
Thunder echoed through the masonry walls. The winter storm had struck just after midnight, opening
with a riotous volley of hail, followed by a deluge that threatened to wash London into the Thames.
Lightning danced across the skies in forked displays from one horizon to another. According to the
weatherman on the Beeb, it was one of the fiercest electrical storms in over a decade. Half the city had
been blacked out, overwhelmed by a spectacular lightning barrage.
And as fortune would have it for Harry, it washis half of the city that went dark, including the British
Museum on Great Russell Street. Though they had backup generators, the entire security team had been
summoned for additional protection of the museum’s property. They would be arriving in the next half
hour. But Harry, assigned to the night shift, was already on duty when the regular lights went out. And
though the video surveillance cameras were still operational on the emergency grid, he and the shift were
ordered by Fleming to proceed with an immediate security sweep of the museum’s two and a half miles
of halls.
That meant splitting up.
Harry picked up his electric torch and aimed it down the hall. He hated doing rounds at night, when the
museum was lost in gloom. The only illumination came from the streetlamps outside the windows. But
now, with the blackout, even those lamps had been extinguished. The museum had darkened to macabre
shadows broken by pools of crimson from the low-voltage security lamps.
Harry had needed a few hits of nicotine to steel his nerve, but he could put off his duty no longer. Being
the low man on the night shift’s pecking order, he had been assigned to run the halls of the north wing, the
farthest point from their underground security nest. But that didn’t mean he couldn’t take a shortcut.
Turning his back on the long hall ahead, he crossed to the door leading into the Queen Elizabeth II Great
Court.
This central two-acre court was surrounded by the four wings of the British Museum. At its heart rose
the great copper-domed Round Reading Room, one of the world’s finest libraries. Overhead, the entire
two-acre courtyard had been enclosed by a gigantic Foster and Partners–designed geodesic roof,
creating Europe’s largest covered square.
Using his passkey, Harry ducked into the cavernous space. Like the museum proper, the court was lost
to darkness. Rain pattered against the glass roof far overhead. Still, Harry’s footsteps echoed across the
open space. Another lance of lightning shattered across the sky. The roof, divided into a thousand
triangular panes, lit up for a blinding moment. Then darkness drowned back over the museum, drumming
down with the rain.
Thunder followed, felt deep in the chest. The roof rattled, too. Harry ducked a bit, fearing the entire
structure would come crashing down.
With his electric torch pointed forward, he crossed the court, heading for the north wing. He rounded
past the central Reading Room. Lightning flashed again, brightening the place for a handful of heartbeats.
Giant statues, lost to the darkness, appeared as if from nowhere.The Lion of Cnidos reared beside the
massive head of an Easter Island statue. Then darkness swallowed the guardians away as the lightning
died out.
Harry felt a chill and pebbling of gooseflesh.
His pace hurried. He swore under his breath with each step, “Bleeding buggered pieces of crap…” His
litany helped calm him.