“C’mon guys,” Hayden interrupted his fantasy before it grew too intense. “Incredibly, we go down this road here called Haymarket.”
“Just shows how important the theater is,” Dahl said.
“Ah, but what was here first? The road name or the showhouse?”
The Swede laughed and paused at the wide curving junction where cars and buses appeared to have full leave to aim at the scuttling road-crossers and slow-moving older people. The team waited for the lights to turn green, feeling a little out of place in traveler’s London, standing among the drifting crowds.
As they waited, Hayden’s cell rang and she directed them all into a shop doorway. “Sabrina,” she said, then answered.
“Are you okay?”
“I am now,” came the hushed but still fiery Italian tones. “So long as you keep that sword-wielder you have away from my face. Many times she almost cut me. I am traumatized.”
Kenzie grinned and leaned forward to say something but Hayden cut her off with a stare. “Sorry, she’ll never do that again.”
Dahl held his hands out, palms up. “You weren’t there. We couldn’t have done it without her.”
Drake nudged him. “Sorry to break it to you, pal, but you did fuck all except cleave a bunch of monks.”
“Ah. And how did Dubai go?”
“Better than your vacation, for sure.”
Dahl looked ready to take it further, looking beyond disgruntled now, but Drake’s attention was grabbed by Sabrina.
“We came by jet some time ago and ever since have been prowling the Haymarket Theater. Webb talks to me of his quest, how important it is and he is. How I might be invited to worship his glory in the future.” The thief sounded sick. “He is a vile man. But he knows no better. Wait…” Moments passed as she moved to a better position, the phone rustling in her pocket.
“I am back. First, Webb already knows where the next and penultimate clue will be found. He has not explained further but I think I remember his words as being ‘at the place of his death.’ So now, this Saint Germain has a connection to the London theater scene. The greatest philosopher who ever lived, who always looked forty five, no matter at which country house, treaty, or party he was spotted, also had an extraordinary proficiency for the arts. The violin. Harpsichord. He was an improviser, an inventor in all walks of life.”
“You memorized all this?” Smyth barked.
“No. I have had it drilled into me for many, many hours,” Sabrina sighed back. “Torturous hours. I’m sure that I will dream of this long-dead Count tonight.”
Hayden chewed her lower lip. “Better than dreaming of Webb, believe me.”
“So, he was a composer, this Count. His works were given to Tchaikovsky and Lobkowitz whilst at least two others were played at and gifted to the Haymarket. In 1745 and 1760, it seems. Webb says the next clue is in the composition, the words or notes of the song.”
Hayden looked up through the drizzle, to the top of the highest buildings. “Of course. He would hide vital information in something that would live long after he was gone. I guess, if a follower has gotten to this point, the Count may already believe he is worthy.”
“I can’t talk much longer and will then be unavailable for some time, as we’ll be moving on to… wherever. I do not know. Webb says our next stop is our penultimate prize. I suggest you move quicker.”
“Does he have backup?” Hayden asked quickly as Drake gauged the road ahead and their path to the Haymarket. “Men? A trap? Anything?”
But Sabrina was gone, called away by Webb himself it seemed. The team took a long look around.
“Busy as all hell,” Smyth said. “And getting worse by the minute. But if Webb’s there right now…”
“Worth a shot,” Drake said. “Or two.”
Hayden headed out, followed by Kinimaka and Dahl. Drake came next with Alicia, Mai and Beau and then a final group traipsed along — Kenzie, Smyth, Lauren and Yorgi, watching the rear. A tour bus rumbled by as they passed shops almost covered in scaffolding. A steak house and signs for Dover Street Market. Lauren pointed out a Planet Hollywood across the street for Kinimaka, but the Hawaiian turned his nose up at it.
“Not the same. I like rock with my burgers.”
“How is the shot glass collection going?” Drake asked as they walked and reconnoitered.
“Growing,” Kinimaka admitted. “My buddy Nigel posts them from all over the world. Either he’s better traveled than us guys, or has lots’a friends.”
A theater, another burger place, and then Drake could see six white pillars and multi-colored banner advertisements hanging down across the sidewalk and guessed they were nearing the Haymarket. Again the group slackened off, taking the time to scrutinize the area. Drake saw no threats and picked up nothing on his trusted inner radar. Within a minute the team were attempting to gain access to the theater, calling up the locals for clearance and then waiting for some to arrive. All the time the clock ticked and Webb grew closer to his goal. By mid-morning the team and half a dozen skeptical looking coppers were entering the sacred innards of the Haymarket Theater.
They spread out, searched the place. They asked the manager to open locked doors and old, unused rooms, archives. They searched for an hour and found no clue that anyone else had been there.
Drake paused at the balcony of the first tier, looking below at the seemingly small stage surrounded by gilded fittings, drapes and mirrors. To see it empty like this, embellished and adorned with finery but desolate, lacking the one thing that filled its rafters with life, was a little unsettling. He just hoped to God that Alicia didn’t take to the stage and break out in song. That would really bring the place down.
He leaned with hands clasping the tiny rail, staring into the distance. Had Sabrina ever been here? Was she playing them? Where in the world was Tyler Webb? More importantly — when would Mai actually come out and say she was unhappy with how things had gone?
And what then?
The last thing Drake wanted was two of the deadliest women in the world fighting over him. Hayden took that moment to use their comms system to admit there was no sign of Webb or Sabrina — or anyone else for that matter — and called the manager to the stage.
Drake headed that way himself, seeing Dahl and Beau and Kinimaka also striding toward the rendezvous. Hayden waited. The theater’s manager was an indeterminate man, tall, gangly and wearing a jacket that was too tight and a watch that was too big. Oddly, he also sported a ponytail too, which maybe he thought was rakish.
Alicia’s eyes were on it the moment she arrived. Drake warned her off with a raised brow. Hayden gained nothing from quizzing the man, not so much as a shifty sideways glance. Drake knew she believed he’d probably allowed Webb unfettered entry in exchange for a hefty paper wad — it was her CIA training — but saw no deceit in the man. After several minutes she altered her line of questioning.
“What do you know of the history of this place?”
“The last twenty years? Most of it. I have been manager a long time.” He looked happy with himself.
“Further back,” Hayden said. “I was thinking more mid-eighteenth century and a dude called Saint Germain.”
“Nah, I definitely wasn’t manager then.” He tried a smile that fell flat, then rubbed the back of his neck. Again Alicia’s eyes lit up as the ponytail started to bounce.
“But you know this place wasn’t the Haymarket then, surely?”
Hayden frowned. “It wasn’t?”
“Nah, the original building is a little further north. Same street, but redesigned in the early 1800s.”
“And its…” Hayden struggled for the right words. “Works of art. Paintings. Compositions. Songs.”