Read The Lazarus Prophecy Online
Authors: F. G. Cottam
âThat was hardly a small thing, Mr. Prior.'
âIt was hearing about the details of the death of a single victim, a five-year old British girl on holiday with her grandparents. They were spared to endure the living death of guilt and regret for the miserable length of the lives left to them.'
âYou stopped believing in God?'
âI still believe in God. But I couldn't serve a capricious God. Not in the way the Church demands, I couldn't.'
She liked him. She thought he was a good man, intelligent and sensitive and probably much too sentimental ever to make anything of himself in such a heartless world. She thought he could be useful to them and at the same time hoped he wouldn't have to be. Her greatest wish was that the Scholar's killing spree would just stop. But she didn't think that was going to happen. This was her first conversation with Jacob Prior. It was highly unlikely to be the last they would share.
âAm I right in thinking there's a conflict between Christ and Antichrist at the End of Days?'
âThere's more to it than that. All the scribes who referred to it agreed that the conflict would take place and that Christ would triumph. But they were peddling Christian propaganda and risking accusations of heresy if they said anything different.'
âWhat more is there to it?'
âThere's the collateral damage. The Son of Perdition will claim to be God and empires will fall.'
âWhich empires are those?'
âThat part can be read as metaphor. The Devil is sometimes known as the Lord of Misrule. His son will rob humanity of hope. Civilization will fail.'
âIs there anything else, Mr. Prior?'
âI'd be more comfortable if you called me Jacob. The only people who refer to me as Mr. are call-centre staff phoning about overdue credit card repayments.'
âFine,' she said. âOne on one I'm Jane. In the presence of other police officers, it should really be Ms. Sullivan.'
âI'm sure I can manage that.'
âOn a subject adjacent to overdue credit card repayments, Jacob, we will need you to sign a confidentiality agreement. It's a sort of contract. And it's binding.'
âWhat does it bind me to?'
âYou can't blog about this case.'
âI don't blog.'
âYou can't tweet about it either.'
âI don't have a Twitter account.'
âMost importantly, you can't talk to the press about it. You might get offers from one or two of the tabloids. I'd say it's likely and I'd predict that if there's another murder the offers might start to get generous.'
âBy generous, you mean tempting?'
âI suppose I do. But we can't let the killer know anything about the progress of the investigation. He's leaving clues. We haven't interpreted them successfully yet, but I wouldn't want him to stop leaving them, not if he goes on killing. Do you appreciate that?'
Prior looked at the faxed transcripts on the desk. His cheeks had coloured. Blushing slightly, he looked even younger. He said, âI wouldn't be tempted, not by any amount of money. I wouldn't wish to profit from tragedy. Murdered women shouldn't be a source of personal gain for anyone.'
Spoken like a priest,
she almost said. But she resisted the joke because it was in poor taste and because she knew he was telling the truth.
âHe won't, by the way.'
âHe won't what?'
âHe won't stop leaving clues.'
âWhy won't he?'
âBecause he doesn't think you'll catch him, because of who he thinks he is.'
They shook hands and he left after assuring her that his mobile would remain switched on for the duration of his involvement with the case. âThat's day and night,' she said, âparticularly night.'
He took the Carter transcripts with him. He wanted to cross-reference some of what they said. There were some minor chronological contradictions.
âYou think he's got his facts wrong?'
âActually I suspect he's got his facts right in areas where we've had them wrong. You were bang on, calling him the Scholar.'
Jane was happy to let Prior take the material away. They had copies. She thought the more familiar he became with the mind of the man who'd written the messages, the better. She thought he possessed an insight into character that was shrewd and well developed. It was a rare talent most common in people with little or no ego of their own.
After he had gone she opened up the Whitechapel file again on her desktop. There was no specific reason for doing this. She had an intuition of her own that this information from the past might prove enlightening and even useful to her at some point in the future. She didn't yet know why or how.
When she closed the file an hour later, she fetched herself a fresh cup of coffee from the machine on the corridor and then sat back at her desk and opened the case notes on Julie Longmuir.
The actress had been rehearsing the lead role in Strindberg's play, Miss Julie. Jane had seen an old BBC dramatization starring someone like Janet Suzman or Glenda Jackson years earlier. She had largely forgotten the plot details. She couldn't even properly remember who'd played Miss Julie. One or two scenes had stayed with her. There'd been the interminable polishing by a servant of a boot. She remembered about it that it wasn't exactly light entertainment. Scandinavian drama of the period was decidedly light on laughs.
What exactly was the period? She looked it up. She saw that Strindberg had written the play in 1888. It was a coincidence, wasn't it? Except that Jane Sullivan had a detective's belief in coincidence. She didn't trust it in the slightest.
It wasn't at all what Father James Cantrell expected. His first emotions were a contradictory mingling of relief and indignation. The bleak austerity of the priory so far was a theme he'd expected to see continued beyond the iron door. He'd expected a dungeon, he realized, a stone
cell hewn from rock in medieval times for captivity and confinement in dark cold secrecy. He'd expected shackles riven into pitted walls.
He had been stupid, hadn't he? If the place had been designed principally as a prison it would be below rather than above that the cells would have been built. That had been the custom then. It was still the custom now. Subterranean spaces were more secure. Where there was no light, hope tended to extinguish itself. It was a custom as true of the Lubyanka Prison run by the KGB as it had been of the Tower of London used by Plantagenet kings.
The door opened instead onto a large and spacious library. It wasn't well-lit, but gloom was a relative notion and compared to what he had left behind it seemed both sumptuous and airy. The windows were narrow but they were thickly glazed with glass and there were several of them, evenly spaced, in a single row across both exterior walls. Between the windows there were crammed bookcases and bookcases lined both interior walls for the whole of their length.
Most of the volumes were bound in leather with gilt tooled titles glimmering on their spines and the overall impression, in the dry and relative warmth and brightness of the library, was one of scholarly privilege.
The room had a high ceiling and a wooden ladder on wheels had been constructed to enable readers to climb to reach the books placed on the more remote shelves. Apart from that, the only furniture was a rectangular oak table at the centre of the room equipped with a single straight-backed chair. The floor was smoothly flagged stone, but this was still by far the most comfortable and congenial area of the priory Cantrell had experienced.
There was a smell he knew was a mingling in there of vellum and parchment and hide. It hinted at the age of the order and the weight of its ancient tradition. He shook his head. He thought of the generations of devout men whose dedications had been squandered on a wicked fallacy.
Then he noticed the single slender item placed on the table at the centre of the room. He sighed, disappointed, knowing with a sinking plunge in the pit of his stomach that this was what they thought of as their proof. Words inked on pages: rumour, embellishment, speculation and lies. He hardly had the will to go and see what had been left there for him. He strode from
the door to the table and looked just the same. The cover was stiff and marbled board without a single character, let alone a title, to tell the reader what the volume might contain.
He took the top corner at the unbound edge and opened it. And he read a copperplate frontispiece that said,
Being an account of the London Mission of Brother Daniel Barry in the Year of Our Lord, 1888.
He shook his head. He was tempted to read no further. He had wasted more than enough time. What he needed to do was to go and confront the trio of fustian-clad unknowing clowns he had left at the bottom of the spiral of stairs. He needed to spell out to them the specifics of what the Cardinal had ordered they should do. And more pertinently, the blasphemous rituals they should no longer practice.
He didn't think he could influence their beliefs. He'd seen the incredulity on their faces when he'd informed them of the contemporary interpretation of what really happened with the miracle of Lazarus and his apparent return from the dead. Father Cantrell didn't delude himself about what he could achieve with the men he'd left down there. Above all, he liked to think he was a pragmatist.
He let the cover of the book slip from his fingers and noticed a puff of dust escape the pages when it dropped back down. Whatever Brother Daniel's mission had been back in the great metropolis of the Victorian era, over recent years, it seemed evident nobody here had bothered to remind themselves about it. That was fine by Cantrell. He had no intention of reading about it either.
He descended the spiral of steps in darkness. Darkness didn't intimidate him the way the thought of it had, clutching his taper on the way up. The journey down led to only one destination and the shaft was straight and the steps evenly cut into the stone. He opened the door at their base and rather enjoyed the crestfallen expressions that claimed the faces of the three brethren waiting for him in the room beyond.
âYou haven't read it,' Brother Stephen said. His tone was not so much forlorn as abject.
âI've no intention of reading it.'
âThat sounds like the bigotry of which we stand accused,' Brother Dominic said.
âWords written on a page are proof of nothing,' Cantrell said. âThey amount to conjecture. At best they can be described as an affidavit. They must be taken on trust. They are not tangible or demonstrable. They do not qualify as evidence.'
âNeither do the Gospels, by your definition,' Brother Philip said.
âWho was this Daniel Barry?'
âHe came from Dublin. He was first a sailor,' Brother Philip said. âHe was a sometimes prize-fighter. In his more reflective moments he wrote song and verse.'
âSounds like one of those Byronic all-rounders,' Cantrell said, âcommon only to the 19th century.'
âHe was both common and uncommon,' Brother Stephen said. âHe was not an aristocrat like Lord Byron. He was intelligent. He was resourceful. He was physically formidable.'
âThe fasting didn't weaken him?'
âHe was not required, in his role, to fast,' Brother Dominic said. âAnd it ill-becomes you, Father, to make fun of us.'
âHow did he stumble across your Order?'
âWe recruited him,' Brother Philip said. âHis faith was staunchly held and sometimes a Soldier of God must be a warrior. At the outset he was unconvinced. We were able to convince him. He took on his mission with hope and resolution.'
âYou haven't convinced me,' Cantrell said.
âPlease,' Brother Philip said. He sounded desperate. âPlease read his account.'
Cantrell remembered the Cardinal's instruction to treat them kindly. He looked at his wristwatch. It was approaching 3.30 in the afternoon. He was absolutely determined he wouldn't spend the night enduring their hospitality. He had more than sufficient daylight left for his descent to where he had left the rental Jeep. It was June and wouldn't be dark until comfortably after 9pm.
He said, âI'll take it away with me.'
âThat's forbidden,' Brother Stephen said.
âBy whom is it forbidden?'
âWe exist in a condition of necessary secrecy,' Brother Philip said.
âThat's my condition. That's my only condition,' Cantrell said to them. âI give my solemn word I'll read Barry's account. I'll give my solemn word not to show it to another living soul. But I need to take it away with me to contemplate its implications fully. I will not be coerced and I won't be rushed.'
âYou give us no choice,' Brother Dominic said.
âNone,' Cantrell said.
âThen we must accede,' Brother Philip said.
Cantrell said, âWhen I arrived here, you mentioned your prayers and observations. There are also the rituals you perform, are there not?'
âNot since the Cardinal wrote to us threatening the sanctions he did unless we stopped,' Brother Stephen said. âWe have not performed any of our rites since then.'
âHow long ago was that?'
âJust over seven weeks ago,' Brother Philip said.
Brother Stephen frowned. âIt's closer to eight,' he said.
âYou give me those assurances in truth, before God?'
âOur rites have not been practiced since the day we received the Cardinal's letter forbidding them,' Brother Philip said.
It was precisely the assurance he had travelled there to hear. Cantrell spread his arms wide. âAnd yet the world has not come crashing around your ears since then, gentlemen. Everything remains the same, does it not?'
They looked at him dubiously. None of them commented on this rather stark observation. It was a little like dealing with recalcitrant children. The Cardinal had hinted at excommunication should they defy his instruction. It was the harshest possible punishment the Church could inflict. But Cantrell thought it the only one that would have stopped them. They were steeped in their traditions and motivated, he supposed, by a childish sort of terror.