PART FOUR - BODRUM
- 6 -
It was at least a larger, roomier, airier cell than the one in which they had locked him back in Cambridge. Other than that, however, this situation had a distressing sense of familiarity to Gabe. This time he had not blacked out when assaulted by the bald eunuch assassins, but he had been far too fearful and panicked to notice especially where they were being taken. All that he knew was that they were still in Bodrum, they had not been moved that far. The Hospitallers must have a base of operations designed to be close by their original castle.
This time, of course, there was also the difference that he was not alone. The room had probably once served as a wine cellar. It was long and thin with a vaulted ceiling. However, one side of the room had been converted into a series of cage like cells made up of iron bars and locked gates. Gabe sat on a hard wooden bench in one of these cells. In the next one along, Saphy was pacing back and forth, separated from Gabe by just a set of bars. Next to her, the naiad sat in the centre of the floor, unmoving, staring defiantly out. In the other half of the room, there were a pair of guards in the black Hospitaller robes.
There were a lot of these guards around. The whole operation here seemed a lot more efficient and organised than it had in Cambridge. They had been subject to a pretty exhaustive search when they had been brought in here. They had been stripped and dressed in shapeless white smocks that covered most of their bodies in one piece of material. Gabe's ubiquitous bag of camera equipment now lay in the corner of the room, unreachable on the other side of the bars. A little nearer, but still beyond grasp of their hands, there was a pile of their clothes.
Gabe watched as Saphy paced, his own slumped despairing posture was the complete opposite to her fidgety inability to remain still for a moment. In the third cell, the naiad was as unmoving as Gabe, but her face had an expression of calm that he could not feel. He could see no way out now and knew that as soon as the Hospitallers and Gerard could extract what they needed to know from the naiad then he and Saphy would rapidly become surplus to the warrior monks' requirements.
Saphy seemed lost in her own thoughts, trying desperately to figure something out. Her eyes mostly remained fixed to the floor as she paced like a caged zoo animal, always following the same track. Gabe could feel the eyes of the guards on him, though, even from behind the black shadow of their hooded robes. It made him feel uncomfortable about even moving. He felt very exposed, trapped and watched. For a moment, he wondered how the subjects of his photographs felt, knowing he was always there watching from behind his camera. He didn't much like the thought.
Footsteps sounded on the stairs leading down to the cellar. There was a certain degree of urgency to the sound that made Gabe's heart jump with fear. Saphy stopped pacing and looked up, catching Gabe's eye. She had a look of steely determination and, last week, that was all that Gabe would have noticed in her look. Now, however, he could see beyond that, could see the fear that was in his eyes mirrored back in hers. She opened her mouth to speak, but was silenced instantly by an angry word from the guard.
The door to the cellar flew open and in strode Dr. Gerard, the Grand Prior, flanked by two of his robed henchmen. All three were dressed in the order's black robes with white crosses, but their hoods were down to reveal their faces. Looking up, Gabe realised that the two men accompanying Gerard were equally familiar. It was DI Gilbert and DS Godfrey from the Cambridge Police Force. Gilbert gave him a nasty looking smirk. Godfrey, meanwhile focused his attention on the beautiful naiad in the third cell.
"We'll deal with you later," Gerard dismissively turned from Gabe and Saphy and walked quickly over to the cell where the naiad was being held, "You, however, can tell us just what we need to know right now," he said to her, then to the guards, "Unlock this cell and bring her with me."
Godfrey opened the door of the cell and walked over to where the naiad sat silently on the bench. He laid his hand on the small young woman's shoulder, but, before anyone in the room had time really to comprehend what was happening, he doubled over in pain. The naiad's hand had moved at incredible speed and struck the detective hard in his solar plexus. In a second, she had sprung up, swinging on the bars of the cell, her leg spun and landed a hard kick to the side of Godfrey's head, bringing him to the floor.
He struggled to get to his feet and, in doing so, swung his fist wildly at the spot where she had been standing. She was simply too fast for him ever to make use of his superior size and strength. Before he could stand, she was on top of him, her hands wrapped around his head. With a sickening crack that made Gabe gasp out loud, she twisted his head in her hands, snapping his neck, and dropping his limp body to the floor.
"Impressive," came the sound of Gerard's sneering, superior voice as he clapped his hands together, "But completely useless."
Gabe turned his attention from the naiad and saw that the other three Hospitallers had now approached. All had drawn their guns. The naiad looked around for a way out but found none and was soon taken by both arms by the two hooded guards that had been standing by the door.
"You can kill me if you will, I will never reveal the secrets of my sisterhood," she spat out defiantly.
"Oh I won't kill you," Gerard replied, "Not yet, anyway. I've got something much better in store for you. Well, better for me, worse for you."
He led the way as the two guards escorted the naiad from the room. Gilbert stood behind, staring at his police partner with shocked awe.
"Get rid of that body," Gerard said, turning back to him before leaving the cellar.
Gilbert glared angrily at Saphy and Gabe as he dragged his partner's heavy corpse from the room, never saying anything but conveying quite clearly in his eyes the feeling of hate he had toward them, hate and blame for what he had just witnessed the naiad do. He slammed the door behind him and the sound of him angrily dragging his partner's body continued for some time.
Gabe and Saphy, locked in their adjoining cells, were left alone in the cellar. For a few moments they stayed in complete silence, just trying to absorb what had just happened. Saphy was no longer pacing, she just stared across the cellar, unspeaking.
"She'll be OK," Gabe said, just wanting to break the silence, "She can handle herself."
Finally, Saphy turned to face him, but what she said next did not appear to follow on at all from what he had said, nor what had just happened.
"Back in the cave," she began to say, to Gabe's surprise, "Why the hell did you dive into that pool of dirty slime like that?"
"Honestly? I have no idea," Gabe replied, "I just felt compelled to do it, like I really needed to feel it."
"What were you hoping to get out of it?" Saphy questioned.
"I...I just needed to do it. I can't answer more than that. I wasn't really thinking rationally."
"Because, to my mind there's only two possible outcomes," Saphy had come right up to the bars separating their two cells now, turning her smart, sharp gaze thoughtfully on him, "Either this really was the mythological Fountain of Salmacis and, by diving in, you would become a woman, or it's just an old puddle of stagnant water and, by diving in, you'd have got wet, cold and dirty. So, why would you want either?"