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Dan looked past Carrie through the window at the lights of the airport, and wondered what Mr. Kesev was up to now.  He wouldn’t feel safe until they were in the air and over the Mediterranean.

“And yet,” Carrie said softly, “there’s something terribly sad about him.  He said something that shocked me.”

“What?”

“He said ‘please.’  He said, ‘Please give it back.’  Isn’t that strange?”

Kesev stood at one of the panoramic windows in the main terminal and watched the plane roar into the sky toward London.

Nothing.

He’d found nothing in the cargo hold or baggage compartment large enough to contain the Mother.

That gave him hope, at least, that the Mother was still in Israel.  And if she was still here, he could find her.

But where was she?  Where?

He trembled at the thought of what might happen if she were not safely returned to the Resting Place.

FOURTEEN

The Greenbriar—off Crete

Second mate Dennis Maguire was rounding the port side of the superstructure amidships when he saw her.

At least it seemed to be a her.  He couldn’t be sure in the downpour.  The figure stood a good fifty feet away in the center of the aft hold’s hatch, wrapped head to toe in some sort of blanket, completely unmindful of the driving rain as she stared aftward.  He couldn’t make out any features in the dimness, but something in his gut knew he was looking at a she.

They’d run into the squall shortly after dark the first night out of Haifa.  Maguire was running a topside check to make double sure everything was secure.  A sturdy little tramp, the Greenbriar was.  With a 200-foot keel and thirty feet abeam, she could haul good cargo in her two holds, and haul it fast.  But any storm, even lightweight Mediterranean squalls like this one, could be trouble if everything wasn’t secured the way it was supposed to be.  And Captain Liam could be hell on wheels if something went wrong because of carelessness.

So Maguire had learned: Do it right the first time, then double check to make sure you did what you thought you did.

And after he wound up this little tour of the deck, he could retire to his cabin and work on his bottle of Jameson’s.

I’m glad I haven’t touched that bottle yet, he thought.

Because right now he’d be blaming the whiskey for what he was seeing.

A woman?  How the hell had a woman got aboard?  And why would any woman want to be aboard?

She stood facing aft, like some green-gilled landlubber staring homeward.

“Hello?” he said, approaching the hatch.

She turned toward him but the glow from the lights in the superstructure weren’t strong enough to light her features through the rain.  And then he noticed something: the blanket or cloak or robe or whatever she was wrapped up in wasn’t moving or even fluttering in the wind.  In fact, it didn’t even look wet.

He blinked and turned his head as a particularly nasty gust stung his face with needle-sharp droplets, and when he looked again, she was gone.

He ran across the hatch and searched the entire afterdeck but could not find a trace of her.  So he ran and told the captain.

Liam Harrity puffed his pipe and stared out at him from the mass of red hair that encircled his face.

“What have we discussed about you hitting the Jameson’s while you’re on duty, Denny?” he said.

“Captain, I swear, I haven’t touched a drop to me lips since last night.”  Maguire leaned closer.  “Here.  Smell me breath.”

The captain waved him off.  “I don’t want to be smelling your foul breath!  Just get to your bunk and don’t be after coming to me with anymore stories of women on my ship.  Get!”

Dennis Maguire got, but he knew in his heart there’d been someone out there in the storm tonight.  And somehow he knew they hadn’t seen the last of her.

Paraiso

“Charlie, Charlie, Charlie,” the Senador said, shaking his head sadly.

Emilio Sanchez stood at a respectful distance from the father and son confrontation.  He had moved to leave the great room after delivering Charlie here, but the Senador had motioned him to stay.  Emilio was proud of the Senador’s show of trust and confidence in him, but it pained him to see this great man in such distress.  So Emilio stepped back against the great fireplace and stared out at the seamless blackness beyond the windows where the clouded night sky merged with the Pacific.  He watched their reflections in the glass.  And listened.

“I thought we had an understanding, Charlie.”  The Senador leaned forward, staring earnestly across the long, free-form redwood coffee table at his son who sat with elbows on knees, head down.  “You promised me six months.  You promised me you’d stay here and go through therapy...learn to pray.”

“It’s not what you think, Dad,” Charlie said softly in a hoarse voice.  He sounded exhausted.  Defeated.

The fight seemed to have gone out of Charlie.  Which didn’t jibe at all with his recent flight from Paraiso.  If he wasn’t bucking his father, why did he run?

Two days ago the Senador had called Emilio to his home office in a minor panic.  Charlie was gone.  His room was empty, and he was nowhere in the house or on the grounds.  Juanita said she’d passed a taxi coming the other way when she’d arrived early this morning.

Emilio had sighed and nodded.  Here we go again.

Fortunately Juanita remembered the name of the cab company.  From there it was easy to trace that particular fare—the whole damn company was buzzing about picking up a fare at Paraiso that wanted to be taken all the way to Frisco.  The driver had dropped his fare off on California Street.

Charlie had run to his favorite rat hole again.

Over the years, during repeated trips in search of Charlie, Emilio had been in and out of so many gay bars in San Francisco that some of the regulars had begun to think he was a maricon himself.  To counteract that insulting notion, he’d made it a practice to bust the skull anyone who tried to get friendly.

But this time he hadn’t found Charlie down in the Tenderloin.  Instead, he’d traced him to the Embarcadero.  Charlie had taken a room in the Hyatt, of all places.

When Emilio had knocked on his door, Charlie hadn’t acted surprised, and he hadn’t launched into his usual lame protests.  He’d come quietly, barely speaking during the drive back.

That wasn’t like Charlie.  Something was wrong.

“What am I to think, Charlie?” the Senador was saying.  “You promised me.  Remember what you said?  You said you’d ‘give it the old college try.’  Remember that?”

“Dad—”

“And you were doing so well!  Doctor Thompson said you were very cooperative, really starting to open up to him.  And you seemed to be getting into the spirit of the prayer sessions, feeling the presence of the Lord.  What happened?  Why did you break your promise?”

“I didn’t break my promise.”  He didn’t look up.  He stared at the table before him, seemingly lost in the redwood whorls.  “I was coming back.  I needed—”

“You don’t need that...sort of...activity,” the Senador said.  “By falling back into that sinfulness you’ve undone all your months of work!”

“I didn’t go back for sex.”

“Please don’t make this worse by lying to me, Charlie.”

During the ensuing silence, Emilio realized that normally he too would have thought Charlie was lying, but today he didn’t think so.

“It’s the truth, Dad.”

“How can I believe that, Charlie?  Every other time you’ve disappeared to Sodom-On-The-Bay it’s been for sex.”

“Not this time.  I...I haven’t been feeling well enough for sex.”

“Oh?”

A premonition shot through Emilio like a bullet.  The Senador should have felt it too, but if he did, his face did not betray it.  He was still staring at Charlie with that same hurt, earnest expression.  Emilio rammed his fist against his thigh.  Bobo!  Charlie’s pale, feverish look, his weight loss...he should have put it together long before now.