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The two sides’ mutual incomprehension on this subject proved to be a fertile source of conflict from the beginning of the Roman occupation until the crushing of the final revolt. The possibility of miscalculation was enormous, even in the best of times.
Just to be sure of his interpretation, Lavon questioned Decius, and the Roman confirmed what he had suspected.
He didn’t seem to like it very much.
Chapter 21
When we reached a point about a quarter mile from the gate, a soldier on the tallest battlement blew a trumpet, and our trumpeter blew his acknowledgment in return.
Lavon, though, paid this activity little attention. His eyes remained riveted on the gate itself – a straightforward, practical structure conveying a sense of solidity and strength.
Massive stone blocks overlaid an arch resembling an upside down U. Two battlements, twice the height of the surrounding wall, flanked the gate itself. Both were well equipped with slits for archers and gaps through which defenders could rain heavy stones or boiling oil down upon their attackers from any direction.
“You seem surprised,” I said.
“It’s not quite what I expected,” he replied. “The Damascus gate still exists – in our world. I took a tour group through it only a month ago.”
“It looks like this?”
“Not at all. It’s smaller, and the stonework is much more elaborate.”
He paused for a moment and looked around.
“Of course, this one does serve a real defensive purpose. The Ottomans built the modern gate in 1542, long after gunpowder weapons had rendered stone fortifications obsolete. They could afford to be decorative.”
That made sense.
“You have one problem, though,” I said. “When we get back, how are you going to convince anyone that your version is correct as opposed to all of those artist’s conceptions floating around?”
It was a question he couldn’t answer, and we both knew it.
“I haven’t quite worked that out yet.”
We never made any more progress resolving that issue, for at that moment, Sharon let out a horrified gasp.
Each of us turned in her direction, where we were confronted by the most gruesome spectacle I have ever had the misfortune to witness.
The nightmares still occasionally return.
Just off the side of the road, at the junction between the road we were on and the path running along the city wall to the southwest, stood what had once been the trunks of a dozen olive trees.
Horizontal beams were lashed to two of them, and hanging from those beams, suspended by nails, were objects that first appeared only as dark, reddened gelatinous masses. Shreds of flesh dangled downward from each, and both were covered almost entirely by hideous swarms of black flies.
Psychologists tell us that our minds have their own internal tricks to avert recognition of true horror, and it took us a few seconds to internalize that these ghastly objects were in fact men, still alive, with their faces contorted in agony and desperation.
Markowitz took one glance and immediately ran to the other side of the road, where he knelt and heaved his insides out. Bergfeld held her head down with her hands over her eyes, while Bryson stood motionless, transfixed by the dreadfulness of it all.
The next few minutes passed in a blur. I struggled to focus my attention forward and put the spectacle out of my head, but after we had gone about fifty more yards, Decius glanced back and saw that Markowitz and Bryson had not moved. Markowitz, in fact, remained on his knees, with his head down and his eyes staring blankly into the pool of vomit.
Decius said something to Lavon, but the archaeologist had turned pale as well and didn’t respond. Since I could gather the gist of what the optio was trying to say, I went trotting back to retrieve the others.
I saw no guard around the victims, so I reached into my first aid kit and ripped open two white packets. I removed the small cylinders, pulled off the lids, and jabbed one into the foot of each man.
I got lucky. Both had visible veins.
I turned and pushed Bryson in the back toward the general direction of the city; then I lifted Markowitz up by his robe.
“Hurry up,” I said. “Let’s get out of here.”
I gave them both another shove, and we pressed forward in silence, with Markowitz still wiping the spittle from his mouth. It wasn’t until we had almost reached the tail end of our column that Bryson finally spoke.
“What did you give them, cyanide?”
“Sufentanil,” I replied. “It’s a synthetic opioid; like morphine, only much stronger.”
Bryson glanced back, as did I. Both victims’ heads had dropped.
“Are they dead?” he asked.
I shrugged. The dosage I had given them would keep them unconscious for the next three to four hours. I could only hope nature would take its course by then.
At least I had tried.
When we got back to the wagon, our party remained visibly shaken. Those of us who hadn’t grown up Catholic had all, at one point or another, made the tourist circuits through the cathedrals of Europe. The crucifix looked nothing at all like what we had just seen.
Lavon closed his eyes, hoping to banish the image from his memory, though I knew he would never completely succeed. He mumbled something to Sharon about the hymn-writer having it wrong – that there was nothing wondrous about any of this – but she only gave a weak half nod and grunted in reply.
His words struck me as a restatement of the obvious, though I wasn’t quite sure what he was talking about and decided not to press the issue.
Lavon finally explained that that the cross had not become the outward, visible symbol of Christianity until the latter half of the fourth century – after at least a generation had passed who had been unfortunate enough to see one for real.
The logic of that was not difficult to comprehend. Nor would any of us find it hard to refute the idea, still bandied about by fringe conspiracy theorists, that Jesus had somehow survived his execution.
For one thing, I doubt he would have wanted to.
Hospitals would run out of sutures before the wounds from that type of flogging could be sewn up, and without a massive infusion of antibiotics, infection would have killed him within a month anyway – a month in which he would have known nothing but the most intense and terrible pain.
Lavon spoke quietly. “Now we know what Paul meant by the stumbling block.”
Sharon just stared ahead. “I never really understood until now.”
“You couldn’t have, could you?”
She shook her head. “No.”
“Understand what?” asked Markowitz.
“In his letter to the church in Corinth, Paul wrote about people not accepting Christ’s message because of the stumbling block of the cross,” she replied.
“In other words,” said Lavon, “how could a Lord, the Son of God, die in such a horrible and degrading manner?”
I couldn’t argue with that.
For the next few minutes, we walked forward in silence. In fact, none of us even noticed that we had passed through the Damascus Gate and into the city itself.
“Who do you think those men were?” Bryson finally asked. “I glanced up at the sign above their heads, but I couldn’t read it.”
I had seen it, too. A wooden placard described their crimes in three languages, none of which I could understand.
“The Greek word is lestes, answered Lavon. “Literally, it means ‘bandit,’ but in our world, we’d pick a different term – ‘terrorist,’ probably. Not just an ordinary brigand, but one acting from a political or religious motive.”
“Zealots, then?” asked Markowitz. “Jews fighting the Romans, like the ones we saw earlier today?”
Lavon nodded. “Probably.”
Chapter 22
A few minutes later, we got another reminder of the seething cauldron into which we had inserted ourselves.
Our column passed through a narrow al
leyway that ran between a continuous row of three story stone buildings. A small boy – he couldn’t have been older than five or six – stood in a third floor window. Sharon looked up at him and waved.
The kid giggled and waved in return for a brief moment before we saw a hand reach out and jerk him back into the apartment. We heard shouting, and though we could not understand the words, the scolding tone was not hard to interpret.
The boy protested, and moments later we cringed as we heard the impact of a slap. The child bawled for a few seconds before a second slap brought about a pitiful whimper.
We looked back to see a weather-beaten old woman step up to the window and make a rude gesture, before spitting in a truculent display of loathing and disgust.
Bergfeld turned to Lavon, her expression uncomprehending.
“All I did was wave.”
Lavon just shook his head, as did I.
For all we knew, that woman’s son was one of the poor unfortunates writhing in agony outside the city gate. Perhaps her husband, or father, or brothers had lost their lives fighting the Romans.
Or maybe her family had been driven off the land by the crushing burden of taxation; or worse, her inability to pay the ruthless and corrupt tax farmers may have forced her to sell a daughter into a life of degradation and slavery.
The possibilities were endless as they were terrible.
***
We didn’t have long to reflect, though. A minute later, we turned another corner and entered a broad plaza. A ten-story crenellated wall on the opposite side dominated the square. Archers stood at the top, guarding their colleagues’ entry.
“It’s called the Antonia,” said Lavon. “The first Herod built this fortress about 75 years ago and named it after his patron Mark Antony.”
That seemed odd.
“I thought Antony lost,” I said.
“He did,” Lavon replied, “but Herod had a unique ability to curry favor with whoever held power in Rome. Unlike his contemporaries, he never sidestepped the fact he had chosen the wrong side. Instead, he told Augustus that he had had served Antony proudly, but would now serve his new master with equal devotion.”
“Obviously it worked,” said Bryson.
“Yeah,” he replied, “though I’m not sure Augustus had any other good candidates for the job. Despite his nasty personal reputation, Herod had demonstrated that he could keep order in a troublesome part of their world, which is what the Romans really cared about at the time.”
“Our son of a bitch,” I muttered.
Markowitz and Bergfeld eyed me strangely, but I didn’t reply. President Eisenhower had made that crack about a brutal Central American dictator who had proven adept at fighting the Communists. It was an era they were too young to recall.
“I thought a Roman governor ran Jerusalem,” said Bryson.
Lavon nodded. “One does now, though when Herod died, his kingdom was divided among three of his sons. The trouble was, the one who got Jerusalem inherited all of his father’s cruel bloody-mindedness without a speck of his administrative ability. After a few years, the Romans got rid of him and installed their own man.”
***
The soldiers we traveled with, however, couldn’t have cared less about governors. When they saw the fortress, the men spontaneously surged forward, like horses returning to the barn after a long, tiring ride.
The gate opened from the inside, and we pressed on until we halted near the center of an open courtyard about the size of a football field. I glanced up and counted eight rings of windows lining the walls, along with stone-lined passages into the interior.
“It’s bigger than it looked in those drawings,” said Bergfeld.
Lavon also seemed surprised by the scale of the place.
“The artists’ renditions don’t do it justice,” he said.
He steered our attention to the battlements. “At least this part is as Josephus described it. A few modern scholars have argued that the fort contained only one main battlement, but here, you can see that there are four; one at each corner.”
This made sense to me. I guessed that each one stood about forty feet above the rest of the fortress. Unfortunately, our circumstances were unlikely to afford us the opportunity to take more exact measurements.
As soon as we stopped, Publius called the men to attention and gave a brief speech, which, from his troops’ demeanor, sounded like congratulations for a job well done.
Their day wasn’t over, though. After being dismissed, the soldiers first stacked their shields on a rack along the front wall, where specialists inspected each one for damage and made chalk marks on the ones needing repair.
As they did this, I helped Sharon off the wagon; then Lavon and I carried stretchers bearing the wounded Romans to a shady spot. Attendants took them from us at that point and toted them inside – presumably to what passed for a hospital. I wasn’t sure what I could do, so I made no effort to follow them.
After a short break for water and a bite to eat, the soldiers set to work preparing their armor and weapons for whatever lay next, turning the courtyard into a veritable hive of industry.
Slaves brought wire brushes and joined the soldiers in scrubbing off the gore and the bits of rust that had accumulated earlier that day. Once they had finished this, others polished the armor with cloths until they could see their own reflections.
Additional servants turned grindstones as the soldiers re-sharpened their own swords, with each man stepping back occasionally to test his weapon for a razor-sharp edge; while still others applied oil to leather straps and repaired torn cloth.
I glanced over to Lavon. “Brings back memories, doesn’t it?”
As lowly recruits, both of us had spent hours after long training marches cleaning our rifles and equipment before we were allowed any rest.
***
Publius didn’t stick around to watch. His men knew what to do, and he had other tasks to complete. Just after he dismissed the soldiers, an older man in a white tunic stepped out from the shadows.
The centurion saluted him and then followed him back into the fortress – no doubt to give a brief summary of the day’s activities before spending the remainder of his evening producing a report, in triplicate.
“Do you think that’s the governor?” asked Bryson.
Lavon shrugged. He had no idea what Pilate would have looked like. No one from the modern world did.
We all pondered this for a moment before Sharon noticed an object at the far end of the courtyard. A cylinder, about eight feet tall and roughly the diameter of a telephone pole, had been planted in the stone floor. Two short chains hung from the top, with a metal shackle at each end.
“What’s that?” she asked.
“A place none of us want to go,” I said.
“Flogging post,” said Lavon.
She stared at it a bit longer and then turned back to face us.
“Was this the place?” she asked.
“I don’t know,” said the archaeologist. “Some scholars say Jesus was scourged here; others say it happened in Herod’s palace. The truth is nobody knows for sure.”
“I guess we’ll find out soon enough,” replied Bryson.
Chapter 23
We watched the soldiers work for another half hour before a young man wearing sandals and a plain brown tunic approached and beckoned for us to follow. He led us to the southeast corner of the fortress and started up a flight of stairs, taking the steps two at a time all the way to the top.
Except for Bryson, we all made it with a minimum of huffing and puffing. It had to be a test, though of what I wasn’t sure; nor could I know whether or not we had passed.
The kid waited patiently at the top landing for the Professor to catch up before leading us down a short corridor and inserting a key into a thick wooden door.
He gestured for us to go inside.
The room was larger than I had expected – about fifteen by thirty feet. The walls were built of the same melek
e limestone as the rest of the fortress, with thick cedar beams running across the ceiling. Four windows, each about three feet wide, faced the Temple courtyard to the south, while two narrower windows opened to the west, giving the room a red glow from the late afternoon sun.
The furniture was sparse, but functional, as I would have expected in a military establishment. A large bed, wider than king-sized by half, sat in the northeast corner of the room, away from the windows. A wooden table, surrounded by six crude-looking chairs rested in the center.
“What’s that?” Sharon asked, referring to a bucket on the floor in the far corner, opposite the bed.
I couldn’t help but laugh. “Piss pot,” I replied.
She blushed. “Oh.”
“Go, if you have to. We’ll all turn the other way.”
She was about to speak when the young man said something to Lavon.
It must have been about food, because after hearing the archaeologist’s response, the man shouted down the stairs. A few minutes later, two slaves appeared carrying warm bread and a jug of wine, followed by two more servants holding five metal goblets and a stack of blankets. The men deposited their cargo without speaking and immediately turned for the door.
After the kid left, I motioned for everyone to gather around the table for a de-brief but quickly realized that it was hopeless. Each of the others raced for a window, where they stood mesmerized by the activity in the Temple courtyard below.
From our vantage point near the top of the southeastern battlement, we could see white-robed priests – drawn by lottery earlier that day – as they completed the evening offering and prepared the Temple for the night.
Each man was dressed identically in a white linen tunic, with a red belt and white linen, turban-like headgear. To our surprise, the priests went about their tasks barefoot.
Bryson edged himself out and around the sill of the far left window in an effort to get a better view.
“Fascinating,” he muttered to himself. “Utterly fascinating.”
It most assuredly was.