Valley of the Templars

Valley of the Templars Read Free

Book: Valley of the Templars Read Free
Author: Paul Christopher
Tags: thriller
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Farrell shook his head. “Not the Doc I knew.”
    “Not the Doc I knew, either,” said Holliday. “Don’t worry, though, Beagle. I’m still on the side of truth, justice and the American way.”
    “Well, that’s okay, then, Doc.” Farrell smiled. “None of us are the way we were back then. All of us are missing parts of one kind or another.”
    “Can you help me out?”
    “I think I got a name and an address somewhere, but this guy is bad news, Doc. He does good work, but he’d slit your throat for a dollar if he could get away with it.”
    “Nice friends you have.”
    “Nice friends don’t forge passports.”
    “True enough.”
    Holliday stayed and finished his sandwich and whiskey, talking about old times with his scarred buddy from a lifetime ago, but old times weren’t necessarily good times and he left with both of them promising to stay in touch and both of them knowing they were lying.
    Holliday called the number Farrell had given him, and he and Eddie arrived at the appointed addressshortly after eight o’clock the following evening. Kostum King was located between a Christian bookstore and a Braun café on Raadhuisstraat between the Herrengracht and the Singel canals in the center of Old Amsterdam. It was a narrow building with a tattered blue awning and four dusty-looking Michael Jackson Thriller costumes complete with shoes and rubber masks dangling in the window from what looked suspiciously like meat hooks. The sign on the door said CLOSED , but Holliday rang the bell anyway.
    The man who answered was short, scraggly-haired, clubfooted and with a large hump on his back. The suit he wore was as dusty as the Michael Jackson costumes.
    “
Ja?

    “Dirk Hartog?”
    “
Ja.

    “Darby sent us.”
    “Ah yes, come in.”
    They stepped into the shop, bypassing the hunchback, who closed and locked the door behind him. The shop was long and narrow with costumes of all kinds hanging in gloomy rows. None of them looked as though they’d been rented in years, and the most modern U.S. president mask they appeared to have was Richard Nixon. There was even a Jane Fonda mask and a set of long-haired Beatles masks lined up on a shelf. The hunchback led them to a door at theback of the room and opened it, ushering them inside. It was an office, crammed with filing cabinets and a large wooden desk with a vinyl-covered office chair. There were two other chairs for guests and a coffee machine on top of one of the filing cabinets. The only picture on the walls was a framed Rembrandt cigar ad from a magazine. To the right of the hanging picture was another door, probably leading into some sort of storeroom. The hunchback sat down at the desk, slipped out of the hunchback jacket and the scraggly-haired wig and slipped off the clubfoot shoe.
    “Much better,” sighed the man happily. “Now, what can I do for you gentlemen?”
    “Identity papers.”
    “
Ja
. Any particular type?”
    “Passports, driver’s license, birth certificate.”
    “Any particular country?”
    “Canada. My friend in the Dominican Republic.”
    “You have pictures?”
    “Yes.” Holliday and Eddie handed over sets of passport photographs they had taken earlier in the day.
    “It will be expensive.”
    “How expensive?”
    “Five thousand euros. For each of you.”
    “No problem.”
    “Half now and your original passports.”
    “Fine.” Holliday had already hit the bank machine and withdrawn money from one of the hundreds of accounts in Helder Rodrigues’s secret notebook. Having expected something like this, he took ten five-hundred-euro notes out of his wallet and put them in front of the man. He and Eddie put their real passports on the desk. Hartog swept them up. “
Goed,
” he said. “Come back in three days. Same time.”
    They spent the three days sightseeing, going to most of the big museums like the Rijksmuseum, the State Museum, newly renovated, and of the course the world-famous Rembrandt Museum. They watched a

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