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‘That sounds like an excellent idea,’ his father said jovially.

‘Ah!’ Little Ben remembered something, opening his pack and taking out a package for his father.

‘What’s this?’ The older man asked curiously.

‘Your friend sent you this. He said you should guard it in the vault, and it couldn’t be in better hands.’

Ben Isaac had no idea what his son was talking about.

‘You’ve never mentioned him,’ little Ben observed.

‘Who?’ his father asked.

‘JC.’

‘Let’s go, darling,’ Myriam called, hugging her son. ‘Go take your shower and rest.’

She walked her son to the door and stopped to look at Ben Isaac.

‘Are you coming?’

‘In a minute,’ he replied.

He walked to the vault with the package in his hand. It should contain a large bound book inside.

He descended the twenty steps and walked to the solid door. He was nervous. Who was this JC, whom both his son and Sarah mentioned?

He entered the code to open the door: KHRISTOS.

He placed his eyes in front of the screen and a blue light read his retina. Entry authorized.

He entered a cold chamber as soon as the heavy door opened. He didn’t have the courage to look at the showcases. He felt sad about not being able to look at the written words of the parchments again.

He turned in front of the door to unwrap the package his son had given him. Inside was a book protected by a plastic bag with a hermetic seal. There was a Post-it attached. He read the message.

Nothing has changed, except only you and I know, and I’ve already forgotten.

He opened the seal and took the book out very carefully. He was completely perplexed. Nothing has changed?

The cover revealed nothing, but the first page said it all.

The History of Jesus, the Nazarite.

The entire text was written in Hebrew.

Tears ran down his face. The experience sent waves of anxiety through him.

He turned some of the pages, yellowed with time, of the ancient transcription. The story of Jesus according to Mathew, John, Simon Kepha, Judas Tome, Phillip, Bar Talmay, Myriam. It was all there, a testimony from those days.

He would guard it in one of the showcases, since there was room now. He went over and looked at the displays, astonished. There, immune to the passage of time, were the Gospel of Jesus and the inscription placing Jesus in Rome in A.D. 45. How could that be? Only one of the showcases was empty, the one containing the Status Quo agreements of 1960 and 1985.

He read the Post-it over again and smiled incredulously. Nothing has changed, except only you and I know, and I’ve already forgotten.

Who was this new unknown friend, known by two letters that could mean nothing? He glanced at the inscription and the Gospel of Jesus again and locked the new item very carefully in the empty showcase.

He returned to the heavy door and looked at the three showcases. He took a deep breath and turned his back. The world always sets things right.

70

God had expressed Himself, but for the first time he hadn’t understood Him. Since he first found Him in the Holy Scriptures that had turned him into His most faithful servant. He had sent him Aloysius, who had guided him through the meanderings of the Word and the Mystery, teaching him the true meaning of all the passages of the Bible.

Tonight God had sent him a message he couldn’t decipher. The pain in his shoulders made him almost lose consciousness. He was laid out on the backseat of the car Aloysius was driving.

‘I should take you to the hospital, Nicolas,’ his worried tutor advised.

‘No, Professor. I’ll deal with this at home,’ he said, in pain.

‘I hope you know what you’re doing.’

Aloysius, or Schmidt, or the Austrian iceman, was devastated by what had happened. Everything overthrown by a stranger, a legend.

He had no doubt he had started a war with the church and if things were bad now, they would only get worse.

She was already in bed when they arrived. She was awakened by loud knocking on the door. She hurried to open it, and saw an unknown man walk in behind Nicolas, who was wounded.

‘My God!’ she stammered, frightened.

Nicolas lay down on the floor, full of pain. ‘You don’t need to stay, Aloysius. She’ll take care of me. Get some rest.’

Aloysius looked hesitant, then said to him, ‘If you need anything, call me. Do you hear?’

‘Of course,’ Nicolas agreed.

‘Did you hear me?’ Aloysius asked her arrogantly.

‘Yes, sir,’ she replied.

Nicolas twisted on the floor, sweating, moaning, and shivering. ‘Get me the first-aid kit,’ he ordered his wife.

She hurried to obey. She heated some water, brought clean towels, and a knife to use as a scalpel if necessary.

She took scissors and cut his shirt away from the wounds to begin the operation. None of the bullets had exited.

‘You’re going to have to get them out,’ he told her. ‘Go and get the case out of my dresser drawer.’

She obeyed and came back in a few moments with a small black case. She knelt down by him and opened it. It was full of containers, needles, and a syringe. She recognized the syringe and could almost feel the fluid injected into her veins, more times than she could remember.

‘Attach the needle to the syringe, insert it into the flask, and extract the fluid,’ he explained, almost fainting.

She did it with some difficulty, then repeated the gesture she’d seen him perform so often, squeezing the syringe until a few drops left the needle.

She started to insert it in his arm, but he grabbed her hand hard. He gasped with pain.

‘Wait. Get the book from the pocket of my shirt.’

She put the syringe on the floor and found the book easily. It was the paperback Bible.

‘Open it at random,’ he ordered.

She did.

‘Choose a verse and read it to me.’

Her voice was nervous, but then gained strength at the end. ‘Behold the eyes of the Lord are on those who fear Him, on those who hope for his mercy.’

He thought about the words she read him for a few moments and made a decision. ‘I’m ready.’

She looked at the needle and injected the contents of the syringe. It would take 120 seconds to take effect.

He raised his head suddenly and frightened her. He seemed delirious.

‘Will everything be all right, Mother?’ he asked. ‘Tell me everything will be all right, Mama.’

She stroked his hair.

‘Shhh. Rest. Everything’s fine, my son. It’ll go away.’

Two minutes passed and Nicolas fell into a deep sleep. There was no more pain, doubt, or disillusion. Everything was perfect.

She opened the small pocket Bible again at random and read the first verse her eyes hit upon. I will place my hopes in the Lord; I will hope for the God of my salvation; my God will hear me.

She took a deep breath and picked up the knife she’d found in the kitchen. She looked at Nicolas’s serene face, breathing peacefully, imprisoned in a drug-induced sleep. Her first stab was right in his heart, the second, an inch or so to the side. She continued stabbing his chest eighteen times, her fury increasing with each motion. When she stopped, she looked again at his peaceful face. He wasn’t breathing.

She took her time washing Nicolas’s blood off her skin. A hot, restoring bath, whose steam billowed into a cloud on the ceiling of the bathroom. She put on a blue dress with a jacket and packed a small suitcase into which she put Nicolas’s Bible. He didn’t need it anymore. She carried the suitcase to the hall and went to his room, to his first dresser drawer, where there was another case, larger than the one that held the syringe. Inside were stacks of fifty-euro bills. She emptied the box and went to the hall for her suitcase. She looked at Nicolas’s corpse one last time. He appeared to be sleeping.

‘We’ll see each other in hell, Nicolas,’ she said bitterly before going out into the cold, dark night.