CHAPTER 9

“What do you mean Sterling’s got the wrong memorial? There’s only one Lincoln Memorial,” Bones said.

“Want to bet on that?” Maddock enjoyed the confused look on his friend’s face as they made their way out of the museum.

“All right,” Bones said when they reached the sidewalk, “you’ve enjoyed your moment in the sun. Does this have something to do with all that useless history trivia you’ve got knocking around in that undersized head of yours?”

“It’s hardly useless, at least, not right now.”

“Get to the point, Maddock.”

“The timing is all wrong. The Lincoln Memorial opened in the early 1920s. Now, it’s possible that the Grand Army of the Republic held on to the journal for almost sixty years until the Lincoln Memorial was built, but I don’t think so. I believe the journal was given for a specific monument that was in the works at the time. We’ll have to check it out to be sure.”

They rounded the museum, turned right on Constitution Avenue, and made the short walk to the District of Columbia Court of Appeals. There, gleaming in the sun, stood a white marble statue of Lincoln. The president, left hand resting on a fasces, a bundle of wooden rods, gazed out into the distance. It was a simple representation of the great man; not the massive, Olympian-like Lincoln that looked out onto the National Mall from the throne inside his famed memorial.

“It’s not very big,” Bones noted. That thing’s not much taller than I am.”

Indeed, the statue itself couldn’t have been much more than seven feet tall, and the pedestal on which it rested not much taller than Maddock’s almost six feet.

“It’s big enough to hold a journal, but this pedestal worries me. It looks new.”

They moved closer to the shiny granite base. LINCOLN was engraved on the front, while the back gave more information.

ABRAHAM LINCOLN

1809–1865

THIS STATUE WAS ERECTED BY THE CITIZENS OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA APRIL 15 1868

RE-ERECTED APRIL 15 1923 UNDER ACT OF CONGRESS OF JUNE 21 1922

“You’re right, Maddock. 1868 would fit the timeline perfectly. And if Acie’s ancestor, Lee’s descendant, was gripped with Lincoln fever after the assassination that could explain why he wanted the journal put in a monument to Lincoln instead of Washington.”

“True. He might even have seen it as forging a link between two great leaders. I’d imagine the Grand Army thought of it that way.”

“But what about this last line? Re-erected? That’s not good.”

It was a measure of Bones’ seriousness that he didn’t make a bad pun out of the word. Maddock considered this. If the statue had been taken down and placed on a new pedestal, the journal might be lost. But he didn’t want to give up so easily.

“Bones, can you create a diversion?”

“How big?”

“Don’t get yourself arrested.”

“Crap. I was ready to get naked.” Bones looked around at the few pedestrians and grinned. “I’ll come up with something.” He moved out in front of the statue, cleared his throat, and boomed, “Who will emancipate the red man?”

Maddock grinned and hurried away. Bones was frequently full of crap, but he could get serious about the plight of Native Americans when he wanted to. As his friend launched into his impromptu speech, Maddock headed back to the sidewalk and found the nearest manhole. Traffic was light and the pedestrians were all looking up at Bones, so he slipped his fingers through the holes of the manhole cover and lifted the heavy circle, climbed in, and slipped it back into place. The fetid odor of stagnant water and decay assaulted his nostrils as he climbed down into the darkness. When he hit the bottom, he turned on his MagLite and moved through the low tunnel, heading in the direction of the statue.

He soon hit paydirt. In one section, the circular tunnel gave way to a square room constructed of crumbling bricks. Up above, he could just make out the muffled sound of Bones pontificating. Smiling, he shone his light up and down the cracked walls.

Beneath the foundation,” he said to himself. In one corner, he noticed a brick that was double the size of all the others. His heart began to race as he drew his Recon knife and chipped away at the mortar. It crumbled like sand beneath the sharp metal until, finally, the brick came free. He let out a small whoop of triumph and shone his light into the space where the brick had been.

Nothing.

“You’ve got to be kidding me.” He reached in and felt around the empty space, but there was nothing there, save a bit of dust and one desiccated spider. Muttering a few choice obscenities, he hefted the brick and made to replace it when something thudded to the floor.

He froze and turned his light downward. The beam fell on a dried out oilcloth bag.

“It’s a hollow brick, genius,” he chided himself. Hope rising anew, he replaced the brick and then carefully opened the bag and peered inside.

The bag held a small, cracked, leather bound journal. He closed the bag, tucked it inside his shirt, and headed back the way he had come.

When he climbed back up to the manhole he paused to listen, but heard nothing. He doubted he would be able to hear approaching footsteps anyway. He raised the manhole cover an inch and peered out.

The few pedestrians were still looking toward the statue, but Bones was no longer making a speech.

As Maddock’s eyes fell on his friend, Bones drove his fist into the chin of a thickset man, sending the attacker to the ground on rubbery legs. A second man stepped back and raised a pistol. Before Maddock could call out a warning, Bones lashed out with his foot, kicked the gun to the side, and bore the man to the ground. He slammed his attacker’s head into the pavement and sprang to his feet.

“Bones! This way!” Maddock shouted.

Bones spotted him and took off at a dead run. Behind him, the first man he’d taken down had pushed himself up to a sitting position and looked with bleary eyes at Bones’ retreating form.

“Why not just run away?” Bones gasped as he reached the manhole.

“In case there are more of them. Come on!”

Maddock dropped to the ground and then moved out of his friend’s way. Bones landed heavily on his feet and they took off at a trot.

“Holy crap, these ceilings are low,” Bones growled.

“I don’t know if you can call the top of a sewer drain a ‘ceiling’, but whatever,” Maddock said.

“Did you find anything?”

“Not much. Just Washington’s journal.”

“Did I ever tell you you’re awesome? Well, no because it’s not true, but you do find more nuts than the average blind squirrel.”

Maddock laughed. “Thanks, Bones.”

They passed through the chamber where Maddock had found the journal and then back into another low passageway. Maddock kept his eyes open for a way out, but saw nothing. After a few minutes, he held up a hand and they stopped. 

“Do you think anyone’s following us?” Bones whispered.

“That’s what I’m wondering.” He strained to listen, and finally heard the sound of footsteps moving in the distance. “No idea how far away they are, but they’re definitely after us.”

“I should have grabbed that dude’s gun.”

“It’s better if we get out of this with no killing. Come on.”

They set off again, trying to move silently. Maddock could move almost silently, but next to Bones, his every movement sounded like thunder to his ears. Finally, they came to a cross-tunnel.

“Which way?” Bones asked.

Maddock chose a direction at random and hurried along. Behind them, the faint sounds of pursuit continued unabated. He picked up the pace, grimacing as they splashed through chill puddles of mud and stagnant water and slipped on detritus.

“Running hunched over like this is bad for my back,” Bones grumbled.

“I could make a joke about you being accustomed to bending over, but that would be too easy,” Maddock jibed.

“Screw you, Maddock.”

A few minutes later Maddock came to a sudden halt.

“What is it?” Bones had the good sense to keep his voice down.

“Look over here.” Maddock shone his light into a wide fracture in the side of the passageway. “There’s something back there. An old cellar, maybe. Think you can squeeze your giant butt through?”

“If that swollen head of yours will fit, I should have no problem.” Bones slipped out of his leather jacket, took a deep breath, forced the air out of his lungs in a whoosh, and squeezed sideways into the narrow passageway.

Maddock watched his friend fade slowly into the darkness. The footsteps were coming closer.  “Are you almost there?”

Bones let out a grunt and, with a dull scraping sound, forced his bulk out of the crevice. “Come on.”

Maddock followed quickly, though his muscular frame made things difficult for him, too. When both were on the other side, they shone their lights around, looking for a way out.

They were in some sort of old cellar, forgotten by the looks of it. Dust and cobwebs coated the ancient brick walls, and black mold clung to the beams above their head.

“We need to find a way out, and quick,” Maddock said. “If the Sons catch up with us, and we’re waving these flashlights around, our side passage here is useless.”

Bones quickly spotted a trapdoor in the ceiling at the far corner of the room. “There’s no way up.” He shone his beam down on a crumbling pile of wood that might have once been stairs.

“We’ll have to do this in proper military fashion,” Maddock said.

Bones grinned. “Just like the obstacle course. Let’s do it.”

They quickly positioned themselves beneath the trapdoor. Bones knelt and Maddock climbed onto his friend’s shoulders. Maddock wasn’t exactly a lightweight, but Bones had no trouble lifting the smaller man up.

Maddock tried the trapdoor. It wouldn’t budge.

“Guess you’ll have to bust through it.” Bones’ voice didn’t indicate the slightest bit of strain at holding Maddock’s solid one hundred eighty pounds. The man was a beast.

“Unless there’s something heavy sitting on top of it.”

“Always the optimist,” Bones said. “Just try it.”

Maddock drew back his hand, palm open. If this didn’t work, the sound was certain to draw their pursuers directly to them. That could get ugly. Nothing he could do about it now. He threw all of his strength into the blow. He struck the soft wood with the heel of his palm, letting out a guttural keop, martial arts style. The trapdoor shattered like a movie prop. Two more blows and the way was open.

“Nothing like dry rot to make you look like a badass,” Bones said.

Maddock climbed up into a pitch black room, turned and reached back to help Bones up.

“Don’t bother. I got this.” Bones took a few steps back and ran toward the corner below the trapdoor. He leaped up, kicked off of one side of the wall, and then the other, each push propelling him upward. With a grunt of effort, he caught the lip of the trapdoor with the tips of his fingers. “Okay. Help?” he gasped.

Under a different set of circumstances, Maddock would have let him fall as a punishment for his hubris, but they didn’t have time. He grabbed Bones by the wrists and hauled his friend up.

“You’re strong for such a little guy,” Bones stood and reached out to tousle Maddock’s hair, but Maddock knocked his hand aside. “So touchy. Where do you think we are?”

“A storage area.” The beam of Maddock’s light fell on crates marked COSTUMES and a heap of outdated lighting fixtures. “A theater, by the looks of it.”

“Any prop weapons we can use? A spear or something?”

“Not that I can see, but let’s try and make it tough on these guys.” He hefted one of the crates and placed it over the gaping hole in the floor, and then leaned a few of the lighting fixtures onto it to add some weight. It wasn’t much, but it might slow the Sons down. Now to find an exit.

Bones had already found the door. “Locked,” he said after trying the knob. “But not for long.” He lashed out with a powerful side kick and the door swung open with a sharp crack of breaking wood as the facing shattered.

Maddock shook his head. “You have the delicate touch of the finest craftsman.”

“I get crap done. That’s what matters.”

They came out in a dark hallway that led to a narrow stairway. The dust beneath their feet bore mute witness to this being yet another forgotten, or at least lightly traveled, space. Faint, yellow light gleamed through the crack beneath the door at the top of the stairs, giving them hope.

“Wonder what we’ll find on the other side,” Bones mused.

“Can’t be worse than what’s behind us.” Maddock pocketed his MagLite and opened the door. As light poured in, a loud voice called out.

“Take one more step and you’re dead!”

Maddock froze. Had the Sons of the Republic somehow gotten ahead of them? And then another voice rang out in the narrow hallway beyond the door.

“You don’t understand. Just listen to me.”

“What the hell have we stumbled into?” Bones asked.

“I don’t know.” Maddock listened. “They’re somewhere that way.” He pointed to his left.

“I’m through listening to you, Ryan,” the first voice said.

“Justin, put the gun down!”

The sharp report of a pistol reverberated down the hall.

“I say we go the other direction,” Bones said. He shouldered past Maddock and took off at a trot. They ascended another staircase and found themselves at another locked door. Bones didn’t have to kick this one in. A little fiddling with the doorknob plus a bit of main force was all it took. He stepped through and stopped.

“It’s a play.”

“What?” Maddock moved to his friend’s side and froze.

They stood on a small balcony overlooking a packed theater. To their left, two tiers, one for seating and one for lighting, looked down on the stage. The walls were painted cream and white, the carpet a bright red. Down below, heads turned their way as patrons noticed their presence. Someone pointed up at them and said something Maddock couldn’t quite hear. An angry murmur rippled through the audience.

“This box is fancy,” Bones said. “I wonder why no one’s sitting here. The tickets must be too expensive.”

For the first time, Maddock looked at the box in which they stood. American flags framed the small space, and bunting adorned the rail. His eyes fell on the antique chairs and his stomach lurched.

“Bones, this is Ford’s Theatre.” He swallowed hard. “And we’re standing in the box where Lincoln was shot.” Bones’ eyes went wide. “Holy crap. Let’s get out of here.”

Down below, Maddock saw two uniformed, armed security guards, scurry out of the theater. “I don’t think we have much time.”

Bones opened the door, looked out, and closed it again.

“Sons of the Republic coming up the stairs.”

“That was quick,” Maddock grumbled.

“I guess we’ll jump.”

“The last guy who tried that broke his leg,” Maddock said.

“Was he a SEAL?”

“It was John Wilkes Booth.”

“Three names? Sounds like a wuss to me.” Bones turned and approached the rail. The actors on stage, probably distracted by the noise of the crowd, had stopped the play, and now stared up at Bones and Maddock in shock.

Bones didn’t miss a beat. “You shot my brother!” he shouted at the actor who still clutched his prop pistol. “I’ll kill you for that.” He flashed a grin at Maddock and then vaulted the rail. He hit the stage with a loud thud, but regained his feet in an instant. As he rose to his full height, the actors on stage took one look at the massive Cherokee, turned, and ran.

Grinning, Maddock vaulted the rail, felt the tingling sensation of falling, and hit the stage. He felt the impact all the way up to the top of his skull, but he didn’t think anything was broken. He stood and turned to the audience.

“There will be brief intermission and then our play will resume.”

He and Bones leaped off the stage and sprinted up the aisle toward the exit. More shouts filled the air, this time from the direction of Lincoln’s box. He stole a glance back and saw their pursuers, pistols in hand, turning to face the security guards who had just burst into the box.

“It’ll be cool,” Bones said. “The rent-a-cops will back down when they see those guys mean business.”

“I hope so.”

They dashed out through the tiny lobby and burst onto the sunlit street. Navigating the throng of tourists, they ran aimlessly down the street, taking turns at random, until they finally managed to hail a cab.

“Where to?” the driver asked.

Maddock’s thoughts drifted to the book. They’d need to find a way to translate it, but he wanted to get out of DC.

“Take us to the best bookstore in Alexandria, and I’ll pay you double if you get us there in twenty minutes or less.

The cabbie accepted the challenge at once, put the pedal to the floor and screeched out into traffic to the tune of blaring horns.

“What’s our next move?” Bones asked.

“Let’s call Sterling,” Maddock said. “We can’t seem to shake the Sons, so we’ll need all the help we can get.”