by Rob Swigart
“Alain’s in hospital,” the librarian said. “Concussion and a dislocated shoulder. They set the shoulder but the concussion looks serious. We’ll know more later.”
Lisa asked about the National Archive.
“We have a membership. I’ll set it up for us to get in – it’s best if we do this together. We’ll meet you there in an hour.”
They returned to the Metro through the passage, got off at Chatelet-Les Halles and headed east across the boulevard Sebastopol. No one paid any attention to a Muslim couple walking slowly in the heat. After all, everyone was walking slowly, heads down, as if the sun had become an intolerable burden.
49.
Lisa and Steve stopped at the impressive stone gate set into the high wall surrounding the Hôtel de Soubise on the rue des Francs-Bourgeois. Columns flanked the gold letters above the entrance: Archives Nationales. This was the home of documents of importance to the Republic of France.
The gate opened on the broad walk leading up to the classical façade of an eighteenth century building that enclosed green lawns lined with lush green topiary cones on three sides. This part of the Archives was now home to the Museum of the History of France. A plaque by the entrance informed them that the only things remaining from the original fifteenth century building were the west door and the two old towers.
Lisa said, “The irony is that during the reign of Henri III this was the headquarters of the Duc de Guise, a Catholic and his bitter enemy.”
“Henri had him killed.”
Lisa nodded. “And his friends in turn had the king assassinated. Today the religions are different but the wars are much the same.”
“Bruno was trying to stop the wars, wasn’t he? It was after Henri had died that he agreed to go back to Venice and into the hands of the Inquisition.”
“He was trying to change history. Though he knew he was probably going to fail and there would be years of torture and suffering for him ahead, he did it anyway. Some people believe he wrote his own epitaph in one of his books: ‘I have preferred a courageous death to a non-combatant life.’ In spite of breaking the rules, or perhaps because of that, he was a real Pythos, a great one…. What’s the time?”
“Three-forty.”
“We have just over an hour to retrieve the Document before the Archives close.”
They walked around to the rue des Quatre-Fils and along the blank wall of the back of the Archives, staying in the shade. Ted and Marianne were already waiting by the thin gray pyramid pointing up at the bottom of a glass tower supported by four slender columns of sand-colored stone.
“We almost didn’t recognize you,” Marianne said. “They look different, don’t they, Ted?”
Her husband only tilted his head and squinted at Lisa with an enigmatic smile.
Lisa removed her hijab and pushed it into her shoulder bag on top of the Augustine. “Let’s get inside before we die of heat stroke.”
Steve removed his robe and added it to the bag. He swiped his forehead with his hand and flicked away the sweat. “Glad to get that off.”
The revolving door was set in a heavy square frame of the same sand-colored stone. They entered into the cool quiet of an atrium filled with light. Stairs on the left led up to the reading rooms.
Marianne talked to the guard and a few moments later returned with badges for everyone. “Before we go up, we have to check our bags, everything except Ted’s laptop, loose sheets of paper, and pencils.”
Lisa said, “How are we going to…?”
Ted’s look cut off the question. “Find the document?” she finished lamely.
“I’ve already phoned in the call numbers,” Marianne said. “The Guyton de Morveau archive is waiting for us.”
They checked their things and climbed two flights of stairs to a locked door. Through the glass wall they could see people working at the rows of tables.
Marianne swiped her card and the door clicked open. At an empty table near the back Ted plugged in his laptop. In moments he had the archive catalog on the screen. “The letters are listed as part of the 1586 diplomatic correspondence of Henri III, but there are no other records of a Guyton de Morveau. We checked him out.”
Lisa said. “There’s a street near my apartment.”
“Yes, yes,” Ted agreed. For him the repetition was strangely impatient. “An eighteenth century chemist, not a sixteenth century diplomat. There are no diplomats with that name. Yet, as far as we can tell this file has been requested at least twenty-three times since Bruno created it and not one of them has written a word about it.”
“Twenty-three?” Steve frowned a moment. “That would be five or six a century.”
“The Pythos,” Lisa said. “Every Pythos reads the Founding Document. So it must be here.”
“Let’s hope so,” Steve said.
With a little wave Marianne went to the front desk.
“The Morveau file has been with the archives for over four hundred years, moving each time the documents moved, until they ended up here. Well, we’ll soon know. Here’s Marianne.”
She carefully placed a folio box bound in leather and tied with a cord on the table. A handwritten label read, Correspondence. Guyton de Morveau à sa mère, Bois le Roi, 1586. “There it is,” she said with satisfaction, sitting down.
“Well,” Lisa said. “Go ahead, open it.”
Ted shook his head. “We think you should be the one to open it, don’t we, Marianne?”
“We certainly do. Lisa is the Pythia. We believe only the Pythos, or Pythia, is supposed to read the document, and we too concluded that the previous twenty-three held that office. So this is Lisa’s trust. This box really contains the Founding Document. So we hope.”
Lisa sighed. “I still can’t get used to this.” She untied the cord and after a moment’s hesitation lifted the lid.
On top was a small note dated 1793: “Who was de Morveau? I haven’t found him in any other archive.” There was no signature.
“Maybe one of the twenty-three wasn’t a Pythos,” Lisa said. “Looks like someone looked at it by mistake.”
Ted shrugged. “Could happen.”
Under the note was a stack of handwritten pages. This she placed on the table and lifted the first sheet. “A deed to a pasture in Bois le Roi. That’s a real place?”
Ted nodded. “Southeast of Paris, not far from Troyes,” he explained. “One of the king’s estates.”
She held up another. “A letter from Guyton to his mother complaining of the weather in Strasbourg. He is going to send her a case of champagne. He asks after his nephews and says he loves her.” She turned over another page. “This records a lawsuit against someone who repaired his mother’s roof. She has complained that the slate was inferior, and several tiles blew off in the first wind. He says he will start a process as soon as he returns.” She held the next sheet up to the light, turning it this way and that.
“Do you think Bruno wrote all this?” Steve asked.
“Too bad the Augustine is locked up downstairs,” she answered. “If I had it here I could compare the writing, but this writing certainly resembles the marginal note.”
Steve watched her closely. “You seem very much at home with this stuff.”
“It’s a lot like papyrology.”
When the box was empty they stared at one another.
“Where is it?” Ted asked.
“No Founding Document. This is all trivial.” Lisa waved at the stack. “Everyday stuff: letters, legal documents, an invitation to a local nobleman’s hunt. Nothing earlier than the sixteenth century.”
“If de Morveau didn’t really exist, and the Founding Document isn’t here, why would Bruno create this elaborate hoax?” Steve asked. “Why have people been requesting this box?”
Lisa stared.
Marianne cleared her throat. “Maybe de Morveau was real,” she suggested. “Just not important enough for anyone to be interested in him. Maybe this is a wild goose chase.”
Lisa wa
s shaking her head. “No, this was important. Bruno deliberately wrote it in the Augustine. ‘Guyton de Morveau to his mother, Bois le Roi, 1586.’ He also forged these documents for a reason. The Founding Document is here…. Or it was.”
“Where?” Marianne turned over all the papers slowly and carefully, holding them up to the light pouring in through the windows.
Steve chewed his thumbnail. “Maybe your eighteenth century reader?” he said at last, voicing all their fears.
Lisa shook her head. “No, I think it’s here.”
They sat in glum silence. Steve checked his watch. It was four thirty. The Archives closed in fifteen minutes.
Lisa let her eyes go soft. The papers blurred into a white block on the dark table. The lamp’s light was washed away by the outside glare. Ted, two seats away, frowned at the screen of his laptop.
The box was solid, made of thin wood covered with dark brown leather. Its hinged lid lay open. The interior was lined with linen. The cord that had tied it shut lay coiled loosely on the surface of the table.
She leaned forward.
The cord was attached to the center of the back of the box by a metal loop. Through the bottom of the inside she could see a small bump. She touched it with her fingertip, still not focusing directly, and felt along a subtle irregularity to the side.
Steve sat up. “Foix’s desk,” he said softly. “A hidden…”
Lisa felt the irregularity branch at the side. She slid her fingers to the top and bottom of the box, inserted her fingernails. The cloth lining obediently curled back, revealing the edge of a small sheet of very fine vellum. She gave a gentle tug and the lining came away.
The vellum was covered with a block of Greek text written in a precise, even prissy, hand.
50.
Philippe Dupond refolded his Tuesday Le Monde and slipped it into the side pocket of his jacket. He had been waiting in the parking lot but Hugo had not returned and it was nearly five o’clock, nearly an hour late for their appointment.
Dupond considered smoking a cigarette, something he hadn’t done in months, but decided against it for several reasons. For one thing, since his sister had become ill he no longer enjoyed them. For another, he thought it showed the kind of weakness he feared most in himself. Finally, he would have to get out of the car and stand in the intolerable heat or put up with the smell in his upholstery.
Instead he turned up the air-conditioning. True it meant leaving the engine running, and that was contributing to global warming, but the warming was already real; so was the air-conditioning. He preferred the latter.
Le Monde had offered only desperation. The situation in Central Asia, for example, continued to deteriorate. Well, it had been deteriorating for years, what was new about that? People were blowing up themselves and others with depressing regularity. In fact it was so regular it wasn’t even really news any longer. Le Monde put bombings with a death toll of fewer than 100 on page seven.
Hugo and Mathieu pulled into the lot and parked four cars away. They seemed reluctant to get out. Come on, he muttered. It’s only 40 meters.
But he was as reluctant as they. Still…
He ran for the door and got inside, covered with sweat even after such a short run. “Putain,” he said to the sergeant at the desk, a man he did not know. “It’s hot.”
“Yes, sir,” the sergeant said flatly. Dupond was only a Guardian of the Peace and didn’t really deserve even that level of respect, but the sergeant was taking no chances. Dupond was in civilian clothes. He might be important. Probably not, but maybe: you never knew.
Dupond snorted and passed through the turnstile. It was not as frigid as he had kept his car, but it felt good. He stopped when he heard the door open and close. He turned, but Hugo and Mathieu were already on him, so he said hello.
Hugo nodded and walked past him.
“What happened?” Dupond asked, jogging to keep up.
Hugo didn’t answer until his office door closed behind them. Then all he would say was the French equivalent of Shitstorm.
“Really?” Dupond looked at his superior curiously. “It was the nun, right?”
That did surprise Hugo. “What makes you think that?”
The Guardian of the Peace shrugged. “I’ve been developing sources.”
“What do these sources say?”
Dupond really had no idea since he had just invented them. But he had followed the monk and nun into Paris, and did know they wanted to lure Lisa and Steve to the abbey. Though he wasn’t quite ready to let Hugo know everything, he said only, “They say she’s been very busy; she’s obsessed with Emmer.”
The captain let out a long breath. “They’re right. There was some kind of confrontation at St. Denis that involved shooting. Fatalities and injuries.”
Dupond whistled.
“It was a real bordel. They all escaped, the Emmer woman, the Canadian, the nun and her priest or whatever he is.” He looked up. “Ballistics says the gun is the one that killed Foix. So tell me, Dupond, what the hell’s going on?”
Dupond was relieved. He wasn’t going to be chastised for not bringing in Lisa Emmer. Clearly St. Denis had trumped Hugo’s impatience with him. He wanted to say I told you so, that the nun was more important than the Emmer woman, but Hugo was preoccupied. Maybe this would change his mind.
“The nun, she’s a Dominican.”
“I know that, Dupond.”
“In the thirteenth century the Pope charged the Dominicans with the Inquisitio Haereticae.”
“Yes, yes.”
“I believe the nun and her monk work for an organization that grew out of the inquisition.”
“The Church doesn’t question heretics any longer, Dupond. Nor does it kill them. This is the twenty-first century. The Inquisition no longer exists.”
Dupond shrugged. “True, in 1965 it was renamed the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and it no longer burns heretics. But it left behind something called the Order of Theodosius.”
“What the hell is that?”
Dupond spread his hands. “A secret organization. I’m trying to find out more, but I can say for sure that the nun did kill Foix and probably Rossignol.”
“Perhaps, but that official investigation is closed. Everyone now wants Emmer.”
“And that’s the question, Captain, isn’t it? Does Quai d’Orsay want her for the same reason as the Order of Theodosius? Or for something else?”
Hugo sat down. “Precisely the question, Dupond. Why don’t you ask your sources?”
Dupond’s lips thinned into something that might have been a smile. “Yes, Captain, I’ll do that.”
51.
A scattering of other scholars in the reading room had their heads bent over the tables, absorbed in their work. The librarian at the front desk was working at her computer. Heat shimmered outside the glass wall. Steve whispered, “It’s going to close soon.”
Ted glanced around. Everyone else was busy, head down. Some were packing up. He quickly popped open the keyboard of his laptop and slid the sheet of vellum inside.
The keyboard was back before Lisa finished smoothing the lining. She made a few more notes, returned the documents to the case, retied it and handed it to Marianne.
They watched the librarian check the pages against the catalog. At one point she gave Marianne a hard look. Finally she replaced all the papers, tied up the case, nodded grimly, and carried it away.
Marianne waved as they left. “Goodbye to Guyton de Morveau.”
They trudged in silence down the rue des Archives through waves of heat distortion. At the Hôtel de Ville they regrouped. Though the temperature was nearly intolerable, it helped preserve their anonymity. “We can’t go back to the safe house,” Steve said. “Nor our apartments. What about Foix’s? We should be safe there. Lisa?”
“Yes. The police still won’t expect us there.” She signaled a taxi. “It’s not far, but we can’t walk in this heat.”
The shutters were cl
osed and the air inside was still and cool. There was a slight musty smell but the impression of recent death had faded.
Lisa placed the Founding Document on the gray leather of Foix’s desk. The pewter lamp cast a warm glow over the ancient vellum. The others gathered around.
She began to read aloud. “What we have foreseen now comes to pass.”
“The Oracle looked into its own future,” Marianne observed.
Ted nodded. “Of course.”
“My name is not important,” Lisa continued translating. “What is important is that I am the last priest of Apollo from his great Temple at Delphi in Phokis, on the Gulf of Corinth, in the lands of Hellas. I have come with the Pythia and our closest colleagues to Alexandria to assure the survival of our tradition, our art and our understanding. Because this was long foreseen, we have carefully prepared, following all our crafts and ways. Since we have come, the Philosopher has helped us, and for that she deserves our respect, our gratitude, and our praise. In return, we revealed her fate. She replied that even she, without our powers of divination, could foresee it and is prepared, and that she has yet some years to teach and think. Let this be known, she is the greatest of our age. Together we determined that the Oracle must continue, for the organization forming around the legends of a Savior tortured on a cross is spreading through our world. Already it is a great power. We foresee enormous harm, for it is known that with great power comes great corruption. And this new belief in the world will be a great power, which will last for centuries. We, and our successors must be the opposing force. Though we must remain in the shadows, we will from time to time subtly reveal what is necessary to hold its power. All this we foresee. In this document I shall say how, and what will come to pass with what we shall now call the Delphi…”
Lisa paused. “The Greek word here is hypothesis. In those days the word meant proposal or plan.”
“Could you translate it as agenda?” Ted asked. “The Delphi Agenda?”
Lisa looked up. “Pardon.”
“M. Rossignol called it Le Projet Delphe. We translated the word as agenda, as in ‘what must be done.’ It sounds right, I think.”