of both." "Yet you continued to tell me the past two days you knew nothing of Christian's whereabouts."
"Frankly, I did not consider the information any of your business. At the same time I kept wondering, why all the interest?" Fellner's tone had harshened, the need for appearances seemingly gone.
"I know of Christian's visit to St. Petersburg two weeks ago. In fact, that is what started all this."
"We assumed you were paying the clerk." Monika's tone was brusque, more so than her father's.
"Again, Ernst, what is this visit about?" Fellner asked.
"The Amber Room," Loring slowly said.
"What of it?"
"Finish your dinner. Then we will talk."
"Truthfully, I am not hungry. You fly me three hundred kilometers on short notice to
talk, so let us talk."
Loring folded his napkin. "Very well, Franz. You and Monika come with me." Suzanne followed as Loring led their guests through the castle's ground-floor maze. The wide corridors wound past rooms adorned with priceless art and antiques. This was Loring's public collection, the result of six decades of personal acquiring and another ten decades before that by his father, grandfather, and great-grandfather. Some of the most valuable objects in the world rested in the surrounding chambers-the full extent of Loring's public collection was known only to her and her employer, all protected behind thick stone walls and the anonymity a rural estate in a former Communist-bloc country provided.
And soon it would all be hers.
"I am about to breach one of our sacred rules," Loring said. "As a demonstration of my good faith, I intend to show you my private collection."
"Is that necessary?" Fellner asked.
"I believe it is."
They passed Loring's study and continued down a long hall to a solitary room at the
end. It was a tight rectangle, topped by a groined vault ceiling with murals that depicted the zodiac and portraits of the Apostles. A massive delft tile stove consumed one corner. Walnut display cases lined the walls, their seventeenth-century wood inlaid with African ivory. The glass shelves brimmed with sixteenth- and seventeenth-century porcelain. Fellner and Monika took a moment and admired some of the pieces.
"The Romanesque Room," Loring said. "I don't know if you two have been here before."
"I haven't," Fellner said.
"Neither have I," Monika said.
"I keep most of my precious glass here." Loring gestured to the tiled stove. "Merely for looks, the air comes from there." He pointed to a floor grate. "Special air handlers, as I am sure you utilize."
Fellner nodded.
"Suzanne," Loring said.
She stepped before one of the wooden cases, fourth in a line of six, and slowly said in a low voice, "A common experience resulting in a common confusion." The cabinet and a section of the stone wall rotated on a center axis, stopping halfway, creating an entrance to either side.
"Voice activated to my tone and Suzanne's. Some members of the staff know of this room. It, of course, has to be cleaned from time to time. But, as I am sure with your people, Franz, mine are absolutely loyal and have never spoken of this outside the estate. To be safe, though, we change the password weekly."
"This week's is interesting," Fellner said. "Kafka, I believe. The opening line toA Common Confusion. How fitting."
Loring grinned. "We must be loyal to our Bohemian writers."
Suzanne stepped aside and allowed Fellner and Monika to enter first. Monika brushed past, casting her a look of cool disgust. She then followed Loring inside. The spacious chamber beyond was dotted with more display cases, paintings and tapestries.
"I am sure you have a similar place," Loring said to Fellner. "This is from over two hundred years of collecting. The past forty with the club."
Fellner and Monika weaved through the individual cases.
"Marvelous things," Fellner said. "Very impressive. I recall many from unveilings. But, Ernst, you have been holding back." Fellner stood in front of a blackened skull encased in glass. "Peking Man?"
"Our family has possessed it since the war."
"As I recall, it was lost in China during transport to the United States." Loring nodded. "Father acquired it from the thief who stole it from the marines in charge."
"Amazing. This dates our ancestry back a half million years. The Chinese and Americans would kill to have it returned. Yet here it rests, in the middle of Bohemia. We live in odd times, don't we?"
"Quite right, old friend. Quite right." Loring motioned to the double doors at the far end of the long chamber. "There, Franz."
Fellner walked toward a set of tall enameled doors. They were painted white and veined in gilded molding. Monika followed