Chase Baker and the Seventh Seal (A Chase Baker Thriller Book 9) (9 page)

BOOK: Chase Baker and the Seventh Seal (A Chase Baker Thriller Book 9)
11.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

CHAPTER 15

 

We land on time in Tel Aviv and quickly make our way through immigration where we are issued entry stamps without questions as if Moshe and Itzhak preplanned it that way. And maybe, with Cross’ help and influence, they have. When we arrive outside in the brilliant sun of the early morning, a vehicle is waiting for us parked in the taxi lane. It’s another black Suburban, almost identical in every way to the one Itzy and Moshe picked us up in this morning. Or should I say, yesterday morning.

Once again, Magda and I pile into the back while Moshe gets behind the wheel, grabbing the keys from on the visor. Itzy rides shotgun. Makes me feel like we never left New York.

“We’ll head right to the safe house,” Moshe says into the rearview where his eyes focus in on my own reflected stare. “Then make a plan.”

“Whatever you say, Moshe,” I say. “I guess, for now, I’m just along for the ride. Tell me when you actually want me to do something.”

Itzy turns and eyes me. “We’re not your bosses. My brother and I are here to make sure you’re safe, and that’s all.”

“Oh, good,” I say, “because for a minute there I was getting the feeling you were running the whole show.”

Magda laughs under her breath, sets her left hand on my forearm. There’s that electric jolt again that tells me I’m falling. Maybe falling hard. Chase the always in love. Or so it seems. But that’s exactly the kind of thing that can get me in trouble. Best that I focus on the job at hand. Do my best to find these codices, if they exist, then get the hell out and back to New York before some rival hunter tries to stop me.

Stop me with a bullet.

After an hour’s drive through a Biblical, mountainous, desert landscape littered with concrete settlements surrounded by precast concrete walls topped with razor wire, we arrive in Jerusalem. The place is a bustling, hilly place that must have been fairly lush at one time, at least, judging by the greenery that still occupies the sides of the hills along with the houses, high-rises, and commercial establishments.

The old City Walls begin to take shape as we drive up the hill toward the Palestinian Quarter. My mind immediately turns to Jesus. His riding into the city on a white donkey through what’s now known as the Wall’s Golden Gate, just like the Old Testament predicted.

Was Jesus acting out scripture when He entered into the city on that fateful Passover weekend back in the early first century AD? Or had scripture merely prophesied the inevitable? Whatever the case, the Muslims have since filled the gate in with blocks weighing one ton apiece. A move intended to prevent Jesus from returning and entering the Holy City through that same gate ever again. But something tells me if He ever does make a comeback tour, those stones don’t stand a chance of stopping Him, no matter how much they weigh. 

Our safe house is actually a non-descript hotel located in the Palestinian Quarter, in an alley off a road lined with clothing shops, bakeries, falafel stands, money changers, and more than a few low-class hotels and eateries. The streets aren’t maintained, and there’s garbage everywhere, despite the ugly metal dumpsters that seem to occupy nearly every street corner.

The building the hotel is housed in is easily a century or two old. It’s built of stone and marble, with arches and keystones over the entry and doorways. Inside the lobby, the walls of which contain several varieties of framed “Visit Palestine” posters, we are immediately handed three room keys. One for the Hasidic brothers, one for Magda, and one for me.

I check my watch.

Nine in the morning. No point in wasting the day.

“How much time you need to freshen up?” I say to the crew.

“Give me five minutes,” Magda says.

“Coffee,” Moshe says. “I need coffee.”

“We should pray, too,” Itzhak says, glancing at the clock above the reception desk. His eyes catch the Visit Palestine posters hanging on the wall. “I can’t say I’m feeling too comfortable here,” he adds.

“We won’t be here long,” I assure him. “Meet me in my room, fifteen minutes. Fair enough?”

“Glad to see you taking charge.” Magda smiles.

“This is how I start earning Cross’ money.”

The four of us head up the two flights of stone stairs and disperse to our individual rooms. As I’m placing the key into the door lock, I’m overcome with an odd sensation. It must be ninety degrees in the shade in Jerusalem, but I feel a cold chill pass through my flesh down to the bone. The hairs on the back of my neck stand up, and goosebumps pop out of my skin. I turn quick and nearly pull the .45 from my shoulder holster. But then I notice the security camera mounted on the corridor’s far upper corner, and I know that I’m being watched. By who or what, I can’t be sure. Cross took care of these accommodations so I can only assume this hotel is safe.

A safe house . . .

Time will tell.

Stepping into the room, I set my bag down on the floor and collapse onto the bed face first. The breeze from the revolving ceiling fan washes over me, and not having caught a single Z on the long flight over here, I fall immediately into a deep sleep.

I’m back in the valley.

A grassy plane surrounded by Date trees and foothills. It’s so hot, I feel like I’m going to melt into a puddle of blood and water. The sky is dark and lightning flashes in the distance. Jagged, bright white, electric, and violent. Emerging from the heat haze that paints the horizon, I see four horses and four riders coming toward me at full gallop.

Three black horses and one white horse.

The white horse is in front.

I try to turn and run, but I can’t. I’m cemented in place. Suddenly, the rider is within view, and she pulls back on the reigns, stops the horse only feet away from me, the animal coated in sweat, its muscles pulsing, snot spitting out its nose and mouth.

The pale rider on the pale horse is Vanessa Gabor.

The other three horses arrive, and the rider’s identities are revealed — Magda, Moshe, and Itzhak. The latter two are laughing and holding the reigns to their mounts with one hand and tattered copies of the Siddu in the other.

“Seek the three sevens,” Magda says.

“When the earth opens up,” Vanessa says, “we will all die.”

“We will all see God,” Moshe says. “Jesus will break down the stone walls and enter through the Golden Gates.”

“We will enter into heaven,” Itzhak says. “We are the chosen people.”

“Remember,” Magda says again, “the three sevens. Or the world ends.”

Jolting awake.

I have no idea where I am. I shake my head, and it slowly comes back to me that I’m in Jerusalem. The sounds of the old city fill the second floor room, and my skin is covered in a sheen of sweat beneath my clothing.

What a dream I had.

What did Magda mean by the three sevens? Are Moshe and Itzhak actually looking forward to the end of the world? Judgement day? As the chosen people, they will see paradise while the rest of us sinners take a fucking powder? Is that why they’re here? Not to prevent judgment day, but to make it happen?

Take it easy Chase. It’s your imagination getting the best of you. The writer’s imagination . . .

Bounding up from the bed, I pull out my laptop, log into the hotel internet, bring up Google. I type in, “Israel, Valley, Judgement Day, Apocalypse.” I am immediately directed to a new article about massive oil reverses in the Megiddo-Jezreel Valley and the Golan Heights. The article refers to the reserves as a “bonanza.”

I sit back and think.

“The Megiddo Valley,” I whisper to myself. “How do I know that name?”

Then, it comes to me. From my New Testament courses back at Providence College. The Megiddo Valley and Armageddon are synonymous. In fact, the article points to the fact that Moses predicted that one day the Israelites would poke their toes in pools of black oil.

I type “Megiddo Valley” into the Google search, hit
Enter
. There’s a photo of Tel Megiddo, the mountain upon which many bloody battles have been fought in ancient times. This is also the spot the Book of Revelations claims the final battle between good and evil will occur.

Armageddon . . . Judgement day . . . The day Christ returns to earth . . .

I close the laptop, sit back in the chair.

“The seven codices,” I whisper. “The seventh book bound with the seventh seal. A seal that, if broken, will usher in the end of days.” I recall Vanessa in my dream.
Seek the three sevens.
I see Moshe and Itzhak holding their tattered Siddu prayer books. Is Vanessa talking about the codices themselves? But then, she was talking to me in a dream. There’s nothing real about the three sevens. It’s something that I’m making up in my subconscious.

A knock on the door.

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 16

 

Open the door.

Magda steps in. No
Hello
. No
Hope I’m not disturbing you
. No smile. Her face is all business. She’s wearing a military green T-shirt, tan cargo pants, and black combat boots. Her long black hair is pulled back into a ponytail. She looks ready for action.

She’s got a map of the city in her hand. While she’s spreading it out on the bed, Moshe and Itzhak enter the room and immediately press their backs against the far wall.

“Don’t mind us,” Itzak says, planting a smile on his face which looks silly between those hanging curling locks and that oversized black Stetson. “Go about your business like we’re not here.”

Just like my dream, the two of them are holding their tattered black, leather bound prayer books. I ignore the Hasidic brothers and concentrate instead on Magda. She’s using her index finger like a pointer. Taking a couple of steps towards her, I gaze over her shoulder.

“The bookshop is located here, in the Old City, through the Damascus Gate. On Al–Wad Street, maybe one hundred feet before the Via Dolorosa.”

“What are we waiting for?” I say.

Magda straightens up.

“It’s as good a place as any to start our search.”

“Are you suggesting or telling?”

“Very funny.” She goes for the door.

“Wait,” I say.

She stops, her hand on the old brass lever.

I pull out my .45, thumb the mag release, check the load, slap the magazine back home, safety on.

“Now I feel better,” I say.

Itzhe slaps his Siddu.

“This is all the fire power I need,” he says. But then, opening his coat and issuing his machine pistol a quick glance. “The Uzi is for backup.”

“Power of God beats bullets every time,” Moshe says.

“God
is
a bullet,” I say.

Magda opens the door, and we pile out.

 

 

 

 

Other books

PrimeDefender by Ann Jacobs
The Secret of Isobel Key by Jen McConnel
Jessica by Bryce Courtenay
Twilight with the Infamous Earl by Alexandra Hawkins
Sing Fox to Me by Sarak Kanake
Little Nothing by Marisa Silver
The Crazy School by Cornelia Read
The Man of Bronze by Kenneth Robeson