tips of crowbars beneath one end of the plinth and levered it up. It made cracking, popping sounds as it gave, protesting after all those centuries of being bonded to the floor. They raised it a few inches, their chests and arms bulging, crowbars flexing beneath the strain.
Ibrahim and Elena went down onto their knees to shine their lights beneath. There was a round, black hole in the floor, perhaps a meter in diameter. The plinth was too heavy for even Mohammed and Mansoor to hold long. Mansoor went first, giving a warning cry, then Mohammed, too, letting it crash back down, throwing up dust, which caught in Ibrahim’s nostrils and throat, sending him into a coughing fit.
“Well?” asked Mansoor, slapping his hands together.
“There’s a shaft,” said Ibrahim.
“You want us to move the plinth?” asked Mohammed.
“Is that possible?”
“I’ll need some help and some more equipment, but yes.”
Ibrahim felt all eyes expectantly upon him, but still he hesitated. Nicolas had promised twenty thousand dollars, but they’d received only half so far, the rest due upon satisfactory completion. Katerina had laid great emphasis on the word “satisfactory,” making it abundantly clear that failure to report a find like this would be considered highly unsatisfactory. And it wasn’t as if he could keep it secret, not now that Elena knew. He had a sudden mental image of Mohammed’s daughter, her life hanging by a thread. “Give me a moment,” he said. “I need to make a call.” He beckoned Elena to follow him up the stairwell, then called the Dragoumis Group, clamping a hand over his ear to shut out the din of the building works. Tinny folk music played as he waited to be connected. He rubbed the bridge of his nose fretfully.
The music stopped abruptly. “Yes? This is Nicolas.”
“It’s Ibrahim. From Alexandria. You said to call if we found anything.”
“And?”
“There’s something beneath the Macedonian tomb. Perhaps a shaft.”
“A shaft?” Ibrahim could hear the excitement in Nicolas’s voice. “Where does it lead?”
“Almost certainly nowhere. These things rarely do. But we’ll need to move the plinth to make sure. It’s just, you made it clear that you wanted to be informed at once.”
“Quite right.”
“I’m going to have the plinth moved now. I’ll call you back as soon as we—”
“No,” said Nicolas emphatically. “I need to be there for this.”
“This is an emergency excavation,” protested Ibrahim. “We don’t have time for—”
“Tomorrow afternoon,” insisted Nicolas. “I’ll be with you by one. Do nothing before then. Understand?”
“Yes, but really, it’s almost certainly nothing. You’ll come all this way and there’ll be nothing and—”
“I’m going to be there,” snapped Nicolas. “That’s final. In the meantime, no one goes in there. I want guards. I want a steel gate.”
“Yes, but—”
“Just do it. Send Katerina the bill. And I want to speak to Elena. Is she there?”
“Yes, but—”
“Put her on.”
Ibrahim shrugged helplessly. “He wants to speak to you.” She nodded and took his phone and walked off a little distance, making a wall of her back so that she couldn’t be overheard.
NICOLAS PUT DOWN THE PHONE and sat back in his chair, breathing a little heavily. Well, that was a phone call. Elena had been certain she recognized Daniel Knox! And on his site, too! At this most sensitive of times. He stood and walked to his window, rubbing his lower back hard with his hands, which had suddenly become unaccountably stiff.
His office door opened. Katerina came in with a stack of papers. She smiled when she saw him working his spine. “What’s the matter?” she joked. “Have you heard from Daniel Knox or something?” He gave her a look that would have peeled onions. “Oh!” she said, putting the papers down on his desk and quickly withdrawing.
Nicolas sat back down. Few people had ever managed to get under his skin like Knox had. For six weeks, ten years ago, the man had made a series of outrageous slanders against his father and his company, and they’d all stood around and done . . . precisely nothing. His father had granted the man immunity, and his father’s word was law; but Nicolas still burned with the humiliation. He rocked forward and buzzed Katerina. “I’m sorry, sir,” she blurted out before he could speak. “I didn’t mean to—”
“Forget about it,” he said curtly. “I need to be in Alexandria tomorrow afternoon. Is our plane free?”
“I believe so. I’ll check.”
“Thank you. And that Egyptian man we bought those papyri through—he arranges other kinds of business, too, doesn’t he?” He didn’t need