The Year of the Great Seventh

Home > Other > The Year of the Great Seventh > Page 29
The Year of the Great Seventh Page 29

by Orts, Teresa


  But right before I hit the “back” button, something caught my eye. On the cover of the original edition, there was a long-bearded man wearing a traditional robe and reading a book that was on a table. Behind him, there was a window, and on the table there was a globe.

  There was something strange about the globe. Instead of having the world map drawn on it, it was covered with random geographical figures and numbers. And in between the random figures, if you stared at the globe long enough, you could see the four symbols from the crabs camouflaged within the other figures. They’d been there all these years, but only if you knew what you were looking for could you see them.

  Nostradamus had left a hidden message. He must have deciphered Cleopatra’s secret.

  Unbelievable. All these years, the four symbols had been right here, but no one realized what they meant. Right below each symbol there was a number, and right away I knew what these numbers meant. Each of them was a reference to a quatrain in the book. As they were in French, I pasted the four quatrains into an online translator. I pressed “translate” on the webpage, and after the page flickered for a second, the translations appeared at the bottom.

  The year of the great seventh number accomplished,

  It will appear at the time of the games of slaughter:

  Not far from the great millennial age,

  When the buried will go out from their tombs.

  A coffin is put into the vault of iron,

  Where seven children of the king are held.

  The ancestors and forebears will come forth from the depths of hell,

  He will lament sacrificing her dead, the fruit of their line.

  The body without soul no longer to be sacrificed:

  Day of death put for birthday:

  The divine spirit will make the soul happy,

  Seeing the word in its eternity.

  Beneath the oak tree of Gienne, struck by lightning,

  The treasure is hidden not far from there.

  That which for many centuries had been gathered,

  When found, a man will die, his eye pierced by a spring.

  So many questions welled up inside me. However, there was one that stood out over the others. Dad, why do I know what some of these quatrains mean?

  Dad had spoken to me about the pyramids known as the minor seven. They were scattered along the Nile, and the one farthest south is known as the Great Seventh. Dad told me it had several numbers engraved above the entrance, and no one had ever established what they referred to. That had to be “The year of the great seventh number accomplished.” I searched for the pyramid online, and got the numbers from the Internet. They didn’t mean anything to me.

  I wasn’t sure what “It will appear at the time of the games of slaughter” meant, but it had to be a reference to a war. “Not far from the great millennial age” had to refer to a century. I didn’t know what “When the buried will go out from their tombs” meant, but my imagination was already running free.

  The second quatrain referred to the Vault of Iron. The first time I came to New York with Dad, he’d taken me to a place called The Cloisters. It’s a branch of the Metropolitan Museum located at the northern tip of Manhattan, in an area known as Washington Heights. I remember that in the Cloisters we’d seen seven stone coffins that belonged to the seven great pharaohs of Egypt. One of them was known as the Vault of Iron.

  Having learned my lesson, I searched for the Vault of Iron, and… bingo. It was still on display at the Cloisters. Then it hit me. The first day at school when Nate and I had looked at each other, I’d seen the coffins. This was it. Someone or something had been trying to warn us of our fate, and even though Nate denied seeing them, I knew he had, just like I did.

  Like the previous quatrain, I didn’t know what the other lines meant, as they could be interpreted in many ways. However, one thought was that it could either be Nate or me. “The ancestors and forebears will come forth from the depths of hell. He will lament sacrificing her dead, the fruit of their line.”

  When I read the first two lines of the third quatrain, I had a bad feeling in the pit of my stomach. “The body without soul no longer to be sacrificed: Day of death put for birthday.”

  In three hours, it would be my birthday. I simply pushed that thought to the back of my mind. Again, I had no idea what the last two lines meant. “The divine spirit will make the soul happy, Seeing the word in its eternity.”

  The fourth quatrain seemed the solution to all our problems. “Beneath the oak tree of Gienne, struck by lightning, the treasure is hidden not far from there.”

  But unfortunately, I didn’t know what the tree of Gienne was.

  I searched online for the word “Gienne,” but all the hits referred to the Nostradamus quatrains. I also tried the online dictionary. No luck. The word didn’t exist as such. Maybe it was a French word. I tried an online French dictionary, but it also came up empty.

  I knew I was close. I didn’t know what the quatrains meant, but I had to believe they contained the solution to save Nate. The problem was how to connect them all. The numbers from the Great Seventh pyramid—they had to mean something.

  I decided to put the first one into a search engine.

  Right away, it returned a list of hits on Octavian (also known as the emperor Augustus), the ruler of the Roman Empire and one-time ally of Mark Antony. The number 010142 referred to January 1, 42 BC—the day he rose to power following the murder of Julius Caesar and was declared Divi filius or “son of God.” Augustus went on to conquer Egypt, bringing about the end of the 3000-year Egyptian Empire and the deaths of Cleopatra and her lover, Mark Antony.

  I continued searching for the other numbers, and my heart almost stopped beating. They correlated with the dates that Genghis Khan, Hitler, and Mao Tse-Tung also rose to power. They all had something in common: they were dictators who committed genocide and war crimes against humanity.

  After following down the list of numbers, I got to one that didn’t make any sense. It was the same for all the numbers after that.

  The date was November 4th of next year.

  Now the second line of the quatrain made sense. “It will appear at the time of the games of slaughter.” The games of slaughter were the genocides.

  It was three hours until my birthday, and I was determined to do whatever it took to stop whatever was about to happen. Our only lead was the Vault of Iron, so we had no choice but to gamble it all on one card. Grabbing my jacket, I stormed through the door and went to Nate’s room.

  “Get dressed. We need to get to the Cloisters now.”

  “What?”

  “You have to trust me on this one. I’ll explain on the way there.”

  CHAPTER XXI

  NATE WAS BARELY ABLE to stand on his own. Staggering upright and supported by my arm, he managed to get himself dressed.

  If anyone saw Nate, they were going to freak out. He looked like a junkie with a strange skin condition. His eyes had gone almost white, his skin was gray, and his face was deformed. Shuffling through his suitcase, I found a black jacket with a hood and his Ray-Bans.

  If the stars lined up for us, we wouldn’t have to break into the Cloisters. I checked the Cloisters website before leaving my room. Normally, it closed at 5:00 p.m., but tonight there was a special event and it would be open until 11:00 p.m. The problem was that it was an exclusive black-tie event, and you could only get in if you had an invitation.

  It was something we’d have to worry about later. The first mission was to get through the lobby of the motel without raising the attention of the man at reception.

  As I didn’t have any cash left and we obviously needed a taxi, I called a car service company and paid with Nate’s credit card.

  Opening the door of the room, I checked there was no one in the corridor. The neon light had stopped flickering.

  Nate leaned against the door. Wrapping my arm around his, I helped him out of the room and we climbed down the steps one by one. He was still
shaking, and every few steps he would clench both hands on the rail.

  We came to a halt at the bottom step, and I peeked around the corner to see if the man from reception was still there. Like before, he was engrossed with his tiny TV.

  “We need to move as fast as possible,” I whispered to Nate.

  He nodded, unable to speak.

  Wrapping my arm around his, we walked through the lobby, and when we reached the door, I heard the chair at reception swivel.

  “I see you finally found your boyfriend.”

  Looking over my shoulder, I smiled back at the man and pushed the door open to get out of there. A Lincoln town car was already waiting for us.

  It was drizzling. The raindrops were a mix of water and ice. The man with the Yankees cap was still loitering outside the deli. He stared at me and when he moved his gaze to Nate, his jaw dropped. The driver saw us coming and unlocked the doors. Thankfully, he didn’t move from his seat.

  We got into the car and drove off. I glanced back at the man outside the deli and he was staring openly as we drove away.

  The driver looked back toward Nate through the rearview mirror. He didn’t seem to react. Maybe he was just focused on the traffic.

  I placed my hand on top of Nate’s, interlocking my fingers with his and trying to give him strength to hold it together for a bit longer while I began to explain what I’d found in the quatrains.

  We drove up to 145th Street and then the town car crossed over to the west side, taking the Hudson Parkway north. Then we took 180th Street and the driver dropped us in the middle of Fort Tryon Park.

  The Cloisters, which are a combination of five interconnected abbeys, sit on the side of the park. The buildings are secluded on top of a cliff overlooking the Hudson Valley. They are made of stone blocks and about two stories high. However, they have only one row of tiny windows right at the top.

  When we arrived, spotlights illuminated the neo-gothic arches behind the trees. I remembered the scene from years ago when I visited with Dad.

  The drizzle had now turned into pouring rain. We hid beneath the trees as I tried to figure out a plan. It was going to be more difficult to get in than I expected. People in tuxedos were already leaving the party. Some of the staff held umbrellas for the guests as they waited for their limousines.

  It was so cold the drops of almost-frozen water felt like pricking needles as they fell on my skin. Nate propped himself against a tree trunk in order to catch his breath. I had to be fast. We had to get in there as soon as possible.

  Wind howled through the trees, whipping the nearby branches.

  I glanced at the Cloisters and back at Nate. The black hood and the sunglasses could only hide so much. We had to be invisible if we were going to get anywhere near the building. As I looked at the people coming out of the Cloisters in their evening gowns and tuxedos, it seemed it would be impossible to get in there.

  I had to do this. I’d done it many times with Emma, Megan, Chase, and Tyson. Crashing parties was our favorite hobby, and this, in principle, was no different. I had to use our golden rules: walk with confidence and use the staff entrance which is always at the back.

  On the right side of the park there was a short set of stairs leading behind the Cloisters. It seemed to be the staff entrance, as waiters were bringing out boxes and leaving them on the lawn.

  “Can you do it? We need to get in there before they close. We don’t have much time.”

  “Let’s do it.” Nate gasped as he observed the glittering scene over my shoulder.

  We ducked behind the trees until we reached the stairs. Then, as if we were working for the caterers, I grabbed one of the boxes that the staff had brought out. We went down the steps and I knocked on the back door. I wasn’t sure if this was going to work. Nate wore his sunglasses and the hood and looked the other way. He gave the impression of being anything but a member of the catering staff.

  Instantly, someone opened the door from the inside and brushed past us on their way out. To my surprise there were at least twenty people working around a set of long tables in a hall. It was the preparation station for the catering, and thankfully, everyone was packing glasses and plates… and minding their own business.

  I left the box to one side and grabbed Nate by the arm. We quickly followed a corridor to the left. We needed a place to hide until everyone left. If the security guards spotted us wandering around the Cloisters on our own, we were going to get kicked out.

  “The restrooms,” Nate managed to say as we passed them in the corridor.

  It was a brilliant idea. We could hide there until everyone left at 11:00 p.m.

  We went into one of the stalls, and Nate locked us inside. We both sat on the floor and Nate took off his hood and sunglasses, unveiling his milky eyes and his deformed face. He didn’t seem to care anymore about me seeing him like this.

  Water dripped down my hair and there was a puddle around us. I took off my jacket, which was totally soaked.

  I was so cold that I began to shiver uncontrollably. I tucked my legs against my chest and hugged them, trying to keep myself warm.

  Nate brought his arm around my shoulders and pulled me closer to him. “You see, I’m not useless,” he said as his body emanated a strong heat, and soon after, I started to feel warm again. He wasn’t shaking as much as before.

  *

  We were hiding in the toilets when all the lights went off. We were in complete darkness.

  “What…?”

  Nate rested his finger on my lips, telling me to be quiet.

  The emergency exit light came on. It was still dim, but at least I was able to distinguish Nate’s silhouette.

  Steps clattered on the tiles down the hallway. Someone was coming our way. The steps became louder and louder, and then someone opened the door.

  Nate’s fingers dug into my shoulders. There was someone—most likely a security guard—at the door, staring in. I held my breath, trying to be as silent as possible.

  I could hear the person breathing as he stood there. Then he turned and continued down the hallway. Eventually, the sound of his footsteps faded away.

  “I think they’re gone. They must’ve been checking to make sure there’s no one left,” Nate said, struggling to get up from the floor. “Where is it?” he rushed to say.

  “The coffins are under the garden eave. That section is called the Romanesque Hall.”

  I held Nate’s hand and we moved down the dark corridor. The high-pitched ceilings and thick stone walls were huge and we seemed miniscule in comparison.

  The exit lights were only bright enough to guide us through the corridor, and we couldn’t really see much. I could distinguish the shape of the paintings hanging on the walls and stone warrior sculptures on either side.

  It was pouring outside. The raindrops drummed on the windows right at the top of the walls. The corridors once must’ve connected the monks in this isolated spiritual retreat to the outside world. I could vaguely remember the layout of the building from when I’d been here before.

  The garden was behind the door at the end of the corridor. If I remembered correctly, the coffins should’ve been just on the other side, beneath the eaves.

  When we got to the door that led to the garden, I clenched Nate’s hand, hoping the coffin we were looking for was out there.

  “This is it, isn’t it?” Nate said anxiously.

  I looked at my watch. It was 11:30 p.m.

  “Let’s open Pandora’s box at the count of three?” I suggested.

  This was our last card. There wouldn’t be any more turns to our story. If the coffin was out there, there would still be hope. If it wasn’t, our destiny, and especially Nate’s, wouldn’t be in our hands anymore.

  “Hold on!” Nate gasped. He rested his hand on my shoulder, making me turn around to face him. “Whatever happens out there, I just want to tell you again. I love you.”

  I could feel the blood rushing to my face. I hadn’t expected this.


  I couldn’t say a word and Nate continued. “I always did. I’m just a fool and I was afraid to admit it.”

  Between the clouds, a few rays of moonlight filtered through the high glass window, illuminating part of Nate’s face. Our eyes met for a moment, and even though there was nothing left of the Nate I’d known, I felt like the luckiest girl in the world.

  “I know,” I whispered.

  Nate brought me close to him and embraced me. I wanted to cry and scream. I wanted to celebrate and mourn. I knew this was the beginning and the end all at once. But for once, instead of tinting the good moments with bad news, Nate had managed to paint a brush of color on a dark night like this. I realized now more than ever that I’d always known.

  We turned around to face the garden doors. Holding hands, we pushed them open, letting in a cold gust of wind.

  The Romanesque Hall was an open-air space under the eaves that bordered the garden. Even though it was dark outside, the garden was brightly lit. The exterior spotlights under the trees and on the garden walls were still on.

  I glanced at Nate and my stomach gave an involuntary squirm. His neck and jaw seemed more swollen than before. There was literally nothing left of him. Only his familiar voice assured me it was still him.

  The square garden was fenced by a tall stone wall separating it from Fort Tryon Park. Gothic arches holding the eaves stretched along the building, and the ground was covered with ceramic tiles. At the other end there was an arched limestone doorway that led back into the building. The garden had two diagonal stone paths that joined in the middle, making a cross shape and dividing it into four sections. Each section was centered by a lemon tree, and where the stone paths crossed in the middle, there was a round marble water fountain.

 

‹ Prev