Interestingly, however, the golden pyramidion on the Paris Obelisk is only a very recent addition-it was added to the great stone needle in 1998.
"Pooh," West said as he drove, "you checked the catacombs?"
"I did. They"re clear. The entry gate is under the Charles de Gaulle Bridge and the tunnel runs all the way under the Boulevard Diderot. Lock has been disabled."
"Stretch. The train?"
"TGV service. Platform 23. Leaves at 12:44 p.m. First stop Dijon."
"Good."
As West drove down the Champs-elysees, he eyed the wide boulevard ahead and beheld the Paris Obelisk, rising above the traffic, easily six storeys tall.
He had climbing gear in his car-ropes, hooks, pitons, carabiners-ready to scale the great needle and examine its upper reaches. He figured he"d look like just another reckless thrill-seeker and if he was fast enough, he"d be gone before the police arrived. After that, his team would proceed to the Louvre, for the larger, more dangerous mission.
Only then, as he drove closer, the traffic parted- "Oh, no..." West breathed.
The entire lower half of the Obelisk was concealed by scaffolding. There were three storeys of it, plank-like levels shrouded with netting, like the scaffolding on a construction site.
And at the base of this temporary scaffold structure, guarding its only entrance, were six security guards.
A large sign in French and English apologised for the inconvenience as the Obelisk was covered for "essential cleaning work".
"They"re cleaning cleaning it," Stretch scoffed. "A little convenient, don"t you think? Our European rivals are onto this lead." it," Stretch scoffed. "A little convenient, don"t you think? Our European rivals are onto this lead."
"The Heretical Gospel of St Mark is notorious. There are other copies of it around the world," West said. "Del Piero would surely have one. He must have already checked and measured the Obelisk and since he can"t remove it from here, he"s sealed it off, stopping us from doing the same. Which means-d.a.m.n it-del Piero is one step short of locating Alexander"s Tomb and getting the topmost Piece..."
West gazed at the scaffolding-enclosed Obelisk, re-thinking, re-planning, adapting.
"This changes things. Everyone. Switch of plans. We"re not going to do the Obelisk first anymore. We"re going to take the Louvre first, in the way we planned. Then we"ll grab a look at the Obelisk on the way out."
"You have got got to be kidding," Stretch said. "We"re going to be running for our lives. Half the to be kidding," Stretch said. "We"re going to be running for our lives. Half the gendarmerie gendarmerie will be on our a.s.ses by then." will be on our a.s.ses by then."
"Confronting the Europeans at the Obelisk now will attract too much attention, Stretch," West said. "I was hoping to climb up and down it unnoticed. I can"t do that now. But after we do what we plan to do at the Louvre, Paris is going to be in uproar-a state of chaos that"ll give us the cover we need to get past those guards at the Obelisk. And now that I think about it, our intended escape vehicle will also come in handy."
"I don"t know about this..." Stretch said.
Pooh Bear said, "What you know or don"t know is irrelevant, Israeli. Honestly, your constant doubting grates on me. You"ll do as Huntsman says. He is in command here."
Stretch locked eyes with Pooh Bear, biting his tongue. "Very well then. I will obey."
West said, "Good. The Louvre plan remains the same. Big Ears: you"re with Lily and me; we"re going in. Pooh, Stretch: get the escape vehicle and make sure you"re in position when we jump."
"Will do, Huntsman," Pooh Bear nodded.
Twenty minutes later, West, Lily and Big Ears-gunless-strode through the metal detectors at the entrance to the Louvre.
The building"s famous gla.s.s pyramid soared high above them, bathing the great museum"s atrium in brilliant sunshine.
"I think I"m having another Dan Brown moment," Big Ears said, gazing up at the gla.s.s pyramid.
"They didn"t do what we"re going to do in The Da Vinci Code The Da Vinci Code," West said ominously.
Lily provided the perfect cover; after all, how many s.n.a.t.c.h-andgrab teams enter a building holding the hand of a small child?
West"s cell phone rang.
It was Pooh Bear. "We have the exit vehicle. Ready when you are."
"Give us ten minutes," West said and hung up.
Eight minutes after that, West and Big Ears were both dressed in the white coveralls of the Louvre"s maintenance crew-taken from two unfortunate workers who now lay unconscious in a storeroom in the depths of the museum.
They entered the Denon Wing and ascended the impressive Daru Staircase. The staircase wound back and forth in wide sweeping flights, disappearing and reappearing behind soaring arches, before it revealed, standing proudly on a wide landing...
...the Winged Victory of Samothrace.
She was, quite simply, breathtaking.
The G.o.ddess stood with her chest thrust forward into the wind, her magnificent wings splayed out behind her, her wet tunic pressed against her body, perfectly realised in marble.
Six feet tall and standing on a five-foot-high marble mounting, she towered above the tourists milling around her.
Had her head not been missing, Winged Victory would almost certainly have been as famous as the Venus de Milo-also a resident of the Louvre-for by any measure, the artistry of her carving easily outdid that of the Venus.
The management of the Louvre seemed to recognise this, even if the public did not: Winged Victory stood high up in the building, proudly displayed up on the First Floor, not far from the Mona Lisa, while the Venus stood in confined clutter on an underground level.
The marble mounting on which the great statue stood resembled the pointed prow of a ship, but this had never been a ship.
It had been the armrest of Zeus"s throne, the broken-off tip of the armrest.
If you looked closely, you could see Zeus"s gigantic marble thumb thumb beneath Winged Victory. beneath Winged Victory.
The natural conclusion was mind-blowing: if Victory was this big, then the Statue of Zeus-the actual Wonder itself, now vanished from history-must have been absolutely gigantic gigantic.
Victory"s position on the First Floor of the Denon Wing, however, created a problem for West.
As with the other key exhibits in the Louvre, all items on the First Floor were laser-protected: as soon as a painting or sculpture was moved, it triggered an invisible laser, and steel grilles would descend at every nearby doorway, sealing in the thieves.
On the First Floor, however, there was an extra precaution: the Daru Staircase, with all its twists and bends, could be easily sealed off, trapping any would-be thief up on the First Floor up on the First Floor. You could disturb Victory, but you could never take her anywhere.
Dressed in their maintenance coveralls, West and Big Ears strode up onto the landing and stood before the high statue of Victory.
They proceeded to move some potted trees arrayed around the landing, unnoticed by the light weekday crowd strolling past the statue.
West placed a couple of trees slightly to the left of Victory, while Big Ears placed two of the big pots far out of the way, over by the doorway that led south, toward the side of the Louvre that overlooked the River Seine. Lily stood by this doorway.
No-one noticed them.
They were just workmen going about some unknown but presumably authorised task.
Then West grabbed a rolling "Repair Work in Progress" screen from a nearby storeroom and placed it in front of Victory, blocking her from view.
He looked at Big Ears, who nodded.
Then Jack West Jr swallowed.
He couldn"t believe what he was about to do.
With a deep breath, he stepped up onto the marble podium that was Zeus"s armrest and pushed the Winged Victory of Samothrace- a priceless marble carving 2,200 years old-off its mount, to the floor.
No sooner had Victory tilted an inch off her mount than sirens started blaring and red lights started flashing.
Great steel grilles came thundering down in every doorway- bam!-bam!-bam!-bam! bam!-bam!-bam!-bam!-sealing off the stairwell and the landing.
All except one doorway.
The southern doorway.
Its grille whizzed down on its runners- -only to bang to a halt two feet off the ground, stopped by the two solid treepots that Big Ears had placed beneath it moments earlier.
The getaway route.
Victory herself landed in the two potted trees that West had placed to her left, her fall cushioned by them.
West rushed to the upturned statue, and examined her feet, or rather the small cube-shaped marble pedestal on which her feet stood.
He pulled out a big wrench he"d taken from the maintenance room.
"May every archaeologist in the world forgive me," he whispered as he swung down hard with the wrench.
Crack. Crack. Craaaack.
The tourists on the landing didn"t know what was going on. A couple of men stepped forward to investigate the activity behind the screen, but Big Ears blocked their way with a fierce glare.
After West"s three heavy blows, the little marble pedestal was no more-but revealed within it was a perfect trapezoid of solid gold, a perfect trapezoid of solid gold, maybe eighteen inches to a side. maybe eighteen inches to a side.
The Third Piece of the Capstone.
It had been embedded in Victory"s marble pedestal.
"Lily!" West called. "Get a look at this thing! In case we lose it later!"
Lily came over, gazed at the l.u.s.trous golden trapezoid, at the mysterious symbols carved into its top side.
"More lines of the two incantations," she said.
"Good. Now let"s go," West said.
The Piece went into Big Ears"s st.u.r.dy backpack and, with Lily running in the lead, suddenly they were off, sliding under the propped-open grille that led south.
No sooner were they through than West and Big Ears kicked the pot plants free and the grille slammed fully shut behind them.
Running flat out down a long long corridor, legs pumping, hearts pounding.
Shouts came from behind them-shouts in French, from the museum guards giving chase.
West spoke into his radio mike: "Pooh Bear! Are you out there?"
"We"re waiting! I hope you use the right window!"
"We"ll find out soon enough!"
The corridor West was running down ended at a dramatic right-hand corner. This corner opened onto a superlong hallway that was actually the extreme southern flank of the Louvre. The hallway"s entire left-hand wall was filled with masterpieces and the occasional high French window looking out over the Seine.
And right then, a second team of armed museum guards were running down it, shouting.
West hurled his huge wrench at the first French window in the hallway, shattering it. Gla.s.s sprayed everywhere.
He peered out the window.
To see Pooh Bear staring back at him, level with him, only a few feet away...
...standing on the open top deck of a double-decker bus!
Only one thing stands between the Louvre and the River Seine: a thin strip of road called the Quai des Tuileries. It is a long riverside roadway that follows the course of the river, variously rising and falling-rising up to bridges and dipping down into tunnels and underpa.s.ses.
It was on this road that Pooh Bear"s recently-stolen double-decker bus now stood, parked alongside the Palais du Louvre. It was one of those bright red open-topped double-deckers that drive tourists around Paris, London and New York, allowing them to look up and around with ease.
"Well! What are you waiting for!" Pooh Bear yelled. "Come on!"
"Right!"
West threw Lily across first, then pushed Big Ears with the Piece in his backpack, before finally jumping from the First Floor window onto the double-decker bus-just as the onrushing guards in the hallway started firing at him.
A second after his feet hit the open top deck of the bus, Stretch, in the driver"s seat, hit the gas and the bus took off and the chase began.
The big red double-decker bus rocked precariously as Stretch threw it through the midday Paris traffic at speeds it was never meant to reach.
Police sirens could be heard in the distance.