she withdrew a handful of folded pieces of construction paper from inside the bag. Carefully she unfolded them, looking at each before handing them to Remy.
He looked at the first. It was obviously a child's drawing, done in crayon, crudely depicting a little girl and a man leaving what appeared to be a hospital. The next picture was of the same girl and man, only they were in a car. The man was in the front seat, driving, while the child stared out the back window, yellow circles beneath her eyes—probably falling tears, Remy guessed.
"Zoe did these?" he asked, looking up at Deryn.
She nodded. "About three weeks ago."
He was looking at the drawing again when the woman's words permeated his brain. "Three weeks ago?" he repeated. "So your husband must have been preparing her for this?" He waited as Deryn shook her head no.
"She drew those pictures without any knowledge of what her father was going to do," the woman explained. "But she knew he was going to take her, Mr. Chandler, just like she knew I would be coming to see you."
Deryn leaned forward and handed him one last drawing.
Remy's eyes widened in surprise as he studied it. Zoe had drawn a childlike depiction of the front entrance to his brownstone, a person standing in front with a black dog on a leash. He was certain the person was himself—the feathered wings were a dead giveaway—and, moreover, floating in the air, written in a small child's handwriting, were his address and telephone number.
Mathias stopped the Range Rover halfway down the dirt path, just close enough to see the bungalow ahead.
Poole had eventually proven his worth, using information he derived by touching the Vietnamese vessel, as well as extensive maps of the entire world. According to the Hound, Delilah's prize would be found here, in Palatka, Florida, of all places.
It wasn't exactly a place that Mathias imagined finding an object that could quite easily change the course of the world, but perhaps that was the point—no ancient temples surrounded by worshippers ready to die in its defense; instead, a run-down bungalow in the backwaters of Florida.
Ingenious.
He removed the Glock pistol from the holster underneath his arm and chambered a round.
"Are we ready?" he asked the other four men on his team.
They grunted their responses as each prepared his own weapons. Febonio, Yelverton, and Wallace, in the backseat, put rounds in the chambers of their hand weapons, while Cole, in the front passenger seat, flipped off the safety of his Mac 10 semiautomatic machine gun.
Mathias hoped it would be enough. They had no idea what they were walking into.
"Let's go," he said, turning off the engine and stepping out into the tropical heat.
Mathias led the way up the rocky dirt path. A mutt tied to a rusting swing in a backyard overrun with weeds began to bark ferociously at their approach, and Mathias was tempted to put a bullet in the mangy beast. But they had to appear harmless; no sense in alerting those inside of potential danger.
As they neared the falling-down porch, he motioned his men to step back out of the line of sight and walked up the four cracked concrete steps to the front door. He could hear the sounds of a television from inside.
He took a quick glance over his shoulder to be sure his team was in position, then rapped loudly on the dented, rusted aluminum door.
Mathias waited, listening to the sounds from inside. The volume on the television went down, and that was his cue to knock again.
Now he could hear muffled voices coming from inside—a man, a woman, and at least one child. The door suddenly opened a crack, and half a face peered out, glaring at him over a short length of chain.
"Yeah?"
Mathias could smell the stink of beer wafting from the man's breath. "Hi," he said with his biggest, fakest, nice-guy smile. "Is this thirty-seven Nautical Way?" he asked, reading from a wrinkled piece of scrap paper he pulled from his jacket pocket.
"Who wants to know?" the
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