Father. What I need to do is bring you to the book .â
âI donât understand.â
He squirmed. âThe only other person Iâve told about this is Father Simon. If word got out, I would lose my job. Your brother assures me you can keep a secret?â
For just a glance at that book, I would have promised Ugo almost anything. I had spent my life since seminary as a gospel teacher, and the first principle of my profession was that a small handful of ancientmanuscripts had given the world its entire text of the gospels. The life of Jesus Christ as most modern Christians know it is a fusion of several texts, all slightly different, all breathtakingly old, stitched into a single version by modern scholars who even now continue to make changes based on new discoveries. The Diatessaron, because it was constructed by that same process of fusing older texts, could reveal the gospels as they existed in the 100s AD, long before the earliest complete manuscripts that had come down to us. It could add new facts to what we knew of Jesusâ life and make us question the facts as we thought we knew them.
âI can fly to Turkey as soon as next week,â I said. âSooner if you need me to.â
The pulse was becoming thready in my chest. It was June; I didnât have to teach class again until the fall. There was enough money in my savings account for two airplane tickets. Peter and I could stay with Simon.
But Ugo frowned. âIâm afraid you misunderstand,â he said. âIâm not asking you to come back to Turkey with me. The book is here , Father.â
C HAPTER 6
A S I FOLLOW Simon out of the canteen and up toward Leoâs apartment, my mind contains a single thought: the Shroud is here. The burial cloth of Christ is within these city walls. I wonder if itâs already locked in one of the piers of Saint Peterâs. Maybe the news will be public soon.
The Shroudâs arrival lends Ugoâs exhibit new significance. The truckâs papers were signed by Archbishop Nowak, which means it was John Paul who ordered the Shroud moved. For sixteen years, since the radiocarbon tests, the Church has made no official pronouncements about the Shroud. Suddenly that seems about to change. My thoughts about Ugoâs death, and the intruder at my apartment, begin to tip in new directions. I wonder if this is what Ugo was trying to tell me in his e-mail. That he had succeeded in bringing the Shroud here, only to encounter some kind of problem.
Something has come up. Urgent .
Christian relics can unearth the most subterranean feelings. Last year at Christmas, Peter and I watched TV footage of a huge brawl among priests and monks in Bethlehem over nothing more than which side of the Church of the Nativity they were allowed to sweep. Earlier this year, an armed guard had to be posted inside an international Shroud conference, and the Shroudâs priest-caretaker had to flee the conference hall because of violent reaction to a decision to have the surface of the cloth gently cleaned. If word of the Shroudâs transfer got out, no doubt mostpeople in Turin would be thrilled to learn of Ugoâs plans to authenticate and honor it, but a small fringe might react differently. The only other violent attack I remember at Castel Gandolfo was inspired by strange religious delusions: when I was ten years old, a disturbed man tried to attack John Paul in the gardens, before leading Italian police on a highway chase back to Rome and charging them with an ax. In his pockets were found notes filled with ravings about emulating the gods. I wonder if itâs possible the moving of the Shroud triggered something similar. If so, then I thank God Peter and Helena werenât hurt.
I jog to catch up to Simon, wondering what his own thoughts are. But my brother has already disappeared. When I make my way inside, Sofia emerges from the nursery and says, âHe went up there.â
She points