Simon Toyne

Bestselling Conspiracy Thriller Trilogy: Sanctus, The Key, The Tower


Скачать книгу

105

       Chapter 106

       Chapter 107

       Chapter 108

       Chapter 109

       Chapter 110

       Chapter 111

       Chapter 112

       Chapter 113

       Chapter 114

       Chapter 115

       Chapter 116

       Chapter 117

       Chapter 118

       Chapter 119

       Chapter 120

       Chapter 121

       Part VI

       Chapter 122

       Chapter 123

       Chapter 124

       Chapter 125

       Chapter 126

       Chapter 127

       Chapter 128

       Chapter 129

       Chapter 130

       Chapter 131

       Chapter 132

       Chapter 133

       Chapter 134

       Chapter 135

       Chapter 136

       Chapter 137

       Chapter 138

       Chapter 139

       Chapter 140

       Chapter 141

       Chapter 142

       Chapter 143

       Chapter 144

       Part VII

       Chapter 145

       Chapter 146

       Chapter 147

       Acknowledgements

       Copyright

Image Missing

      I

      A man is a god in ruins

      RALPH WALDO EMERSON

      1

      A flash of light filled his skull as it struck the rock floor.

      Then darkness.

      He was dimly aware of the heavy oak door banging shut behind him and a thick batten sliding through iron hasps.

      For a while he lay where he’d been thrown, listening to the pounding of his pulse and the mournful wind close by.

      The blow to his head made him feel sick and dizzy, but there was no danger he was going to pass out; the agonizing cold would see to that. It was a still and ancient cold, immutable and unforgiving as the stone the cell was carved from. It pressed down and wrapped itself round him like a shroud, freezing the tears on his cheeks and beard, chilling the blood that trickled from the fresh cuts he himself had inflicted on his exposed upper body during the ceremony. Pictures tumbled through his mind, images of the awful scenes he had just witnessed and of the terrible secret he had learned.

      It was the culmination of a lifetime of searching. The end of a journey he had hoped would lead to a sacred and ancient knowledge, to a divine understanding that would bring him closer to God. Now at long last he had gained that knowledge, but he had found no divinity in what he had seen, only unimaginable sorrow.

      Where was God in this?

      The tears stung fresh and the cold sank deeper into his body, tightening its grip on his bones. He heard something on the other side of the heavy door. A distant sound. One that had somehow managed to find its way up through the honeycomb of hand-carved tunnels which riddled the holy mountain.

       They’ll come for me soon.

       The ceremony will end. Then they will deal with me …

      He knew the history of the order he had joined. He knew their savage rules – and now he knew their secret. They’d kill him for sure. Probably slowly, in front of his former brothers, a reminder of the seriousness of their collective, uncompromising vows: a warning of what would happen if you broke them.

       No!

       Not here. Not like this.

      He pressed his head against the cold stone floor then pushed himself up on all fours. Slowly and painfully he dragged the rough green material of his cassock back over his shoulders, the coarse wool scouring the raw wounds on his arms and chest. He pulled the cowl over his head and collapsed once more, feeling his warm breath through his beard, drawing his knees tightly under his