The Fallen Angel
Eli.”
“I thought you said this place was nothing but a pile of stones.”
“I did,” said Gabriel. “But they’re my stones.”
Lavon lapsed into silence.
“What are you thinking about?”
“The pillars.”
“Get me a hammer and a flashlight, Eli, and I’ll take you to see the pillars.”
44
JERUSALEM
T HE DRIVE FROM K ING S AUL B OULEVARD to the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem usually took a half-hour, but on that afternoon, Uzi Navot’s motorcade accomplished it in just twenty-two minutes door to door. By the time Navot entered the building, Gabriel’s radio had been switched off the papal protection network onto a secure band reserved for Office security personnel. As a result, Navot was able to listen as Gabriel and Eli Lavon raided a storage room in the Western Wall Tunnel for the supplies they would need to break into the Temple Mount.
The prime minister was waiting in the cabinet room, along with the defense minister, the foreign minister, and Navot’s counterpart from Shabak. Live CCTV images of the Old City flickered on the video display wall. In one, the Vicar of Christ was approaching the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. In another, several thousand Muslims were gathered atop the Haram al-Sharif. And in a third, a dozen Israeli police officers stood watch in the now-empty Western Wall Plaza. It was, thought Navot, the Good Friday from hell.
“Well?” asked the prime minister as Navot settled into his usual seat.
“They’re just waiting for your order.”
“A single analyst says there’s a bomb in the Temple Mount that could bring down the entire plateau, and you say I have no choice but to believe her.”
“Yes, Prime Minister.”
“Do you know what’s going to happen if the Palestinians find out that Gabriel and Eli are in there?”
“Someone’s liable to get hurt,” Navot said. “And then the Arab Spring comes to Jerusalem.”
The prime minister stared at the video screens for a moment before nodding his head once. Navot quickly passed the order along to Gabriel. A few seconds later, he heard the sound of four sharp blows.
Alef, Bet, Gimel, Dalet . . .
Then it was done.
From the storage room, Gabriel and Lavon had taken a sledgehammer, a pickax, two coils of nylon rope, two hard hats with halogen lamps, and whatever small hand tools they could find to disarm the bomb. Before putting on his hard hat, Lavon had first covered his head with a kippah . Gabriel had removed his suit jacket, necktie, and shoulder holster. The SIG Sauer 9mm that Alois Metzler had given him was now tucked into the waistband of his trousers at the small of his back. He left the microphone of the miniature radio open so Navot could hear his every breath and footfall.
After breaking through the cement seal, they entered an arched passageway that bore them through the base of the western retaining wall and into the Mount itself. The paving stones of the ancient street were as smooth as glass. Three times a year—on Pesach, Shavuot, and Sukkot—Jews from the ancient kingdoms of Israel had walked over these stones on their way to the Temple. Even Gabriel, who had more on his mind than history, could almost feel the presence of his ancestors, but Eli Lavon was plunging headlong through the gloom, breathless with excitement.
“Look at the dressings on these stones,” he said, running his hand along the cold wall of the passage. “There’s no way these are anything but Herodian.”
“We don’t have time to look at stones,” Gabriel said, prodding Lavon along the passage with the handle of the pickax.
“There’s a very good chance that you and I are going to be the last Jews to ever set foot here.”
“If that bomb goes off, we definitely will be.”
Lavon quickened his pace.
“Where are we exactly?” asked Gabriel.
“If we were on the surface, we’d be passing through the Gate of Darkness heading directly toward the eastern façade of the Dome of the Rock.” Lavon paused and then turned his headlamp toward a pair of columns in the stonework. “Those are Doric,” he said. “They’re Herodian, no question about it.”
“Keep walking, Eli,” Gabriel said with another nudge of the pickax.
Lavon obeyed. “At the end of this passage,” he said, “there’s a cistern that was discovered by Charles Wilson, the other great British explorer of ancient Jerusalem.”
“As in Wilson’s Arch.”
Lavon’s headlamp bobbed in the affirmative.
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher