The Temple Mount Code (20 page)

Read The Temple Mount Code Online

Authors: Charles Brokaw

BOOK: The Temple Mount Code
2.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

In the days of Herod the Great (37–04
BC
), the families of important temple priests had lived in mansions throughout the area. Excavations by the Institute of Archaeology of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Israel Exploration Society, and the Israel Department of Antiquities (now known as the Israel Antiquities Authority) started in 1968, shortly after the Six-Day War.

From 1969 to 1982, those excavations were directed by Dr. Nahman Avigad. The archaeologist had also published one of the Dead Sea Scrolls, helped with the Masada excavation, and found the Broad Wall that protected the city during King Hezekiah’s reign in the late eighth century
BC
. Lourds loved the man’s work, but what fascinated him most was Avigad’s study of Hebrew seals. One of the seals, according to Avigad, had belonged to Queen Jezebel. Despite peer challenges, Avigad had stuck to his guns in his claims.

The Burnt House had always captivated Lourds’s attention as one of the most intriguing artifacts that had been discovered. It had been found under ashes, informing excavators that the building had burned down, but the ground floor was miraculously saved.

Lourds stood in the doorway for a moment and imagined what it must have been like before the restoration efforts. Avigad and his people still had so many incredible finds ahead of them: the stone kitchenware that was used instead of pottery to keep the cleanliness by edict of the Halacha, the Roman-period oil lamps and inkwells, the perfume workshop tools that included measuring cups and bowls, an iron spear that might have belonged to a Jewish fighter, and the ghastly remains of a young woman’s arm from fingertips to elbow.

That sight had stayed in Lourds’s mind. The arm bones had been buried according to Jewish custom, but pictures of the find remained on display.

A short distance farther on, Lourds found the
mikveh,
the ritual bath used by men and women. Regulations varied widely among the different interpretations of the religion, but most agreed that the ritual baths had to be fed by natural springs and be deep enough to cover the person bathing.

The
mikveh
was constructed of stone and had two doorways at the top of the steps: one for entering and one for leaving. Lourds went down when no one else was there. He took the Black Scorpion blacklight he’d purchased from the electronics store from his pocket.

He stopped at the bottom of the
mikveh’s
stone steps, then turned to his right and tracked the blacklight beam across the stones, counting as he went.

Thomas, if I ever have anything that is important and must be found, I will leave it where you can find it. Only you and I will know of this place. If, for whatever reason, I cannot finish my study of whatever this thing might be, I want you to promise me that you will look for it.

They’d been drunk at the time. It had been after Lev had gotten out of the hospital and been fitted with his prosthetic leg, after which walking with the prosthesis had proven both sad and hilarious.

As a boy, Lourds had fallen in love with the old Doc Savage pulps, and Lev had shared a love of them. In the stories, Doc Savage and his aides were forever leaving messages for each other written in ultraviolet chalk.

Over the years, Lev had occasionally left messages for Lourds in different places. Never the
mikveh.
That place was sacred, meant for only the holiest of things.

Lourds knew that if Lev had truly been working on something important, earthshakingly important, he would have left a clue there. He hoped there was nothing there.

Then the blacklight touched the message and brought it to vibrant life.

THOMAS

CENTRAL BUS STATION

B-34

GO WITH GOD, MY FRIEND

26

Schloss Volker

Vienna, Austria

August 5, 2011

Von Volker stared at Colonel Davari’s face on the computer monitor. The telephone connection linking them was heavily encrypted, but they still remained careful.

‘Thomas Lourds has arrived in Jerusalem.’ The colonel’s tone was accusatory, as if Von Volker himself were to blame for the professor’s appearance in the city.

‘I know. I have men watching him even as we speak.’

‘Then why haven’t they taken him into their custody?’

‘Because we have to be careful. The police are watching Lourds, and somewhere out there you can bet the Mossad are also watching. I shouldn’t have to remind you that if the Mossad finds out about me, they will also find out about you. Austria’s political sympathies lie with the Ayatollah, at least for the moment.’

‘What is he doing over there?’

That told Von Volker a lot, and he had to keep himself from smiling. Evidently Davari’s intelligence sources didn’t run that deeply into Jerusalem.

Or maybe he had pulled his people back to leave Von Volker hanging as a Judas goat. That thought didn’t settle quite so easily, and took away some of the superiority the Austrian felt.

‘For the moment, Lourds seems to be sniffing around, looking for whatever crumbs might be left of his old friend.’

‘I trust nothing was left that we need to worry about.’

‘I had Strauss’s computer and the artifacts by his desk smuggled out of the country. They’ve been arriving over the last couple of days. I’ve got people going through them this very moment. If there is anything to be found, any clue of the Book or the Scroll, they will find it.’

‘And you will call me.’

‘Of course.’

Without another word, Davari broke the connection.

Despite his casual conversation with the colonel, Von Volker was tense. If Davari was getting hard to get along with, Von Volker knew the Ayatollah would be even more so. If something didn’t happen soon, blood would spill, and some of it might be his.

He rose from the plush leather chair and walked out of the office. In the hallway, he turned toward the former two back bedrooms, now one very large bedroom. When Lev Strauss’s things had started arriving, Von Volker had hired a crew to remove the wall to allow more room for his specialists. After this project was completed, he would have the wall rebuilt.

He walked into the room.

Instantly, one of the older men got to his feet and approached.


Herr
Von Volker, it’s a pleasure to see you.’ The older man knew better than to offer his hand, and bowed his head instead.

‘Have you any news to report, Professor Gustav?’

‘We are proceeding according to schedule.’ Gustav waved to the artifacts that lined the tables. ‘There were many things in this collection, and the cataloguing takes time. If I may suggest,
Herr
Von Volker, your wife is a trained archaeologist, and many of these things are surely within her field of study.’

Von Volker glared at the man. ‘Are you telling me that your skills are not up to this task, Professor Gustav?’

The old man paled. ‘No. Certainly not. I was just thinking that another pair of hands would – ’

‘Then you presume to tell me my business.’

‘No,
Herr
Von Volker. Certainly not. I will do as you wish to the best of my ability.’

‘Good. Anything less will get you released.’
And your body dumped at the bottom of a lake.
Von Volker refrained from saying the last, so that it would be a surprise. Gustav and his group of experts were headed for the bottom of a lake anyway when the time came.

‘It will not be a problem.’

‘There are more deliveries forthcoming. They should arrive tomorrow or by Monday.’

‘Of course. We will make room.’

Von Volker walked back out of the room and spotted Alice in the hallway in her lounging wear and a robe, a wine glass in her hand. He wondered if she had heard any of the conversation.

‘How is your
secret
project going?’

‘Fine.’ Von Volker put on a small smile.

‘You still haven’t told me what it’s about. Or why strangers stay so long at our house, or why the wall was torn out?’

‘The wall was torn out to make room for the strangers. That should be obvious.’

She frowned at him and sipped her drink.

‘As for the rest of it, that shall remain my secret for a time longer.’

‘Whatever.’ Alice lifted one slim shoulder and dropped it. She looked at him. ‘Would you like a drink?’

‘No. Thank you.’

‘Are you coming to bed?’

Von Volker was almost tempted. It wasn’t often his wife asked him to bed, but she did so every now and again when she wanted something. He supposed she might have grown tired of her car. ‘I’m afraid I can’t. Business, you see. There is the rally tomorrow night. I must make sure things are ready. People are depending on me.’

She nodded and even managed to look a little disappointed. She turned and walked away. ‘Well, if you should change your mind …’

Watching her hips twitch so provocatively, Von Volker almost changed his mind. But he knew he had things to do. If the Ayatollah got his precious Book, and it even came close to doing what the man thought it would do, Von Volker knew the Austrian and German people had to be ready.

If the Ayatollah unleashed a global
jihad
, a brand-new powder keg lit in the Middle East would go a long way to paving the road for a larger, more powerful Germany. And Austria would be the crown jewel of that new unification.

And Von Volker was going to make sure that when the time came, he would be the man wearing that crown.

August 6

Alice lay in bed for more than two hours. First she heard her husband leave, watching out the window as his car drove into the night. Then she heard the men in the renovated bedrooms pack up their gear and leave.

The clock beside the bed showed 12:34 a.m. And they would be back no later than seven in the morning. Even though they were staying in one of the guesthouses and had no long drive ahead of them, she felt bad for them. Her husband worked them unmercifully.

She lay atop the bed for a while longer, thinking about the conversation she’d overheard her husband having with someone on his computer. Klaus had mentioned Thomas Lourds’s name, something he’d never done in all their years of marriage.

For a moment, she thought back to the last time she’d had sex with her husband. She didn’t call it making love because it wasn’t that. And it really wasn’t having sex either, though sometimes his attentions were welcome because she was a young, healthy woman with her own needs.

That night, though, she was certain he’d drugged her. The way she’d felt, so hazy and out of control, and the spectacular headache she’d had the next morning had convinced her Klaus had given her something.

He’d done that before, though he never admitted to it. And each time, the next few days were always awful as her body recovered. When Klaus loosed his inner depravity, he was a beast.

No matter how much she struggled, though, she couldn’t remember that night. They’d talked, she was sure of that, but she had no idea what they’d talked about or even what Klaus would be interested in talking to her about.

She got up, pulled on her robe, and went out into the hallway. She’d worn some of her sexiest lingerie, hoping to seduce Klaus. She did that to him sometimes, and when he was passed out in postcoital bliss, she went through his pockets, his phone, and his PDA.

There was always precious little to find. Klaus was very careful. Sometimes she wondered if he knew what she did and wondered if he thought the layers of duplicity was some grand game. Things like that delighted him.

Out in the hallway, she grew more afraid. This could be some kind of game, too. Leaving the house unattended with the
secret
project here was enticing.

Of course, there was the possibility that he didn’t think she could figure it out. Or that it wouldn’t matter if she did.

He mentioned Thomas by name. There must be a reason.
Alice screwed up her courage and walked to the doors at the other end of the hallway. A fresh security lock had been installed on the door. This one required a thumbprint.

She smiled at that. Klaus did love gadgets, but he wasn’t nearly as clever as he thought he was. A thumbprint-recognition system in a house where he lived was foolish.

It only took her a moment to get a print off his electric razor with a piece of clear tape. Then she pressed the borrowed thumbprint to the door, watched the green bar cycle from top to bottom while it read it, and heard the locking mechanism pop open.

Her breath caught in her throat. If this
was
a trick planned by Klaus, this would be the point at which he would step forward and catch her in the act.

She remained alone in the hallway.

Trembling, she pulled open the door and stepped inside.

As she gazed in wide-eyed wonder at the artifacts revealed on the tables in the moonlight streaming through the windows, she wondered what it could all mean. How was Thomas mixed up in anything her husband might be doing? The only history Klaus was interested in was the German Confederation and how he might be able to bring Austria and Germany together as a large, imposing nation the West would have to acknowledge.

The news had been full of her old lover lately. Although she’d had to keep her interest hidden from Klaus, Alice had followed all the breaking reports about the temple Thomas had located in the Himalayas. She’d also heard that he had left the dig site a few days ago.

That hadn’t sounded like the Thomas Lourds Alice knew. Wild horses and rampaging lions wouldn’t have gotten him away from something like that.

But
something
had.

Alice studied the artifacts, realizing they were an impressive collection of Christian, Judaic, and Islamic pieces. There were centuries-old crosses, Stars of David, a sword-wielding figure that could only be a representation of Iblis, the Islamic devil, who’d been either a jinn and a devoted servant of God or a disobedient angel. That was just one of the many ways Muslim faith diverged. Iblis had been made of fire while Adam had been made of clay, and Iblis had refused to accept that Adam was better. God had thrown Iblis into hell and renamed him Shaitan. Since those days, Shaitan had devoted himself to turning men and women against God.

Other books

Bleak by Lynn Messina
Tragedia en tres actos by Agatha Christie
Choke: A Thriller by Amore, Dani
Black Harvest by Ann Pilling
The Rembrandt Affair by Daniel Silva
Partners in Crime by Anne Stuart