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“You can leave whenever you want.”

“Nice try. You’re not getting rid of me that easy.”

“Then stop asking questions. You quiz Thorvaldsen like this?”

“Why don’t you like him? In France you stayed at his throat.”

“Look where I am, Cassiopeia. Cotton’s in a mess. My own people want me dead. The Israelis and Saudis are both after me. You think it’s wise I like anyone?”

“That’s not an answer to my question.”

No, it wasn’t. But she couldn’t voice the truth. That through his association with her late husband, Thorvaldsen had come to know her strengths and weaknesses, and near him she felt vulnerable.

“Let’s just say that he and I are far too well acquainted with each other.”

“Henrik’s worried about you. That’s why he asked me to come. He sensed trouble.”

“And I appreciate that. But it doesn’t mean I have to like him.”

She spotted the house, another of the many symmetrical brick residences with carvings, a portico, and a mansard roof. Lights burned only in the downstairs windows. She sca

Still quiet.

“Follow me.”

ALFRED HERMANN RARELY SLEPT. HE’D CONDITIONED HIS mind long ago to operate on less than three hours’ rest.

He was not old enough to have personally experienced World War II, though he harbored vivid childhood memories of Nazis parading through the streets of Vie

His tenure, though, was coming to an end.

At his death, his daughter would inherit everything. And the thought was not comforting. True, she was like him in some ways. Bold and determined, and she appreciated the past and coveted, with an enthusiasm similar to his own, that most precious of human commodities-knowledge. But she remained unpolished. A work in progress. One he feared might never be completed.

He stared at his daughter who, like him, slept little. He’d named her Margarete, after his mother. She was admiring the model of the Library of Alexandria.

“Can we find it?” she quietly asked.

He stepped close. “I believe Dominick is near.”

She appraised him with keen gray eyes. “Sabre is not to be trusted. No American should be.”

They’d had this discussion before. “I trust no one.”

“Not even me?”

He gri

“Sabre has too much freedom.”

“Why begrudge him? We give him difficult tasks. You can’t do that and expect him to work as we see fit.”

“He’s a problem-American ingenuity and all that-you just don’t know it.”





“He’s a willful man. He needs purpose. We provide that to him. In return he furthers our goals.”

“I’ve sensed more from him lately. He tries hard to mask his ambition, but it’s there. You just have to pay attention.”

He thought he’d taunt her. “Perhaps you’re attracted to him?”

She scoffed at his question. “That’ll never happen. In fact, I’ll fire him once you’re gone.”

He wondered about her assumption that she would inherit all that he owned. “There’s no guarantee you’ll be Blue Chair. That selection is made among the Chairs.”

“I’ll be in the Circle. I assure you. It’s a simple step from there to where you are.”

But he wasn’t so sure. He knew of her contacts with the other four Chairs. He’d actually encouraged them as a test. His wealth far surpassed that of the others in age, volume, and scope. Financial institutions he controlled were heavily entangled with many members, including three of the Chairs. Never would any of them want others to know of that vulnerability, and the price of his silence had always been their loyalty. He’d manipulated their weaknesses for decades, but his daughter’s attempts had been feeble. So a word of caution was in order. “Once I’m gone, it’s true, Dominick will have to deal with you, as you will with him. But don’t be so quick. Men like him, with little emotion? No morals? A daring heart? You might find them valuable.”

He hoped she was listening but feared, as always, that her ears remained filtered. Her mother had died when she was eight and, in her youth, she’d seemed a product of him-of the rib, she liked to say-yet age had not matured that early promise. Her education had started in France, continued in England, and was completed in Austria, her business experience honed in the boardrooms of his many corporations.

But the reports from there had not been encouraging.

“What would you do if you found the library?” she asked.

He concealed his amusement. She apparently did not want to discuss Sabre or herself anymore. “It’s beyond imagining what great thoughts are there.”

“I heard you speaking yesterday about those. Tell me more.”

“Ah, the Piri Reis Map, from 1513, found in Istanbul. I was ru

“I always listen.”

He gri

“I was telling the chancellor of how the map had been drawn on a gazelle hide by a Turkish admiral who was once a pirate. Full of incredible detail. The South American coastline is there, though European navigators hadn’t yet charted that region. The Antarctic continent is also shown, long before being coated with ice. Only recently, using ground radar, have we been able to determine that shoreline’s contour. Yet the 1513 representation is as good as ours. On the face of the map, the cartographer noted that he used charts drawn in the days of Alexander, Lord of the Two Horns. Can you imagine? Perhaps ancient navigators visited Antarctica thousands of years ago, before the ice accumulated, and recorded what they saw.”

Herma

“Unrecorded knowledge is either forgotten or muddled beyond recognition. Do you know of Democritus? He conceived the notion that all things were made of a finite number of discrete particles. Today we call them atoms, but he was the first to acknowledge their existence and formulate the atomic theory. He wrote seventy books-we know that from other references-yet not one has survived. And centuries passed before other men, in other times, thought of the same thing.

“Almost nothing Pythagoras wrote remains. Manetho recorded Egypt’s history. Gone. Galen, the great Roman healer? He wrote five hundred treatises on medicine. Only fragments remain. Aristarchus thought that the sun, not the earth, was the center of the universe. But Copernicus, who lived seventeen centuries later, is the man history credits with that revelation.”

He thought of more. Erathosthenes and Strabo, geographers. Archimedes, the physicist and mathematician. Zenodotus and his grammar. Callimachus the poet. Thales, the first philosopher.

All their ideas gone.

“It’s always been the same,” he said. “Knowledge is the first thing eradicated once power is attained. History has proven that over and over.”

“So what is it Israel fears?” she asked.

He knew she’d eventually work him around to that subject.

“Perhaps it’s more fear than reality,” she noted. “Changing the world is difficult.”

“But it can be done. Men-” He paused. “-and women have done it for centuries. And violence has not always brought about the most monumental changes. Often it’s been mere words. The Bible fundamentally changed mankind. The Koran likewise. The Magna Carta. The American Constitution. Billions of people govern their lives by those words. Society has been altered by them. It’s not so much the wars as the treaties that follow that truly alter the course of history. The Marshall Plan changed the world more expressly than World War II itself. Words are indeed the true weapons of mass destruction.”