The Judas Strain - James Rollins [94]
“You found it,” Vigor said.
Balthazar already had a small rubber mallet in hand, removed from his belt. He tapped at the tile. Gray’s brow pinched at the man’s deliberate work.
Vigor explained, “It was how we found the hollow spot beneath the inscribed tile in the Tower of Winds. Percussion. Listening for any hidden cavity.”
Balthazar worked across the tile, meticulous, but the furrows across his forehead deepened. “Nothing,” he finally mumbled.
“Are you sure?” Vigor said. “It has to be here.”
“No,” Gray said. He sprawled out on his back, staring up. “What’s Jesus staring at?”
Vigor glanced to the vague figure of Christ in silver on the crucifix, then back up.
“He’s staring at the dome,” Gray answered. “The same dome that transfixed Marco Polo. A dome lightened in weight through the use of hollow bricks. If you wanted to hide something that would last the ages…”
Vigor craned, mouth wide. “Of course. But which brick?”
Balthazar leaped to his feet. “I have an idea.” He ran off toward the rear of the building, shoving through a German tour group.
Vigor offered a hand and helped Gray back to his feet. Gray collected the cross and hung it back around his neck.
“Brilliant, Gray.”
“We haven’t found the second golden paitzu yet.”
Vigor knew Gray had pulled Seichan aside for a private few words before they separated. “What’s the urgency, Gray? With Nasser coming in a few hours, why even bother finding the second key?”
“Because I want Nasser happy,” Gray said. Vigor read the worry in the young man’s eyes for his parents. “And to prove our use to him. We need him to keep us alive.”
Vigor sensed the man was leaving some bit of the plot unspoken. Before he could question Gray further, Balthazar reappeared and hurried back to them. Breathless, he held out a small tool. “With all the construction going on, I figured someone had to have a laser pointer or level. Handy when working across such vast spaces.”
Vigor’s colleague knelt down and positioned the laser device atop the inscribed cross and switched it on. Nothing seemed to happen.
Balthazar picked up a pinch of plaster dust and cast it above the device. A scintillation of ruby brilliance lit up the dust. “It’s working.” He craned up. “Someone will have to climb up the scaffolding to find which brick is lit up by the pointer.”
Gray nodded. “I’ll do it.”
Balthazar glanced around guiltily—then handed him a chisel and hammer. “I got these, too.” He waved for Gray to hide the tools away. “You’ll have to be discreet. No one’s allowed up there without a special artisan’s pass issued by the Turkish government. I got permission from the curator to allow one of us up there. To take some photographs. Briefly. But the guard”—he nodded to the armed sentinel by the scaffolding’s ladder—“in this day of terrorist attacks, they’ve been trained to shoot and ask questions later. If they see you take a chisel to the roof…” His voice trailed off.
“Beyond getting shot,” Vigor warned, “we can’t be discovered in any regard. If we’re kicked out…if the police are summoned…”
Vigor read the understanding in Gray’s eyes.
Nasser would know.
“And it’s not just our lives in jeopardy,” Vigor acknowledged.
Gray’s parents would suffer, too.
Sighing deeply, Gray lowered his voice, “Then we’ll need a distraction.”
11:48 A.M.
HALFWAY UP THE scaffolding, Gray kept his head ducked from the low bracings as he climbed. Reaching a landing of planks, he glanced below and spotted Balthazar. The tall man’s features were barely discernible as he stood with the museum curator. Gray leaned out to spot the scaffolding’s guard. The uniformed man had stepped away from his station to get a clear view of Gray’s progress.
Under everyone’s watchful gaze, Gray continued onward. He reached the ring of windows along the bottom edge of the dome. Sunlight blazed through the arched glass. Gray caught a glimpse of the Sea of Marmara through one of them. Then he was above the windows. The way grew more shadowy. After another two minutes of scaling, he