PROLOGUE
In a village outside Jerusalem, Israel, 135 A.C.E.
I am a dead man.
Akiva scratched the words across a torn piece of
parchment, which was stretched over a table made from two
clay wine jars and a large piece of wood from an
abandoned ox-cart. A faint smell of wine drifted through
the cracks in the wood, reminding him his old stomach was
as empty as the wine jars. While dismissing the tempting
perfume, he dipped his stylus again into the black ink
and waited for the bead on the tip to plop back into the
pot, for every drop was worth a fortune and he was
quickly running out of money and time.
Shaping the letters in short, deliberate movements, his
hand crept from right to left, aligning each letter to
the one before it. For a long moment he stopped to stare
at the words as though they were a primal truth and, try
as he may to understand them, he knew he never would. The
world had gone mad with violence and he seemed to be at
the whirling core of it.
He felt a sharp pain scrabble inside his chest until it
found his heart, making it rattle like a dried up bean in
a clay jar. Age had come upon him suddenly in these last
few weeks, hurtling itself over him until his bones
creaked with the weight of it, or was it, rather, the
harrowing millstone of responsibility for all of those
deaths at Masada crushing him? He touched the point of
his stylus to the parchment and began writing again.
I can hear the soldiers marching several streets away as
they search for me and the others involved in the
rebellion. They most certainly will find me, unless I am
able to escape in the next few moments, leaving little
time to explain anything to you, but I shall try.
A tear slid down his nose and dropped, drowning the
letter it fell upon until it was nothing more than a
black spot. He wiped his face with his sleeve and
continued writing.
I am staying in a village somewhere on the outskirts of
Be’er Karkom. My life here has been smothering me like an
old wool blanket. All the hiding and the reliance upon
others to fetch food and supplies has taken its toll on
my spirit. I continue to teach, but the number of my
students has dwindled to only those brave enough to defy
the governor’s edict. General Vespasian will never give
up the search for those who escaped Masada, and my name
is on the top of the list. I believed in Bar Kokhba, I
believed he was our Savior, but, as you know, hindsight
has always had better vision.
My students each carry a letter to you through my
graduates who are scattered about the countryside. I hope
that by using this method, one letter will make it
through to you.
He stopped suddenly, hearing a noise outside the door. He
held his breath as his heart drummed in his chest. A
dog’s nose peeked through a hole in the wall and snorted.
Disinterested, the dog trotted down the mud-soaked alley,
oblivious to the fright he caused. Akiva exhaled, placing
his hand over his heart, still beating in a furious
tattoo of fear. These terror-ridden moments were
exhausting him, aging him a year for each moment as they
increased in frequency. He knew he must move quickly, but
how do you hasten expressing your love? Lowering the
stylus to the parchment, he began to shape the letters in
quick light strokes.
I have made the decision to return to the Cave because
there is safety from the Romans within its inaccessible
walls. A map accompanies each letter, in the hope that
you will be able to join me if it is possible for you to
get away without being followed. You know the secrets and
the symbols to find me.
I love you, my darling. You know I do not make this
decision lightly. The worst part of it is that I may
never see your beautiful face again, or lay my lips upon
yours. How fortunate I am to be married to you. I still
live in the fervent hope that you will find your way to
me, unless God has other plans.
Here O Israel, the Lord our God is One.
Your loving husband,
Akiva ben Josef
He rolled the parchment and slid it inside a leather
saddle bag beside another rolled parchment. He recognized
the cadence of his students’ footsteps outside the door.
This was it. The long journey lay ahead of him if the
Romans didn’t capture him first.
“Goodbye.” He kissed his fingers and touched the small
clay mezuzah on the lintel. Returning his fingers to his
lips, he turned his face toward the approaching figures.
“Were any of you seen?”
In the year of our Lord 1610, high in the Andes Mountains
of Peru
A young Catholic Priest dodged a branch flying toward his
anxious face. His black hair was tangled with dried
leaves and twigs and his skull cap was threatening to
fall off his head. He raised his arm as a shield from any
further attacks by the dense jungle and stumbled forward.
“How much farther?” he asked his guide. “The sun is about
to rise.”
“We will make it, Llactapata lies directly ahead,” the
Mochen’s voice sounded reassuring, authoritative. “We are
nearly there.”
He was ahead of the Priest, keeping his eyes fixed on the
overgrown path before him, a torch in one hand and a
machete in the other, never breaking his pace or the
rhythm of his machete as it sliced through the
underbrush.
It had taken a full year for the Priest to get this quiet
Mochen to trust him, and another to convert the man’s
heart from its pagan roots to Christianity, but the
question the Priest never bothered to ask himself was
whether or not he trusted this unassuming native of Peru.
He certainly trusted the Mochen more than the soldiers
who he sailed with from Spain. Instead, he placed all of
his trust in the vision and the song that he knew he
received from God. He could hear it now, pulsing in his
ears along with his blood flying like a startled bird
through his body.
Everyone, even his Bishop, thought he was mad. Only an
insane man would dream such bizarre dreams, hear the
otherworldly music dancing in his head, and possess such
an unwavering desire to come to this wild place to
convert these simple Mochen peoples to Christianity. But
the Holy Father believed him, the Pontiff Paul V,
listened intently to the descriptions of his dreams, and
was fascinated by the mystical nature of his visions.
After the meeting, the Pontiff immediately secured him a
cuddy aboard one of the ships set to sail across the
ocean, and presented him with the beautiful gold
crucifix, which adorned his neck. He then blessed him and
assured him that every priest in the Vatican would be
praying for his safety and success, for he was on an
incredible mission from God and the gates of Hell would
be pressing against him.
Perhaps he was mad, for there were moments when even he
believed he might be. The proof of that point was about
to be tested. He could hear the muffled sounds of a large
gathering, the cadence of a chant rising toward a full-
throated hypnotic delirium. His heart leaped in his
chest. They were too late.
“We must hurry.” He picked up his pace, nearly running
past his Mochen companion.
They both pushed through the edge of the jungle into a
clearing of terraced gardens and dashed toward the temple
rising above them. Dozens of torches lit up the dawning
sky and cast a soft, golden glow on the faces of the
crowd of worshippers, each swaying as though they were
bewitched, their arms raised above their heads with
terrifying grimaces stretched across their faces. The
Priest had never seen the ceremony before, but he had
heard it described by his convert in horrifying detail.
Nothing had prepared him for what he saw as they elbowed
their way through the crowd.
The heads of two men with expressions of sheer terror
mortised on their faces lay at the bottom of a trail of
blood that led to the top of the small temple. He stared
in horror at the bloody visage, feeling light-headed, and
that he would faint dead away if someone merely touched
him. His stomach churned and twisted while he desperately
tried to steel himself against swooning, but his body
doubled over and the contents of his hastily consumed
last meal spewed over the bloody trail. He wiped his
mouth and straightened his uncooperative body as he
called upon God to give him strength and direction.
Words suddenly came roaring out in a robust, commanding
voice that was not his, “Stop this evil! What kind of god
demands you to murder your brothers, these innocents?”
It was as though someone had slapped each face in the
crowd, their arms dropping limply to their sides, and the
grisly sardonic expression metamorphosing into one of
surprise and confusion. The pagan priest flashed from
rapture to rage in an instant and began a deliberate
descent from the top of the temple steps directly toward
the young Catholic Priest, his sacrificial knife raised
in his hand red from blood. He stared at the priest as he
would a lamb he was about to slaughter, vulnerable and
unarmed. His face twitched as his eyes grew into two,
huge orbs, his mouth a black gash, and his body taut and
consumed with mad hatred.
The Mochen Christian moved like lightening toward the
pagan priest, grabbing his wrist which was holding a
death grip on the knife.
“Enough,” the Mochen Christian announced. “There will be
no more sacrifices.” His eyes toured the crowd. “It ends
here.”
Heads swiveled toward their fellow Mochen and the crowd
instantly fell to their knees, their faces showing that
they knew who he was and that he was an imposing and
important person. He hardened his grip on the witchy
priest, who reluctantly bowed his head as he lowered his
body to a kneeling position.
“Who,” the Catholic Priest swallowed hard, “who are you?”
“I am their King.”
The pagan priest seized the moment, wrested free from the
King’s relaxing grip, and leaped from the steps onto the
startled Catholic Priest who fell backward from the
force. The pagan priest straddled him, raised the knife
with both hands, and shrieked with a sound straight from
Hell.
The determined Catholic Priest began, “Christ before me—”
but he was unable to say the next words of Saint
Patrick’s breastplate. At that moment, the sun peeked
over the temple and with the precision of a focused beam,
landed on the crucifix around his neck, the light
exploding with the force of a bomb. The assemblage
dropped to the ground and the pagan priest screamed.