Zack’s vehicle turned out to be an old British Land Rover with plenty of room to store a trussed-up Zack in the back between a large jack, a toolbox, and a wealth of camping supplies. Ian found zip ties in the toolbox and replaced the paracord that bound Zack with the thin strips of plastic, cinching his wrists and ankles tight to the same rear-seat mount and his neck to a different mount, limiting his movement and ensuring he would be very uncomfortable when he returned to consciousness.
They’d driven for about thirty minutes when Cressida powered up Ian’s phone and a single flickering bar appeared. The rush of emotion at seeing the little flashing graphic made her suck in a sharp breath. Ian pulled to the side of the narrow dirt track that served as a road. He glanced at the back of the truck and held a finger to his lips. They had no clue what they were going to do with Zack, so for now, if he was conscious, they couldn’t discuss their plans.
With a nod, Ian indicated she should grab her backpack and climb out. He did the same. After locking the truck, he pulled the distributor cap from the Rover, effectively disabling it.
“Are we leaving him?”
“I hope not, but I’m not taking any chances. Never assume we’ll return to any location. Always be prepared to run.” He paused and studied the landscape. “We need a place to lay low to make the call. This area is too open. Zack probably has people in the area.”
“How far is the village?”
“About two kilometers. We might get lucky and find an old barn or other abandoned structure on the outskirts.”
Luck was with them, for a change. After walking for ten minutes, Cressida spotted an ancient-looking stone shed nestled against a hillside across the dirt road. Overgrown with vines and built with the same type of stones as the bedrock, the structure blended into the landscape from the side, but a rusted metal roof gave it away.
Broken planks of wood—remnants of a door—half covered the entrance. When they slipped inside, Cressida was thankful to be out of view from the road that led into the village, even if it meant hanging out in a crumbling shed that smelled of rats and rotting grasses.
She pulled out the phone and met Ian’s gaze. “You ready? There’s a chance Trina’s phone is being monitored.” In all likelihood, Lee had secured the line, knowing Trina was the first person Cressida would call, but they had to be prepared for anything.
Ian’s gaze was intense, carrying the weight of a thousand unspoken words. He pressed down on the cell phone. She stiffened, tightening her grip on it. She’d twist his balls too before she let him take the phone from her.
He shook his head, and one corner of his mouth curved in a sad way. “I’m not going to stop you, Cress. I was moving it so it wouldn’t be between us when I do this.” He pulled her against him and stroked her hair, his large hand holding her head to his chest. His lips landed on her temple. “You were amazing and saved us both. When we’re far away from here, I want you to tell me what you meant by ‘again.’”
She had no intention of ever telling anyone the story of Three. Especially not Ian Boyd.
He lifted her chin and pressed a kiss on her lips. “Call Trina.”
She nodded and entered Trina’s number. With every touch of the screen, her heart rate jumped. By the time she pressed the phone to her ear to wait for the call to connect, her pulse raced fast enough to power a small city.
* * *
Trina’s face flushed and her belly flipped when Caller ID indicated an overseas call. She nodded to Keith, who speed-dialed Lee on the landline as soon as she hit the answer button. “If this isn’t Cressida, I’m hanging up,” she said in a shaking voice.
There was a long pause, a delay caused by the international call, before she heard Cressida’s clear voice. “Treen, it’s me.”
Her eyes teared at the sound of Cressida’s voice, and she flopped into a chair at the kitchen table. “Ohmygod! Sweetie! We’ve been scared to death. Where are you?”
“I’m okay. For now. But I need help.”
Keith frowned as he murmured something to Lee, and Trina remembered her script. As much as she wanted to talk to Cressida and make sure she was okay, they didn’t have that luxury. She had to assume every second of conversation could be the last. “Cress, Sean is looking for you. Right now, he and a Raptor team are in Cizre. Can you write down his number?”
Cressida’s voice was muffled as she said, “Ian, I need pen and paper.”
To Keith, Trina said, “She’s with Boyd.” Into the phone, she asked, “Cress, is Boyd an ally?”
The pause was too long for Trina’s comfort, but it could be the international delay. “Yes.”
Of course, the man must be right next to her. Listening. “Okay, answer correctly if he’s not coercing you…” She closed her eyes and tried to think of something simple but innocuous. “Who hosted the party we went to with Todd last summer?”
There was only one answer that meant Ian Boyd could be trusted. All Cressida had to do was say any other name and they’d know if Boyd was a threat. “Dr. Patrick Hill,” Cressida said firmly.
Trina let out the breath she’d been holding. “Okay.” She recited the phone number. “Call Sean. He can get you out of Turkey.”
“Got it.” Cressida said good-bye and hung up.
Trina stood in her living room, staring at her phone. She’d been waiting for that moment for days, and it was over so quickly. Her body shook, and she didn’t know if relief or fear caused the tremors.
Keith’s arms circled her from behind, and she turned to face him and wrapped her arms around his waist. “I’m scared, Keith.”
“If anyone can get her out, it’s Sean. He’s my best operative.”
She nodded. “I just feel…helpless. I wish we knew Boyd. I wish we were certain we could trust him.”
“Cressida trusts him, doesn’t she?”
“She said she did.”
He smiled. “Then we can trust him too.”
“What if she’s wrong? It’s not like she has a great track record.”
“Given what we’ve been able to piece together of their week in Turkey, Cressida knows if Boyd is one of the good guys by now.”
* * *
Disconnecting the call with Trina was hard. Hearing a warm, concerned voice, knowing her friends were trying to help her had triggered relief and guilt. She met Ian’s gaze. “Keith has already sent a Raptor team to Cizre. Sean Logan is one of the operatives. They want me to call him.”
“You have good friends.”
She nodded and dialed Sean’s number. He answered immediately and said, “Cressida Porter, it’s about damn time.”
She let out a hard laugh as a rush of emotion hit her for the second time in as many minutes. She was far too emotional these days. “Sean, you have no idea how good it is to hear your voice.”
“Same here, Cress. I’ve been worried. We all have.”
She cleared her throat. “Thanks. Listen, I’m handing over the phone to Ian.”
“Boyd’s a friendly?”
She met and held Ian’s gaze as she said, “Yes. I trust him with my life.”
Ian’s jaw tensed, and his nostrils flared slightly. She wondered what was going on in his mind. It might be best, when this was all over, if she forgot she’d ever met Ian Boyd. She couldn’t see how she could maintain contact with him and not want him.
She handed him the phone, then settled down on the dirt floor to listen. He told Sean about Zack, trussed up in the Rover, and described their location. Cressida had been in something of a fog after dealing with Zack, and had lost track of the distance they’d traveled. She hadn’t realized quite how close to the Syrian border they were. When Ian estimated their distance from Cizre, she sat upright in shock.
In heading for the nearest cell tower, they’d unintentionally continued on course for the aqueduct.
She glanced around the old stone shack, her mind racing. She leaned toward the wall to inspect the mortar between the stones, then reached for Ian’s backpack and pulled out a knife with a sturdy blade. She pressed the edge in a chink between rocks and broke a small chunk of mortar free, then studied her sample in a ray of sunlight that shone through a hole in the rusted roof.
The mortar could be ancient. She’d visited several ancient sites in Istanbul and Antalya to study the concrete so she might be able to identify the ancient Roman variety if the need arose. The mortar in her hands was composed of crushed stone aggregate bound with lime, a combination used for centuries, but the ratio of aggregate to binder had changed over the course of two millennia, and the composition in her hands was consistent with the mix used in antiquity.
She twirled in a slow circle, studying the shed, then zeroed in on the southeast corner. She dropped to her knees and scraped the dirt floor with the knife blade, finding the edges of a massive flat stone. Using her headscarf, she wiped across the surface. The coarse weave worked well to dislodge decades of soil. With the rock exposed she grabbed a flashlight from the pack and laid it flat on the ground, so the light spread across the stone, revealing pits and chinks in the deceptively smooth surface. The mark was there, etched into the flat rock.
“Cressida?” Ian said.
She startled, realizing he was no longer on the phone with Sean. She twisted to face him without leaving her corner.
“We need to head for the rendezvous with Logan’s Raptor team.”
She shook her head, feeling dazed. “We’re here.”
His brow furrowed. “What?”
“We made it. This is it. We’ve found T. E. Lawrence’s stone house.” She pointed to the exposed flat rock. “That’s the entrance to the tunnel. Lawrence etched his initials into the rock, just like he’d marked it on the map.”