Chapter Three
THE MONASTERY
Wednesday
DEEP IN a monastery hidden in the mountain canyons not so far from
Paradise, Colorado, an orphaned boy named Billy hurried to class, letting
his gaze wander over the bas-relief pictographs inscribed in the roughhewn
stone around him. The pictures peered from their graven settings
with fixed eyes. He could rarely look directly at the pictographs without
it raising gooseflesh, and he wasn’t sure why. Now proved no exception.
He pushed a heavy door open and squinted in the sunlight that filled the
library. The monastery was laid out like an old wagon wheel, cut in half and
buried into a wedge-shaped gap in the cliff so that its spokes ran into the
mountain. At the center lay the one room that had a direct view of the sky
through the top of the canyon—the hub of this half wheel, though it
wasn’t quite symmetrical.
A large, reinforced glass canopy bridged the opening—one of the only
truly modern things about this otherwise ancient monastery. Sunlight
poured into the expansive atrium. The library’s wood floors encircled a
large lawn where three oak trees and a myriad of shrubs grew. A welcome
half-acre of escape from the Gothic halls.
Billy ran through the empty library and shuffled down a stone hallway
leading to one of the monastery’s many classrooms. He was late for writing
class. In fact, he might have missed it. Not that it really mattered. He’d made
the rest of his classes this week—what was one small writing class out of
twenty-one subjects? There was mathematics, there was history, there was theology,
there was geography, there was a whole line of other disciplines, andBilly excelled in all of them, including writing. One missed class, although
highly unusual, wouldn’t mar his record.
He ran a hand through loose red curls and stopped to catch his breath
before a door near the end of the hall. The soft whisper of voices floated
through the oak door. And then a deep one, above the others.
Raul?
Yes, there it was again. Raul, the head overseer, was teaching this evening.
A warm flutter ran through Billy’s gut. Then again, any of the twelve overseers
would have triggered the same response.
His hand trembled slightly as he reached for the door. He could handle
this. He would just pull himself together and handle this like he’d handled
everything else.
He twisted the knob and stepped into the room.
Raul stood at one end of the room next to a bubbling stone fountain.
The other students—thirty-six in all if they were all here—sat at desks in
two large semicircles with their backs to Billy, facing the tall, white-bloused
overseer. A few glanced Billy’s way, but most seemed intent on whatever
nugget of truth the teacher had just tossed out.