Secret of the Bibles: Suspense Thriller (Donavan Chronicles Book 2)

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Secret of the Bibles: Suspense Thriller (Donavan Chronicles Book 2) Page 11

by Tom Haase


  “How old are you?” he asked.

  “Twenty- four. Why?”

  “Just trying to make talk. Since this may be our last night on earth if that artillery gets worse. The fighting seems to be escalating,” he said as he put his arms around her. She moved closer.

  “I'm scared shitless,” she said. “We can cower here all night waiting to die, because we can't go out there where we could be killed by either side.”

  “Yes, but we could get killed by artillery in here,” he said.

  “Either way we could die, and I don't want to spend all night fearing that. So I want you to fuck me.”

  “What are you doing?” Cornelius managed to ask as the woman kissed him.

  “I'm taking our minds off dying. I have always wanted to make love to a man I would never see again when the sun comes up. You’re that man.” She placed his hand on her breast and moved it around.

  They made love there on the floor. Sometime in the night the artillery firing stopped. She dressed and left when the sun came up. The Israeli army units were entering the area. He never saw her again. He never even got a good look at her face, but he would always remember the things she had done to him that night, with her mouth, her hands, and her body ….

  “Shit,” he heard the loud curse just a foot or two from his hiding position.

  His lungs were bursting. Too much smoking and not enough exercise to hold his breath any longer. He started to release air as carefully and as slowly as he could. Halfway through the exhale, he heard the cop move, and the couch above him jarred and then collapsed onto him.

  The footsteps moved toward the door. The cop must have rammed the couch with his knee or hit it with his arm. The piece of furniture shifted and pinned Cornelius under its weight. All of his air exited his chest. He gasped for air as the door to the room slammed shut, covering the sound of his forceful inhalation.

  After filling his lungs, he pushed up to get the weight of the couch off and grabbed the top of it to prevent it from falling to the floor. That would be the end if it fell and made the unmistakable noise signaling someone in the room. Slowly, he regained an upright position and went over to the window. He could see no one outside but decided not to open the window.

  Best to wait for some time to ensure the cops left. If he tried to get away now there was a distinct possibility the cops would be outside for a period of time either just watching the house or talking to their superiors on what they found. He looked at his watch and decided on waiting for a half hour. He moved over to the righted couch and sat down. He clinched the heavy tome in both hands and thought of his next course of action.

  Now he could become rich. He had the book and he knew the method he would use to secure his future. Time to make a phone call and then get out of Dodge as fast as possible.

  That would be the tough part, getting out of Israel with such a large book that would certainly be seen as an artifact. Security at the airport would detect such a thing. He could not risk placing it in his suitcase as checked baggage because he heard that the security people at Ben Gurion airport looked into every bag.

  The one person who sent his daughter to oversee the Donavans exhibited a monetary interest in acquiring the Bible of Constantine. He would certainly be willing to pay for the book and pay handsomely for it. As soon as he could get out of this house, he would return to the hotel and make the phone call. Then he would leave at once and catch the only transportation he felt certain would not involve custom inspectors.

  The half hour passed, and he opened the window he’d used to gain access to the house and peered outside. He waited to hear any noise or movement. He saw and heard nothing as he exited through the window and went to the front edge of the house. Carefully moving his head around the corner, he observed the empty street. No one in sight and no police cars parked there. He moved as fast as his weak legs would allow, the hotel his next destination. A car's headlights appeared somewhere behind him but he turned the corner.

  His plan centered on obtaining the commitment for money from Mr. Schultz and to have a part deposited into his account. Then he would make his way by the safest route he could think of to Cairo. No one checked anything going out of Cairo, at least not like they did in Tel Aviv or Beirut.

  Chapter 29

  Jerusalem

  Outside the hotel, Cornelius Jake gave a deep sign of relief. He had pulled it off. In a few minutes he would be getting out of here. Thank God he had the porter bring down his suitcase and hold it at the concierge desk until he would take a taxi to the bus station. He researched the bus schedules and knew an hour remained before the last bus departed.

  He made the cell phone call outside the hotel and it went through.

  “Mr. Shultz, my name is Cornelius Jake. I believe I have something you are looking for. In my possession is the only extant copy of a Bible that the Emperor Constantine commissioned in 326 A.D. I’m prepared to offer it to you.” He stopped and waited.

  “How do I know that you even have it? How did you know I even am looking for it?” Schultz demanded.

  “First of all, if I called you, then you must assume I know you're looking for it. But to satisfy your curiosity, your daughter told me.”

  “Not likely,” Schultz said into the phone.

  “Mr. Schultz, your daughter believes that I assist her in keeping an eye on the Donavan's. She told me about the object of your search, and I agreed to spy on them by getting close to them as a reporter to validate any find they might make. She did this just to get someone close to them in case they tried to give her the slip. That is how I know you are after this book. Now I want to discuss a financial arrangement.”

  “I don't give a damn what you want to discuss. You will give the book to my daughter and you’ll be paid.” Schultz used a commanding voice to impart this.

  Cornelius didn’t bat an eye at the bravado.

  Many years ago in Washington, he followed a fellow reporter to a cheap hotel. The man was married to the richest woman in the city. He burst in on him with the naked lady under his protruding member and snapped a Polaroid picture. The man charged him but Schultz closed the door before the naked man could get close. He waited in the lobby. When the man appeared he told him he would give him the one picture he had in exchange for the major story the man had been working on. Schultz managed to get all the credit and the man would never say anything. If he would not agree the wife would get the picture.

  The man agreed and Schultz got the story. He returned the blackmail instrument to the man. Afterward, the man took his wife back to her hometown of San Francisco and took a position in that paper. Schultz never heard from him again. He knew that blackmail could work if the price or the prize was worth it to the intended victim.

  Schultz could be had.

  “Don't think so,” he responded to Schultz. “You are just one person of many who may want to possess such a valuable piece of an ancient Christian artifact. I'm willing to give you first crack at it, but it will be in my possession until I get to the States where I can auction it off.”

  “No matter what you get, I'll outbid it. Bring it to me and let me see it is real, and I'll pay you double any offer you get. Maybe you have the book I'm seeking, maybe not. I don't suppose you know how to read the Greek that is written on the second and third pages?”

  “Haven’t the foggiest idea,” Jake said.

  “If you'll turn over the documents to my daughter, I'll pay you one million.”

  “No way am I going to do that here in Israel. First of all, I don't trust your daughter any more than I trust you. If we're to conduct a business transaction, it'll be in person, and you can deliver me a cashier's check for five million.”

  He guessed Benjamin Schultz could hear the finality of the demand in his voice. Negotiation was not something on the table. Jake now forced the man to make a quick decision.

  “I tell you what. You tell me where Bridget Donavan is as a show of good faith. I want to know where she is right
now.”

  “She is in the hotel café, and she and her brother are leaving it right now.” He saw her through the window, sitting there, and then they got up to leave.

  “All right, I agree to your demands, if you can deliver the book to me here in New York. Phone me with your arrival plans. I will have a limousine meet you at the airport. How you get here is your concern, and I do not need to know how. When can I expect you?”

  Cornelius smiled. Just as he hoped. He would be rich.

  “Let my daughter accompany you to ensure its safety.”

  “Don't think that’s a good idea. I don't want you knowing where I am until I decide to meet with you. You have too many arms that could reach out and ensnare me. I'll contact you at this time tomorrow night with my instructions for a meeting.”

  “Wait. Are the first three pages of the Bible intact?” In his research he learned that the Emperor wrote something by hand on every one of the fifty Bibles he distributed to select religious and political leaders. If the man could answer that a hand written note was scrolled across the second page, then he probably possessed of the tome.

  Cornelius looked and saw some scribbling in a handwriting that looked like Greek on the second and third pages. The first page contained a great Crucifix with Latin annotations. The copied text started on page four. “I am opening the book now, and after the first page, which has a drawing of a crucified Christ, there appears to be handwritten notes on the second, and—let me turn the page—yes, on the third page, too. Does that help?” He finished and held his breath.

  “I do believe you have the book.”

  “You bet I do. You better be prepared to pay. Until tomorrow.” Jake hung up. He didn't want to take a chance on meeting the daughter or the Donavans with suitcases in his hands. For safety reasons, he had sent his luggage down earlier and kept the Bible in his large briefcase. That proved to be a smart decision.

  A bus would leave in twenty minutes for Gaza and start him on his travels to Cairo and then an airplane ride to New York. Mr. Schultz would meet him and make the exchange for money. He didn't plan on offering it to others, too dangerous. He held his fish on the line and would reel him in and secure his future.

  Life was good, he stood on top of his game, and he possessed the Bible. He went inside and headed to the hotel bar for one last drink before going to the bus terminal.

  * * * *

  New York

  Benjamin Schultz answered his private phone. When he picked it up he thought it must be his daughter. She hadn't called since her arrival in Israel. No need to worry since it was only her first day there. He didn't suppose much could happen in one day, since the secret Bible had remained completely cloistered for centuries. In his mind, he calculated the time as late evening in Jerusalem.

  The voice he heard emanate from his phone sounded unfamiliar and completely unexpected.

  After Jake hung up, Benjamin Schultz clenched the phone until his hand started to hurt. His daughter should never have revealed the purpose of their business. Now, somehow this man got hold of the object of the quest.

  The man appeared to have the document. Schultz no longer retained any need for Bridget Donavan. I can now extract my cold and too long postponed revenge.

  He would text his daughter in a few minutes to inform her to come home, as he would soon have the Bible from a man named Jake—and tell her to stay away from Bridget Donavan. He’d text her so she could read it in private in case she was with the Donavans. Now, however, he needed to act fast before the opportunity passed. He knew Kesi waited on his instruction in Jerusalem.

  Benjamin sent a text message. In it he gave the exact location of Bridget Donavan. The last two words he inserted into the text were the most important, “execute immediately.”

  * * * *

  Kesi had no problem finding the hotel and the baksheesh he paid provided the room number for Ms. Bridget Donavan. Dressed in the business suit he purchased with Schultz's money, he looked the part a foreign salesman visiting Israel. He carried his briefcase to the elevator and went to her floor.

  It wasn't his business on what changed the man's mind from the original orders to wait before carrying out the hit. The text specified - execute immediately.

  Getting into the room proved no obstacle to a man who previously snuck into all kinds of secure locations to extract the vengeance demanded by his superiors. Once inside, he checked everywhere for any weapon she may have hidden and looked through all her personal effects. He flicked off the lights and sat down to wait. He received his orders in the last hour. He needed to make sure that Schultz's daughter didn’t get involved in the Donavans’ removal. Most important to him remained his revenge for what she did to him.

  Patience was a virtue he possessed in great abundance. At the end of his waiting, a substantial reward would always appear. This case would be no different. The man promised to double his fee for killing the bitch. He would have carved her up for free if the man had given him her address or location. He felt honor bound to extract retribution for what she had done to him.

  The guerilla war ended, and he and a white buddy were open to any type of contract for any job. They handled a few people they were paid to eliminate and their reputation spread. They preformed the jobs with efficiency and speed. Consequently, the fees they charged increased.

  One day a phone call requested them to go to Ethiopia and take out a woman working on an archaeological dig. The information was specific and detailed. The woman would have three local helpers, as the rest of the team on the dig had returned to the United States. Whatever they wanted to do to the woman did not concern the requestor. He wanted the woman dead and wanted her to suffer before dying.

  “Why do you want her dead?” Kesi asked.

  “That is a personal matter. I'm not paying you to ask questions,” came the terse reply over the phone.

  “Speaking of paying, there will be some extra charges above our normal,” Kesi said.

  “I expected there would be. You will have travel expenses, bribes, and in- country expenditures.” The voice on the other end of the phone spoke in an authoritative manner and appeared to know how the system worked. “What is your price?”

  Kesi anticipated that question and added a substantial padding to what he wanted to cover all the extras. He hesitated for a few seconds to make the man wait and hopefully cause him to agree to the figure. He gave the figure and waited.

  “I'll double that figure and deposit one half of the money to any account you give me. The rest depends on you performing the contract within five days. She is scheduled to depart the location I gave you on that date. Have it completed and verified and the rest will be in your account within twenty-four hours. Any question?” the voice on the phone asked.

  “Yes, we need to know your name and contact number to get back to you.” Kesi didn't think he would give it but decided to try.

  He received a surprise when the man spoke. “My name is Schultz and the only number you are ever to use to contact me is”—he gave the number.

  “You are generous in your payments. There must be a great reason to have this woman killed. We'll do it. We'll call you in five days. It would help me if you would tell me why you want her dead.”

  A long silence ensued, but the phone line stayed open.

  “She killed my son.”

  Chapter 30

  Jerusalem

  “Why are we going to go by the dead bishop’s house?” Bridget asked.

  “I just thought it might be a good idea to at least see the place,” Scott responded. “Besides, it might—hey, isn't that our new buddy going around the corner? His gait is unmistakable.”

  “I saw somebody go around the corner but didn't get a chance to make out if it was him,” Bridget said.

  The taxi pulled to a stop in front of the address they had given the driver.

  “What the hell is he doing here? He said he would be at the hotel.”

  “If it was him, methinks we have
a problem with our reporter,” Bridget concluded. “I can see crime scene tape all over this place and we came in a taxi. I don't think it would be wise to get out here. Let's just go to the hotel and see if we can talk to Mr. Jake. Besides, it's been a long day, and I'm exhausted. I haven't had a night’s sleep in two days.” Bridget ordered the taxi to take them to the hotel.

  A half hour later at nine o'clock, Bridget and Scott sat eating in the hotel café.

  “I was starved,” said Bridget. “I'd forgotten how long it was since I ate a meal. Let's go over and have a short drink and then I need to get to bed. I'm exhausted. We can corner Jake in the morning.”

  “That sounds like a plan. I'm not exactly tired, since I've had a good night’s sleep, but you go ahead and get a good rest tonight,” Scott said.

  As the Donavans started walking toward the entrance to the hotel's bar, Bridget put her hand out and stopped Scott. She pointed. Scott saw the reporter outside talking on a cell phone.

  “Let's find out if he's been here all evening or if he was at the bishop's house,” Bridget said.

  They watched as Jake punched his cell to end after taking it from his ear. He walked toward the hotel bar without looking around. Scott and Bridget entered the bar after him and went over to where Jake sat with a drink. He had both elbows on top of the bar and sipped on what looked like a martini with the olives on a toothpick.

  “Mr. Jake, we've been looking for you. Have you been here since you dropped us off?” Scott asked.

  Cornelius looked over his shoulder at them. He did not flinch or look away but stared straight at them.

  “After I dropped you off I returned here to the hotel, been waiting on you to come and tell me what you learned. Remember, I'm the guy who can validate your story.”

  Bridget felt something, a twist, something told her to be careful. Why hadn't the reporter wanted to be with them if they found out something significant at the bishop's house? Wouldn't he want to be there instead of hearing about it second hand from them? That thought made her even more skeptical.

 

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