It looked like Mab wasn't the only power player in Ashland who had stashed her shinies at Briartop. But there was no hoard of gold and nothing that looked like it was remotely worth the risk Clementine and her giants had taken in breaking in here, versus the art they had already swiped from the rest of the museum.
"If it wasn't gold, then what is Clementine really after?" Owen asked, voicing my thoughts.
I shook my head. "I don't know, but start looking. Whatever it is, we need to find it and get out of here before Clementine and her men come back."
Owen started looking at the white labels on the metal boxes along the left wall, while I took the opposite side of the vault, scanning first one shelf, then another. All the while, I was counting off the seconds in my head. It wouldn't be too long before Clementine realized that she'd been tricked and headed back this way. We needed to be out of the vault by then, or we were dead. But we also needed to find whatever she was after. Otherwise, we'd have no leverage to use to free the hostages.
A minute passed, then two. But all I saw were paintings, jewelry, more small statues, and a couture dress made of crimson feathers and adorned with rubies that was draped over a mannequin in the back corner. Well, Finn certainly would have considered that valuable enough to store inside the vault. And it was even in my color. Heh.
"Anything?" I asked.
Owen shook his head. "Nothing that jumps out at me. You?"
"Same."
Owen turned toward the wall of boxes again, but I took a step back and examined the vault. We could look for an hour and not find what Clementine had been after, and the giant and her men would return any second. As my gaze flicked from one shelf to another, I realized something important, something I should have remembered before now: that the inside of the vault was made of marble, just like the rest of the museum. An idea popped into my head of a way that I could at least narrow down our search area. I leaned forward, laid my hand on the wall closest to me, and reached out with my magic, concentrating on all the whispers of the stone.
The stone walls hummed with various emotions, mostly lofty pride and haughty arrogance at all the precious things they had housed and kept safe over the years. But those feelings were also mixed with notes of sweet relief, as the museum staff had been glad when certain items had been moved elsewhere so they wouldn't be held responsible for them anymore. I reached for more of my magic and let myself sink even deeper into the stone, straining to hear every single thing I could from the marbles walls, every harsh note, every soft whisper, every sly murmur.
And I finally found something - a suspicious mutter that was just a little louder and just a little sharper than all the others. I trailed my fingers over the smooth stone, following the echo of that mutter like notes on a roll of sheet music. The sound led me all the way over to a shelf in the back of the vault. To my surprise, there was only one item on this shelf: a tube made out of ebony.
Small, thin, lightweight. There was nothing extraordinary about the tube, except for the design inlaid in the center of the black wood, a thumbnail-size ruby surrounded by several wavy golden rays.
A sunburst. The symbol for fire. Mab Monroe's personal rune.
"I found it," I said.
"Are you sure?" Owen asked, coming around one of the tables to where I was.
My fingers closed over the tube, and that mutter in the marble took on an even uglier, darker, harsher note. "I'm sure."
"What do you think it is?" he asked. "A portrait? Maybe some sort of small painting?"
I shrugged and stuffed the tube into one of the pouches on my stolen utility belt. I also took a moment to snag the diamond necklace I'd noticed earlier and dropped that inside the pouch too. "Don't know. We can look at it later. Right now, we need to move."
Chapter 17
Owen followed me out of the vault. I stopped in the exterior chamber long enough to do a quick pat-down of the three dead giants. Key cards, a couple of metal batons, pepper spray, walkie-talkies. Same old, same old. Owen picked up two of the men's guns, while I handed him all the extra ammo I found stuffed in their pockets. He reloaded both weapons before tucking one against the small of his back and keeping the other one in his hand at the ready. He nodded at me, and together we crept up to the exterior door and peeked outside.
I didn't see anyone in the hallway, but I heard something just as worrisome - the steady thud-thud-thud of footsteps, growing louder and louder as they pounded in this direction.
"Let's go," I whispered. "They're headed this way."
Owen nodded again and followed me into the hallway. I headed right, away from the sound of the footsteps, and we ran in that direction. What followed was a desperate series of zigzags as we tried to avoid the giants. Clementine's men were everywhere we turned, walkie-talkies screeching as they yelled instructions at each other and searched for whoever or whatever had caused the explosion. Three times we started down a hallway only to pull up short and backtrack when we caught a glimpse of a couple of giants lurking at the far end, guns up and ready to fire at the slightest movement. Oh, yes. Everyone knew that I was here now.
There was no way we could break through the perimeter they'd set up without making a whole lot of noise and bringing them all down on top of us, so Owen and I ended up crouching behind a doorway in a room down the hall from the vault entrance. It was far too close to the vault and the main force of giants in the rotunda for my liking, but all the other exits from this part of the museum had been cut off. We'd just have to hunker down and see what happened.
We didn't have long to wait. We'd just slid into the shadows when Clementine ran down the hallway, with Opal and Dixon following her. The three giants rushed through the open door that led into the vault area.
"Dammit!" Clementine's scream erupted out of the chamber a minute later.
I grinned. Such a satisfying sound. Always nice when you could make your enemies bellow with anger. Across from me, Owen gave me a sly wink.
A moment later, Clementine stormed out of the vault entrance and back into the hallway. Opal and Dixon followed her, although the two younger giants were careful to keep out of arm's reach of her. A good idea, on their part.
Clementine raised her walkie-talkie to her lips. "Somebody go out front and see if the cops are here. Right now."
"It's not the cops," one giant answered her a few seconds later. "I'm out by the moving trucks, and there's no one here. No police cars, no cops, nobody. All of the art is still inside the truck, and it doesn't look like anything's been stolen. Er . . . re-stolen."