“No, I am only his undeserving son.”
“I see.”
“You see nothing. You are blind to the truth, as are those vermin of our race who condemn themselves to eternal punishment by collaborating with your iniquity. They defy the ways of God.”
The prisoner then cut loose with a stream of invective. I caught only bits and pieces as the interpreter struggled to keep up, though the parts that did come through — something about pig-eating sons of whores and their rightful place of damnation — made the gist of this fellow’s speech quite plain.
The people of the modern Middle East had elevated swearing to an art form. It didn’t sound like things had changed very much.
Volusus said nothing. He had heard it all before, I was sure, and perhaps experience had taught him that it was best to ignore their florid insults. Nevertheless, I could see that he was losing patience, and allowing such brazen defiance to go unpunished could give the others courage that they didn’t otherwise possess.
He nodded to the optio again and the Romans repeated the drill, this time slicing the index finger off the same hand. They weren’t quick about it, either.
The leader’s grimace grew more evident, though once again, he stifled a cry. How he managed to do it, I couldn’t imagine.
Volusus watched in silence. This wasn’t getting anywhere.
“Take them below,” he finally ordered.
I didn’t want to think about what awaited them in the dungeons. I moved off to one side as soldiers dragged the unfortunate creatures away and two slaves rushed over with buckets of water to mop the congealed blood off the stone floor.
A few of the words, though, turned over and over in my mind as I watched: a son who seemed to worry only that he had not killed enough Romans to do his family proud. One Son of Abbas.
“I’ll be damned,” I muttered to myself. Son of Abbas. bar Abbas. Barabbas; arrested for — how had the Gospels put it — insurrection and murder.
My thoughts turned to the awful scene at the gate coming in. This Barabbas, if he was truly the one, was unaware of how lucky he would prove to be, and how quickly his fortunes would turn.
Chapter 37
While the guards led Barabbas and his crew to their fates below, I focused my attention back to the Roman wounded.
Suddenly, I heard a loud shout. By instinct, I jerked my head up and glanced around in all directions; though a brief moment later, I realized the sound had come from my earpiece.
I heard the shuffling of feet, followed by what sounded like a pile of lumber crashing to the ground. I called out, but got no response. Instead, I heard Lavon’s sharp whisper.
“Lie down on the ground. Don’t move.”
This couldn’t be good.
“Damn it, I said don’t move!” The voice was still a whisper, but it carried an insistent tone.
I closed my eyes in order to concentrate. I could hear footsteps — running men by the sound of it — but I had no way of knowing what had actually happened.
Then I heard Lavon speak again, just as quietly as before, but with even more urgency.
“You must pretend to be dead, which you will be if you don’t do exactly as I say.”
And that was all.
I opened my eyes to see a couple of legionnaires looking at me with odd expressions, though the awkward moment passed quickly. Moments later, the optio who had dismembered Barabbas’s hand called out and ordered them to fall back into formation.
Even I could see that whatever started outside the walls had now escalated into major trouble. A trumpet blew atop one of the battlements as another officer signaled for reinforcements, and I had a feeling that Barabbas wouldn’t be the only man dissected today.
I was right about that, too.
For the next hour or so, wounded Romans either stumbled or were carried back in through the north gate.
I treated them to the extent I could and discovered that my reputation had spread through the ranks. Soldiers I had never seen before made a beeline to me with the most serious cases, though for some of them, I, like their colleagues, could do nothing but hope for the best.
Shortly after the last reinforcements had gone out, the returning legionnaires began to drag in coffles of battered prisoners, whose faces and clothing were caked in dried blood.
I had no way to know whether these men had suffered their injuries in the fighting or whether they had been beaten by vengeful soldiers after their capture. Obviously, the Romans issued no Miranda warnings, and a phone call to a lawyer was out of the question.
Very few of the captives carried themselves with the firm bearing of hardened combatants, and none displayed the intense fury I had witnessed in Barabbas.
I shook my head at the madness of it all. They probably never had much of a plan. Instead, full of misguided enthusiasm, these young men had gone charging forth on a grand campaign.
It would end as anything but that.
Having my hands full treating the injured Romans, I paid less attention to the prisoners as time went on. As the legionnaires dragged in a later batch, however, I glanced up and noticed one face that stood out, though the sight was so unexpected that it took my mind a few moments to process what my eyes had seen.
I spat and muttered a quiet expletive.
Bound fifth in the string, with his right eye blackened and blood dripping down behind his ear, was Markowitz. His face reflected a mixture of both confusion and raw terror.
Just before the Romans dragged his line through the doorway leading down to the dungeons, he shouted out my name, and Publius’s — though he fell silent after a soldier slapped him hard on the face and barked at him to shut up.
I ducked behind a column as I considered what to do next. I called out to Lavon, but received no answer. I closed my eyes in yet another effort to recall a few tiny fragments of Latin, but it was no use. Even if I could remember more than a phrase or two, that was a far cry from being able to communicate properly.
I’d put it off as long as I could, but I knew that at some point, I’d have to make a decision: whether I had a realistic chance to save our reckless friend, or whether, by trying, I would share his fate.
***
I stewed over this for a little while; then to my relief, I heard Sharon’s voice. As Lavon had predicted, Herod’s servants had taken her to the baths, which were, unsurprisingly, a luxurious contrast to the Spartan, barracks-like facility in the Antonia.
“Can you tell me exactly where you are now?” I asked.
“I’m upstairs on the northwestern side of the compound. It’s like a big dorm.”
She described the chamber as being situated two floors above another caldarium. The room, about the size of a basketball court, had long cedar beams stretching across the ceiling that reminded her of her high school gym. Twin beds, spaced about four feet apart, lined the long walls. She counted sixty in all.
Once again, Herod’s engineers had been clever. Heat from the furnace below the baths flowed upward through vents in the chamber’s floors. At the far end, mounted to the wall, a two-foot diameter wheel rotated valves that permitted the heated air to flow through the room when the weather turned cold and shunted the excess to the outside on warmer days.
I couldn’t help but ask whether the women fought over the thermostat.
She chuckled briefly before turning serious.
“Have the others come back?” she asked.
“Not yet,” I replied.
I wasn’t about to say more. Though her mental state seemed to be holding up well, I was sure that at the back of her mind, she held to the certainty that once Lavon came back and we could speak to the Roman commander, we’d have her back in the fortress before anything untoward could happen.