the Third Secret (2005)

the Third Secret (2005) by Steve Berry Page B

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Authors: Steve Berry
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permission.
    “Do not worry, Sister. I have business to handle.”
    “You should be resting. You know that.”
    “I will return shortly. But I feel fine and need to attend to this matter. Father Valendrea will take good care of me.”
    “No more than half an hour. Clear?”
    Paul smiled. “I promise. Half an hour and I’ll be off my feet.”
    The nun retreated to her room and they headed onto the elevator. On the ground floor, Paul inched ahead through a series of corridors to the entrance for the archives.
    “I have delayed something for many years, Alberto. I think tonight is the time to remedy that.”
    Paul continued along with the help of his cane and Valendrea shortened his stride to keep pace. He was saddened by the sight of this once great man. Giovanni Battista Montini was the son of a successful Italian lawyer. He’d worked his way up through the Curia, ultimately serving in the Secretariat of State. After, he became the archbishop of Milan and governed that diocese with an efficient hand, catching the eye of the Italian-dominated Sacred College as the natural choice to succeed the beloved John XXIII. He’d been an excellent pope, serving at a difficult time after Vatican II. The Church would sorely miss him, and so would Valendrea. Of late, he’d been fortunate to spend time with Paul. The old warrior seemed to enjoy his company. There was even talk of a possible elevation to bishop, something he hoped Paul saw the grace to extend before God summoned him.
    They entered the archives and the prefect knelt at Paul’s appearance. “What brings you, Holy Father?”
    “Please open the Riserva.”
    He liked the way Paul answered a question with a command. The prefect scurried for a set of oversized keys, then led the way into the darkened archives. Paul slowly followed, and they arrived as the prefect completed opening an iron grille and switching on a series of dull incandescent lights. Valendrea knew of the Riserva and of the rule that required papal authority for entry. It was the sacred reserve of the Vicars of Christ. Only Napoleon had violated its sanctity, paying for that insult in the end.
    Paul entered the windowless room and pointed to a black safe. “Open that.”
    The prefect complied, spinning the dials and releasing tumblers. The double doors swung open. Not one sound leaked from the brass hinges.
    The pope sat in one of three chairs.
    “That will be all,” Paul said, and the prefect left.
    “My predecessor was the first to read the third secret of Fatima. I am told that afterward he ordered it sealed in this safe. I have resisted the urge to come here for fifteen years.”
    Valendrea was a little confused. “Did not the Vatican in ’67 issue a statement that the secret would remain sealed? That was done without you reading it?”
    “There are many things the Curia does in my name of which I have little knowledge. I was told, though, about that one. After.”
    Valendrea wondered if he might have stumbled with his question. He cautioned himself to watch his words.
    “The whole affair amazes me,” Paul said. “The mother of God appears to three peasant children—not to a priest, or a bishop, or the pope. She chooses three illiterate children. She seems to always choose the meek. Perhaps heaven is trying to tell us something?”
    Valendrea knew all about how Sister Lucia’s message from the Virgin had made its way from Portugal to the Vatican.
    “I never thought the good sister’s words something that commanded my attention,” Paul said. “I met Lucia in Fatima, when I went in ’67. I was criticized for going. The progressives said I was setting back the progress of Vatican II. Putting too much emphasis on the supernatural. Venerating Mary above Christ and the Lord. But I knew better.”
    He noticed a fiery light in Paul’s eyes. There might still be some fight left in this old warrior.
    “I knew young people loved Mary. They felt a pull from the sanctuaries. My going there was

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