. That was inappropriate. Please forgive me.’
Just like that, the anger and awkwardness she’d experienced were gone. That was what it was like being with Thomas Lourds. He didn’t judge her. He never had. He was only trying to be funny, to get a moment’s respite during a hard situation.
‘You’re forgiven. I overreacted.’ And she was way past feeling that her attentions to Lourds were in any way suitable for a married woman. She still loved him but at the same time she realized that she’d never be able to have him. That didn’t keep her body from responding to his proximity, though. Every now and again, her breath caught at the back of her throat.
She was his for the asking.
And he probably didn’t even know it.
Finally, he picked up a small candelabrum from one of the tables.
She joined him. ‘Is that what you were looking for?’
His grin was all the answer she needed. ‘Yes. This was something I gave Lev a long time ago. Evidently he put it to a new use.’
The candelabrum was a Jewish menorah for celebrating Hanukkah. Instead of the traditional six branches fanning out in an elliptical pattern around the main branch, this one had eight. It was supposed to be lighted during the eight days of the Jewish holiday. The shamash, the servant candle, was the candle that was used to light the other candles. Carefully, Lourds twisted that thin spire.
To Alice’s surprise, the short candle base pulled free. A tightly rolled piece of paper occupied the hollowed area.
Lourds took the paper out, gently set the menorah aside, and opened his prize.
Standing on tiptoe, too aware of Lourds’s clean, soapy smell and cologne, Alice peered over his shoulder and read the note.
Thomas, you’ll have to see this from my point of view.
At the bottom of the piece of paper was a deftly rendered pictograph.
‘Is that a Pegasus?’
Lourds smiled. ‘It’s a flying horse, all right. But this is al-Buraq, not the mount from Greek myth.’
‘The flying horse that Mohammad rode?’
‘The very same.’
‘What does it mean?’
‘It means I have to return to Jerusalem.’
Although she’d been expecting the answer, Alice’s heart felt pierced. She didn’t like the idea of getting Lourds back and losing him again so quickly. ‘When?’
‘The sooner the better. A lot of people are looking for this, and I’m not even sure what it is.’ Lourds looked at her. ‘Alice, I don’t know how to thank you enough. Without you, I’d never have found this.’
Wordlessly, Alice gave in to the desire that had fueled her since she’d seen him that afternoon on the terrace of the Albertina Museum. She pulled him to her and kissed him soundly.
Lourds hesitated only for a moment, and she thought the fact that she was married — no matter how miserably — was going to stop him. Then he bent down and swept her up in his strong arms.
He smiled at her. ‘I’m sure there are a lot of bedrooms here. Pick one and tell me how to get there.’
Anger flared through Von Volker as he watched the image of the American professor carrying his wife through the halls of his house. He watched them on the computer monitor. Their intent was unmistakable. In that moment, he wanted to go to the schloss, get one of his shotguns, and blow the American’s head off his shoulders.
‘Herr Von Volker, if you want me to stop this, I can.’ The schloss’s security chief looked uncomfortable.
They sat in the off-site security headquarters in one of the guesthouses. From there they could access the schloss’s closed-circuit security system. Six computer monitors rotated views of the house. The central one tracked Lourds’s progress through the hallway.
Evidently Alice was giving directions to one of the guest bedrooms. She wanted to avoid the one she shared with her husband. Von Volker took a measure of pride in that. If she wouldn’t love him, he ensured that she feared him.
‘No. Leave them alone. Let them have their fun. Because there will be no more of it after tonight.’ Von Volker kept his voice calm. Von Volker was more angry about having to cut short his festivities at the after-rally party. He had whipped the crowd into a proper frenzy, and he’d gotten caught up in the pull of it all himself.
He was also angry because he could see how much his wife was in love with the American. Expectation glowed on her face. In that moment, he hated her in a way he’d never hated anyone.
On the screen, Alice and Lourds began removing each other’s clothing. Von Volker made himself watch. Once they found out he had seen them, they would fear him even more. He would use that against them and enjoy every moment of it.
Alice lay beneath Lourds as he laved her breasts with kisses and his gentle tongue. Her breath grew shorter, and her needs grew stronger. Then his kisses drifted farther south until he was probing her sex yet again, driving her closer and closer to the edge — until she shattered and lost all control.
Her cries of pleasure filled the bedroom, and she knew she would have been mortified if she’d been in her right mind. Gasping, she lay back as Lourds raised himself above her and looked down at her, chuckling.
Finally, her breath returned, and she could feign a frown. ‘You don’t have to gloat.’
‘This? This isn’t a gloat. This is happy.’
‘You’re awfully proud of yourself.’
‘Shouldn’t I be?’
‘Possibly. Of course, doing that to me has always had those results. You have always been a cunning linguist.’
Lourds grinned even larger. ‘It’s truly a shame that bit of wordplay only works in English.’
‘Because you’ve been with so many women that don’t speak English?’
He froze for a moment, and she could see that he didn’t know what to say.
‘My bad. Now I’m the one who’s transgressed.’
‘I forgive you.’
‘How very gallant.’
‘But I am going to exact a punishment.’ Lourds adjusted his hips and sank into her.
Alice’s breath grew short again. Then he began to move, and the slippery, glorious friction made coherent thought all but impossible.
An hour before dawn, Lourds woke and started to get up so he would be gone before Von Volker’s research team returned to the schloss. Alice grabbed him and slid on top of him. The lovemaking this time had more tenderness than desperation, and Lourds knew they were both resenting the fact that they had to part.
But the mystery wouldn’t wait, and Von Volker wasn’t a man to forgive trespasses.
Afterward, Lourds showered and dressed as she watched him. He didn’t feel self-conscious about her watching, but he regretted the way his leaving was making her feel. On one level, he didn’t want to go, but on all the others, he was excited to get back to Jerusalem and find out what Lev had left for him there.
And he thought he knew the exact place to look for the sign.
When he was ready to go, he leaned over and kissed her once more. ‘While I’m gone, see if you can sort through Lev’s artifacts. In case there’s something else there we’ll need to know about later.’