The 13th Tablet (25 page)

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Authors: Alex Mitchell

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‘A certain stone tablet' she answered.

She slid the attaché-case on his desk and opened it. He looked at the cuneiform tablet, picked it up and examined it on all sides.

‘What sort of stone is it?' asked Oberon.

‘I'm looking into it,' said Natasha. ‘We'll have the results of the analysis in a day or two.'

‘Excellent. Send it to Professor Manfred this afternoon, under the usual confidential terms. I want the translation as soon as possible.'

‘That won't be possible, sir.'

‘Just double his fee.' Then, noticing that Natasha was avoiding his gaze, he asked, ‘Why not?'

‘He passed away three months ago.'

‘How unfortunate.'

‘I only found this out yesterday. Since then I've looked for a suitable translator, but I'm not sure we'll get someone as amenable as Professor Manfred, when it comes to the sort of confidentiality we require. I don't think we can trust any scholar faced with such a tablet not to publish their results or let alone refrain from talking about it.'

‘Oh. Is that all? In that case, we'll just use the Vatican procedure.'

‘Sorry sir?' she said.

‘When Vatican officials find an apocryphal gospel and feel that it may harm the orthodoxy of the Catholic faith, they don't give it out to one translator. They divide the work between three or more.'

‘So that no-one but the officials have the full knowledge of the text's importance,' she answered.

‘Exactly. Photograph the inscription and split it between three scholars you have already listed. Make them sign the confidentiality agreement before sending anything.'

‘Yes sir.'

‘It was a stroke of luck, leaving those men behind in Safed', he added.

‘Yes.'

‘What amazes me is that Mina Osman's still alive.'

‘There was a man with her in Safed,' Natasha added, ‘he might be the same one who was in Mosul. I suspect he has been protecting her all this time. I think I should find out who he is.'

‘No,' he answered, ‘you have enough on your plate as it is. What can they do? Try to steal the tablet back? I think not. Miss Osman will probably return to New York and cash in her quarterly research funds. I don't think we'll hear from them again.'

‘Right. I'll go then Sir.'

Natasha's intuition was that Mina Osman and her mysterious helper would be back on the scene. Oberon had already made a mistake talking to Mina on the boat about his Chinese oracle bone. However clever he might be, he was too arrogant to be considered wise.

Same day. Safed.

‘Master?' said a man. He was dressed in dark clothing and sitting in a car with tinted windows that concealed him from passers-by.

‘Yes?'

‘We have recovered a parchment describing the council of rabbis in Safed.'

‘Good. Where is it?'

‘Ephraim is on a plane as we speak, bringing it back to you.'

‘It should have been destroyed.'

The man hesitated, then said, ‘It will be done Master, but the tablet is in Wheatley's hands.'

‘Retrieve it.'

‘It will be difficult master. He is well guarded. I may need some…
special
… help.'

‘Do not fret. I will pray for you and I will send you instructions.'

‘Thank you Master.'

‘Your labours will soon be at an end,' the voice said, and the line went dead.

 

Chapter 21

 

December 13th, 2004. London

 

 

 

Mina woke up alone in the hotel room. Jack's bed was untouched. He hadn't returned since the night before. She retraced their steps from the moment they landed at Heathrow airport; they'd taken a train to Paddington station in West London, then walked through Paddington Green to Maida Vale and come to the Colonnade hotel, where Jack had booked a room for a few nights. ‘We'll be safe here,' he had said. They were a few streets away from Little Venice, with its beautiful mansions and canal barges. For a millionaires' haven, it was a wonderfully discreet part of London.

 

Mina had been exhausted when they'd arrived at the hotel but Jack had ‘people to see,' as he put it enigmatically. She didn't ask any questions and hadn't seen him since. She couldn't find her mobile phone anywhere. Had she forgotten it in Safed? No, she was sure she still had it in Ben Gurion airport in Tel Aviv. She remembered turning it off. It was the last time she'd handled it. Had Jack taken it? Again? She found a note stuck to the bathroom mirror. ‘Morning Mina. Meet me for lunch at one p.m. at the Waterway, on Formosa Street. Xx, Jack.'

She was a little miffed at his bossy tone, but she couldn't deny that she looked forward to going on a date with Jack, if this was what he intended. They had been through so much pain and misery since they had met, a change of pace would be welcome. She lay half-asleep in the large, warm bed, all alone, thinking about Jack. She felt a growing desire for Jack's muscular body. She wanted to feel his weight crushing her, wanted his strong hands to pin her down as he made rough, passionate love to her. She snuggled deep under the sheets, and closed her eyes.

 

Mina left the hotel an hour later to grab a coffee in Little Venice and gather her thoughts while she waited for Jack. She had asked for directions in the hotel lobby but expected to get lost in a matter of minutes. It was only her second visit to London and she had not spent much time walking in the city back then.

Two years ago, she had attended an academic conference on the ancient Near East at University College London, which housed one of the largest institutes of Archaeology in the world. She had been offered accommodation nearby, in Russell Square, from where she had visited the British Museum a few times, as well as Covent Garden. That was the extent of her knowledge of the British capital.

She strolled down the broad streets of Maida Vale. It was a delightful part of London; central but secluded all the same, five minutes walk from Paddington station but cut off from the bustle of London traffic. As she walked past large white mansions lined with expensive cars she knew she was nearing her destination. She arrived at the canal, on Bloomfield Road. She walked across a bridge towards a barge-caf.. It was painted in a glossy maroon finish and ivy tresses hung down from the upper deck on either side.

The weather was chilly, so she walked onto the barge and into the caf.. She ordered a cappuccino and a croissant. The Buena Vista Social Club soundtrack was playing, which put her in a good mood. She had an hour before meeting Jack. She took out her notebook and placed it next to her coffee mug, leaned back and watched the cyclists shooting by, using the local network of canal routes to get to Paddington station. She remembered Jack saying that one could access most of London and avoid all traffic by using the cycle paths along the canals.

 

She thought back to their conversation in Tel Aviv the day before their departure to London. Jack could be very persuasive but she would not have left for London had she not felt deep down that he was right. She still felt utterly devastated about Eli's death. She kept repeating the words that Jack said: she had neither wanted him dead nor had she killed him. Someone else had: Oberon Wheatley. He might be legally untouchable, as Jack explained, and would never stand trial for the crimes he had perpetrated, but by going to London she could at least make sure he would never learn about the other tablet. She would get there first for Eli and for all those who believed in saving mankind rather than annihilating them or holding them to ransom.

Right now, Wheatley had the stone tablet and most likely the rabbi's chronicle as well. But they held the upper hand, as they already knew the contents of both and knew where to head next: Cambridge. Clearly the letter between the two brothers, from Cambridge to Safed, indicated that an ‘item' was safe, and would one day be returned to its rightful place, the temple in Jerusalem. What else could this item be but the Jerusalem Tablet? She would have loved to know how the tablet had come to be a family heirloom of sorts, cared for by these two brothers. But first she had to speak to Moshe Shobai. Whatever Jack's misgivings about the man, she would meet him. The whole world was not after them, Jack was being overcautious. One couldn't be so na.ve as to think that academic pursuit was not fraught with danger. Shobai probably knew something about the tablet as a scholar deeply immersed in the field and was wise enough to keep away from what he sensed to be dangerous. He had kindly told her to leave it well alone but she hadn't heeded his warning.

Her thoughts had drifted so much she'd almost forgot the time. She paid the waitress and left her a generous tip. Walking briskly across the bridge, she turned left down the street towards the restaurant. Jack was waiting for her out front holding a beautiful bunch of roses.

‘Hi Mina,' he said, offering her the flowers.

‘Hi Jack. Thanks,' she answered, taking the roses and kissing him on the cheek. ‘Now can I have my phone back?' she added, smiling sweetly.

He grinned and pushed her gently into the restaurant. He had made a reservation for a table by the window. As they sat down, Mina looked out at the canal through the glass. Jack ordered a bottle of red wine and some sparkling water. They looked at each other without a word until the drinks arrived.

‘What should we toast to?' asked Mina.

‘To the success of our quest! By the way Mina, if you'd checked your mobile you'd know that Hassan's fine.'

‘He's fine?'

‘Yes, he is. I'm not quite sure how he escaped Wheatley's grasp but he did and he texted you to say he and his mother were staying with relatives in the countryside. I texted back saying it was good news and that you'd get in touch sometime soon.'

‘Thanks for that Jack. Now, seriously, where's my phone? Are you a kleptomaniac? It's the second time you've taken my mobile while I've been asleep.'

‘Technically, you fainted the first time. Does that really count?'

‘Just give me my phone.'

‘Here you are,' he said, handing her a brand new one.

‘That's not my phone.'

‘I know. Yours wasn't safe to use any longer. We need to stay under the radar for the time being. Here's a British passport by the way.'

‘A passport? You
have
been busy,' she answered.

‘Let me explain.'

The waiter came to take the order. Jack chose the salmon, and Mina who hadn't paid attention to the menu, said she would have the same.

‘Please, do explain,' said Mina, sarcastically.

‘We have no idea how powerful Wheatley is,' Jack said, ‘my guess is his area of influence is huge; politics, finance, police. We don't know that he won't try to get hold of you again. I couldn't do anything about it while we were in Israel, but in London things are different. I met a contact last night, and he sorted out a few things for us including fake IDs and a car. I bought us two pay-as-you-go mobile phones and I found Moshe Shobai's office address in St. John's Wood. It's a funny place to have an office, as it is mainly a residential area but there it is.'

Mina was trying to assimilate all the information, but was struggling, ‘Jack?'

‘Yes?'

‘I know you told me Oberon is a powerful guy. But with all your ‘connections,' can't we get some more help? Why can't you contact the proper authorities and have Oberon arrested?'

‘Well…'

‘What?'

‘Back in Iraq, when you were in the hospital…'

‘Yes?'

‘I called it in.'

‘Can you be less cryptic?'

‘I talked to a friend, Stella, my former superior officer and discussed your situation.'

‘So? That's good, isn't it?'

‘Then in Israel, the day we left, I was contacted again but not by her.'

‘By whom?' she asked.

‘Someone I didn't know, from a different service. Intelligence. He asked me about you but I played dumb. I then tried contacting Stella but she was unreachable.'

‘I still don't understand,' Mina said, with growing anxiety.

‘You have to understand how these people in the intelligence business think. Their ears prick up at the smallest bit of information, especially in wartime Iraq. The little they know of your story is weird enough to interest them. They're paranoid, ever-doubting and obsessed with secrecy. Maybe my conversation with Stella was intercepted, or maybe she spoke to someone she shouldn't have. I don't know. The important thing is that before you know it, Mina, you'd be locked away somewhere, for reasons of ‘National Security.' The whole affair would be taken over by some agents and I'd never see you again.'

Mina was as pale as death. She was about to say something but Jack continued.

‘Let me finish. That's one worry, but from the moment our business became known to more than one person, I realised it could be leaked to more people and eventually Wheatley could find out about our whereabouts too. I'm sorry, Mina.'

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