Apocalypsis 1.09 Wearily Electors (2 page)

Peter’s thoughts were racing as he tried to figure out whether or not he had enough time to jump to his feet and subdue Nikolas. But then he scrapped the thought.

No chance. He would be too fast.

So Peter continued to stare at his twin brother. Because one thing was absolutely clear to him: the man with the machete, this exact mirror image of his own self, had to be his twin. Nothing else would make any sense.

Nikolas. My brother.

The shock of this realization was greater than the fear of his imminent death. The realization that he had always kind of known, throughout his entire life. All those moments when he had not felt complete. All those nightmares in which he had encountered himself, yet felt as if the other self were a stranger. And now, all of a sudden, all these things made sense. And then again, they didn’t. But what did it matter on the brink of death?

But just as Peter was looking into Nikolas’s eyes, waiting for his death, he saw a shadow of hesitation pass over his twin brother’s face. An expression that suggested bewilderment about something that had always felt natural but suddenly no longer seemed possible. Just for a brief moment. And Peter understood that Nikolas could not kill his own mirror image. He could not kill his brother.

»Why…?«

Nikolas gazed at him without blinking. »I
did
kill you, Peter. Do you understand me?« He put his cell phone away. »You are dead. Stay dead. Forever. For everybody. Evaporate from the face of this earth and don’t ever come back, not even as a ghost. For I am pain. And I will come to everyone to whom you appear as a ghost. Do you understand me?«

Peter sat up and nodded. Yes, he had understood.

The sirens were coming closer. Nikolas looked down at Peter, somehow undecided, as if there was more to say. He appeared to be far less bewildered by the encounter with his twin brother than Peter was; he just seemed to be curious. As if he had already known about his existence.

»Do you sometimes suffer from headaches?«

Peter nodded. »Yes, I do.«

»And when you have them, do you see pictures?«

Peter nodded.

»Do you see
her

»Yes,« Peter replied. »Her hair is burning. Until now, I didn’t know who she was.«

Nikolas nodded seriously. He seemed to think.

»Do you sometimes see a tower?«

The tower. Don’t go there. Run away!

»Yes,« Peter said. »I remember a tower. It is not big. It is gray. It stands by itself. A car is parked in front. It is raining.«

Nikolas nodded as if this had clarified everything between them.

»You are dead,« he repeated one more time, like a mantra, like a seed that he wanted to implant in Peter’s mind. »I am pain. Should you resurrect, I will find you. Don’t you ever forget that.«

With these words, he turned around and disappeared behind the cab, vanishing like a phantom in the mild spring air that was filled with the scent of salt and rain.

By now, the sirens were approaching quickly; they were only a few streets away. Peter staggered to his feet. The dead cab driver was lying next to him.

You are dead. Vanish from this world. Evaporate.

Peter tore his eyes from the sight of the murdered driver, climbed into the cab and started the engine.

LXV
ONE YEAR EARLIER …

From: [email protected]

To: [email protected]

July 5, 2010 14:34:33 GMT+03:00

Re: Re: Warning

Peace be unto you, Christian!

I thank you for the warning. However, I see no reason to become active in this matter. It is obvious that these so-called »Light-Bearers« are an occult Christian sect and therefore an internal issue of your church.

If you want to save the Vatican’s fortune, you will have to do it by yourself, my friend. In any case, what are these »sources« that you have mentioned? Share the water of your source with me and I might be willing to give the matter another thought.

Furthermore, I won’t give that Jewish bastard in Jerusalem another chance to insult me: I will never again sit at a table with the miserable wretch.

May Allah be with you,

Sheik Abdullah ibn Abd al Husseini

The Permanent Committee for Islamic Research and Fataawa

Makkah Al-Mukarramah

PO Box 8072

Saudi-Arabia

 

From: c.kapl[email protected]

To: [email protected]

July 5, 2010 15:02:01 GMT+02:00

Re: RE: Warning

Dear Mister Laurenz,

All due respect for your well-intentioned concern for our mutual interests, but I cannot see how these so-called »Light-Bearers« could constitute a threat to Judaism and the State of Israel. Instead, this seems to be a problem that you will have to tackle by yourself. We have already more than enough problems with orthodox separatists and fanatic fundamentalists.

Furthermore, I find your request to confront this alleged danger with headquarters in Nepal (!) not only disconcerting but also typical. The Satanic Beast, of which you spoke in May, has shriveled to a bunch of financial sharks that engage in speculative trading against the Vatican. In plain terms: with an invented threat, the Catholic Church is trying once again to use Judaism for the sake of its own expansionist politics. The fact that you do not reveal your sources only confirms this assumption.

Therefore, as long as you have nothing else to offer and as long as al Husseini, this racist hatemonger from Mecca, continues with his diatribes against Judaism and the State of Israel, I am out of the three-way talks.

Shalom and sincerely yours,

C.K.

Chaim Kaplan

Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem ABD

Hekhal Shelomo

85 King George St. POB 2479

Jerusalem 91087

Israel

 

July 7, 2010, Apostolic Palace, Vatican City

S
tagnation. Paralyzing stagnation. Paralyzing heat. There was nothing in this world that John Paul III hated more. The heat, the true ruler of Rome, had reconquered the Eternal City and held it firm in its grip, tormenting the Pope with stagnant air, frustrating emails and a nagging headache. For weeks, an area of low pressure over North Africa had been pumping hot desert air towards Italy, which picked up moisture over the Tyrrhenian Sea and hit Rome like a hot and muggy fist. A sand-colored bell of humidity, haze and exhaust fumes hung threateningly over the city, pushing Romans and tourists into air-conditioned offices and bars and the consumption of
Gelato
and aspirin to a record high. Hospital emergency rooms were filled with people who had collapsed from dehydration, and anyone who could, fled to the ocean. The rest yearned for
Ferragosto
, August 15, the day when the entire Italian nation abided by tradition and took a collective vacation, congesting freeways and beaches.

This year, the Pope would leave later than usual for his summer residence, Castel Gandolfo. The summer residence in the Alban Hills had been one of the extra-territorial properties of the Holy See since the 17
th
century. The atmosphere in the small palace was more informal and relaxed than in the Vatican, and the air, which was filled with the resinous scent of pine trees, was fresher and lighter than the mugginess of Rome. John Paul III loved the summer residence and its parks and gardens, especially the meditation garden,
Giardino della Madonnina,
where he liked to go after lunch to spend some quality time alone. The weeks in Castel Gandolfo gave him freedom from papal audiences and annoying organizational tasks. Instead, he finally had the opportunity to refocus on his Encyclicals and his Paulus biography.

But for now, the coolness of Castel Gandolfo was still a distant dream because there was nothing but bad news, beginning with the emails from Mecca and Jerusalem. During their first meeting, the Pope had been able to demonstrate the seriousness of the situation to the Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia and the Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem, but their unity had been short-lived and they were already back to provoking each other with the same old, seemingly unending hostilities and thereby throwing his warning of the Light-Bearers to the wind.

John Paul III deleted both emails from his personal mailbox and discarded the idea of trying to reinforce his warning. Because he had given his word to Nakashima he had, at this point, no new argument to offer to Sheik al Husseini and Chaim Kaplan which might have convinced them.

Nakashima had sent him satellite images of an area in Nepal. The high-resolution pictures showed a Buddhist monastery complex that belonged to an American mining company, which was part of the almost inscrutable web of corporations owned by the Light-Bearers. Strangely enough, though, the mine that was operated by the mining company did not yield anything. According to Nakashima, the inaccessible monastery ruins housed the headquarters of the Light-Bearers.

But the bad news, like the heat, did not end. Two days ago, Don Luigi had returned from India. During a private conversation, while they were taking a walk on the roof terrace of the Apostolic Palace, he had handed the Pope a list of 21 names.

Moe, Thein    

Yangon, Burma

Adam, Peter    

Hamburg, Germany

Aharon, Shimon    

Jerusalem, Israel

Babcock, Frank    

New York, USA

Brinks, Thomas    

Cologne, Germany

Bühler, Leonie    

Bern, Switzerland

Corelli, Franco    

Rome, Italy

Das, Mina    

Mumbai, India

Delgado, Alejandro    

Buenos Aires, Argentina

Djordjevic, Aleksandra     

Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina

Egan, Christal,    

Des Moines, USA

Horovitz, Rinat    

Tel Aviv, Israel

Huang, Maggie    

Singapore, Singapore

Kowaljow, Marina    

Moscow, Russia

Kwaheri, Grace    

Arusha, Tanzania

Matube, Nafuna    

Gulu, Uganda

McKee, Conor    

Dublin, Ireland

Saparow, Usman    

Ashgabat, Turkmenistan

Szekel, Sándor    

Karcag, Hungary

Torres, Fernando    

Santiago de Compostela, Spain

Witkowska, Ewa    

Kraków, Poland

John Paul III glanced over the list of 21 names and places and frowned. »And these are all the names now, Don Luigi?«

»I believe so.«

John Paul III tapped his finger on one of the names. »Him, too?«

Don Luigi raised his arms. »I knew that you would ask this question. But yes, it looks as if he was also part of it.«

The Pope let out a sigh. »Do I have to remind you of what is written in the Fourth Secret of Fátima, Padre? Or in Malachy’s Prophecy? Or in the Apocalypse of Adam?«

»I can see the contradiction, Your Holiness. The question is now: which source should we trust more? Fátima or the list?«

For a while, the Pope kept staring at the list and then he looked over the rooftops of Rome. From up here, it was clearly visible that the Eternal City was suffocating under a yellow haze of heat, dirt and desert sand.

»Where is he now?« he suddenly asked.

»In Hamburg. Four weeks ago, he… lost his fiancée.«

»He lost her?«

»She was violently murdered. In Turkmenistan. Shortly thereafter, one of my sources confirmed that he was on the list.«

»I don’t trust him, Padre. I still believe that he is one of the key players in the apocalypse. I want you to keep an eye on him.«

Don Luigi nodded. »As you wish, Holy Father.«

»Lately, something else is causing problems,« the Pope continued. »Sophia informed me that Alexander Duncker has recently begun to pay regular visits to the Opus Dei headquarters.«

»Which is not a crime,« Don Luigi interjected.

»Of course not. Just vulgar and distasteful, nothing more. I found it strange, though, that my private secretary had never told me about these visits. So I confronted him.«

»And?«

»Monsignore Duncker explained to me in the most circuitous way that he was trying on an ›informal‹ level to campaign for my reform program within the conservative wing of the Church. I did not even have to look at him to know that he was lying. And to be perfectly honest with you, this lie hurts me more than the hypocrisy of the entire Curia.«

»I can understand that,« Don Luigi said. »What are you going to do?«

»Nothing, at least for now. As there is no hard evidence at the moment that would prove that Monsignore Duncker betrayed my confidence or that he is conspiring against me with Menendez and Opus Dei, I will let the matter rest for now.«

»Do you think this is wise, Your Holiness?«

»I have known Duncker for a very long time,« the Pope answered. »He has always been loyal to me. He is ambitious. It may just be a moment of confusion that will pass.«

»Do you really believe that, Holy Father?«

The Pope gave Don Luigi a pensive look.

»Keep an eye on Duncker. I don’t want to bother Sophia with that. She already has enough on her plate with Menendez, who has people spying on her to compromise me.«

»No problem, Your Holiness.«

»The Cardinal Secretary of State is my most relentless critic. But up until now, he has always exercised openness and fairness in the choice of his means.« With a pensive expression on his face, the Pope looked over the Eternal City that was blanketed in haze. His headache began to worsen again. The Pope pressed his hand against his temple and turned back to Don Luigi. »Menendez has a brilliant mind and he is ruthless and hungry for power. But he is still a man of faith and a man of the Church. What do you think, Don Luigi: how far would he go?«

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