Blood Relics: James Acton Thrillers, #12
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*** FROM USA TODAY & MILLION COPY BESTSELLING AUTHOR J. ROBERT KENNEDY ***
A DYING MAN. A DESPERATE SON. ONLY A MIRACLE CAN SAVE THEM BOTH.
As Jesus Christ suffers an agonizing death, a blind Roman soldier named Longinus is miraculously healed after lancing the crucified body, yet though the miracle restores his eyesight, it marks a new beginning to his troubles as he and his friends flee the authorities determined to suppress any word of what truly happened during those fateful events.
Two thousand years later, Professor Laura Palmer is shot and kidnapped in front of her husband, Archaeology Professor James Acton, as they try to prevent the theft of the world's Blood Relics, ancient artifacts thought to contain the blood of Christ, a madman determined to possess them all at any cost.
Acton's desperate pleas for help spur his friends into action, all answering the call to help save the woman he loves and the most precious relics the world has ever known.
From USA Today and million copy bestselling author J. Robert Kennedy comes Blood Relics, a heart pounding thrill ride filled with non-stop action, humor, heartache, and intrigue, where he once again takes a well-known event in history and expertly weaves it into today's headlines. If you enjoy fast-paced adventures in the style of Dan Brown, Clive Cussler, and James Rollins, then you'll love this heart-wrenching tale.
Get Blood Relics today, and experience the unintended consequences of the Passion two thousand years later…
About the James Acton Thrillers:
★★★★★ "James Acton: A little bit of Jack Bauer and Indiana Jones!"
Though this book is part of the James Acton Thrillers series, it is written as a standalone novel and can be enjoyed without having read any of the previous installments.
★★★★★ "Non-stop action that is impossible to put down."
The James Acton Thrillers series and its spin-offs, the Special Agent Dylan Kane Thrillers and the Delta Force Unleashed Thrillers, have sold over one million copies. If you love non-stop action and intrigue with a healthy dose of humor, try James Acton today!
★★★★★ "A great blend of history and current headlines."
J. Robert Kennedy
With millions of books sold, award-winning and USA Today bestselling author J. Robert Kennedy has been ranked by Amazon as the #1 Bestselling Action Adventure novelist based upon combined sales. He is a full-time writer and the author of over seventy international bestsellers including the smash hit James Acton Thrillers.
Read more from J. Robert Kennedy
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Blood Relics - J. Robert Kennedy
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BOOKS BY J. ROBERT KENNEDY
Please click here for the intended reading order.
* Also available in audio
The Templar Detective Thrillers
The Templar Detective
The Templar Detective and the Parisian Adulteress
The Templar Detective and the Sergeant's Secret
The Templar Detective and the Unholy Exorcist
The Templar Detective and the Code Breaker
The Templar Detective and the Black Scourge
The Templar Detective and the Lost Children
The Templar Detective and the Satanic Whisper
The Just Jack Thrillers
You Don't Know Jack
The James Acton Thrillers
The Protocol *
Brass Monkey *
Broken Dove
The Templar’s Relic
Flags of Sin
The Arab Fall
The Circle of Eight
The Venice Code
Pompeii’s Ghosts
Amazon Burning
The Riddle
Blood Relics
Sins of the Titanic
Saint Peter’s Soldiers
The Thirteenth Legion
Raging Sun
Wages of Sin
Wrath of the Gods
The Templar’s Revenge
The Nazi’s Engineer
Atlantis Lost
The Cylon Curse
The Viking Deception
Keepers of the Lost Ark
The Tomb of Genghis Khan
The Manila Deception
The Fourth Bible
Embassy of the Empire
Armageddon
No Good Deed
The Last Soviet
Lake of Bones
Fatal Reunion
The Resurrection Tablet
The Antarctica Incident
The Ghosts of Paris
No More Secrets
The Dylan Kane Thrillers
Rogue Operator *
Containment Failure *
Cold Warriors *
Death to America
Black Widow
The Agenda
Retribution
State Sanctioned
Extraordinary Rendition
Red Eagle
The Messenger
The Defector
The Mole
The Arsenal
The Delta Force Unleashed Thrillers
Payback
Infidels
The Lazarus Moment
Kill Chain
Forgotten
The Cuban Incident
Rampage
Inside the Wire
Charlie Foxtrot
The Detective Shakespeare Mysteries
Depraved Difference
Tick Tock
The Redeemer
The Kriminalinspektor Wolfgang Vogel Mysteries
The Colonel’s Wife
Sins of the Child
Zander Varga, Vampire Detective Series
The Turned
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Table of Contents
The Novel
Author's Note
Preface
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Chapter 64
Chapter 65
Chapter 66
Chapter 67
Chapter 68
Chapter 69
Chapter 70
Chapter 71
Chapter 72
Chapter 73
Chapter 74
Chapter 75
Chapter 76
Acknowledgments
Sample of Next Book
Don't Miss Out!
Thank You!
About the Author
Also by the Author
In memory of Frédéric Boisseau, Franck Brinsolaro, Jean Cabut, Elsa Cayat, Stéphane Charbonnier, Philippe Honoré, Bernard Maris, Ahmed Merabet, Mustapha Ourrad, Michel Renaud, Bernard Verlhac and Georges Wolinski.
But one of the soldiers with a spear pierced his side, and forthwith came there out blood and water.
John 19:34, King James Bible
When your time comes to die, be not like those whose hearts are filled with fear of death, so that when their time comes they weep and pray for a little more time to live their lives over again in a different way. Sing your death song, and die like a hero going home.
Tecumseh
Pale Death beats equally at the poor man's gate and at the palaces of kings.
Horace
PREFACE
The pace of scientific progress is breathtaking at times, the gap between discovery and market incredibly tight now. What is discovered today can be in consumer hands within twenty-four months, if not sooner. In the past, scientific discoveries often took many years, sometimes decades to make it into the public’s hands. This gave scientists, politicians, ethicists and the general public time to evaluate whether some of those advancements should actually be permitted to happen.
Today that buffer once provided by time is gone.
Now the question is whether or not that is a good thing.
Scientists are now considering trying to bring back the wooly mammoth, confident they have the technology to actually accomplish this. But should this be allowed? If we can bring back extinct species, should we? If we can bring back the wooly mammoth, what about others more recent like the dodo? And if we bring back the mammoth, then decide it was wrong, do we have the right to then kill it?
And what if the technology is taken to the next step? With a single blood cell we can create a clone of an animal and in theory, a person. With the pace of progress racing forward at breakneck speed, some of these experiments are discovered by the public after the successful results are already completed, meaning Pandora’s Box could be unleashed on humanity before it even knows it exists.
And what if we take it beyond animals and to human beings?
Or one human being.
Born two thousand years ago.
AUTHOR'S NOTE
A portion of this book deals with the crucifixion of Christ, the rest dealing with the characters’ beliefs around this event. Whether you believe or not is immaterial to the enjoyment of the book as it serves as a backdrop to other events. Though loosely based on the Gospels, artistic license has of course been taken for these scenes and no offence is meant.
A
1 |
Notre-Dame Cathedral, Paris, France
Present Day
O h my God, Laura!
Professor James Acton dove across the room, sliding on the marble floor as bullets flew overhead, glass and shards of ancient stone raining down upon him as he desperately tried to reach his wife. Screams of agony from one of the cathedral’s defenders momentarily drowned out his wife’s own cries as he scurried on his stomach trying to cover the few short feet to her prone form, his hands, cut and bleeding from the shattered display cases, leaving a crimson trail.
He winced as something sharp sliced into his knee.
Hold on!
He could see the agony on the face of his wife, Professor Laura Palmer, as she gripped her stomach, a rapidly expanding red stain oozing out from between her fingers, her blouse already soaked with blood.
Bullets tore open the floor in front of him causing him to scamper backward, taking cover behind a large display case. He looked for his friend, Interpol Agent Hugh Reading and spotted him behind a pillar on the opposite side of the room from him.
And closer to Laura.
Can you reach her?
Reading poked his head out and immediately a bullet ricocheted off the stone pillar. He jumped back, shaking his head. I’m pinned down.
Acton tried once again to reach his wife, and again was sent diving for cover. He looked behind him at the French police, their gunfire dwindling, their numbers severely thinned by the explosion, caused he guessed by a grenade of some type. Their attackers, so effective over the past few days, had always arrived well equipped and well organized.
And always unexpectedly.
But today they had been expected.
Or at least anticipated.
The gunfire from the defenders diminished yet again as someone cried out. He watched as one lone man, covered by a pillar, returned fire, followed by the distinctive click of an empty magazine.
The gun clattered to the ground and the opposing fire immediately stopped.
He dove.
Boots pounding on the marble were ignored as he finally reached his wife, cradling her in his arms as he moved her hands to see the wound. It’s okay, I’m here,
he said, his beloved looking up at him, her intense pain overwhelming, her face weary.
And pale.
She’s lost so much blood.
Suddenly Reading was at his side, his cellphone pressed to his ear. Acton lifted his wife’s blouse, blood oozing from the wound, unsure of what to do other than press on it.
Then an idea struck him.
A final, desperate, crazed idea that he couldn’t believe he was even contemplating.
He jumped up as their attackers rushed past, ignoring the unarmed trio. Reaching into a shattered display case, he grabbed a clay jar and returning to his wife, reached inside, scooping its dried contents with his fingers. As he began to remove his hand he felt something press against the back of his head.
I’ll kindly ask that you not do that.
He opened his hand, its contents falling back into the jar, then slowly placed the ancient piece of pottery on the floor beside him, raising his hands, Reading already doing the same.
You have to let me save my wife.
Another man rushed up beside them, decked out in gear any Special Forces soldier would feel at home in. All clear, sir.
The gun was removed from the back of Acton’s head. Secure these two.
Acton was hauled to his feet, his hands quickly zip-tied behind his back. He watched as the same was done to Reading while another man began to examine Laura.
We need to get her to a hospital, now!
cried Acton. A gag was shoved in his mouth then one end of a roll of duct tape slapped against his chest. Within moments he found himself taped tightly to a pillar, Reading struggling nearby in the same predicament.
Status?
asked the man apparently in charge, his accent distinctly German. Decked out head to toe in black, his only discernable features a tanned, chiseled chin with a thick moustache above his grimacing mouth.
She’ll die without immediate help.
A whip of the leader’s hand had his men jumping to action. Take her with us.
No!
screamed Acton against his gag as he wriggled his shoulders and waist in a futile attempt to get loose. Laura cried out weakly as she was lifted by two of the men and carried from the room.
Status on the relics?
All have been retrieved,
said another man as he held up the jar.
Then we’re done here.
The room quickly emptied of their attackers as sirens sounded in the distance. Acton slumped against his bindings as he gave up his struggle to free himself, all hope lost.
His wife was gone, taken from him with a stomach wound that looked fatal, and he was powerless to help her, to stop these men who hadn’t yet hesitated to kill in their mad quest.
He sobbed into his gag as he realized he would probably never see her alive again, never hold her in his arms, feel her breath on his face, caress her cheek as they made love, or start the family they had been talking about having.
She would die alone.
And he swore he’d kill every last one of those responsible.
A
2 |
Jerusalem, Judea
April 7
th
, 30 AD
The Third Hour
W hat’s happening?
Longinus cocked an ear, trying to pick out from the amassed crowd any tidbit that might reveal what the commotion he was hearing was all about. His eyes, failing him for years now, revealed only dark shadows in front of him, details of his surroundings long since lost to the ravages of what the garrison doctor had called cataracts.
Incurable.
You’ll never see properly again, and in time, you won’t be able to see at all. At least anything we would call seeing.
How long?
The doctor had shrugged. A year. Years. There’s no way of knowing, it’s different for everyone. If you’re lucky you’ll finish your term of service and get your pension before it gets too bad.
Well, he hadn’t. With only a few months left before he was due to return home, he was now pretty much useless as a soldier. But his friends were helping him as best they could, he well liked in his contubernium.
And his best friend, Albus, was almost never far from his side.
Including today.
Looks like another crucifixion.
Again?
Longinus frowned, shaking his head. One of the few blessings of being blind was not having to see another person nailed to a cross, left out in the sun to die for all to see, their crime sometimes written on a piece of paper, sometimes wood, tacked to the cross as a warning to anyone else who might dare to break the law. I wonder what this one has done.
Who knows nowadays? The Prefect might just have been in a bad mood.
There was a grunt of surprise from his friend. There’s two others with this one.
Albus gasped. By the gods! You should see the first one, he’s in rough shape. His back is so bloodied it’s soaked completely through his robe. And
—there was a pause, Albus’ gentle hold on his arm slipping for a moment—there’s something on his head. It looks like thorns! A circle of thorns!
What? Like a crown?
Longinus had never heard of anything like that being done before, and he had seen countless crucifixions in his time, and now, with his poor eyesight, it was one of his more common duties to join the guard at the crucifixion site and wait for the death of the convicted.
They can’t run away from you up there!
his commander had cried, roaring with laughter. Longinus had laughed with him, used to the constant jabs at his expense, those low in the ranks, condemned to the menial tasks of a soldier, always on the lookout for an opportunity to revel in the misery of their peers.
But he was thankful. His commander could have dismissed him, but instead had found a purpose for him.
Just three more months!
Then he’d be heading home to his family.
It had been so long since he had heard from them, and even longer since he’d seen them. The pessimist in him wondered if they were even alive, and on the bad nights, when doubt and loneliness welled up with the self-pity he sometimes gave into over his condition, he couldn’t seem to bring up an image of them, a frustratingly crushing experience that would send him rushing into the darkness that was his existence, to drown his sorrows in drink until he forgot why he had been sad in the first place.
It’s been so long!
He felt tears flood his eyes as a pang of sorrow stabbed at his chest.
Longinus! Albus!
Longinus immediately recognized the voice of their commander. He was close. He felt Albus’ grip tighten slightly, gently guiding him so that he’d be facing the man, then they both snapped to attention. Decanus Vitus knew full-well of his condition, but those more senior didn’t. If it became too obvious to those around them that one of Rome’s finest wasn’t up to par—such as by standing at attention facing the wrong direction—Vitus would be forced to do his duty and dismiss him.
Thus violating his contract, thus forfeiting his pension.
If only I had lost my sight in battle!
But no, he was cursed to have lost it naturally, from old age and weak stock apparently.
I want you two to accompany this procession to Golgatha, help with the crucifixions, then stand guard until the last of them passes.
Yes, sir!
they both replied.
Vitus lowered his voice and Longinus could see his shadow lean in closer. You should hear this one’s story. Ridiculous! Clearly mad.
The hot morning sun quickly returned to its assault on his face as Vitus stepped back. I’ll see you back at the barracks. Report to me as soon as they’re all dead.
Yes, sir!
Longinus heard the commander walk away, Albus taking him by the arm and leading them toward the ruckus. Stand aside!
shouted Albus, the crowd of the subjugated immediately parting to let them pass, and once they had done so, returning to their shouts. Most were hurling insults or taunting the condemned men, something he had heard every single time he had drawn this duty over the years.
In his experience most of those lining the streets never knew the convicted, never knew their crimes, instead merely thrilled in taking a break from their daily struggles to enjoy seeing someone whose day was guaranteed to end worse than their own.
The distinctive sound of the wooden crosses, dragging on the hard packed dirt and stone filled his ears, the jerking motions as they advanced with each halting step bringing their bearers inexorably closer to their own doom, seemed particularly slow today.
The first one, he’s weak,
explained Albus, answering his unspoken query. There’s so much blood, they must have really beaten him.
Please, my Lord, let me help you!
Stand back,
shouted Albus at the woman who had spoken. Do not interfere with the procession!
But let me at least wipe his brow, he’s so exhausted!
There was a pause then acquiescence from his friend. Very well.
The dragging of the cross stopped for a brief moment and he could hear the woman whispering words of comfort to the man, words he couldn’t hear above the shouts of the crowd, a crowd he noticed seemed to have a larger number of people than usual unhappy with what was happening. Women were wailing in sorrow, men were shouting in anger not at the men bearing their crosses, but at the soldiers enforcing Prefect Pilate’s orders.
The splintering of wood dragging on the unforgiving ground resumed, a hint of renewed energy then a gasp from the crowd. A loud crash and a man’s weakened grunt of shock suggested to him that the man had fallen, his heavy load tumbling to the ground.
You there, come here!
Longinus turned toward Albus’ voice as a shadow approached.
What is your name?
Simon.
You look like a traveler.
I’ve just arrived from Cyrene.
You look strong. Take his cross or we’ll be here all day.
But I have business to attend to!
Longinus heard a hand-width of sword drawn from its scabbard. Your business can wait.
Very well,
replied the man, no fear in his voice.
Longinus listened as the man lifted the cross from the ground, the scrape strong, swift, but instead of it continuing up the road, it stopped.
What’s happening?
he whispered to Albus, not wanting anyone to know he couldn’t see.
He’s helping the man to his feet. A few women are cleaning him up. I think they’re friends, perhaps family.
Longinus nodded as the scraping continued, still a staccato rhythm as the cross dragged with each of the man’s steps.
A woman wailed, joined by several others.
Suddenly the procession stopped again.
Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for me, weep for yourselves and for your children…
Who’s speaking?
asked Longinus.
The condemned man,
hissed Albus in his ear. The crowd immediately fell silent, as if this man’s words meant something more than the usual pleas of innocence so often cried by the condemned.
His voice was weak but confident, as if the man had not yet lost his will to live, his mind and soul still resilient, merely his body failing him.
…for the time will come when you will say, blessed are the childless women, the wombs that never bore and the breasts that never nursed! Then they will say to the mountains, ‘Fall on us!’ and to the hills, ‘Cover us!’ for if people do these things when the tree is green, what will happen when it is dry?
Move along!
shouted Albus, ending the man’s speech, the sound of Simon carrying the cross resuming, the crowds swarming along with the condemned men surging forward, faster than before as the strong, fresh traveler seemed intent on making quick work of his task so he could return to his original plans.
The sun was hot and unforgiving already though it was still morning. The uphill climb out of the city, to the hillside known as Golgatha, was grueling even for Simon, a man whose voice had suggested he was large. Albus’ gentle grip on Longinus’ arm never wavered, and neither did the wails of the women following the procession, the bulk of the crowds abandoning their pursuit once the city gates were cleared, though a strong contingent of those delighting in the misery of these three men followed, their hatred seemingly focused solely on this poor soul who had been severely beaten.
We’re here,
whispered Albus. You stand guard here,
he said in a louder voice, pushing on Longinus’ arm, spinning him to face the crowds. Longinus could see the mix of dark and light in front of him. He jabbed the base of his spear into the dirt, taking a wide stance and extending his right arm with the spear to his side, his other arm held out to block the crowd.
No one passes,
he said in a commanding voice, immediately halting the advance of the shadows cast before him. The crowd stopped and he put his hand on his hip, listening, even the coldest of those gathered shunned into silence at the gruesome task now being carried out.
The distinct sound of the three crosses tossed off the shoulders of their bearers, the wood clattering on the solid rock, was followed by pleas from two voices he didn’t recognize, clearly the men that had accompanied the other weakened man, the man whose words still confused Longinus.
If people do these things when the tree is green, what will happen when it is dry?
What did it mean? What tree?
Drink!
What is it?
asked the weakened voice.
Wine with gall. It will help with the pain,
replied Albus, his voice beseeching the man to take the liquid offered to all the condemned.
No.
Longinus’ eyebrows rose slightly. He couldn’t recall the last time, if ever, one of the condemned had refused the acidic wine mixed with wormwood, the combination dulling the senses for what was to come.
Who is this man?
A hammer hit an iron spike, someone cried out in agony, the gasp of the crowd suggesting the man who had shown so much courage and strength up to this point.
But he can’t escape the pain.
He tried to tune out the taps of the hammer, instead returning to his thoughts on the man’s words. Perhaps the tree was a metaphor? That made sense, but Longinus wasn’t much for metaphors, in fact he wasn’t much for any of the flowery language those who would call themselves philosophers and scholars espoused whenever he heard them. Speak plain, speak straight, then there’s no misunderstandings.
Perhaps the green tree means when times are good?
That made sense. Perhaps he meant if things like this were done in good times, then what horrors might be seen when times were bad?
Another spike, another cry. He forced himself to not wince with each tap of the hammer, each one eliciting a shriek from one of the gathered women. He wondered who they were, what connection they had to this man, for it was sympathy that he was hearing for this one man, not the other two. In fact, all the support, and all the hatred, seemed exclusive to this one soul, and he again wondered what he must have done to elicit such diametrically opposed reactions from those gathered.
The tapping of the hammer echoed across the rocky hilltop, different this time, and he recognized the sound made when something was tacked onto the cross.
Probably his sentence.
The sound of the first cross being lifted, its base slipping into the hole dug long ago, the thud followed by a cry from the poor soul condemned to die in such a horrendous fashion, signaling at least the beginning of the end of these doomed men’s time on Earth.
The other two men were next, the impact of their crosses slamming into their holes reverberating through the stone Longinus stood on.
It was a feeling he had never noticed before, he never before particularly caring about any of those who had been condemned.
But something was different here today.
Something felt different.
As if some great injustice were being committed, something that they would later come to regret if they continued.
He shivered.
Feet scraping on the rock behind him had him turning slightly.
How are you, my friend?
It was Albus. He nodded. Fine. Who is he? The one they’re all crying over?
"I’ve never heard of him, but according to the sign Pilate wanted nailed to his cross, he certainly thought a lot of himself. No wonder they sentenced