buildings. To someone who’d grown up with the lavish architecture of the fin de siecle, it seemed relentlessly dreary.
Although once he arrived in the city, there were familiar sights and sounds. Modiano Market with tables piled high with oranges, figs, tomatoes, and fresh-cut flowers. The bouzouki music that emanated from the tavernas. The clusters of men with their newspapers and clacking worry beads.
The first two nights he stayed at a downtown hotel where he endured the constant roar of traffic outside his window. Needing his sleep, he checked out of the pricey hotel and headed for the old Turkish quarter near the Byzantine walls. There, he rented an unadorned flat in a whitewashed building. He slept blissfully that night, awaking the next morning to a breakfast of feta cheese, olives, and crusty bread. Refreshed of mind and body, he set off to find the house where he’d lived the first seven years of his life.
He found it easily enough, taken aback to see a crone mopping the marble stoop.
The crone eyed him suspiciously, then said curtly, “Did you know the Jew named Moshe Benaroya?”
If she’d asked if he’d known Ataturk, he would not have been more surprised. Now his turn to be suspicious, he warily nodded his head.
He took no offense at her brusque manner, too stunned to be insulted.
By all that was holy… she’d just handed him a treasure trove.
One week later, he went to Agia Sophia, a magnificent Orthodox church that had been constructed in the eighth century, to photograph the ceiling mosaics. He’d just finished photographing the famous ascension mosaic in the central dome. Not yet acclimated to the heat, he sat down in a wooden chair.
No more than a few moments had passed when a shadow fell over him.
He glanced up, taken aback to see a young man standing beside his chair. There was a halo of light surrounding the youth’s dark head. He blinked several times. Noticed the small details. That the young man wore tight jeans and too much cologne.
Suddenly, he was very much aware of being a mature man in a tailored wool suit.
Without asking permission, the young man sat in the chair next to him.
Leery, Mercurius clutched his soft-sided attache to his chest. Afraid that a thief might make off with the incredible manuscript, he’d taken to carrying it with him. He learned his lesson years earlier at the Archaeology Museum in Amman.
Oblivious to the sanctity of the church, the young man nonchalantly said, “Would you like to fuck me up the ass? For you, I’ll give a discount.”
Mercurius didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. He relaxed the tight hold on his attache. “No, but I would like to take you to the patisserie on the other side of the square.” In truth, he feared a church priest might overhear the profane young man.
The beautiful youth accepted the invitation with a bored shrug. Together, they walked across Agia Sophia Square.
“The Christians held a thanksgiving service in this square when the Allies liberated the city from the Germans,” he remarked. The comment elicited another bored shrug.
Although it was a hot day, they sat outside at a bistro table, shaded by a colorful umbrella. Possessed of a ravenous appetite, Saviour ate not one, but two, slices of almond cake piled high with chocolate shavings. Mercurius refrained — doctor’s orders — and, instead, sipped unsweetened coffee from a demitasse. No sooner did Saviour wipe the plate clean than he suggested they leave. Intrigued by the young man, Mercurius led him to the old section of town.
As they approached the towering Byzantine walls, the streets became narrow, more precipitous, the old district set on a hillside that overlooked the harbor. Inexplicably animated, he pointed to a waterless fountain. “When I was a young boy, I once saw the ghost of a whirling dervish twirling in that fountain, arms spread to the heavens as water spewed between his lips.” A moment later, he gestured to a row of shops. “Before the war, that used to be an olive grove. Until the Italians mistook it for a military target and bombed it.”
“The Italians can’t hit porcelain when they piss,” the young man contemptuously sneered.
Standing in the shadow cast by the ancient walls that had once fortified the Byzantine city, he showed Saviour several places in the wall that had been repaired with marble tombstones from the desecrated Sephardi cemetery. Removed from the necropolis when the Greeks went on a wild rampage searching for Jewish treasure.
Whether it was the burst of melancholy induced by that somber reminder of the past or the fact that he’d given up jogging years ago, Mercurius came to a sudden halt. Breathless, his sixty-five-year-old heart wildly raced.
“We must rest,” his companion abruptly declared, taking hold of Mercurius’s elbow as he ushered him to a marble stoop.
They sat side by side on the steps, the air fragranced with the scent of honeysuckle and mimosa.
“Tell me, why did you leave Thessaloniki? I left once. I couldn’t wait to return.” As he spoke, Saviour bent down to pet a stray cat that had impudently rubbed against his lower leg. When the cat began to lick the same fingers that Saviour had earlier licked at the patisserie, the young man smiled, clearly enjoying the feline’s antics.
Mercurius found himself, again, breathless. This time for a wholly different reason.
Hit with a sudden impulse to make a connection with the youth, he proceeded to tell Saviour about the remarkable friendship between a Muslim
“As soon as the war ended, my family moved to America. None of us knew about the hidden manuscript.”
He hesitated only a brief second before unbuckling his leather attache and removing the loose-leaf manuscript that had been given to him a few days prior. He noticed the awestruck expression on Saviour’s face when he saw the cover sheet with its exquisite illuminated gold star.
“The manuscript, titled the
“Me, I like to read Westerns. What is this
Mercurius contemplated whether to give the long answer or the abbreviated one. He decided on the latter, not wanting to bore his companion with the history of Judaic mysticism.
“It’s s a book about Creation and how the world came into being ex nihilo.” The young man’s brow wrinkled. “Out of nothing,” he clarified.
What Mercurius didn’t tell the young man, at least not then, was that when the crone had unceremoniously shoved Moshe’s manuscript into his hands, it was the Third Sign. Validation that he was the chosen one, his destiny intertwined with the stunning revelations contained within the
Another seven years would pass before the Fourth Sign, the final one, was revealed to him.
“Why hide it? Maybe if he’d published it, your Moshe could have made some money.”
“Moshe Benaroya had to hide the
“Like the Nazis who tried to find the Ark of the Covenant in the
Mercurius suppressed an amused smile. “Exactly so. Afraid that the ancient teachings would be confiscated