The Book Glasses
The Book Glasses
Arthur Bozikas
Copyright (C) 2021 Arthur Bozikas
Layout design and Copyright (C) 2021 by Next Chapter
Published 2021 by Beyond Time – A Next Chapter Imprint
Edited by Fading Street Services
Cover art by CoverMint
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the author’s permission.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Also by Arthur Bozikas
Legend of the Holy Father’s Book Glasses
Prologue
Window Dressing
The Old Woman
Australian Museum
The Job
The Book Glasses
A Parcel
The Library
Remembrance
The Professor
A Sister’s Heartbreak
Negotiations
Shopping For One
Mondays
Manly Ferry
Making Some Money
Undergraduate
First Official Date
Making More Money
Twenty-Five Percent
Welcome To Sydney University
Languages
Three Men
Paying Off The Loan Shark
Please Call Frederick Hans
High Distinctions
Doctor Of Philosophy Law
Dinner Invitation
Teaching Undergrads
Dr Samantha Page
Celebration Dinner
Not Billy!
It’s My Business
Who’s The Bitch Now?
Four Seasons Hotel
The Penthouse Suite
Passing Of A Great Man
Silverback And The Two Thugs
The Merger Hearing
Keep Them On
Danger Is Over
Back To Business
You Killed My Father
Family Of My Own
A Second Pair Of Glasses
Dear reader
Notes
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank those who helped to make this book possible. Special thanks to my wife, Helen, and our children, Jimmy and Pamela, for their dedicated love and support, and to both our parents and all our immediate family for their tireless affections.
Arthur
Also by Arthur Bozikas
BLACK OPS: ZULU. Tom Stiles Thrillers, Book 1
Legend of the Holy Father’s Book Glasses
According to myth, a pair of eyeglasses were crafted in Rome over two and a half centuries ago for the pope from a stone sent by God. It was understood that whoever had the good fortune to wear these glasses was blessed with superior vision. However, their real power was revealed when the wearer of the glasses was reading a book. The reader was given unmeasurable wisdom and knowledge beyond belief.
The Occhiali da vista scrolls of Pope Leo XIII from the 1881 Vatican Secret Archives, now missing, were rumoured to have told the story of this pair of book glasses commissioned between 1700 and 1800 by the Papal Basilica of St Peter for the sole use of the pope and all future popes. The lenses were to be crafted from a unique clear stone, rumoured to be blessed by angels. The origin of the stone was unknown but renowned experts at the time all agreed that it hadn’t come from the ground. Instead, one autumn day after morning prayers, the stone had suddenly appeared in the Vatican City centre—a gift from the heavens above after a hailstorm. Apart from the unnamed cardinal who found it, only a few individuals, high in the inner circle of the Catholic church, knew of the stone and its origin. No other reference to this event was ever recorded, before or after this time.
Experts who examined the stone were sworn to secrecy. Not even the sitting pope, Pope Benedict XIV, knew about it. Secrecy was paramount and death would befall anyone who dared even talk about it. This curse of death was common knowledge and thus, silence was respected and the existence of the extraordinary stone, and subsequently the glasses into which it was crafted, remained hidden from the world.
All documents that referred to the Holy Father’s book glasses disappeared from the records. Only the myth endured, but, fearing the curse, people still do not dare speak openly about the book glasses.
Prologue
Friday, 22nd August 1919
A bitterly cold gale came out of nowhere, whistling down the streets and stirring up the fallen snow, forcing the young corporal out of his shadowy vantage point to take shelter from the storm in the nearest establishment open on such a harsh winter’s night.
Before crossing the threshold, he looked over his shoulder, but the Munich street was empty, its covering of snow taking on an eerie glow in the darkness.
Once in The Bavarian, the soldier, constantly on alert, scanned the room as he walked up to the bar and ordered a warm beer. Yet he noticed that every eye in the room furtively followed his movements. The packed local was full of people desperate not to be seen on this stormy subzero night and they were highly suspicious of strangers.
Without looking up, he paid the barman, picked up his beer and made his way back to an empty chair near the entrance.
They watch me, but not with the prestige I deserve. How dare they glare at me like that? Keeping his head down, he struggled to control his mounting anger and his hand started to shake, almost spilling his beer. Could no one give him the respect he was due? He was a decorated war hero, yet these nobodies ignored him.
One day they would acknowledge him. He knew he was destined for greatness. As for his army career, what would it take to rise through the ranks? He glanced at the two-bar chevron on his uniform sleeve with distaste; it was humiliating to still be a corporal after all his faithful service. He should have been promoted well before now, but his superiors were blind idiots who could not see his true brilliance.
One day, they would do his bidding. And that day could not come soon enough.
He approached the only table with an empty chair. A man also sat there. “Excuse me, is this seat taken?” the corporal asked politely.
The well-dressed man looked up and smiled. “Please sit down. I would enjoy the company. What’s your name, corporal?”
“Adolf, sir. Adolf Hitler.” He sat opposite him in the window seat.
“I am Anton Drexler. Pleased to meet you. Warm in here, ja voll?”
“Ja, but it’s getting bad out there.”
“What’s a corporal doing out this late at night?”
“My job keeps me busy working all sorts of hours, sir.”
“And what is your job, may I ask?”
“Intelligence agent for the reconnaissance unit of the Reichswehr.”
“Intelligence agent, you say?” He nodded. “Very impressive, young man, but what good is that now? It’s 1919. The war ended last year.” He slapped his beer glass against the corporal’s before taking another drink and drowning his loud burst of laughter.
The soldier raised his glass to his lips, but didn’t drink, and put the glass back down on the table. “Sir, I know who you are. May I suggest a few things to you? I hope you don’t mind.”
“So, you know I’m the chairman of the German Workers’ Party, do you?”
“Yes sir, I do!” Forgetting where he was, he took his glasses out of his inside jacket pocket and put them on. When he realised what he had done, he h
oped Drexler wouldn’t notice them. His lapse in judgement made his heart race but he remained stone cold on the outside, concealing his discomfort at revealing his new eyeglasses with their distinctive engraved metal frames.
“What an unusual pair of eyeglasses you have. Are they army issue?”
“No, they’re mine. I got them abroad, and they do the job.” He hastily took them off and returned them to his jacket pocket.
“Well then, go ahead and tell me what’s on your mind. I need to go soon, so hurry up.”
His hand closed over the notebook in his side jacket pocket, but he let go of it, deciding to wing it without reading from his notes. Taking a deep breath, he said, “Thank you, sir. It’s about communicating to the masses. I believe all effective… er… messages should be limited to a small number of points and that your party’s slogan should be inserted into every speech or message until every last member of the public understands what you want him to understand by it.” He picked up his drink again and waited patiently for Drexler's response.
“Very interesting, but what masses? We only have fifty-four members.”
“That’s what I’m talking about, sir. You don’t have a clear message to draw in a crowd.”
“But we are only a new party. These things take time, young man.”
“Sir, fifty-four members is a good start. I would like to be your next member.”
“You’re a corporal in the army. How could you be a member of the German Workers’ Party? Stop now and drink up. Look, you haven’t touched your beer.”
“I’ve already discharged myself from the army and I want to utilise my knowledge for a good cause. I could help you better support workers to get back their rights. All you need are more members, and I am good at communicating with people. What do you think? Are you after more members, sir?”
“You’ll need to trim that moustache first. I can’t have you attending looking like you’re still in the trenches. It’s a working man’s party, understand?”
“Yes sir, the moustache will be trimmed.”
“Ja, I tell you what, our next meeting is on September twelfth, and we get all new members to give a speech on their first night. Do you know where we meet?”
The soldier nodded.
“So, come and have your say and let’s see what you can offer. I can’t promise you anything. The worst thing is that you become a member of the German Workers’ Party.”
“Thank you, sir. And I can guarantee you will be impressed with my speech.”
“If you are as confident at the meeting as you are now, we have nothing to worry about. Now drink up. Here’s to you, Adolf Hitler, and to civilian life!”
Drexler knocked back the last of his beer, nodded at his companion, got up from his chair, put on his coat and hat, and walked out into the intensifying blizzard without any hesitation. Hitler remained seated in front of his untouched beer, feeling euphoric at obtaining Drexler’s personal invitation to attend his next party meeting. He intended to infiltrate the party and he was off to a good start.
He pushed his full glass of beer to one side and pulled out his latest prized possession—a pair of medieval-looking reading glasses he had found a couple of years earlier while stationed on the western front. Having only recently discovered the powers of the glasses, he regularly took them out of his secret strongbox where he hid them away for safe-keeping and used them every chance he got, with extraordinary results.
After placing them back on, he took out his notebook and recorded some ideas for his first speech. He was on his way to fulfilling his plan to entrench himself in the party and provide himself with a platform from which to get his views across to the masses.
Hitler’s relentless surveillance over the last few weeks had exposed Drexler’s daily routines and personal habits. Arriving at the chairman’s favourite drinking spot at almost the time for him to leave and go home for his usual Friday night late dinner had been masterful. He hadn’t suspected a thing and was oblivious to the fact that he had followed him for almost three weeks.
The bait was set and, with the eyeglasses in his possession, Hitler was ready to execute his strategy to get an audience and thus the respect that he deserved as a first step to achieving complete control.
Window Dressing
Monday, 26th August 2013
Samantha Page turned to view her reflection one last time in the department store window as she rushed out on to the busy street with the bustling city crowd. As she admired herself in the full glare of the morning sun, flicking her hair up with one hand in a swift action from side to side, styling it the way she liked it, she tried to block out the nasty comments from people walking by who felt she was obstructing their path.
She was caught up by her imposing mirror image in almost blinding brightness, sending her mind into doubtful thoughts. She looked okay, but would it make any difference this time?
“You are fucking stupid and have no friends, you loser.”
The words echoed in her head and hurt every bit as much as they had the first time she’d heard them. She’d endured a lot at the hands of her foster parents but her time with them had helped her master the art of concealing any evidence of the hard knocks that life had inflicted on her.
Sam put up a defiant front for the world. Twenty-three years of failure had not destroyed her. She carefully hid the fact she had spent her entire childhood in foster care, had not graduated from high school and had never had a permanent job.
Unfortunately, her situation hadn’t got any easier as the years had passed. Surviving on leftover food from the local women’s refuge where she volunteered had been harrowing, and hunger left her with no choice but to endure.
Maybe this time would be different.
It was the second day of summer—a beautiful clear Sydney morning with a marble blue sky—as she walked along the busy streets in her borrowed red high heels, short white dress, red belt, and off-white handbag.
For good luck, she was wearing her best owl earrings with the tiny light blue stones for eyes that matched her own. Her long brown hair was neatly secured in a hairclip. It didn’t matter that her makeup and nails had only been partially done at the sampling counter of the nearby high-end department store—nothing was going to get in the way of her 11 a.m. appointment. She would get this job and start living her dreams, believing a utopia of endless possibilities lay in wait for her.
As far back as she could remember, she had wanted to travel all over Australia, but the furthest she had ever got was Manly via Circular Quay and it had taken her almost a year to save the money for the ferry ticket. Many times, since that day, she had walked up to the Quay and fondly recalled her trip, hoping to take another ferry ride once she secured a full-time job. She had been living in the same one-bedroom unit since moving from her last foster parents’ house on her eighteenth birthday. Her unemployment benefits just covered her rent and utilities, but there was nothing left for anything else.
And she couldn’t get a job. Preparing for interviews had always been her downfall. It wasn’t that she couldn’t read, but the words were all jumbled around and hard for her to decipher. Doctors and specialists asked too many questions and didn’t give any helpful answers.
She picked up the pace and was in front of the building with thirty minutes to spare. Feeling confident, she entered the utilitarian structure and gracefully stepped onto the travelator. A cheeky gust of wind came out of nowhere and prompted her to hold her skirt down.
At the top, she disembarked the travelator with a charming skip and a hop and headed to the front desk of the lobby in high spirits.
“Good morning, can I help you?” asked the concierge.
“Yes please, I’m here for my 11 a.m. interview with Brown Department Stores. I’m a little early,” replied Sam.
“I’m sorry, but they’re not accepting any further applications.”
“No, you must be mistaken. My name is Samantha Page. I have an 11 a.m. appointment. Please check.”
“You’re here for the window dressing position?”
“Yes, that’s it.”
“Yep, people have been waiting since six this morning and they are not accepting any more applicants, sorry.”
“But I have an appointment for—”
“Please contact the person you spoke to about the position. Who’s next, please?”
Shoulders hunched and red-faced, Sam quickly exited the building. She felt as if everyone was looking at her and laughing. Shattered beyond belief, she hit a new low point in her life and climbing back out of it would take a miracle.
The Old Woman
Sam made it out of the building on one full breath, covering her face with one hand. She had gone about three blocks before realising she was heading toward the refuge. Paralysed with fear, she stopped, then calmed herself, and continued down the street.
Consumed with grief, she pushed past the staff, volunteers and homeless women congregating in the great hall, preparing for lunch. After almost knocking over a few women in her path, she finally found herself alone in the toilets and gave in to her despair.