39
The Airbus A320 reached its cruising altitude of
36,000 at a speed of 540 miles per hour. Within approximately two
hours it would land at Portela Airport, Lisbon, the destination of
the 111 passengers that included Sarah Monteiro, now officially
Sharon Stone, a French citizen, and Rafael, officially John Doe, a
British subject. Flight TP433 had left Orly a bit more than twenty
minutes before, behind schedule. Since they were both awake, Rafael
had to face questions and more questions from the career reporter
at his side.
Rafael had once heard someone say that “the fathers
were in Jerusalem.” Probably the reference was to the mythical
builders of the Temple of Solomon. Those venerable architects had
conveyed their knowledge to the carpenters and stonecutters of the
West, the same ones who erected the cathedrals in the Middle Ages.
They were the maçons, users of the drop hammer, chisel,
square, compass, and plumb line. Those powerful guilds knew the
Lord’s secrets. Even now, in Notre Dame or Reims or Amiens, one
could see that those men truly knew what God wanted for the world.
The Lord Jesus Christ proclaimed: “Render to Caesar that which is
Caesar’s and to God that which is God’s.” The whole world knew
this, including politicians, university professors, doctors,
bankers, civil servants, soldiers, writers, and journalists. Even
the pope knew it. “God is to be found everywhere, my child, even in
arms factories and bank safe-deposit boxes.”
From what Rafael had heard, the Masons had been on
the scaffolds when the bloody heads of kings and nobles rolled in
revolutionary France. And later they were behind the wars and
violent regime changes in Europe and the Americas. The members of
the P2 could take satisfaction in belonging to the same
organization as many presidents of the United States and of
Europe.
In Rome, Italy’s Grande Oriente began to suffer
from internal schisms near the turn of the twentieth century. It
was then that Propaganda Due was founded. Those who held the
strings of power around the world complained that Masonry was being
bandied about, with members’ names in the papers and their
activities directed by inept, vain politicians. The number 2
would provide the anonymity they sought, ending the announcements,
photos, and leaked names. The P2 did not exist. Nobody should know
anything about it. The loggia coperta welcomed, among those
privileged to know God, everybody ready to devote his life to
building the Kingdom of Heaven on earth.
“Those were very bitter times for them,” Rafael
told Sarah, who listened eagerly. “Hitler and Mussolini fascinated
them, but as they saw it, their spiritual goals were being betrayed
by those men.”
Licio Gelli, who headed Italian Masonry in the
mid-twentieth century, was the true driving force of the P2 Lodge.
“Gelli had more ideas than ability to carry out his projects,”
Rafael told Sarah. The Grand Master of the Grande Oriente of Italy
granted him powers far beyond his talents. Gelli was a small
businessman from Tuscany who venerated Der Führer, Il Duce, and El
Generalísimo. In fact, he enlisted as a volunteer, fighting against
the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War. He also served as a Nazi
spy in the Balkans, actively collaborated with the CIA, and incited
several coups d’état in South America.
“Gelli’s rise in the organization is a mystery,”
Rafael continued. “The Lord’s ways are beyond understanding. That’s
why it’s surprising how many idiots manage to gain power, glory, or
fame.”
Licio Gelli was at the top of the P2 Lodge in the
early seventies, and in 1971 he became one of the most powerful men
in the underworld. Gelli, always with a penchant for conspiracy,
founded the P1 Lodge, even more secret than the P2, exclusively to
cover presidents, high dignitaries, secretaries general, and
CEOs.
Some of Rafael’s older comrades told him about
those meetings. As many as twenty shiny black armored cars with
tinted windows would gather at a luxury hotel near Lake Como or in
Geneva or Baden-Baden. The cars stayed for two or three hours, then
left using back roads and eventually merged onto the European
highways.
It was probably Gelli who persuaded many of the
Masons from the Giustizia e Libertà organization to join the ranks
of the P2. There they met with all sorts of politicians, military
men, and bankers. They all felt privileged, belonging to such a
select group.
“Vanity is a tragic flaw, Sarah. Gelli couldn’t
resist having his picture taken with Juan Perón at the Casa
Rosada.”
When Gelli found himself under judicial attack in
the mid-seventies, he sealed off his organization, severing all
ties with any other Masonic Lodge. That was how the P2 became a
supersecret entity and Gelli himself became Grand Master. Those
times were dubbed “the Cosa Nostra era.” The P2 operated exactly
like mobsters or the Mafia—“the Gelli,” became their moniker.
Gelli’s neofascist ideology prevented his lodge’s advancement in
the divine master plan. But seen from a different angle, his work
was highly effective, because his collaborators managed to
infiltrate all sectors of the Italian government, in addition to
the Vatican and several foreign national security agencies.
Many politicians during this period considered the
real president of the country to be Licio Gelli, who manipulated
the media, investigations, voting, and electoral campaigns so that
the country’s top spot would be filled by his own predesignated
nominee.
Rafael was watching Sarah’s reaction.
“Gelli was done in by that scumbag,
what’s-his-name, Pecorelli. The Gellis dug their grave when they
let the lodge’s membership list fall into that journalist’s
hands.
“The judges started asking questions, and old man
Gelli needed to hide out in Uruguay.
“Along came the current leadership of the lodge,”
Rafael went on. “They distanced themselves from Gelli and got busy
trying to get the organization back on track. Those years involved
a lot of work. They had to amend the Constitution, reorganize the
judiciary and the university, and influence certain men,
particularly Craxi, Andreotti, and Bisaglia. It didn’t much matter
what party they belonged to. The crucial factor was getting them to
‘collaborate,’ even without knowing they were doing so. Reporters,
in general, were on board. They liked money,” he concluded.
The lodge was now a collection of shadow figures
that nobody could uncover. It was a fantasy of conspiracy addicts,
an irrational urban legend, an organization that inspired terror
only among solitary investigators on the Internet. They did not
exist. And nonexistence was highly recommended for someone trying
to carry out a plan like his.
Sarah began to realize that the organization had
grown and continued to extend its networks worldwide. Even in the
Vatican, where the P2 was called the Ecclesia Lodge. When Pope John
Paul I died suddenly, the lodge included numerous members carrying
out their duties in the palaces of the Holy See.
“In those years, Rome was the best place in the
world. Archbishop Marcinkus was involved in the finances, and
everything he touched turned to gold,” Rafael continued. “Of course
the investments were in pornography, contraceptives, and other
businesses ill suited to the image of the Church. But the funds
Marcinkus invested in arms factories, political subversion, bribes,
blackmail, and money laundering proved much more productive in the
long run.”
“I don’t know if you’re trying to tell me the truth
or terrify me,” Sarah remarked, then fell silent.
Sarah was deep in thought, and Rafael retreated
into his own reflections. A peaceful quiet ensued between
them.
The flight attendant offered the snacks tray to
both of them. They ate silently, buried in their thoughts.
“What I need now is a shower.” Sarah twisted in her
seat, trying to wake up her numbed arms and legs.
“We can arrange that,” Rafael assured her. “When we
land, we’ll take care of it.”
“Is that a promise?” she asked, half smiling.
“No. I never make promises. But I do keep my
word.”
They were silent a few moments longer. The noise of
the plane’s engines drowned out the other passengers’
conversations. Sarah turned to him again.
“Do you think my father’s all right?”
“Yes. Don’t worry.” His voice was so assured that
she believed him.
“What I’m afraid of now is having them catch us at
the airport,” Sarah said.
“You can relax. That’s not going to happen.”
“How can you be sure?”
“It’s one of the advantages of my position. We may
have half the world after us, but we know how they think. We’re
always one step ahead. And what matters for us is to keep going
like that. We have to keep the initiative.”
“And how do they think?”
“The first thing they’re going to do is clear the
scene of the shooting and the street where I threw the tear
gas.”
Somehow Rafael’s voice inexplicably calmed Sarah.
To her it was a killer’s voice, the voice of a man without
scruples, but its effect was reassuring.
“What will we do after talking to my father?”
“We’ll see. We’ve got to go step by step.”
“You’re always holding back information.”
“That’s true. But in this case I don’t have much
more to tell you. The objective is to have you reunite with your
father. That’s basic. Then we’ll see what to do next.”
“But isn’t there a risk that when we arrive in
Lisbon, they’ll have photos of us in some paper? It’s possible the
authorities will be looking for us.”
“Definitely not. It’s in their interest for us to
go through unnoticed. Their objective is to see us six feet under.
Besides, as long as we have the list, no one’s going to let us
appear in the papers. If they did that, they’d lose
everything.”
I hope you’re not wrong, Sarah thought.
“How did Firenzi get my address?” she asked herself
out loud. “Of course, considering my father belonged to the
organization, I can see why they knew my home address. What I can’t
figure out is why he wrote to me.”
Rafael didn’t even seem to react to her. Once more
he brought his hand to the wounded arm.
“Does it hurt?”
“Yes,” he answered, massaging the area softly.
Hours before, he’d bandaged it in the bathroom on the train, and
the pain had eased somewhat. But now it was bothering him again,
badly.
“Do you need anything? Can I help you?”
“No, thanks, I’ll be fine,” Rafael replied.
As they circled the airport, flying over the
northern part of Sarah’s native land, she felt a renewed anguish
suffocating her.
“Do you know the man who broke into my
house?”
“Yes.”
Rafael kept silent again, just staring out the
small window.
“Who was it?” Sarah insisted.
“It was an American Secret Service agent. Actually
he was a Czech-born naturalized American, though that’s irrelevant.
But other people connected with you have died recently. There was a
Spanish priest named Felipe Aragón, and an Argentinian one, Pablo
Rincón. Both of them received information concerning John Paul I’s
papers.”
“Papers like mine?”
“On the night he died, the pope had various papers
with him. The list that you got is only part of it.” Rafael seemed
to want to talk.
“And they also received papers?”
“Probably, but they had worse luck than you. Father
Pablo couldn’t manage to get away. And unfortunately, Father Felipe
died of a heart attack at almost the same time.”
“If Father Pablo received any papers, then they
must be in the P2’s hands now. If, on the other hand, he received
only an indication, let’s say, as to the whereabouts of the
remaining documents, the P2 could also have obtained that
information before killing him,” Sarah reasoned.
“That may be, I don’t know. Your father might be
able to clear all of this up for us.”
“How can you be acting like that, making decisions
without sufficient information?”
“In my work, we’re all small cogs in a big wheel.
What counts is for us to know our part and perform effectively. As
for the whole puzzle, only its inventor knows.”
“And you aren’t curious?”
“Curiosity is very dangerous.”
The plane completed its approach, and moments later
landed smoothly.
“We have just landed at Portela Airport in Lisbon,”
the flight attendant announced, and repeated the usual
litany.
“At least they didn’t attack us with missiles
midflight,” Sarah joked, trying to shake off the gripping
tension.