The LibraryDark Revelations of Joan of Arc

Secrets Unveiled

Aubrey · Chapter 14 of 18 · 17-minute read

Eric, completely naked, strolled around me and picked up a blanket off the pallet I’d made earlier for Benny. He covered the body on the floor, careful to hide anything that might frighten the child when he woke.

Me? I sat on the corner of Benny’s bed and stared at the floor. Eric was talking, something about going outside to take care of the other two assassins who’d sure be right behind this one.

“Been there, done that,” I whispered. Not even an armed and naked Eric could raise my spirits.

Eric raised an eyebrow, then nodded approvingly. “My research had indicated you might be able to take care of yourself without my help.” He thumbed his hand at the lump under the blanket. “Hope you still don’t have trouble accepting help from others, me included.”

He meant it as comic relief, but I simply shook my head. “I don’t mind.” I didn’t look at him. I felt myself sinking into an abyss. That sense of doom. And it wasn’t from the high vibrations of the tiles under the bed.

“Come,” Eric said. “Caleb will know where his men are. We can’t stay here. We need to get moving. Now.” He stalked back into the bathroom and dressed.

When he returned, I hadn’t bothered to get Benny dressed or make any preparations of my own. I sat in the same position as when he’d left.

“Aubrey.” I vaguely heard him but didn’t respond. “Aubrey,” he said urgently. “We have to get out of here.” I shook my head. It was no use. I had lost.

“My cover’s still safe. When we find that second tracker, you’ll be free to go to France to your friend Catrina. Take the tiles and the manuscript. Myrddin and the others will contact her soon enough. I’ll spend the day on the coast with Benny and I’ll take him back when I know for certain that his father is at the palazzo and the boy will be safe from his uncle. Benny will—” He thought I wasn’t listening. “Aubrey? Aubrey, what’s wrong?”

I didn’t move. Nothing but my eyes. “That man.” I made an abrupt gesture at the lumpy blanket on the floor. “He said Simon has my daughter.”

“So?” Eric shrugged. “You don’t have a daughter.”

“Yeah… I do.”

“What?” Eric froze. “No. You don’t.”

“Eric… Eric, it’s true.”

“That’s not what Myrddin told me. He had Max’s records on you. I’ve seen them myself. There was nothing in there about a daughter. Nothing, I’m telling you!” He clenched his jaws as if he’d been lied to and didn’t care for it.

“Myrddin didn’t know. Neither did Max.”

“Myrddin told me that you and Matthew Burns, uh…” He stumbled for the right words. “That Burns impregnated you. But you miscarried before you left Britain. You lost your baby.”

“No. Not then. I didn’t lose my baby until eleven years later when I came back to France.”

Realization shone in his eyes. He nodded. “The setup. And you couldn’t go back. How… how old is she now?”

“She’s in college.”

My eyes burned. I’d never talked about Lilah, not since I’d left the States, not since I’d left her behind. I’d never talked about her. Not to anyone. Not to Catrina. Not to Therese. Not to any of the female friends who’d disappeared. Not to my colleagues in the underworld of art. Not to a lover. Not to anyone. Not even to the private investigator who sent me photographs of her every month and a short report on her activities. I’d taken great care to contact the P.I. through a third party so there’d be no chance of interception.

I’d always wanted to talk about her. I wanted to tell someone how special she was and how much I loved her. I wanted to be like any other proud mother of a beautiful, smart, savvy, sassy, sweet, wonderful daughter who’d grown into the kind of woman I’d always hoped she’d be. I’d wanted to tell the world about the flesh-and-blood legacy of hope and love I’d created with my mysterious Matthew. But I’d had to stay silent all these years. I’d never even spoken her name aloud.

“Lilah.” Tears ran down my cheeks. I didn’t wipe them away. “Lilah,” I said louder, but it came out as a sob. The syllables stuck in my throat and fell off my lips like a prayer to an ancient goddess. “Lilah.”

Eric opened his mouth to say something, but nothing came out. For all the weapons in his arsenal, he didn’t seem to have anything effective against tears. Finally he asked, “How did you keep her a secret for all these years?”

“When I was pregnant, Matthew smuggled me into the Highlands. He said he had to get me out of the country and we had to hide the baby or they’d kill us. He never said who ‘they’ were. But it didn’t matter to me. I was young and I believed him. Matthew, he was young, too, but he was a good man. Barely older than Lilah is now.”

Eric nodded. “He was working for Max, but he was working for others like you, too. That’s what Myrddin told me. Matthew knew who you were before he ever met you. They sent him to kill you, but he saved you. It wasn’t just because he fell in love with you. He was probably in love with you before he ever laid eyes on you. Maybe that’s why he volunteered to work so closely with the Adrianos. Others like you were trying to reconnect and build a force against Max. Some of them had sons who infiltrated Max’s organization.”

“You?” I asked.

“No. Not me. But Myrddin’s trying now to rally women like you. Warriors at heart. It’s been tried many times over the past fifteen hundred years.”

“And Matthew tried, too.” I backhanded my tears and then sniffed them away.

“Yes. Myrddin once told me that Matthew Burns knew Max was onto him. That’s why he went back. To buy you time. So you could safely get out of Europe. He thought he’d be able to join you. At least, it appears that he did.”

I sighed. “I was young then. Just a hopeless romantic. I’d thought he’d come to the States after me. He never showed up at our rendezvous point. He never contacted me. Just vanished from the face of the earth. I waited for a few months until I ran out of money.” I twisted my hands in my lap. “I found a relative in the States, though. Not a blood relative. She was married one time to my mother’s cousin. She took me in and I started a new life under the name of LeighAnne Remington, a name I’d found on a tombstone in a little town in North Carolina. My mother’s cousin knew some people… shady people… who were able to forge some papers under my new name. I was eighteen and about six months pregnant.”

“And afraid,” Eric added.

“My daughter was born, and I kept looking for Matthew, but I never heard from him. We were together for such a short period of time. I’m not sure how much of it was a lie or a cover story. I’m not sure I even knew the real Matthew, but I always imagined the kind of husband he would have made for me. And what a great father he would have been. He used to tell me about how he’d told his baby sister, Nonny, bedtime stories when he’d been a teen. Stories about warrior women. That’s what he used to tell her. I didn’t know he was talking about my ancestors… or his. I just thought they were stories.”

“They’re not stories. They’re real.”

“As real as Jeanne… Joan of Arc. I read the rest of Isabelle’s manuscript while you were sleeping.”

“You mean Joan of Arc’s manuscript.”

“No. It wasn’t written by Jeanne. The incunable was written by her sister. It’s an indictment against the Adrianos, about how they manipulated the pope, countries, kingdoms. Myrddin was right—my daughter is from the double bloodline, and my half of that bloodline dates back to Joan of Arc’s mother and before.”

Eric sighed. “That makes her all that much more valuable to Simon.”

“But, Eric, I don’t understand how they would know about Lilah. I was so careful. Her birth certificate has my guardian’s name on it as her mother. There is nothing to do with Lilah that has my name on it. There’s nothing that has my claim on her. I raised her as my daughter, yes, but there’s nothing in writing anywhere that says I have a daughter.”

Eric sat down on the bed beside me. He took my hand and squeezed it. Words between us weren’t important. The gesture let me know he cared. He lost himself deep in thought, then jerked his head up. “Therese!” He nodded to himself and then to me. “That’s how Simon found out who you were before. About your identity between the time you were Aubrey de Lune and the time you became Dr. Moon. The patriarch— Max—he was the one who set you up. He kept you on a leash all these years but never told Simon.” He lowered his voice in an aside. “Adriano men don’t always trust their sons. More than once, a son has turned against his father or brother if it meant taking control of the family dynasty.”

I folded my hand over Eric’s. I let him soothe the skin on the back of my hand with his thumb. I let myself take comfort in his touch.

“Max never told Simon who you really were. Simon found out only a few months ago, right before you went to San Francisco for the manuscript.”

“Therese?” I remembered Max’s secretary. I’d met her a couple of times in Paris and once in Athens when she’d made personal deliveries to me, usually instructions on a job Simon wanted me to do. Always something that was too problematic to be delivered electronically, even with Pretty Good Privacy—or PGP—protocols to safeguard the information. In spite of advances in technology, some things still didn’t lend themselves well to encryption.

Therese had been young and pretty, in her mid-twenties. She was more of a courier, really, than a secretary, and I had no doubt that she could use her looks to slip through the tightest of security. Therese and I had become friendly, if not friends, and had shared lunch on several occasions. After Max was hospitalized— Therese had told me he’d actually died and Eric had confirmed it— Therese had been moved to a different position within the organization. I hadn’t seen her since.

“A few months ago, Therese asked Simon what to do with Max’s files on Aubrey de Lune as well as some other women. He’d left some files with Therese instead of in his office. Therese didn’t know Max hadn’t intended for the files to go to Simon. Max had been shot. He’d retired from the family business, so it made sense that all his personal files would go to Simon. Myrddin saw those files years ago and recreated some of them from memory. He tried to keep those files out of Simon’s hands, but he failed.”

“That’s how Myrddin knew who I really was?”

“Yes. That’s how Myrddin knew all about you. And how I knew all about you. And eventually how Simon knew all about you. But, Aubrey, there was nothing in those files about a child born to you. Nothing at all to indicate you and Matthew ever had a daughter. So if you took great care in hiding her as you say you did, I don’t know how Simon would have found her. He didn’t find her through those files. I know that. I’ve seen copies of them myself.” He slipped an arm around my shoulder. “They can’t possibly have your daughter.”

“I can’t take that chance.”

“It’s probably a bluff.”

“Maybe. But I still can’t take that chance. We have to go back.”

“What about the tiles? The manuscript? You’re just going to march back to the palazzo and hand those over?”

“No.” I shook my head. “Never. But I’ll hand myself over if I can set my daughter free.”

“Aubrey! Think about it!” He grabbed my shoulders and bent into my face. “You don’t want to go back there.”

“No, I don’t want to go back. But I don’t have a choice.”

“You always have a choice, Aubrey. Always. Life is always about the choices you make.” He let go of my shoulders. He sounded as if he was channeling Myrddin. “Sometimes they’re good, sometimes they’re bad. But you do have choices.”

“Eric, if Simon has my daughter and I don’t do something about it, then I could not live with that choice. I want nothing more than to get as far away from life with the Adrianos as I can get, but my top priority is and always will be my daughter’s safety.”

He clamped his mouth shut and thought for a second. Then he nodded. “I know. I do, Aubrey. I know. If I were in your position, I’d do the same thing. I… I never had the choice. The choice was made for me. But, Aubrey, if Simon gets that manuscript and those tiles, do you realize how many people might die?”

I wanted to say I didn’t care, that I cared only about Lilah. But I couldn’t. Not honestly.

“You know,” I said, “Joan of Arc had a secret weapon. And I don’t mean the tile ring she wore. She had a sister. A twin. An identical twin.”

“You told me about the sister.” He shrugged. “I don’t remember reading about her.”

“You wouldn’t have. That’s because when she was captured, part of her punishment was that no one would ever speak her name or write it. Years after Jeanne was burned at the stake and Isabelle escaped, Isabelle lived in seclusion, courtesy of some priests who hid her from the Adrianos. Her punishment from the Church was that ‘her name be obliterated from the annals of man.’ The pope that the Adrianos installed decreed that no one would ever utter her name. Not a scribe, not a husband, not a child. The only one who could was her. So she learned to write. And she, not Joan of Arc, is the one who wrote this manuscript.”

“An identical twin?” Eric raised an eyebrow. “Useful, I suppose.”

“Very. She’s the one who, when Jeanne was wounded on the battlefield, stood in Jeanne’s place, inspiring the troops so that they thought Jeanne was invincible. She was taken, too, tortured like Jeanne, but she escaped when she jumped from a three-story window. Jeanne wasn’t so lucky. The inquisitors took their rings, the ones with bits of the tiles in them. Isabelle had given her ring to Jeanne to wear, so both rings were confiscated.” I motioned to the mosaic under the bed, then flipped my hand in a grand gesture at the tiny tiles on the chest by Benny’s bed. “The eyes of the child.”

Eric picked up one of the eye-shaped tiles and held it up to the halogen light to get a better look.

“This incunable,” I continued, “this manuscript isn’t so much about Joan of Arc but an indictment against Simon’s ancestors. Could you imagine if the press got a copy of it? It tells how the Adrianos manipulated popes and fought against a line of strong women that Isabelle and Jeanne were descended from.” I frowned. “That I’m descended from. That Lilah is descended from. That’s why they had to keep it hidden. This manuscript was written in an attempt to get the word out to others of their kind. To pull them together so others would know what the Adrianos of their time had done. To get others to unite with them against the Adriano front and bring them down. Isabelle put the family crests in the margins, but instead of being used to bring together these women, the incunable was used to hunt them down and destroy them.

“It’s said,” I added, “that Joan of Arc was discovered, alive and well, several years after she was burned at the stake. That a woman came back claiming to be her. Her brothers recognized her as their sister. Everyone who’d fought beside her recognized her as Jeanne. The king denied it. The pope denied. Officially she was declared an impostor. Even fairy tales said that the only remains of Jeanne’s body was the still beating heart they discovered in the ashes. All kinds of legends sprang up. But the best legend of all-and the truth of it all—no one ever knew. It was all buried right here.” I kicked my foot in the direction of the briefcase. “Right here in this manuscript. All of it. That’s why this book is so important to the Adrianos. They don’t want this news to get out.”

“That and the possibility of using it to track down their enemies.”

“The woman they’d claimed was an impostor was the real thing, Eric. Well, half of the real thing. The woman who was on the battlefield when Jeanne was injured was the impostor. No one was the wiser and the stunt kept the battle going. Maybe we should take a lesson from her. From Jeanne… and Isabelle.”

Eric fidgeted with one of the child’s-eye tiles. If his ears rang or he felt sick, he didn’t show it. He walked over to the bits of cell phone on the floor and knelt over the pieces. He ran the tile over the bits. He shook his head and looked up. “I don’t understand. What does Joan of Arc’s twin have to do with you going back to the palazzo and getting yourself killed?”

“I’m going to make a trade with Simon. My daughter for me. Me and the tiles. And the book. The manuscript will be easy enough to hide, at least for as long as it takes to get my daughter to safety. I won’t hand over the real thing. I’ll hand over impostors.”

I watched as Eric held the tile a hand’s width from his arm, almost as if he were scanning his whole body with it. He did the same over his chest, his waist, his hips, over the bulge in his trousers. Down each leg. Around his boots.

“Continue,” he urged. “I’m listening.”

“The manuscript will be easy enough to provide an impostor for. Newspaper wrapped in a cloth, then placed inside the stereolithographic case and snapped shut. Then put inside the briefcase. They’d have to get through several layers before they’d know if it is or isn’t the manuscript.”

Eric held the tile over my head and scanned back and forth around my face. I shooed him away.

“What are you doing?”

“Checking for bugs. There’s a tracker on one of us. I’m betting it’s you.”

I stood up and held my arms out to either side so he could hold the tile close to my skin, along the lines of my body. He tested me as thoroughly as an airport security guard with a metal-detecting wand.

“We won’t be able to duplicate the tiles,” he reminded me. “Not like your mother did. We’d need plaster and gemstones. Several days of time you don’t have.”

“I don’t intend to duplicate them. I want only to provide an impostor that will slow Simon down and buy me some time.”

He followed the lines of my velvet dress, then bent to his knees and skimmed the child’s-eye tile over my bare legs and muddy feet. Something about him kneeling in front of me and tilting his chin upward to me gripped my throat. I liked this man. I really liked him.

I didn’t know much about him—not his favorite color or his shoe size or his mother’s name—but I knew the really important things. Like why he wanted to live when he’d lost everything to live for. Like how he planned to leave his mark on the world. Like how his palm curved against the back of my head when he stroked my hair when he thought I was asleep. I wanted more of those moments. More of him.

“You’re clear,” he said, rising to his feet.

I picked up one of the trivets from the night table beside Benny’s bed and held it up to the light. The red Mother Mary glimmered in the halogen beam. “See? Tiles.”

Eric eyed me doubtfully. “Simon will know the difference.”

“As long as he doesn’t know the difference immediately. I need the weight and the appearance. Rocks and tile. That will suffice.”

Eric smiled, but it didn’t quite reach his eyes. “You always have a plan, don’t you, Aubrey de Lune?”

“You don’t approve.” A statement of fact, not an expectation.

“I have a plan of my own,” he said, “but let’s hope I don’t need it.”

He bent over Benny’s bed and skimmed the boy’s shoulder and chest. He moved up closer to the child’s head, and the tiny tile in Eric’s fingertips shimmered.

I blinked. Had I seen it correctly? “What was that?” The tile had just changed from pink and blue to gray and black, then back to its original color.

Eric sighed. “I think we just found the other tracking device.” He skimmed Benny’s jawline, and the tile changed hue again. “It’s in his tooth. The tracker must be in one of his fillings.” Eric cursed under his breath. “Josh never told me. I guess it was a safeguard against even me.”

“The tile… the way it changed.”

“Radiological electromagnetic energy field. It can detect frequencies. More important, it can amplify communication signals. As long as Benny was in your rental car, the tiles amplified his tracking signal’s location.”

“But we lost the three men in the BMW yesterday. For a while, at least.”

“The storm. That was meant to slow us down. We made it here and Benny got separated from the tiles. The signal was too weak then.”

Yes. Benny had spent the afternoon far from the tiles, playing with the innkeeper’s grandson and the kittens elsewhere in the cluster of old monastic buildings.

“And then,” I continued for Eric, “Benny went to sleep literally atop the tiles and boosted the transmission of his signal. So they knew exactly where to look for us.”

Eric and I stared at each other. We both knew what that meant. We needed to find a safe place for the tiles—one as far away from Benny as possible—so we could reach the palazzo before the Adrianos’ men found us again.


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