The Omega Factor(12)



Ahead he spotted the Gravensteen, a fearsome twelfth-century fortress, lit to the night. Once the seat for the Counts of Flanders, it had been first modeled after a Syrian crusader castle, he knew, then remodeled in the nineteenth century to reflect what Victorians thought a medieval castle should look like. It came complete with a moat, turrets, and arrow slits built originally to thwart Viking invasions. He’d toured it once.

The boat ahead passed the fortress.

Now about a hundred yards separated them.

Ghent’s downtown was chopped up like a puzzle, its pieces outlined by rivers, tributaries, and canals. Hard to go in any direction and not find water. Luckily, here the river was straight, devoid of bends, more empty boats at anchor against the stone walks and walls at the edges. He grabbed his bearings and realized they were heading toward the northern reaches of town, the buildings on either bank becoming progressively darker. He kept paddling, trying not to lose the other craft.

He’d come a long way from the FBI’s Art Crime Team. Cultural trafficking was a looming criminal enterprise. Billions of dollars were stolen annually. The FBI had long operated a team of twenty agents, trained and supported by another special team of Justice Department prosecutors. The twenty were divided into five units of four, each responsible for cases in an assigned geographic region. His team had been headed by a no-nonsense special agent named Bill Muntan and oversaw the southwest United States. During his five years with the FBI hundreds of millions of dollars in looted art and cultural treasures had been recovered. Then, on a rainy Thursday afternoon, his life changed.

“UNESCO is looking for a field asset,” Muntan said to him. “This is something new for them.”

He’d worked with UNESCO several times on cases. It possessed a wealth of information and access to even more. But he’d been unaware that it employed active assets.

“They want someone young, eager, and hungry,” Muntan said. “I thought of you.”

“I like my job now.”

“And I’m not particularly fond of losing you. But if the UN is going to get into the same hands-on business that we do, I want a friend over there. Someone I can call on and who will call on me. I like to have friends in places.”

Point made. So he’d taken the job.

And never regretted it.

The past six years had been the most exciting and productive of his life. His professional success seemed due to an alchemy of intelligence, courage, and a capacity for hard work. He was now thirty-seven years old, fit physically and mentally, with a solid career and the prospects of even more.

So what else mattered?

At the moment retrieving Kelsey’s laptop had vaulted to the top of his must-do list.

A part of him wanted to be there for her.

No matter what.

Ahead, he saw his target ease toward the east bank of the river. He stopped paddling and watched as a black figure hopped from the boat and headed up a set of stairs to street level. It was hard to tell if the form was male or female. A lit building stood at the top, across the street from the river, a few parked cars hugging the curbs in front. He watched as the figure topped the stairs, laptop tucked under one arm, crossed the street, and stepped through a gate in what appeared to be an iron fence. The figure then vanished through the building’s front door.

He resumed paddling.

A light came on in a second-floor window, near the center of the rectangle. He made his way to the same quay, secured the dinghy, and climbed the stone risers. At the top, he crossed the quiet street and approached the iron gate. The building beyond was a four-story, brick rectangle with two projecting wings that stretched from either side toward the back. It was flanked on one side by more multistory brick buildings that all faced the river. Its roof was steeply pitched slate dotted with dormers. The spiny tentacles of tall blooming trees rose close to the walls. Windows sheathed by opaque curtains allowed only a halo of light to seep outward in the upper stories, the pedimented front door shielded by a porch and lit by two iron fixtures. He saw no cameras or other overt security, and the gate itself was unlocked. But what really puzzled him was the sign near the main entrance.

CONVENT FOR THE MAIDENS OF SAINT-MICHAEL





Chapter 6



Sister Claire Haffner slipped the black hood from her head. Sweat soaked her short brown hair and dark brow. Her eyes were filled with tears for Sister Rachel. She’d heard the gunshots. Had her friend sacrificed herself to ensure that the operation was successful? Was she hurt? Dead? Captured? Impossible to say. But why had she chosen to toss the laptop down and remain on the street exposed, vulnerable?

“The panel’s destroyed. Take this and go.”

That’s what Rachel had said. She’d caught the laptop, then watched as her friend vanished from sight. The next thing she’d seen were the strobing lights. Then heard the gunfire. An unsettling sound. One that had broken her heart. With no choice she’d made her escape on the river following Rule #1. The objective took priority.

Always.

She stood in the convent foyer and allowed the familiar silence to calm her shattered nerves. This convent, here in Ghent, was for the aged, where the maidens lived out their later years after a lifetime of faithful service. The building had existed for three centuries, built specifically in Ghent for a reason. And yes, the women here were aware of the mission and had helped with preparations, but they’d intentionally not been briefed on all its particulars. Those details were only for the order’s abbess, who was hundreds of miles away awaiting a report.

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