"Two documents from the first century," he informed her at last.
"Important?" Sarah asked uncomfortably.
"Very. One of them is the Gospel of Jesus."
17
W
hen a commandment comes from God, it cannot be questioned. It is known that He always writes without error. His will is law, always, even if it is not written. It will come to pass from that day forward. And if to protect Him certain commandments must be violated, commandments that He himself inscribed and gave to Moses to communicate to us; well, then, let His will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
One of the Ten Commandments he violated constantly,
Thou shalt
not kill,
but He slept like a baby every night since He knew the majesty of His work in the astonishing Creation.
The mail was delivered every week without the name of the sender or the recipient listed, since it could be for only him, for only he and she lived there.
She always woke up before he did and never went to bed unless she was told to or unless he was not at home, which, fortunately, happened frequently. She rarely spoke unless he asked her a question, though she did speak to herself when she was alone. Every day, like taking medi cine, before bed, and first thing in the morning, she had a random pas sage from the Bible to read, or at least that's what she thought.
Tonight he returned without prior warning, and she was still not asleep at nine. She was reading a novel that he didn't know about. Her lip split from the hard slap he gave her and splattered blood on the pillow.
"The sun has already set," he said in a calm voice and with an expression that made it seem the remark should be considered an act of leniency.
"Forgive me," she murmured, her eyes tearing with pain.
She got up and ran for her room.
"Stop," he ordered, and approached her menacingly. He grabbed the book roughly. "I'm confiscating this. Go to your room."
Everything had its time, rules, and discipline. A fault, whatever it was, required a punishment, and the slap in the face that split her lip was not itself the punishment, but a warning.
These outbursts could be avoided if she followed the rules. She knew them backward and forward. She had no excuse to disobey what had been determined.
He looked at the book and read the title,
The Man Who Never
Existed,
by one Hans Schmidt. A heresy in two hundred pages that pre tended to point out the road to salvation. He couldn't understand it. God showed them the way. Why did she have to look for other ways? He was too merciful. Some people needed to learn the hard way how to stay on His track.
He threw the book in the fi replace, which was burning with a hot flame, and opened his briefcase. He took out the last envelope he had received. Inside there was a letterhead with round strokes in large let ters. On the top line he read
AD MAIOREM DEI GLORIAM.
On the next line was De
us vocat,
followed by the name of the chosen ones. Normally there was one name, rarely two. This time he read two: Yaman Zafer and Sigfried Hammal.
He threw the letter and envelope into the fi replace.
He got up and went to see her. She was kneeling by the bed to pray.
The power of prayer. He didn't interrupt her, since nothing is more sacred than the direct contact with God through prayer. To ask forgive ness, grace, an idea, a suggestion, this was the privileged, sacred chan nel that should never be interrupted. He waited with his arms crossed, staring at her. As soon as she made the sign of the cross, signaling the end of the communication, she got up and lay down in bed. He went to a chest at the foot of the bed and opened a drawer. His back was turned to her, so he didn't see her eyes fill with tears, which she quickly wiped away. Her shaking lessened, then stopped, for better or worse. He looked at her and came over. He carried a syringe containing a yellow liquid.
"Give me your arm," he ordered.
She wouldn't. He pulled her to the edge of the bed and inserted the needle. He slowly emptied the syringe and waited. He looked at his watch. Two minutes later she'd be sleeping like a baby. Breathing quietly. A sleep without dreams. A holy repose. He undressed, folding and hanging each piece of clothing on a chair. He got on the bed, on top of her, raised her nightgown, opened her sleeping legs, and entered her. He went in and out in a frenzy, and she never opened her eyes or uttered a sign. A few minutes later he finished, with a few drops of sweat on his face. She remained asleep, unchanged, with the same quiet breathing.
He left her asleep and went to look at the mail. A box in the door with a lock only he had the key to. There was an envelope in it, as he suspected. A cold smile, if it could be called that, spread over his lips. He opened the box and took it out. The same letterhead across the top and then the name of those chosen by God to join Him. He had no time to waste. This time there were three names.
18
T
ell me the story straight," Gavache asked as he leaned his head against the front passenger seat.
Jean-Paul was driving the inspector and the two Italians into the city.
"Saint Ignatius of Loyola was the first to use that saying in the Society of Jesus, which he founded. A
d maiorem Dei gloriam. Fo
r the greater glory of God," Rafael explained.
"Saint," Jacopo mocked.
"Are you telling me the Jesuits go around killing people?"
"No, I'm telling you that
a J
esuit killed
two
people—"
"Three," Jacopo interrupted to correct him.
Gavache's eyes almost jumped out. An exasperated Rafael stared at Jacopo with disdain.
"Three? The count has now gone up to three? Did you hear that, Jean-Paul?" He looked at Rafael like an inquisitor.
"Yes, Inspector. Someone's hiding information." Jean-Paul joined the party.
"That's exactly what I think, Jean-Paul. Somebody's making fun of us. What can you expect from those who preach morality? They only preach morality when they're being immoral, right? But who's fooling us, Jean-Paul?" he looked around and stared at the passengers behind him.
Jean-Paul didn't answer Gavache's rhetorical question since he knew the inspector could be dramatic when necessary.
"I'm sorry, Inspector. I didn't remember that detail," Rafael began uncomfortably. He hated to apologize. Difficult for someone who nor mally did as he pleased . . . in the name of God. Jacopo had to learn to keep his mouth shut, but this could wait. "The third homicide, which chronologically was actually the first, was a Catholic priest in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem."
"When?" demanded Gavache brusquely.
"Three days ago."
"Name?"
"Ernesto Aragones. He was the administrator of the Catholic wing," Rafael clarified. He was still on shaky ground.
"Why do you say the Catholic wing?"
"Because the Church of the Holy Sepulcher is administered by six distinct churches."
"Did you hear that, Jean-Paul?"
"A real mess, Inspector." Jean-Paul kept his eyes on the road.
A light rain continued to fall, glazing over the windshield irritat ingly. The wipers dirtied the windshield more than cleaning it off, forc ing Jean-Paul to double his focus.
"How can six churches fit into one?" He turned around, facing the road. Spending so much time twisted around to the back was giving him a crick in the neck.
"Do you know the importance of this church?"
Gavache didn't answer, as if he were thinking about it, but Rafael realized that he was just irritating him.
"It's the most important."
"Exactly. It marks the place where Jesus was crucified and buried."
"Supposedly," Jacopo added, as if that one word made all the difference.
"I see your friend is not very Catholic," Gavache offered, amused but not smiling.
"Not at all Catholic," Jacopo added. "Not a drop."
"So why'd you come?"
Jacopo didn't know what to say. He'd rehearsed answers for every possible question, but he didn't know how to answer that.
"Jacopo is an eminent historian at the University of Rome, La Sapi enza," Rafael said. "He came because he was a friend of Yaman Zafer."
"And of Sigfried Hammal?"
"I think we met at a conference in '85, but it wasn't important enough to remember," Jacopo offered in a timid voice.
"And this Ernesto Aragones," Gavache insisted.
"I've never heard of him."
Gavache was silent a few moments. The only sound was the car moving on the street.
"Where were we?" he asked after some time.
"How is it six churches can fi t in one?" Jean-Paul remembered, as if it were nothing.
"Exactly. How?" Gavache repeated.
Rafael explained. "As we said, this church is the most important of all the ancient churches, for historical reasons." He stared hard at Jacopo. "A treaty worked out with the Ottomans in the 1850s divided the custody of the church and adjacent residences between Roman Catholics, Greek Orthodox, Armenians, Copts, Syrians, and Ethiopi ans. They named a neutral watchman."
"Watchman?" Gavache asked.
"The person who locks and unlocks the church," Rafael explained. "They named a Muslim watchman."
"What a happy world in which all the religions live together in peace," Gavache said sarcastically.
Rafael ignored the remark. "This treaty is called the Status Quo."
Gavache absorbed the historical information and wet his lips.
"Now the million-dollar question." He permitted himself a few seconds of suspense and turned toward the back. He massaged his neck to ease the pain. He wanted to see their faces when they replied. "Did Ernesto Aragones, Yaman Zafer, and Sigfried Hammal know each other?"
The two passengers in the back looked at each other.
"I have no idea," Rafael answered.
"I don't know what to tell you," was Jacopo's response.
"Hmm . . . do you think they'd give the same answers if they were in separate rooms, Jean-Paul?"
"I have no idea, Inspector. I don't know what to tell you," the sub ordinate replied.
Gavache was a falcon. He hovered over his prey several times before sinking in his talons.
"Are the crimes related? How did the other one die?"
"A bullet in the back of the neck."
Gavache sighed. "Is this a Jesuit practice?" Sarcasm at a new level. "A priest, an archaeologist, a theologian," he said, speaking more to himself than to the others. "We know the archaeologist and theologian are related. The priest's death differs in the modus operandi. Here I am with a priest and historian who keep the best information to them selves and sweet-talk me. Do you think we can trust them, Jean-Paul?"
"I don't know what to say, Inspector. Are you greedy?"
"I'm greedy, Jean-Paul. Of course I'm greedy. I'd rather have a bag of candy in my hand than have them handed to me one at a time, or have to beg them to give me more."
"There's your answer, Inspector."
Their dialogue irritated Rafael and made Jacopo apprehensive.
"Inspector Gavache, I've given you everything I have," Rafael offered, attempting an excuse."I didn't mention the crime in Jerusalem because I didn't think it was related. As you yourself said, the modus operandi is different. It could have been the same murderer or not. I didn't try to trick you. I hope you understand that. It's been a terrible week for us."
"And I have two related deaths on French territory, in less than twenty-four hours, in the capital and the south. Do you think that's easy?" Gavache countered.
"That's not what I was trying to say," Rafael said, in his own defense. It wasn't easy to argue with Gavache. Actually it was impossible. He'd never win this kind of argument. He decided to leave things the way they were.
Silence settled in again. Jean-Paul drove through the heart of down town Paris. Perhaps because it was still before the morning rush hour, there was not much traffic, and it was easy to drive. Several minutes passed in a deafening silence that could have been counted out by a heavy ticktock. Ti
cktock
. Ti
cktock
. Ti
cktock
.
Rafael recognized the street, Boulevard du Temple. Boulevard des Filles du Calvaire followed, farther along rue de Saint-Antoine.
"Why did you ask help from the Vatican?" Rafael asked.
Gavache didn't answer at once. He looked ahead like Jean-Paul, turn ing over in his mind everything that had been said, the good and bad.
"The Vatican was mentioned on your friend's recording," he fi nally said. "But something else intrigued me even more."
Rafael leaned against the seat in front. He was very attentive."What?"
"The murderer said the pope would pray for him. It could have been an innocent remark, but to me it means that your Jesuit did what he did on his orders."
"Are you crazy?" Rafael exclaimed. "That doesn't make sense."
"I'm only a layman. If you have a better explanation, I'm all ears," Gavache said ironically.
"Does it make sense that the Holy Father would hire a murderer and later agree to help in the investigation of a crime he himself ordered?"
"You know as well as I do that criminals sometimes testify in crimes they themselves perpetrated. It wouldn't be the fi rst time."
"What we have here is a Jesuit out of control . . . with his own per sonal agenda," Rafael compromised.