Reilly couldn't suppress a tired grin. "Oh, I'm sure she's racking her brains looking for it as we speak."
This seemed to confirm De Angelis's guess. "Have you heard from her?"
"Not yet."
De Angelis nodded quietly. Reilly could tell something was troubling the man, that he was holding something back.
"What is it, Father?"
The monsignor looked slightly embarrassed. "I'm not sure. I'm just a litde concerned, that's all."
"What about?"
The priest pursed his lips. "Are you sure she would call? If she found out?"
Coming from De Angelis, this surprised Reilly. He doesn't trust her? He leaned forward. "What makes you say that?"
"Well, she seems to be rather driven, it's her field after all. And a discovery like this . . .
careers have been made from far less. If I were to put myself in her shoes for a moment, I wonder what my priorities would be. Catching this Vance ... or discovering something any archaeologist would give his right arm for. Would I inform the authorities and risk losing the credit and the glory ... or would I go after it myself?" His tone was soft-spoken but irresistibly confident. "She comes across as a very ambitious lady, and ambition ... it can often lead one to choose the less, shall we say, magnanimous path."
De Angelis's words stayed with Reilly long after the priest had left.
Would she call? It hadn't even crossed his mind that she wouldn't. But then, what if the Vatican envoy was right? What incentive did she have to call? If she did figure it out and gave the FBI its location, agents would be flown out to try and intercept Vance, local law enforcement agencies would be drafted in, and the situation would quickly get out of hand; there would be little room, or consideration, for her quest. The priority, as far as the authorities were concerned, was to apprehend a fugitive. The archaeological discovery was of little consequence.
Still, she wouldn't be so reckless ... or would she? What's she going to do, fly out there by herself?
A surge of trepidation rushed over him. No, that's insane.
He reached for the phone and dialed her home number. There was no answer. He let it ring until her answering machine picked up, then hung up without leaving a message. He quickly tried her cell phone. It rang five times before diverting to her messaging service.
With rapidly swelling unease, Reilly hung up and called up the internal operator. Within seconds, he was patched through to the officer parked outside Tess's house. "Have you seen her today?"
The officer's reply was stolidly assured. "No, not since she got home late last night."
His internal alarms were blaring. Something felt very, very wrong. "I need you to go up to her front door and make sure she's okay. I'll hang on."
The officer sounded like he was already getting out of his car. "You got it."
Reilly waited anxiously as the seconds ticked by. He visualized the officer crossing the road, walking up the path across her front yard, climbing up the three stone steps, and ringing the bell. It would take her a few more seconds to come down if she were upstairs. Right about now, she'd be opening the front door.
Nothing.
His discomfort grew alarmingly as the seconds dragged on. Then the officer's voice crackled back through his handset. "She's not answering the door. I had a look out back and nothing's been disturbed, there's no sign of forced entry, but it doesn't look like she's around."
Reilly was already scrambling into action. "Okay, listen to me," he fired back as he gestured urgently to Aparo, "I need you to just get in there right now and confirm to me that the house is empty. Break in if you have to."
Aparo was rising out of his seat. "What's going on?"
Reilly was already reaching for another phone. "Get onto Customs and Borders." Cupping the phone with his hand, he looked at his partner, frustration and anger in his eyes. "I think Tess might be doing a runner."
Chapter 51
Standing in line at the Turkish Airlines check-in desk at JFK, Tess stared at the display on her cell phone. The screen didn't show who the caller was, and she decided not to answer it. She knew the call was probably originating from some routing switchboard, and none of die likely callers were particularly welcome right now. Not Leo from the Institute; Lizzie would have relayed the cryptic, confused explanation for her absence by now. Not Doug, calling from L.A.—no qualms there. But Reilly . . . that was the one that stuck in her throat. She hated doing this to him. It was one of the toughest decisions she'd ever had to take; but, now that she was going through with it, she couldn't afford to talk to him. Not yet.
Not while she was still in the country.
Stuffing the phone back into her jacket pocket, she finally reached the desk and embarked on the arduous check-in procedure. Once she was done there, she trailed the signs to the departure lounge and a much needed coffee, going by way of the newsstand where she picked up a couple of paperbacks she'd been aiming to read when she had the time; whether or not she could rein in her galloping imagination enough to concentrate on even lightweight fiction, given everything that was going on, was another matter.
She went through the passenger checks and reached the departure lounge, where she sank into a chair.
She couldn't believe she was actually doing it. Sitting there with nothing more to do other than wait for the flight to be called, her mind finally had a chance to wind down, take a step back, and consider the recent events more carefully, which wasn't necessarily a good thing. The last twenty-four hours, from the time she knew she was onto something to the actual moment she made the discovery, had been an adrenaline-induced haze. Now, alone and waiting to fly off into the night, she fell prey to a litany of fears and misgivings that came crawling out from deep within.
What are you thinking? Going out there, up into the Turkish backcountry— alone? What if you bump into Vance out there? What about all the other creeps you could run into? It's not exactly the safest country in the world. An American woman, alone in the Turkish outback. Are you nuts?
The panic attack about her physical well-being soon gave way to something that troubled her even more.
Reilly.
She'd lied to him. Again. A lie of omission, maybe, but a pretty serious one nevertheless. This was different from driving off with the manuscript and not alerting him about Vance waiting for her at home. She knew something was going on between them, something she liked and wanted to nurture, even though she sensed there was something holding him back that she couldn't quite put her finger on. She'd wondered if she had ruined any chance they had of getting together. She thought she'd gotten away with it at the time; there were extenuating circumstances and he was very understanding—in fact, he'd behaved wonderfully. And now, here she was, screwing up again.
How much does this mean to you, Tess?
She snapped out of her unsettled reverie when she sensed the harsh glow of the fluorescent lighting interrupted and felt the presence of someone standing there, blocking it. She opened her eyes.
It was Reilly. He was standing there, looming over her, and he didn't look thrilled.
Hugely pissed off was probably closer to the mark.
Reilly broke the pregnant silence. "What do you think you're doing?"
She wasn't sure about how to answer that. Just then, a nasal voice echoed down from the overhead PA system, announcing the opening of the gate for boarding. Passengers all around them rose from their seats and formed a couple of messy lines that converged on the gate's counters, buying her a welcome respite.
Reilly glanced at them and visibly mustered some self-control before plunking himself down beside her. "When were you planning on telling me?"
She took a breath. "Once I got there," she said sheepishly.
"What, were you going to send me a postcard? Damn it, Tess. It's like nothing I've said meant anything to you."
"Look, I'm—"
He shook his head, raising both hands and cutting her off. "I know, you're sorry, this is a big deal for you, a once-in-a-lifetime thing, a career-defining moment . . . We've been through this before, Tess. You just seem hell-bent on getting yourself killed."
She breathed out in frustration, mulling over his words. "I can't just sit back and let it slip away.
Besides, until this thing is sorted out, one way or another, I'm not going to feel safe, Kim's not going to be safe. . . . He was in our house, Sean. I'm part of this, whether I like it or not." She paused, almost afraid to ask. "You said there were things I didn't know about? Other deaths?"
Reilly nodded, then darted a discreet glance around before lowering his voice. "The other three horsemen from that night—they're dead. And they didn't exactly die in their sleep."
Tess edged forward. "You think Vance killed them?"
"It was either him or someone involved with him. Either way, who-ever's doing it is still out there, and the killing part doesn't seem to bother him at all."
Tess rubbed her eyes with fingers that, she noticed, were quivering. "What if he hasn't figured it out yet? Fonsalis"
"I think you would gave gotten another visit if he hadn't. My guess is, he knows."
She let out a deep breath. "So what do we do now?"
Reilly studied her, clearly wondering the same thing. "You're sure you've got it right?"