The Cathedral of Kerloc’h: A Tale of Freemasonry, Templars, and the Devil
CHAPTER 1: The Apprentice
A young man named Telmo is admitted to the lodge of Freemasons and becomes an apprentice. His father, León Yanez Telmo, is a master builder and gives him a tool kit.
CHAPTER 2: The Journey
Telmo leaves for Britain to find his father’s teacher, Thibaud, who has disappeared. He meets a man named Loki, who tells him about the Order of the Eagle of St. John, a secret society that is said to have funded the building of the cathedral at Kerloc’h.
CHAPTER 3: The Secret
Telmo and his companions travel to Kerloc’h and meet Hugo de Gascogne, the master builder of the cathedral. Hugo tells Telmo that he is the sculptor his father asked him to find, but Telmo does not believe him.
CHAPTER 4: The Contest
Telmo enters a contest to carve the image that will preside over the altar of the cathedral. He wins the contest, and Hugo congratulates him.
CHAPTER 5: The Envoy
Telmo meets Abraham Ben Mosset, a Jewish pawnbroker who is secretly an envoy of the Pope. Abraham tells Telmo that the Order of the Eagle of St. John is planning to use the cathedral to summon the devil.
CHAPTER 6: The Crypt
Telmo and his companions discover a secret crypt in the cathedral. They see a symbol written in blood, and realize that it is the mark of the master of the Order, Thibaud de Orly.
CHAPTER 7: The Secret Chamber
Telmo and his companions find a secret chamber in the cathedral. They see the body of Thibaud de Orly, and realize that he was killed by the Order.
CHAPTER 8: The Sacrifice
The Order of the Eagle of St. John plans to sacrifice a virgin to summon the devil. Telmo and his companions must stop them.
CHAPTER 9: The Battle
Telmo and his companions fight the Order of the Eagle of St. John. They defeat the Order and save the virgin.
CHAPTER 10: The Aftermath
The cathedral is destroyed, and the Order of the Eagle of St. John is disbanded. Telmo and his companions return to their homes.
EPILOGUE
Telmo travels the world, building churches and cathedrals. He leaves his mark on a rock, a T on a Y, as a reminder of his journey.