“One old man I met called these a compass,” I went on. “I don’t know what he meant. I don’t know how much any of this is true. I’ve been operating on science, faith, and speculation since I fled Paris a year ago. But the pyramids seem to encode sophisticated mathematics that no primitive people would know. And where did civilization come from? In Egypt, it seemed to spring wholly formed. The legend is that human knowledge of architecture, writing, medicine, and astronomy came from a being called Thoth, who became an Egyptian god, predecessor of the Greek god Hermes. Thoth supposedly wrote a book of wisdom, a book so powerful that it could be used for evil as well as good. The Egyptian pharaohs, realizing its potency, safeguarded it under the Great Pyramid. But if Moses stole it, the book may have—must have—been brought here by the Jews.”
“Moses didn’t even get to the Promised Land,” objected Miriam.
“He died on Mount Nebo, looking across the river Jordan. He was not allowed by God to enter.”
“But his successors came, with the ark. What if this book was part of the ark, or supplemented it? What if it was secreted under Solomon’s Temple? And what if it survived the destruction of the First Temple by Nebuchadnezzar and the Babylonians and the Second Temple by Titus and the Romans? What if it’s still here, waiting to be rediscovered? And what if it is found first by Bonaparte, who dreams of being another Alexander? Or by the followers of Count Alessandro t h e
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Silano, who dream of enriching themselves and their corrupt Egyptian Rite of Freemasonry? What if Silano survived his fall from my balloon, even if Astiza did not? This book could tip the balance of power. It must be found and safeguarded or, if worse comes to worst, destroyed. All I’m saying is we have to look in every likely place before those French do.”
“You live in my house, and work at my forge, and not until now do you tell me this?” Jericho was annoyed, and yet was looking curiously at my seraphim.
“I’ve tried to leave you and Miriam out of all this. It’s a nightmare, not a privilege. But now, if you know of underground tunnels you must help me find them. The French will not give up. We’re in a race.”
“I’m a smith, not an explorer.”
“And I’m a mere trade representative caught up in distant wars, not a soldier. Sometimes we’re called to things, Jericho. You’ve been called to help me with this.”
“To find Moses’ magic book.”
“Not Moses. Thoth.”
“Ah. To find a book written by a mythical god, a false idol.”
“No! To prevent the wrong people—the renegade Egyptian Rite of Freemasonry—from harnessing its power for evil.” My frustration was rising because I knew how insane I sounded.
“The Egyptian Rite?”
“You remember the rumors of them in England, brother,” Miriam said. “A secret society, said to have dark practices. Other Masons abhorred them.”
“Yes, that’s right,” I encouraged. “I suspect the man who attacked your sister is one of them.”
“But I work with hard iron and hot fire,” Jericho protested. “Tangible things. I know nothing of ancient Jerusalem or hidden tunnels or lost books or renegade Masons.”
I grimaced. How could I enlist him?
“Yet we know there is a scholar in this city who has researched the ancient pathways,” Miriam allowed.
“You don’t mean the usurer!”
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“He’s a student of the past, brother.”
“A historian?” I interrupted. It sounded like Enoch, who had helped me in Egypt.
“More like a mutilated tax collector, but no one knows more about the history of Jerusalem,” Jericho conceded. “Miriam has befriended him. We need lanterns, picks, help from Sidney Smith . . . and the counsel of Haim Farhi.”
“And who is he?” I said cheerfully, relieved the blacksmith was helping.
“A man who knows more than anyone about the treasure hunters who came before you—the Christian knights who may have beaten you to your quest.”
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I expected Haim Farhi would have some of the Aristotle-like gravity and dignity of Enoch, the mentor and antiquarian in Egypt who was murdered by my enemies.
Instead, I was struggling not to gape. It wasn’t just that this short, slight, middle-aged Jew with corkscrew sidelocks and dour, dark clothing lacked Enoch’s majesty. It was that he had been mutilated into one of the most hideous men I’d ever seen. Part of his nose was carved away, leaving a piglike snout. His right ear was missing. And his right eye had been gouged, leaving a socket closed by a scar.
“My God, what happened to him?” I whispered to Jericho as Miriam took the man’s cloak at the door.
“He incurred the ire of Djezzar the Butcher,” the smith replied quietly. “Do not express pity. He carries his survival like a badge of honor. He’s one of the most powerful bankers in Palestine and has Djezzar’s trust, having remained loyal after torture.”
“People use him for their savings and loans?”
“It was his face that was damaged, not his mind.”
“Rabbi Farhi is one of the province’s foremost historians,” Miriam said more loudly as they came toward us, both guessing the reason for 6 4
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our whispers. “He’s also a student of Jewish mysteries. Anyone delv-ing into the past is wise to seek his counsel.”
“So I appreciate his help,” I said diplomatically, trying not to stare.
“As I appreciate your tolerance of my misfortune,” Farhi replied in a serene voice. “I know my effect on people. I see my disfigure-ment mirrored in the look of every frightened child. But mutilation’s isolation gives me time for this city’s legends. Jericho tells me you’re searching for lost secrets of strategic significance, yes?”
“Possibly.”
“Possibly? Come, if we’re to make progress we must trust each other, must we not?”
I was learning not to trust much of anyone, but didn’t say that, or anything else.
“And these items may have some connection with the Ark of the Covenant,” Farhi persisted. “Is this not so as well?”
“It is.” Obviously he knew what I’d told Jericho.
“I can understand why you’ve journeyed so far, with such excitement. Yet it is my sad responsibility to warn that you may be seven hundred years too late. Men have come to Jerusalem before, seeking the same powers you have.”
“And you’re going to tell me they tried their best and didn’t find them.”
“On the contrary, I am going to tell you they possibly found exactly what you are looking for. Or, that if they didn’t, it’s unlikely you could succeed either. They searched for years. Jericho tells me you have days, at most.”
What did this mutilated man know? “Found what, exactly?”
“Curiously, scholars still argue about that. A group of Christian knights came away from Jerusalem with inexplicable powers, and yet they proved powerless when they were betrayed. So did they find something? Or not?”
“A fairy story,” Jericho scoffed.
“But one grounded in history, brother,” Miriam said quietly.
“Those stories of tunnels are musty legends,” Jericho insisted to Miriam.
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“And what is legend but an echo of truth?” his sister answered.
I looked among the three of them. They’d argued this before.
“What legends?”
“Of our ancestors, the Knights Templar,” Miriam said. “Their full name was the Poor Knights of Christ on the Temple of Solomon.
Not all the warrior monks were celibate, and tradition holds that our blood descends from theirs. They sought what you seek, and some think they found it.”
“Do they now?”
“It’s a curious story,” Farhi said. “I understand you have lived in Paris, Mr. Gage? Are you familiar with the Champagne region of France, southeast of Paris and north of Troyes?”