Then came the pilgrimage to Jerusalem, the silence, the disappearance. Juspe remembers the last telephone conversation. Mateo sounded different, disturbed. I’ve discovered something, Giuseppe, something that changes everything we thought we knew. I need to be sure before I speak. Those were his last words.
Now, seven years later, this diary mysteriously appears among documents cataloged as ordinary correspondence from 1983. Someone hid it there. Someone didn’t want him to be found. Juspe opens the first page with trembling hands. Mateo’s unmistakable handwriting hits him like a punch to the gut. If you’re reading this, it means I can no longer speak.
What I discovered will cost me everything, but the truth deserves to be known, even if it destroys my life. Forgive me, brother. And I continue what I started. Juspe closes his eyes. Outside the bells continue to ring, but inside, an abyss has just opened up. The truth awaits you in those yellowed pages.
Juspe Ferrara is 52 years old. impeccably styled gray hair and an unblemished reputation within the Roman Curia. For three decades he has served in various Vatican departments, always discreet, always efficient, always loyal, but beneath that facade of an ecclesiastical diplomat beats a heart tormented by unanswered questions.
The disappearance of Mateo Sandoval haunts him every day. He locks his office door and places the diary on the desk. The light from the flexible lamp illuminates the pages with almost surgical intensity. Yusepe takes a deep breath and begins to read. Day 1. Jerusalem. I arrived this morning.
The heat is stifling, but the heart is at peace. Tomorrow we will visit the Holy Sepulchre. I feel like this trip will be different. God is calling me towards something I don’t yet understand. The first entries are ordinary. Spiritual reflections, descriptions of sacred places, encounters with other pilgrims. Giuseppe recognizes his friend’s contemplative style, that ability to find the divine in the everyday, but in the entry for day 5 the tone changes.
Today I met an elderly archaeologist named David Earlick, an Orthodox Jew, who has been excavating on the Temple Mount for 30 years. He showed me something in his laboratory, a fragment of parchment from the 10th century. Jusepe, if what you told me is true, everything we have taught about the early years of the church may be incomplete.
Yusepe feels a chill. Matthew would never have used the word incomplete lightly. Erlich warned me not to talk about this with anyone. He says that others have tried to publish similar findings and have been silenced, not by governments, but by the church itself. He showed me documents, photographs, carbon-14 analysis. I can’t ignore what I saw.
The monsignor gets up and walks towards the window. From there he observes the majestic St. Peter’s Basilica under the gray clouds. How many secrets do these walls hold? How many truths have been buried for convenience? Return to the desktop and continue reading. The entries become more erratic. more distressed.
Day 8. I’m being followed. Two men in dark suits have been watching me since I left Earlik’s lab. They are not tourists, they have military training. I tried to lose them in the old town market, but they’re still there. Day 9. Earlick is not answering my calls. I went to his office. It’s closed. A neighbor told me that he suddenly went on a trip .
Nobody knows when he will return. I’m scared, Jusipe. For the first time in my life. I am afraid inside the house of God. Juspe notices that his own hands are trembling. He flips through several pages. The following entries are written in hurried, almost illegible handwriting. Day 11.
I copied everything before they took it away from me . The documents, the photographs, the evidence. I hid it in a safe place. If something happens to me, someone has to carry on. The truth is more important than my life. Day 12. I received a message in my hotel room with no signature, just a sentence. Forget what you saw or forget how to breathe.
I know I should be afraid, but I feel a strange peace. If this is God’s will, I am ready. The last entry is dated March 14, 2017, the day Mateo disappeared. I’m going to meet with someone who claims to have more information, a contact inside the Vatican. I don’t trust it completely, but I have no alternative.
Juspe, my brother, if you read this, look for the codex of the seven seals. It is in Kumbran sector 4, cave 11B. Coordinates 31 mines 4 corner of 3545 eh. Therein lies the proof of everything. Forgive me for what I am about to unleash. Juspe closes the newspaper. His hands are sweating. His heart is beating violently.
What did Matthew discover? Who silenced him? And why did the diary appear now after 7 years? Outside, Rome continues with its routine, but for Juspe Ferrara nothing will ever be the same again. Yusepe doesn’t sleep that night. He stays in his office until dawn rereading the diary over and over again , memorizing every word, every coordinate, every name mentioned.
David Erlik. The Jewish archaeologist is still alive. Did he really disappear or was he forced to disappear? The Codex of the Seven Seals. I had never heard that name before. And that, coming from someone with access to the Vatican Archives, is unsettling. At 6 a.m., Giuseppe allows himself a quick shower in the private bathroom of his office.
Hot water does not relieve the tension that is pressing on your chest. Standing in front of the mirror, she observes her own face, lines of tiredness, deep dark circles, but above all something she had n’t seen in her own eyes for years . Determination. He has been a good soldier of the church. He has obeyed orders, kept silent when necessary, and looked the other way when convenient.
But Matthew was different. Matthew was pure. And if anyone within these sacred walls had anything to do with his disappearance, Juspe is prepared to betray everything he has built to find out. He leaves the Vatican at 7. Rome is slowly waking up. Street sweepers, bakers, nuns hurrying towards their convents. Juspe takes a taxi to Trastevere and enters a small trattoria where the owner has known him for decades.
Cafedopio, per favore. Her voice sounds hoarse. While he waits, he takes out his phone and searches for David Erlik, archaeologist Jerusalem. The results are limited. An outdated academic profile at the Hebrew University. Some publications on pottery from the Second Temple period and then nothing. as if the man had ceased to exist after 2017.
Juspe dials a number he has memorized, but hasn’t used in years. Respond to the third tone. Soon, Enzo, it’s me, Giuseppe. Silence on the other end, then a harsh laugh. Monsignor Ferrara, how long? Finally, you need my services. Enzo Mancini is a freelance investigative journalist, a skeptic, a provocateur, someone who has dedicated his life to exposing corruption within powerful institutions, including the church.
Giuseppe and he met during a financial scandal in 2009, when Giuseppe secretly leaked documents that helped Enzo publish a devastating investigation. Since then they have maintained a strange relationship, mutual distrust mixed with respect. “I need information,” Yusepe says. Discreet and urgent. How much do you pay? This isn’t about money, Eno.
It’s about justice. Another laugh. The last time a priest spoke to me about justice, I ended up with a lawsuit. But keep going, you intrigue me. Juspe tells him the essentials. Mateo, the diary, the coordinates, the missing archaeologist. It omits some details, but enough for Enzo to understand the seriousness of the situation.
Interesting, murmurs the journalist. Very interesting. And why are you risking your career for this? Juspe closes his eyes. The question pierces him like a spear. Because 7 years ago I let my friend die in silence. Because I chose my comfort over the truth. Because I’ve been a coward for too long. The silence that follows is heavy, laden with understanding. That’s fine, Monsignor.
I’ll help you, but if things get ugly, you don’t know me. Understood? Understood? Give me 48 hours. Ah, I have contacts in Jerusalem. If Erlick is still alive, I will find him. Juspe hangs. The coffee arrives steaming and bitter. He drinks it in one gulp, feeling it burn his throat. He returns to the Vatican with his head down, politely greeting guards and colleagues.
No one suspects the revolution that is brewing inside him. In his office, he keeps the diary in a safe hidden behind a painting of Saint Ignatius of Loyola. Then he sits down at his computer and writes an email to his superior. Cardinal Bernardo Besi requesting a two-week leave of absence for personal reasons. The answer arrives in minutes.
granted. God bless you. Juspe smiles bitterly. God will bless him or condemn him, but at least he will finally do the right thing. 48 hours later, Juspeci received an encrypted message from Enso. Earlick lives under protection. He wants to talk to you. Come alone. The monsignor books a flight to Tel Aviv for that same night.
Pack little: civilian clothes, Mateo’s diary hidden in a secret compartment of his suitcase, and a rosary that belonged to his mother. The flight is turbulent, but Giuseppe barely notices. Mentally review everything you know, trying to connect the scattered fragments. The first-century parchment, the codex of the seven seals, the warning about silencing uncomfortable findings.
What a dangerous truth Mateo discovered. Land in Telviv at dawn. Eno is waiting for him at the airport, dressed in worn jeans and a black t-shirt. His face is thinner, more weathered than the last time they saw each other. Welcome to the Holy Land, Monsignor. He says ironically. I hope your God protects you here, because if someone discovers what you ‘re looking for, not even the Vatican will be able to save you.
They travel silently towards Jerusalem. The landscape is arid, golden from the morning sun. Yusepe looks out the window, feeling the weight of history that soaks into every stone of this land. Erlick lives on a kibbutz near the Dead Sea, Enzo explains as he drives. He hasn’t published anything since 2017 .
He officially retired due to health problems. Unofficially, he received such serious threats that he had to disappear. Who threatened him? Enzo glances at him out of the corner of his eye. That’s what’s interesting. He says they were Mossad agents, but acting under orders from another entity, an entity with a lot of power and many secrets to protect.
It goes without saying. They both know who he’s talking about. They arrive at the kibbutz 3 hours later. It’s a small place, surrounded by palm trees and vineyards. Erlich awaits them in a modest white stone house. He is a man in his eighties, hunched over but with bright, alert eyes. Monsignor Ferrara says in surprisingly fluent Spanish.
Mateo told me a lot about you. She said he was the only one she could trust. The words hit Giuseppe like punches. I was not worthy of that trust. I abandoned him. Erlik studies it with compassion. So now he has the opportunity to redeem himself. Sit down. What I am about to show you will change your understanding of everything.
Meanwhile, in a room where the walls are covered with maps, photographs, and documents. In the center there is a table with a wooden box. Earlik opens it with trembling hands. Inside are fragments of parchment protected in acrylic plates. The writing is ancient Aramaic, barely legible. This is the fragment I showed to Mateo. Erlik says.
It dates from the year 35 or 36 AD. It was found in a cave near Kumran in 1952, but classified as having no historical value and archived. For decades no one studied it. “What does it say?” Juspe asks, leaning forward. It is a letter written by someone very close to Jesus, someone who was present in the early years of the Christian community in Jerusalem.
Juspe feels the air leaving his lungs. The letter mentions events that do not appear in the canonical gospels, Erlik continues. Internal conflicts, political decisions, commitments to the Roman authorities that, let’s say, do not coincide with the official narrative of the church.
He is suggesting that the gospels lie, they don’t lie, Erlik corrects, they omit, edit, select what to tell and what to keep silent about, like any institution that needs to build a foundational mythology. But this letter, this letter shows the complicated, imperfect human version of how Christianity was born.
Giuseppe sits down, dizzy, and the codex of the seven seals. Erlik smiles sadly. That’s the real problem. This parchment is only a fragment. The complete codex contains all the correspondence, all the memoirs of the first disciples, and is hidden where no one expects it. Not in Cumran, but in Rome, in the Vatican. Juspe looks at him incredulously.
That’s impossible. I work there, I have access to the files. “Really?” Erlick asks. He has access to everything, even things that aren’t officially cataloged. The silence that follows is sepulchral. Juspe walks through the streets of Jerusalem that night, unable to process what he has just heard.
Enso follows him at a distance, respecting his need for solitude. Erlick’s words echo in his mind like warning bells. The codex is in Rome. They have had it for centuries and will kill to keep it hidden. It’s possible. Would the institution to which he has dedicated his entire life really deliberately conceal historical documents that contradict his own narrative? Yuspe stops in front of the Wailing Wall.
Tourists and worshippers pray, placing papers between the cracks of the ancient stones. He also approaches, placing his hand on the cold surface. “My God,” he whispered in Italian, “if you ‘re there, guide me. I don’t know what’s true and what ‘s false. I don’t know if I’m a traitor or a seeker of justice. Give me a sign.
” He received no answer. Only the murmur of prayers in Hebrew, Arabic, and English. He returned to the hotel where Enzo was waiting for him with two glasses of whiskey. “You look like you’ve seen a ghost,” the journalist said. “Worse,” Yuspe replied. “I’ve seen the possibility that everything I believed in was built up. Welcome to the club of the disillusioned.” Enzo raised his glass.
” What will you do now?” Yuspe drank the alcohol; it burned, but it was a welcome pain. ” Go back to Rome, find the codex, finish what Mateo started. Do you know what that means? If it’s true that they’re willing to kill for this, you ‘ll be next.” “I know.” Enzo studied him for a long time.
“You’re braver than I thought, Monsignor, or more of an idiot. I have n’t decided which yet.” The next day, Giuseppe visited one last place before leaving. The site where Mateo was last seen. According to the police report, it’s an alley near the Mount of Olives, a tourist spot by day, but deserted at nightfall.
Juspe walks slowly, taking in every detail. A closed souvenir shop, a stone wall with Arabic graffiti, a rusty trash can. What happened here, Mateo? he murmurs. Who was waiting for you? Suddenly he notices something on the wall: almost imperceptible, a small mark carved into the stone, a Latin cross with seven circles around it.
The symbol of the seven seals. Juspe takes a picture with his phone, his heart racing. It’s not a coincidence. Mateo left this mark deliberately, a final clue for whoever came looking for him. Below the cross, in tiny letters almost erased by time, it reads subrosa, under the rose, an ancient Latin expression meaning secretly, in confidence.
Giuseppe runs back to the hotel, searches online for subrosa Vatican Architecture. The results lead him to the Hall of the Signatura in the Vatican Museums. One of Raphael’s rooms . And there, painted on the ceiling, is a design of intertwined roses that few tourists notice because they are too busy admiring the School of Athens.
Giuseppe enlarges the images and then sees it. In the center of the floral design, almost invisible, are seven small roses arranged in a circle, exactly like the symbol that Matthew carved in Jerusalem. “My God,” he whispers. “It’s hidden in plain sight.” Call Enzo immediately. I need you to come back to Rome with me. Did you find anything? I know where the codex is, or at least I know where to start looking.
Enzo Silva, you’re completely crazy, but count me in. This will be the story of the century. Enzo, if we publish this, I know. We will change the world, or they will kill us trying. Preferably the former. Yusepe hangs up and looks out the window. Jerusalem stretches out before him, a city of prophets and martyrs, of revealed truths and buried truths.
Mateo says out loud as if his friend could hear him. I’m going to finish what you started, even if it costs me everything. That night Yuspe couldn’t sleep. He dreams of Mateo walking through the desert, leaving footprints that are erased by the wind. He dreams of burning manuscripts. He dreams of a truth so powerful that entire nations conspire to hide it.
And when she wakes up, she knows there’s no going back . Juspe returns to Rome on a night flight. During the 5- hour trip, she doesn’t take her eyes off Mateo’s diary. Each word now takes on a new meaning. Every seemingly casual observation is actually a carefully disguised clue. In a post on the 7th, Matthew wrote, “I visited the Garden of Gethsemane today.
There is a strange peace in that place, as if the sorrow of Christ still permeated the olive trees.” I thought of Peter, of his triple denial, of his cowardice, but also of his redemption. Sometimes, brother, I think we are all Peter. We deny the truth when it is inconvenient and then spend the rest of our lives seeking redemption.
Juspe closes the diary, feeling the weight of those words. He has been Peter, he has denied, he has looked the other way, he has chosen the comfort of silence, but Peter redeemed himself and he will too. Land at Fiumichino at dawn. Eno picks him up at the airport in a rental car, with a serious expression.
“We have a problem,” Juspe says as soon as he gets on. What happened? Erick was found dead this morning. Apparent heart attack. Juspe feels like the world is stopping. It wasn’t a heart attack. Of course not, but officially that’s what the death certificate will say. An elderly man in his eighties . No one will ask questions.
They know we were with him, no doubt, which means the clock is ticking. If they’re going to move you, they’ll do it soon. Juspe takes a deep breath. The fear is real, visceral, but so is their determination. So, we need to move faster. They arrive at the Vatican at 9 a.m. Yusepe enters through the Santana gate, greeting the Swiss guards in a natural manner.
Everything seems normal. Tourists queuing for museums, employees walking briskly, nuns with bundles of documents. But Giuseppe feels eyes on him, stares that linger for too long a second, people appearing in places where they shouldn’t be. “Paranoid,” he says to himself. You’re just being paranoid. But Erlich is dead and Mateo is dead and paranoia can be survival.
In his office, he finds a manila envelope on his desk with no return address. Inside there is a single sheet of paper with a typed message. Stop searching. His friend made a choice. Don’t make the same mistake. This is their only warning. Juspe crumples the paper in fury and throws it into the trash can. Then he regrets it, retrieves it, and photographs it as evidence.
He calls his contact in the Swiss Guard, Captain Heinrich Müller, a serious but honest German who has served for 20 years. Heinrich, I need a delicate favor. Tell me, Monsignor. I need access to the Vatican Museums outside of public hours tonight for private research. Silence. What type of research? I’d rather not say it over the phone, but I swear to Christ it’s legitimate.
Another longer silence. Okay, but if this causes problems, we never had this conversation. Understood? Thank you, brother. Juspe spends the rest of the day pretending to be normal. He attends a meeting on diocesan finances, has lunch in the Vatican canteen, answers routine emails, but his mind is elsewhere, planning every step of what he will do that night.
At 8 o’clock, when the last tourists leave the Vatican Museums, Giuseppe meets Heinrich at a side entrance. “You have two hours,” the captain says, handing her a key, ma’am. After that, I cannot guarantee your safety. The security system will be turned off in the area you indicated, but only for that time. That’s enough.
Juspe enters the deserted museums. His footsteps echo in the marble corridors. The sculptures observe him from their pedestals with blind stone eyes. He arrives at the classroom for the subject. Raphael’s fresco shines under the emergency light. The School of Athens, Plato, Aristotle, Socrates, all the great thinkers of antiquity brought together in a harmonious composition.
Juspe looks up at the ceiling. There are the roses, seven in a circle. He takes out a small folding ladder he brought with him and climbs carefully. His heart beats violently, he touches the surface of the fresco and then feels a small panel that gives way slightly under pressure. ” Her rose,” she literally whispers beneath the rose. Press harder.
The panel opens with an almost inaudible click. Inside there is a secret compartment, and inside the compartment, a dark wooden chest sealed with wax. Giuseppe pulls it out with trembling hands. He has found the codex of the seven seals. Giuseppe descends the ladder with the chest pressed against his chest as if it were the Holy Grail itself.
His hands are trembling so much that he almost drops it. Weight is not physical. The object is surprisingly lightweight, if not existential. Inside this dark wooden box, sealed with the one bearing the papal seal from the 15th century, lies the truth that cost Matthew his life. Perhaps the truth that has been hidden for 2000 years. No.
Yuseppe sits on the marble floor of the sign room, under the painted gaze of the Greek philosophers, and observes the chest. The wax seal shows the crossed keys of Saint Peter, but also something more. Seven small circles arranged in a crown shape. The seven seals murmur. Your phone vibrates. A message from Enzo. Did you find something? 45 minutes have passed.
Juspe writes, “Yes, I’m leaving in 10 minutes.” But his hands do not move to open the chest. Part of him knows that once he breaks that seal, there will be no going back . Once you read what’s inside, you will become a possessor of dangerous secrets. It will become a threat. He will become Matthew. ” My God,” she whispers, closing her eyes, “give me strength.
” Break the seal with a quick movement, like someone ripping off a bandage. The sealing wax cracks with a dry cracking sound that echoes in the empty room. Inside the chest there are three objects. First, a rolled-up manuscript, yellowed by the centuries, tied with a linen cord. The first visible words are in Greek koine, apomnimonefmaton apostolon, memories of the apostles.
Second, a more recent letter, dated 1542, written in elegant Latin. Juspe reads the signature, Pope Paul Icero. Third, a small bronze key with intricate engravings. Yuspe carefully unfolds Paulo Icero’s letter. His Latin is impeccable, his handwriting beautiful, but the content is devastating.
To my successors in the See of Peter I have personally examined the manuscript known as the Codex of the Seven Seals, recovered from the archives of Constantinople after the fall of that city. After consulting with the wisest theologians of our time, I have determined that its content, although historically valuable, is spiritually dangerous to the faith of the simple.
The manuscript contains authentic correspondence from early followers of Christ, but it reveals disagreements, doubts, and human conflicts that could be misinterpreted by those of weak faith. It portrays the apostles not as saints, but as fallible men who struggled to understand the divine message. For the sake of Holy Mother Church, I have decided to preserve, but not destroy, this document.
Let it remain hidden until God in His wisdom determines that humanity is ready to understand that true faith is not weakened by historical truth, but strengthened by it. Anyone who finds this should ask themselves, does it serve the truth or does the truth serve the church? May God enlighten your discernment.
Innomine patrice et Philpitus Santi. Paulus Pepé. Third. Juspe drops the letter. His hands are trembling uncontrollably. Tears roll down her cheeks without her even noticing. Paulo Io knew, a 15th-century pope knew that the Church was hiding historical truths and consciously chose to keep them secret.
How many popes after him also knew it? How many holy men have kept this secret generation after generation? Yusepe takes the ancient manuscript with reverence. He doesn’t dare unroll it completely. The parchment is fragile, almost dust, but fragments can be read. And Peter said to James, “I don’t understand why the master chose me.
I am ignorant, impulsive, and cowardly. I denied knowing him three times.” And James replied, “That’s precisely why he chose you, to show that God works through imperfect men. Not despite their failings, but through them. Another fragment. There was a great dispute about whether the Gentiles should be circumcised.
Paul and Peter almost came to blows. Mary Magdalene intervened. The Master didn’t come to bring new laws, but to transcend all laws. Don’t you understand? And yet another that leaves Yusepe breathless. We found the writings where the Master spoke of his doubt in Gethsemane. Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from me .
Some wanted to omit this from our testimonies, saying that it showed weakness, but John, I insisted, his humanity is what makes his sacrifice truly divine. Juspe closes his eyes. This doesn’t destroy his faith. Strangely, it deepens it. Seeing the apostles as real men, with doubts and conflicts, makes their testimony more powerful, not less, but he understands why the Church hid it.
For centuries, ecclesiastical authority was built on the image of a Perfect apostolic tradition, without cracks or contradictions. This manuscript shows the truth, an imperfect human community that struggled to understand something that transcended them. His phone vibrates urgently. Yuspe, there’s movement now.
Guards heading for your location. Yuspe quickly packs everything into the chest and runs. Juspe leaves the senatorial room at full speed. The chest under his arm, his ragged breathing echoing in the empty museum corridors. In the distance, he hears voices, hurried footsteps, the crackle of radios. They know, of course they know.
Heinrich betrayed him, or there’s simply surveillance the captain was unaware of. Juspe turns into a side gallery, desperately searching for an alternative exit. The Vatican Museums are a labyrinth of 54 galleries, secret staircases, and service passages. If he can reach the Sistine Chapel, there’s a maintenance door that leads directly to the Vatican Gardens. He runs.
His leather shoes slip on the polished marble. The chest rattles against his ribs with each step. Behind him The voices draw nearer. Sector 3, move. Giuseppe walks through the gallery of chandeliers. The Roman sculptures watch him with impassive marble expressions, eternal witnesses to human secrets. He crosses the gallery of tapestries, where biblical scenes woven 500 years ago seem to come alive under the emergency lighting.
Finally, he reaches the Sistine Chapel. Michelangelo’s masterpiece surrounds him in the gloom. The Last Judgment covers the altar wall with Christ at its center, separating the saved from the damned. On the ceiling, God extends his finger toward Adam at the moment of creation. Giuseppe stops for a moment, panting, contemplating the most famous painting in the world.
And for the first time in his life, he sees something different in it . Not divine perfection, but the human yearning to understand the incomprehensible. A man, Michelangelo, trying to paint God, imperfect, human, but full of genuine faith, like the apostles, like Matthew, like himself. Halt. Three Swiss Guards enter. Through the main door.
Their anachronistic uniforms, now menacing in the dim light. They carry pistols, not drawn, but their hands rest on the holsters. ” Monsignor Ferrara,” says the leader, a stern-faced young Swiss man, “hand over what you took and come with us without resistance.” Juspe clutches the chest tighter. “I can’t do that.
We don’t want to hurt you, Monsignor. But we have orders.” “Orders from whom? Cardinal Bes? The Secretary of State? Since when do we obey orders that conceal the truth?” The guard hesitates. He’s young, maybe 25. Juspe sees doubt in his eyes. “He doesn’t know what’s in this chest.” Juspe continues.
His voice echoing in the empty chapel. “But I do. It’s history, isn’t it? Words written by men who walked with Christ. To really shoot a priest for protecting the truth. Orders are to hell with orders.” Juspe has never shouted Thus in his life. Decades of silent obedience explode in that moment. I am a monsignor of the Holy Catholic Church.
I have served faithfully for 30 years, and I tell you that what is in this chest is more important than any bureaucratic order. The guards look at each other indecisive. Then a new voice resounds from the shadows. Let me speak with him. They all turn. From the side door emerges a figure that Giuseppe knows all too well. Cardinal Bernardo Besi, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
74 years old, silver hair, icy eyes, the most powerful man in the Vatican after the Pope. Stand back, Besi orders the guards with a gesture of his jeweled hand. I’ll take care of it. The guards obey, clearly relieved not to have to resolve the conflict. The door closes behind them with a sepulchral echo. Giuseppe and Besi face each other under the painted gaze of Christ at the Last Judgment.
So he “You found it,” Besiei says softly, almost paternally. ” I knew you would eventually. You’re too clever for your own good. And Juspe. Did you know? Did you know about the codex? Of course, all the prefects know. It’s part of our responsibility to protect the Church from truths the faithful aren’t prepared to process. Truths.
He calls this truth and hides it.” Vesi approaches slowly, his shoes tapping on the marble. ” Jusepe, my son, you are an idealist. You always were. But the real world requires pragmatism. The Church isn’t just faith; it’s an institution, and institutions survive by controlling the narrative. And Mateo, he too discovered too much of the narrative.
” Pesi’s face remains impassive. “Matthew made his choice. As you’re making yours now.” Yusepe steps back, feeling the weight of the implied threat. “You killed him.” “I didn’t kill anyone, but I didn’t mourn their absence either. Mateo was dangerous. As you’re being dangerous now.” “The truth isn’t dangerous. Fear is.
” It really is. You see and sigh like a father tired of explaining the obvious to a stubborn child. Hand over the chest, Juspe. Forget what you saw. Continue your career. Perhaps it will even make you a cardinal someday, but if you leave here with that chest, I guarantee you won’t make it to tomorrow.
Juspe feels the chest burning in his hands. Juspe observes Cardinal Bessi and for the first time in his life sees clearly what was always there. Not a prince of the Church, but a bureaucrat of power, a man who confused protecting the institution with protecting God. You don’t see, Juspe, you simply see and blink, genuinely surprised. Excuse me.
I said, “No, I won’t hand over the chest.” I will not forget what I saw, and I will not allow another good man to die because of the cowardice of this institution. Besi’s face hardens. You’re making a terrible mistake. “Perhaps, but it will be my mistake, not his.” Juspe steps back toward the side door, the one that leads to the gardens.
Pes doesn’t move, but his voice turns sharp as a scalpel. “Erlich died this morning. An unfortunate heart attack. Heinrich Müller, the captain who helped you, will be transferred tomorrow to a remote parish in Switzerland for disciplinary reasons. And if you take one more step toward that door, the next name on that list will be yours.
” Yuspe stops. The horror of reality hits him. Besí is confessing to murders with the ease of someone commenting on the weather. “How many deaths has this man ordered in the name of protecting the Church? How can he live with himself?” Yuspe asks, his voice cracking. “Very well, thank you. I sleep soundly every night, knowing that I have preserved the faith of 1 million Catholics.
You can say the same when your arrogance causes a global crisis of faith. If faith is built on lies, it doesn’t deserve to be preserved. How naive you are.” Besi finally loses his composure. The faith of the masses isn’t built on complex and nuanced truths; it’s built on simple certainties. People need to believe that the apostles were perfect saints, that the Church was founded on solid, unshakeable rock .
If you publish that manuscript, you’ll destroy that certainty. And when the faith of the simple folk crumbles, who will be responsible? You. The simple folk, Yusepe repeats bitterly—that’s what he calls the faithful, as if they were children who can’t handle the truth. Because they act like children, they want easy answers, miracles, saints to pray for, and sins to confess.
They don’t want historical complexity. Juspe feels a strange calm descending upon him. He has lived 30 years under the weight of obedience, of respect for the hierarchy, of the fear of disappointing his superiors. But now, looking at Besi, he understands something fundamental. This man doesn’t represent God; he represents the fear of God.
You are mistaken, Your Eminence, Yuspe says firmly. You underestimate the faithful. True faith doesn’t need lies. pious. True faith can sustain the truth, however uncomfortable it may be. You’re an idealistic idiot, Yusepe, like your friend Mateo. Then I’ll die an idealistic idiot. Better that than live a pragmatic liar.
Juspe turns to the door. He presses his fist and shouts, “Guards!” The main door bursts open. The three Swiss Guards rush in, this time with their weapons drawn. Stop him, he orders. By force, if necessary. Juspe to the side door. His fingers touch the handle, he turns it. The door opens onto the dark, silent Vatican Gardens under the Roman moon, and then he hears the shot.
He feels no pain immediately, only an impact on his left shoulder that makes him spin. The chest falls from his hands, bouncing on the marble floor with an ominous crunch. Yusepe collapses, his back against the wall. Blood stains his black cassock, spreading like a dark flower across his chest. The guards look horrified.

The young man who fired drops his The weapon, his hands trembling. I didn’t mean to. He moved, and Pessi walked slowly toward Yusepe. He carefully picked up the chest. He inspected it to make sure it wasn’t damaged. “Take him to the infirmary,” he ordered without looking at the fallen monsignor. “If anyone asks, there was an accident, an attempted robbery.
Monsignor Ferrara tried to stop the thief and was shot— a tragedy.” ” But Your Eminence,” one of the guards began. “I have to repeat the order. ” The guards lifted Yusepe, who was barely conscious. His vision blurred, but he caught a glimpse of Pessi walking away with the chest under his arm, walking beneath Michelangelo’s Last Judgment, without a hint of irony.
“Matthew,” Yusepe whispered before darkness swallowed him. “I’m sorry, I failed again.” The last thought before losing consciousness is a prayer. God, if you exist, make it worthwhile. Everything turns black. Yusepe wakes up in a white room that smells of disinfectant and secrets. He’s not in a regular hospital.
He knows it because of the baroque crucifix on the wall and the absolute silence that only exists in Vatican buildings. The private nursing of the Holy See. His left shoulder throbs with a dull ache, immobilized by bandages. A drip hangs above his bed, feeding his arm with a clear liquid. The light coming through the window tells him it’s daytime, but he doesn’t know which day.
How long has he been unconscious? He tries to sit up, but a sharp pain forces him to stay still. The door opens and a young nun in a white habit enters , a sister of the order of Saint Camillus, dedicated to the care of the sick. Monsignor Ferrara says with a northern Italian accent, thank God he has been unconscious for 36 hours. The doctor was worried.
“Where is the chest?” Yusepe asks in a hoarse voice. The nun blinks in confusion. Chest. I don’t know what you’re talking about. You arrived here with a gunshot wound to your shoulder. We were told there was an attempted robbery at the museums and that you were injured trying to stop the thief. That’s a lie, Monsignor.
It should not be shaken. The doctor said, “I need to talk to someone, to Cardinal Besi, to the Pope, to anyone who has authority.” The nun backs away, clearly frightened by Yuspe’s intensity . Cardinal Bessi came yesterday and left very clear instructions. You should rest and not receive visitors until you are fully recovered.
“Of course he left those instructions,” Yusepe murmurs bitterly. He is trapped, injured, isolated. Officially a hero who foiled a robbery, but unofficially a prisoner. How long do they plan to keep him here? Until I forget, until I accept silence as the price of my survival. The nun takes his temperature, checks the IV drip, and leaves promising to return with food.
Juspe is left alone with his thoughts and his pain. It has failed completely, absolutely. The codex is once again in the hands of those who will hide it. Erlich is dead. Heinrich was probably professionally destroyed and himself reduced to an anecdote. Poor Monsignor Ferrara, who suffered trauma and now says nonsensical things about conspiracies.
Mateo whispers to the white ceiling. I failed you again. She closes her eyes, feeling tears of frustration roll down her cheeks, and then hears a soft knock on the window. Yusepe turns his head with difficulty. Outside, on the narrow third-floor balcony, is Enso Mancini, the journalist, clinging precariously to the stone wall with an expression that mixes determination and absolute terror.
“For God’s sake,” Enzo mumbles voicelessly, “open the window.” Giuseppe, despite the pain and despair, almost laughs. He manages to get out of bed with tortuous movements and opens the latch. Enzo slips inside like a panting wet cat . “You’re completely crazy,” Yusepe says. “You’re the one who got involved in a Vatican conspiracy.
I just climb historic buildings.” Eno brushes the dust off his trousers. Are you OK? I have contacts who told me you were shot. I will survive. But the codex—”I know. See if he has it. I saw him leaving the museums with a chest that night.” Eno pulls a small electronic device from his pocket. ” But there’s good news.
Before you were shot, Heinrich contacted me. He knew something bad was going to happen. He gave me this. What is it? A USB drive with complete photographs of the manuscript you found. Heinrich took them when he helped you get into the museums. He copied everything with a high-resolution camera while you were searching.
” Giuseppe feels his heart race to the point of pain. ” Heinrich photographed the codex, every page, every word, and asked me that if anything happened to him or you, I should publish everything. So here I am, climbing Vatican buildings like an idiot, asking you, ‘Do you want me to publish the truth, or do you want everyone to continue living in the comfortable lie?'” Giuseppe stares at the USB drive, so small, so insignificant, and yet it holds the power to change 2,000 years of the official narrative. “Do you know
what will happen if you publish…” “That?” Yusepe asks. “I’ll have to hide for the rest of my life.” I will probably be excommunicated, even though I am not Catholic. They will definitely come after me. “Maybe they’ll kill me.” Enzo smiles. “But it will be the most important story of the century, and I have stupid principles about the truth.
” You could destroy the faith of millions or strengthen it, it depends on how much real faith they have. Juspe closes his eyes. This is the decision, the point of no return. Think of Matthew walking towards his death for defending the truth. Think of Heinrich sacrificing his career to do the right thing. Think of Paulo Io 500 years ago making the opposite decision. Hide to protect.
Publish it, says Yusepe. Finally, he publishes everything. Eno nods solemnly, putting away the USB drive as if it were a sacred relic. I need your help. The manuscript is in ancient Greek and Aramaic . I need context, explanation, translation. Without that, it’s just old paper with scribbles.
I can’t get out of here. They are watching. So I’ll stay. Eno takes his laptop out of a backpack he was wearing. We have maybe four or five hours before anyone notices my presence. Let’s begin. During the following hours, Giuseppe and Enzo worked feverishly. Juspe translates and explains each fragment of the manuscript while Enzo writes, contextualizes, and verifies.
It’s like putting together a 2000-year-old jigsaw puzzle, piece by piece. The Codex of the Seven Seals turns out to be a collection of seven distinct documents written by different hands. The first seal, a letter from Peter to the communities of Antioch, admitting his doubts and failures, describing how he almost gave up everything after denying Christ and how Mary Magdalene convinced him to continue.
The second seal, correspondence between Paul and James about the violent theological disputes of the early Church, shows how they were almost permanently divided over whether Christianity was for Jews only or for everyone. Third seal, the testimony of Mary Magdalene about the last days of Jesus.
A story that portrays her not as a redeemed prostitute. That narrative was added centuries later, but as a spiritual leader and theologian in her own right. Fourth seal. Memoirs of Doubting Thomas, explaining that his doubt was not weakness, but the foundation of Christian critical thinking . Faith that examines, questions, and still believes. Fifth seal.
A letter from John describing the political conflicts with the Roman Empire, showing how the early Church had to make pragmatic compromises in order to survive. Sixth seal. documents about the gospels that were not included in the official canon and the political, not theological, reasons behind those omissions.
Seventh seal, a final reflection from an unknown hand, possibly written in the year 95 of Decocist, warning future generations, do not make chains of our writings. We write as imperfect humans searching for truth. Let those who come after have the freedom to seek their own understanding. Yuspe cries while translating this last seal.
It is a call across the centuries. Don’t turn faith into fossilized dogma. “This is extraordinary,” Enzo murmurs, typing frantically. This does not destroy Christianity, it humanizes it, makes it more real, more honest. Exactly what you see and fear, Yusepe replies. A faith that acknowledges complexity, doubt, and humanity.
A faith that does not need absolute certainty to be valid. They are so absorbed in their work that they don’t hear the footsteps in the corridor until it’s too late. The door bursts open. Cardinal Bessie enters followed by four guards. His face is a mask of contained fury. “I should have known,” he says in an icy voice.
“You never know when to give up, do you, Yusepe?” Eno quickly closes his laptop. Pes makes a gesture and two guards grab him, snatching his computer and backpack. “No!” Giuseppe shouts, trying to get out of bed. The pain in his shoulder makes him collapse. They can’t do this. Of course I can.
You look at and examine the laptop with disdain. Everything will be confiscated. You, journalist, will be escorted out of the Vatican and banned from entering for life. And you, Yusepe, will be transferred to a secluded monastery in Sicily , where you can reflect on your betrayal in silence. Betrayal. And he laughs bitterly.
Betrayal of what? To the lies. Betray the institution that shaped you, fed you, and gave you purpose. The institution must serve the truth, not the truth the institution. Vesi approaches the bed, his face inches from Yusepe’s. Listen carefully, this game is over. The codex will return to its hiding place. Heinrich Müller was already sent to Switzerland with a generous pension and a permanent order of silence .
And you two will be forgotten footnotes in history. Understood? Giuseppe looks him straight in the eyes. One question, Your Eminence. Did you ever have real faith, or was it always just politics for you? The blow is quick. Besie’s hand slams into Yusepe’s face with enough force to make him bleed from the mouth.
“Get them out of here,” Besie orders the guards, both of them. Now, as the guards drag Enzo out of the room, the journalist shouts, “Juspe, the cloud, remember the cloud.” The words make no sense to anyone, except to Giuseppe, who suddenly understands. Eno set up automatic cloud backup. Even if they confiscate the laptop, the photographs are already on remote servers. The truth escaped.
Besi, oblivious to this, walks away with the laptop under his arm, believing he has won. Juspe lies back on the bed, bleeding, seemingly defeated, but for the first time in days he smiles. Three days later, Juspe is transferred in an inconspicuous ambulance to a small military airfield on the outskirts of Rome. Bessi’s plan is simple.
Golden exile in a Sicilian monastery. Constant surveillance, permanent silence. Juspe is traveling sedated, still recovering from his injury. Beside him, a Vatican doctor checks his vital signs with a neutral expression. Two guards in the front seat don’t say a word, but the ambulance never arrives at the airfield.
Halfway there, on a rural road surrounded by vineyards, another vehicle blocks the way. The guards brake abruptly. Before they can react, the doors are opened from the outside. They are not criminals, they are journalists. Dozens of them with cameras, microphones, recorders. And at the front is Enzo Mancini with a triumphant smile.
Monsignor Ferrara says aloud, clearly for the cameras, that it is true that he was shot inside the Vatican for trying to reveal historical documents that the church has hidden for centuries. The guards try to close the doors, but it’s useless. The cameras are already recording. Reporters shout questions in Italian, English, Spanish, and French.
Giuseppe, still dazed by the sedatives, understands what Enzo has done. He has turned this into a public scandal. Now the Vatican can’t simply make it disappear. ” That’s right,” Giuseppe says in a weak but clear voice. I discovered documents that reveal the true history of the early Church.
Documents that humanize the apostles, that admit doubts and conflicts, and that’s why they shot me. Chaos erupts. The journalists shout for more questions. The guards try to physically restrain them , but they are overwhelmed by the numbers. Eno approaches and helps Yusepe get out of the ambulance. I’m sorry, old friend, but this was the only way to protect you.
If you are a public case, they cannot silently silence you. You published everything 2 hours ago on my website, on Wikileaks, on every alternative media outlet I know: the photographs of the codex, your translation, the historical context. The internet is exploding. The hashtag #onmá codice de los celos is a worldwide trend.
Juspe feels his legs giving out. Eno holds it while camera flashes illuminate the Italian sunset. “You did it,” Yusepe whispers. You really did it. “We did it,” Enzo corrects. Matthew began. You continued. I just finished the job. That night Juspe did not return to the Vatican. Several journalists offer him protection, taking him to a hotel in Rome where he can recover under the watch of international media.
From his room he observes how the world reacts. Social media erupts in debate. Some Catholics are furious, feeling that their faith has been attacked. Others express relief, saying they always knew the official story was too perfect to be real. Progressive theologians celebrate revelation as an opportunity for a more honest and mature faith.
Conservatives denounce it as a heretical forgery. The Vatican publishes an official statement. The documents circulating on the internet are of dubious authenticity and are being investigated. Monsignor Ferrara suffered a regrettable incident during an attempted robbery and is receiving treatment for psychological trauma. Juspe laughs bitterly as he reads this.
Psychological trauma. The diplomatic way of saying he’s crazy, but then something unexpected happens. 36 bishops from around the world publish an open letter calling for an independent investigation of the documents. They don’t report them, they ask that they be honestly investigated. Then, 120 Catholic theologians signed a petition demanding transparency.
And finally, three cardinals, not part of Besi’s inner circle, formally request a papal audience to discuss matters of historical and theological urgency. Juspe observes all this from his makeshift hospital bed, amazed. The world is not collapsing, it is evolving. Her phone rings, unknown number, she hesitates, but answers.
Juspe Ferrara asks a voice in Italian with an Argentinian accent. Yes, this is Father Antonio Richi, His Holiness’s personal secretary, speaking. The Holy Father requests a private audience with you. Tomorrow, at 3 p.m., he will accept. Juspe almost dropped the phone. The Pope wants to see him. Yes, he manages to say.
Yes of course. Excellent. We will send safe transportation. And Monsignor, His Holiness asked me to convey this to him. The truth will set us free, even if it makes us uncomfortable at first. The call ends. Juspe stares at the phone, trembling. He doesn’t know if this is a trap, an opportunity, or a miracle, but he knows that tomorrow, in front of the man who leads a billion Catholics, he will defend what he discovered, even if it costs him everything.
That night, for the first time since Mateo’s disappearance, Giuseppe sleeps soundly. He dreams of his friend walking through the desert, but this time he doesn’t disappear into the distance. This time he turns around, smiles, and points forward toward the truth. The papal audience takes place not in the official office, but in the Pope’s private library, a small room filled with old books, with a simple wooden crucifix on the wall.
The Holy Father is a 78-year-old man of Argentine origin, with a reputation as a reformer, but also as a shrewd politician. Juspe knows what to expect. He enters limping slightly, his shoulder still bandaged under his cassock. The Pope receives him standing, without ceremony, and embraces him with genuine warmth.
Yuspe speaks in Spanish, the language of his childhood in Buenos Aires. I’m glad you ‘re alive. Bernardo Ves assured me that it was all a misunderstanding. Now I know he lied. Yuspe blinks, surprised by the frankness. Please sit down. The Pope continues, pointing to two armchairs in front of the window overlooking the gardens.
Let’s talk like two men who are searching for God, not like Pope and Monsignor. They sit down . The Pope serves coffee from a simple pot. No Vatican ceremony. ” I read the documents,” the Pope says, “without preamble, everything, the photographs that your journalist friend published, the translations.
” And you know what, Juspe? They don’t surprise me. No, of course not. I always knew that the official story was simplified. All popes know this on some level, but confronting it explicitly is another matter. The Pope drinks his coffee thoughtfully. Bernardo wants me to excommunicate you. He says you’re a heretic, a traitor.
Juspe feels his stomach clench. And what do you think? The Pope smiles. I think you are an honest man in a system that often rewards dishonesty. Like your friend Mateo. Do you know what happened to Mateo? The silence that follows is heavy. Finally, the Pope nods. I have suspicions, I can’t prove it, but I believe Bernardo ordered his disappearance and that of others before him and did nothing.
I had no proof. And a pope, Yusepe, is not an all-powerful dictator. I govern with the consensus of cardinals, many of whom are loyal to Bernardo, not to me. If I accuse him without evidence, they’ll fire me and put someone worse in my place. Yuspe feels a mixture of frustration and understanding.
Even the Pope is caught up in Vatican politics. But now, the Pope continued, his eyes shining, you have given me something. Public evidence, international scandal. Bernardo can no longer hide. This afternoon in a private council meeting I will ask for his resignation. If he refuses, I will launch a formal investigation into his conduct.
Yuspe feels hot tears on his cheeks. Really, really, and there’s more. The Pope gets up and walks to a shelf from which he takes out an old book. After reading the codex, I searched our archives. I found this, a diary of Pope John XXIII, the Pope of the Second Vatican Council . Look what he wrote in 1972. Juspe reads the marked page.
The writing is elegant in Italian. I have seen the documents that no one is talking about. The uncomfortable truths about our origins. I know that one day they will have to reveal themselves, but not in my time. We are still too fragile. May God send someone braver than me to open those doors.
Juspe closes the book, deeply moved. “You are that someone,” the Pope says gently. You and Mateo. And now I too must be brave. What will he do with the codex? With the truth? The Pope returns to his chair. I will form an international commission. Theologians, historians, and archaeologists, both Catholic and non-Catholic, will study the codex publicly, and then we will have an honest debate about what it means for our faith.
The conservatives will probably crucify him, but I prefer to be crucified for the truth than to be complicit in the lie. The Pope smiles. Furthermore, he would not be the first Pope to be metaphorically crucified. Pedro literally was. I think I can handle some hostile editorial columns. Juspe laughs through his tears. One last thing, the Pope says, becoming serious.
Mateo Sandoval, I am going to order a formal investigation into your disappearance and if we discover that you were murdered, those who did it will face justice, both human and divine. Thank you. Yusepe whispers. Thank you, Holy Father, don’t thank me. Thank God and thank your friend who died seeking the truth. Juspe nods, unable to speak.
Outside, the bells of San Pedro begin to ring. A new era is beginning. 6 months later. Giuseppe Ferrara is standing at the Pontifical Gregorian University, in front of an audience of 300 theology students from around the world. Her shoulder has healed completely, her hair has more gray hairs, but her eyes shine with a light they did n’t have before.
Faith, he says, his voice echoing in the auditorium, is not the absence of doubt, it is the decision to believe despite doubt. The first Christians knew this. The Codex of the Seven Seals shows us men and women who wrestled with impossible questions, who made mistakes, who argued violently with each other, and yet built something extraordinary.
A student raises his hand. Monsignor, are you not afraid that many Catholics have lost their faith after the revelations? Juspe nods, it saddens me, it doesn’t frighten me, because if his faith depended on the apostles being perfect, then his faith was fragile from the beginning. True faith embraces complexity, it embraces the humanity of its founders.
And Cardinal Bessi, another student asks. Juspe takes a deep breath. Bernardo Besi resigned after a papal investigation confirmed his involvement in covering up multiple scandals, including likely involvement in the disappearance of Matthew. He faces canonical trial, although he will never be criminally prosecuted.
Vatican laws protect even the fallen. Cardinal Besi, Yuseppe carefully states, was a man who confused protecting the institution with protecting the truth. It’s a mistake we can all make when power blinds us. After the conference, Juspe University Gardens. Rome is beautiful under the spring sun. Tourists photograph the coliseum from afar, oblivious to the silent revolutions taking place in ancient institutions.
His phone rings. It’s Enzo. Did you see the news? The journalist asks excitedly. Oxford University has just announced a full professorship dedicated to the study of early Christianity using the codex as a primary source. Archaeologists are returning to Kumran to search for more documents. Juspe, we changed the academic world.
“You changed the world,” Juspe corrects. I only translated. Foolishness. You were the one who had the courage. Hey, we had lunch. I have an idea for a book. The truth behind the codex, co-authored. What are you saying? Juspe laughs. I’ll think about it, but first I have something to do. They say goodbye. Juspe takes a taxi to the Campo Verano cemetery on the outskirts of Rome.
There, under a cypress tree, is a new white marble gravestone with a simple inscription. Father Mateo Sandoval. 1978. The truth will set us free. Juspe places fresh flowers and kneels down, ignoring the lingering pain in his shoulder. Hello, brother, he whispers. Sorry it took so long, but we did it. Your truth is in the world and the church is changing slowly, painfully, but it is changing.
The wind moves the cypress leaves. Juspe imagines that it is Mateo’s answer . Heinrich is also fine. Continue. He returned from Switzerland. The Pope offered him a position on the commission of inquiry. He said yes. And Erlik, well, we couldn’t save him, but his name will be remembered. I promise you.
Yusepe stays there for a long time praying, remembering, healing. Finally, he gets up. He has a meeting with the Pope that afternoon. They are planning an international symposium on faith and historical truth. He has students to mentor, he has lectures to give. He has a life dedicated not to hiding secrets, but to illuminating truths.
As he walks towards the exit of the cemetery, Yusepe feels something he hasn’t felt in 7 years. Peace. Not the peace of absolute certainty, not the peace of having all the answers, but the peace of knowing that you are living with integrity, the peace of having chosen truth over comfort. Look up at the blue and infinite Roman sky.
“Thank you,” he whispers, not knowing exactly who he is addressing: God, Mateo, the universe, maybe everyone. Perhaps that is, after all, the essence of faith. The truth is a light that cannot be permanently extinguished; it can be hidden, buried, denied. But like spring that follows the harshest winter, it always finds a way to emerge.
This story, based on fictional events but universal human truths , reminds us that institutions, even the most sacred, are run by people, and people are imperfect, capable of both heroism and cowardice, wisdom and blindness. The codex of the seven seals may not exist, but the temptation to hide uncomfortable truths exists in every organization, every government, every power structure that has ever existed.
The question each of us must ask ourselves is, who ultimately chose the truth? Or will Besi be the one who chose power? Will I, Mateo, be willing to sacrifice everything? Or will I be the silent observer who looks the other way? True faith does not fear the truth. True faith embraces it. And the truth, however painful it may be, is always better than the most comfortable lie.