“The stakes?” He flashed her a perfect smile. He looked like he might like games.
She did, too, and held out one slender wrist. “If you win, I give you my bracelet.”
The diamond bracelet cost fifty thousand dollars, but she had no intention of losing it. She never lost.
He laughed. “I don’t need a bracelet.”
“And I give it to you in your hotel room.”
Farid looked over the railing and fell silent. She liked him better silent.
“If I win …” She stepped so close to him that her silk dress brushed his warm leg. “I get your watch—and you give it to me in my room.”
A Rolex; she suspected it cost about the same as her bracelet. She had no need of it either. But the jump would cut short the flirting and might lead to more inspired and passionate lovemaking than Farid was probably capable of.
“How can I lose?” he said.
She gave him a long and languorous kiss. He responded well. She slipped her phone into his pocket, fingers tracing a metal knife that she found there. Farid was not so defenseless as he appeared. She remembered her mother’s words.
Even a white lily casts a black shadow.
When she drew back, Farid slid both hands down her silk-covered back. “How about we skip the jump?”
She laughed. “Not on your life.”
Grasping the cold railing with both hands, she vaulted over the side.
She opened into a swan dive, falling, arms out straight and back arched. Her dress fluttered against her thighs. For a moment she thought that she had misjudged the depth and the fall would kill her, and in that moment she felt more relief than fear. She hit the water flat, distributing her weight.
The violent slap stole her breath.
For a second, she floated facedown in the cool blue, br**sts and belly stinging, her unsettled blood finally quiet. Then she rolled over, pushing her now transparent bodice out of the water while dipping her head to slick back her hair, laughing brightly.
When she stood up, the entire lobby stared. A few onlookers applauded, as if she were part of a show.
Far above, Farid gaped.
She climbed out of the fountain. Water streamed from her body and spread across the expensive woolen carpet. She bowed to Farid, who returned the gesture with a slight nod, followed by the dramatic unbuckling of his Rolex and the lift of an eyebrow, conceding she had won the bet.
Minutes later, they stood outside her door. She shivered slightly in her damp clothes in the air-conditioned hallway. Farid’s bare palm, as soft as silk but as hot as a coal, ran up her back under her thin dress, raising an entirely different shiver. She sighed and glanced darkly toward him, craving the heat of his flesh far more than any companionship he could offer.
She retrieved her key card, the newly won Rolex dangling from her wrist.
As she unlocked the door and pushed it open, her phone buzzed, but it came from Farid’s pants. She turned, slipped her hand into his pocket, and tugged it free.
“How did that get there?” he asked, surprised.
“I put it there when I kissed you.” She smiled at him. “So it wouldn’t get wet. I knew you’d never jump.”
A wrinkle of hurt pride blemished his perfect forehead.
Standing in the doorway, she checked her phone. It was a text message, an important one from the name of the sender. She went cold all over, beyond anything a shiver could warm through or a heated touch could soothe.
No more time for play.
“Who is Argentum?” Farid asked, reading over her shoulder.
Oh, Farid … a woman likes to keep her secrets.
It was why she traveled under so many false names, like the one she used to book this room.
“It appears I have some pressing business to attend,” she said, stepping through the doorway and turning. “I must bid you good-bye here.”
A dark disappointment showed in his face, a flicker of anger.
He abruptly shoved her deeper into the room, following close. He grabbed her roughly and shoved her against the wall, kicking the door shut.
“I’ll say when we’re finished,” he said huskily.
She lifted an eyebrow. So there was some hidden fire in Farid after all.
Smiling up at him, she tossed her phone to the bed, pulled him even closer, their lips almost touching. She swung him around so he was now the one with his back to the wall. She reached to his pants, which widened his dark smile. But he mistook what she searched for—she removed his hidden knife instead.
She opened it one-handed, and with a quick thrust, she buried it in his eye socket, punching it up and back. She kept hold of his body, pressed against the wall, feeling his body’s heat through her thin clothes, knowing that warmth would quickly expire, snuffed out with his life. She savored that waning heat, held him tightly as the death tremors shook through him.
As they ended, she finally let go.
His body sagged to the ground, his life spent.
She left him there, stepped to the bed, and sat down, crossing a long leg. She retrieved her phone and opened the attached image file that had been sent to her.
On the screen, a single photo appeared, of a piece of paper covered with a strange script. The handwriting stemmed from another time, better suited to being scratched on parchment with a sliver of bone. More code than language, it was written in an archaic form of Hebrew.
As part of her training, she had studied ancient languages at Oxford and now read ancient Greek, Latin, and Hebrew as easily as her native Hungarian. She deciphered the message carefully, ensuring she made no mistake. Her breath quickened as she worked.
A quake destroyed Masada.
A great death came with it,
brutal enough to mark Its possible unearthing.
She brought a hand to her white throat, fingertips brushing the mark that blackened her skin, thinking of the night she received it and became forever tainted. Her blood burned still.
She read on.
Go. Search for
A Knight has been dispatched to retrieve it.
Let nothing stop you.
You must not fail.
She stared at the phrase in Herodian Aramaic. The Belial had waited long for this message.
Her lips shaped impossible words, not daring to speak them aloud.
The Book of Blood
A surge of unfamiliar fear pulsed through her fingertips.
He whom she served had long suspected the Jewish mountain stronghold might hide the precious book. Along with a handful of other sites. It was one of the reasons she had been sequestered here, deep within the Holy Land. A few hours’ distance from dozens of possible ancient landmarks.
But was he correct? Did Masada mark the true resting place for the Book of Blood? Once she and her team revealed their presence, they could not be hidden again. Was this enough of a sign to warrant that risk?