CHAPTER 1
Pesaro, Italy 1220 A.D.
Father Anthony, born Fernando Martins de Bulhoes, had
just finished with his nightly prayers. Tomorrow, he and the
young Giovanni would prepare the church for people to come
and hear the Bishop from Rome speak about the Crusades.
The bishop was Pope Honorius III's special envoy.
Because of the troubling state of affairs in Italy, the
threatening attitude of the Tatars, and the fear of a
schism, he was being sent to villages like theirs to inspire
and recruit people to join the fight. In 1215, the Pope
issued the Papal Bull "Ad Liberaindam" calling all
Christendom to join the Crusades. His wish was to reacquire
the Holy Land and Jerusalem.
Anthony heard a light rap on the door to his room and
someone softly whispering.
"Are you still awake Father Anthony?"
"Giovanni is that you? Yes, come in, my
son." Giovanni's father and mother had brought him to the
monastery when he was 12 years old. Since then he had grown
to be a tall lad, slender with dark wavy hair and warm dark
brown eyes.
During the last six years the monks became his family
and in exchange for helping around the monastery, he was
taught to read and write, turning out to be an excellent
student.
"I'm sorry if I disturbed you father, but I couldn't
sleep. I keep thinking about the bishop coming the day after
tomorrow. Do you think the war will end soon?"
"Only our Heavenly Father knows the answer to that
question. We can only pray on it and ask for the strength to
follow the Lord's will."
The priest could tell Giovanni had something else on his
mind.
"There's something I wanted to give to you Father. I
have been working on it for months, and I finished it a few
nights ago."
Father Anthony watched as Giovanni brought something
wrapped in a brown piece of cloth tied with a string, from
behind his back. As he untied the string, the fabric fell
away, and he held in his hands a beautiful wooden box.
"I made it to thank you for teaching me to read and
write. I hope you like it."
The priest held the box in his hands and saw that it was
quite unique in design.
"Giovanni, I don't know what to say. We've been blessed
having you here at the abbey. When you found the time to
make such a beautiful box I will never know, but I will
always treasure it. One with such devotion is surely one of
God's Chosen Ones. You will be a good servant to those who
want to learn the faith."
Giovanni was fidgeting as the Father spoke.
"Please Father Anthony, may I have it. There's something
very special about the box I want to show you."
Curious to see what Giovanni meant, the priest handed
the box back to him.
"First, the key to lock the box is inside, see."
Then he continued to explain to Father Anthony the
secrets of the box.
"Giovanni, what a genius you are. I must pass your gifts
of artistry on to the bishop. Perhaps they will have need of
someone with such a gift in Rome."
"My only wish was to please you, Father Anthony. I am so
happy you like the box. Whatever God has planned for me, I
will work to please Him the best way I know how but I must
tell you a story about the box.
"I was working in the fields a few months back and was
trying to think of something I could do to thank you for
teaching me to read and write. A monk I had never seen
before was also working in the fields that day. When it came
time to stop for the midday meal he came over to me and
offered to share his.
"He had packed more than he could eat, and a young lad
like me, he was sure, would be able to eat more than what
was in the small pouch I carried. As we ate, I told him I
was trying to come up with an idea for a gift to thank you
for all you have done for me.
"He said he knew of you and was sent to tell me to make
a box that could keep a secret safe from others' eyes. I did
not understand why it must hide a secret but he was so kind
and wise of a holy man that I promised to create something
special. I thanked him for the meal and went out to the
field to finish my work. At the end of the day when I looked
for him he was gone. I've never seen him again. I said a
prayer that night and thanked God for sending me the
messenger and that I would fulfill my promise both to Him
and the monk I met in the field that day."
Father Anthony did not question God's ways. He would
accept the box from young Giovanni as a gift of kindness and
great effort. If there was a purpose for the box he knew
that he would be shown it when the time was right.
"Dear Giovanni, though I would like to hear more about
that day in the field, we must get our rest. We have much to
do tomorrow to prepare for the bishop. Bless you, Giovanni,
for your faith and kindness, and thank God for the gifts he
has honored you with. Let us say a prayer and then we must
get our sleep, for the morning will be here before we know
it."
CHAPTER 2
September 28, 1978 The Papal Palace
Cardinal Jean Villot, Vatican secretary of state, had
gotten hold of the list of appointments, resignations to be
asked for, and transfers Pope John Paul I planned on putting
into motion the next morning. There was one common
denominator that linked each of the men about to be replaced
... it was Freemasonry.
Villot was aware of each man's affiliation to the
Masons; more important, so was the Pope. It was the reason
the Pope would strip these men of their power.
Pope John Paul I had evidence indicating that within the
Vatican City State, there were over one hundred Masons
ranging from priests to cardinals. The Pope was further
preoccupied with an illegal Masonic Lodge called Propaganda
Due (P2), which had infiltrated far beyond even the Vatican
in its search for wealth and power. The fact that it had
penetrated the Vatican walls and had converted priests,
bishops, and even cardinals made P2 anathema, a formal
ecclesiastical curse accompanied by excommunication.
The changes the Pope was intending on making would
create, by any standards a dramatic reshuffle within the
Vatican. It would set the church in a new direction,
directions that Villot and others on the list considered
dangerous for their movement.
On the morning of September 29, 1978 at 4:45 a.m.,
Sister Vicenza entered the papal apartments to bring the
Holy Father his morning tea, only to find the lifeless body
of the Pope. Fifteen minutes later at 5:00 a.m. it was
reported that Cardinal Villot confirmed the death of the
Pope. Only thirty–three days after his election, Pope
John Paul I was dead.
Sister Vicenza gave two conflicting reports concerning
the state in which she first found Pope John Paul I.
According to a group of French priests that same morning, it
was "in his bathroom" that she found the Holy Father dead,
still in his papal robes. Later, after Cardinal Villot was
present, she reported that upon entering the room she found
the Pope sitting up in bed "with an expression of agony"
before he died.
This small detail is significant. If it was true that
Sister Vicenza found the Holy Father dead in the bathroom
still in his papal robes, it could be construed that he died
shortly after his "toast" with Cardinal Villot, the night of
September 28, 1978.
That evening Villot hastily arranged for the embalming
to be performed, a procedure as unusual as it was illegal,
Villot also insisted that no blood was to be drained from
the body, and neither were any of the organs to be removed.
No official death certificate has ever been issued. No
autopsy ever performed. Cause of death: Unknown.