"It is true," Aringarosa said. "Unthinkable, but true. In only six months."
The bishop's words terrified Silas. He prayed for deliverance, and even in those dark days, his trust
in God and The Way never wavered. It was only a month later that the clouds parted miraculously
and the light of possibility shone through.
Divine intervention, Aringarosa had called it.
The bishop had seemed hopeful for the first time. "Silas," he whispered, "God has bestowed upon
us an opportunity to protect The Way. Our battle, like all battles, will take sacrifice. Will you be a
soldier of God?"
Silas fell to his knees before Bishop Aringarosa—the man who had given him a new life—and he
said, "I am a lamb of God. Shepherd me as your heart commands."
When Aringarosa described the opportunity that had presented itself, Silas knew it could only be
the hand of God at work.
Miraculous fate! Aringarosa put Silas in contact with the man who had
proposed the plan—a man who called himself the Teacher. Although the Teacher and Silas never
met face-to-face, each time they spoke by phone, Silas was awed, both by the profundity of the
Teacher's faith and by the scope of his power. The Teacher seemed to be a man who knew all, a
man with eyes and ears in all places. How the Teacher gathered his information, Silas did not
know, but Aringarosa had placed enormous trust in the Teacher, and he had told Silas to do the
same. "Do as the Teacher commands you," the bishop told Silas. "And we will be victorious."
Victorious. Silas now gazed at the bare floor and feared victory had eluded them. The Teacher had
been tricked. The keystone was a devious dead end. And with the deception, all hope had vanished.
Silas wished he could call Bishop Aringarosa and warn him, but the Teacher had removed all their
lines of direct communication tonight.
For our safety.
Finally, overcoming enormous trepidation, Silas crawled to his feet and found his robe, which lay
on the floor. He dug his cell phone from the pocket. Hanging his head in shame, he dialed.
"Teacher," he whispered, "all is lost." Silas truthfully told the man how he had been tricked.
"You lose your faith too quickly," the Teacher replied. "I have just received news. Most
unexpected and welcome. The secret lives. Jacques Saunière transferred information before he
died. I will call you soon. Our work tonight is not yet done."
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