The Third Day (11 page)

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Authors: David Epperson

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“Well, what did he say?” asked Markowitz. 

“He said we had strange names.” 

“That’s it?” 

“No; the best part is that he insists that we accompany them to Jerusalem.” 

“Why is that so funny?” asked Bryson. 

Lavon chuckled again.  “He said it’s not
safe
for us to stay here.” 

 

Chapter 17
 

After the morning’s misadventures, I needed no convincing to move on.  An army escort to the city would at least raise the odds that we would arrive in Jerusalem in one piece, though unless Bryson’s wife got that machine working again, I couldn’t say I had the greatest confidence that we would depart in the same condition. 

A Roman medic helped Sharon into the wagon where she took her place on a side rail next to three of the wounded who were unable to make the journey under their own power. 

Being men, it was assumed that rest of us would tag along on foot, despite the fact that Bryson only managed to squeeze in minimal cardio work while Bergfeld had run two triathlons in the past year. 

To his credit, the Professor didn’t complain, and Sharon was prescient enough to take her luck where she could find it. 

Publius by now had trotted up to the front of the column, leaving his second in command, who introduced himself as Decius, to supervise the rear.  An
optio
, Lavon called him, just below a centurion in rank.  

Decius struck me as a pleasant enough fellow – one who would remain so as long as we stayed out of his way and didn’t cause any trouble.  He had the gruff but competent demeanor of a seasoned NCO, the soldiers who are the backbone of any army worthy of the name. 

We stood aside as the
optio
made a few final checks and then signaled to Publius that the column was ready to proceed.  Moments later, a trumpet sounded and we started forward. 

As I expected, we had barely gone a quarter mile when the questions started.  Lavon was quick-witted enough to mumble something to the soldiers about his Greek not being good enough for medical terminology, but this excuse wouldn’t work for our own party. 

I explained that I had utilized the Army’s latest high tech bandage.  A powder on one side became part of the clotting matrix, while an antibiotic-impregnated glue on the other held the sides of the wound together as securely as if they had been sutured. 

It was, truly, a miracle of modern chemistry.  US field hospitals are first-rate, but wounded soldiers still had to live long enough to get there.  Bleeding out was one of the main reasons they didn’t. 

“How do you remove it once the wound has healed?” asked Bryson. 

“You don’t,” I replied.  “That’s the best part.  In a couple of weeks, the body’s own enzymes begin to dissolve the material.  A few days later, it disappears entirely.” 

Lavon glanced over to the injured Roman.  “What are his chances, realistically?” 

Fortunately for us, they were pretty good.  Profuse bleeding often carries out the dirt, so the odds were at least reasonable that his wound would not get infected. 

“He’s lost a lot of fluid, though,” I said.  “I’d put in an IV drip, if I had one.  A tetanus shot wouldn’t be a bad idea either.” 

They all laughed, except Bryson, who had swung around to Juliet’s thinking on the issue and chided me for possibly changing history. 

“I brought no weapons, Professor, but I sure as hell wasn’t coming back to a primitive world without a decent first aid kit.” 

“That man would have died.  Now he will live.” 

For all his academic brilliance, Dr. Bryson didn’t have the best sense of priorities.  “At the moment, I’m more concerned about
us
living,” I replied. 

He frowned. 

“Tell me how they could reverse engineer this sort of thing?” I said.  “The wrapping is biodegradable, too.  In a week or so, it will vanish completely.  It’s especially designed to decay in this type of climate.” 

“I didn’t realize the Army had gone green.” 

“I’m not pretending we have, Professor, but our enemies over the last fifty years have proven resourceful at using our throwaways against us.  You undoubtedly know that the Viet Cong made booby traps out of old ration tins and shell casings.  The Afghans did the same thing to the Russians, and are doing it again to us, from what I hear.  The less we leave behind, the better.” 

It was then that I thought of the camera. 

“Speaking of left behind, Professor, do you have your video camera?” 

He didn’t, of course, so Lavon asked Decius if we could go back and retrieve it, explaining that the good Doctor had dropped his money bag in his haste to flee the Zealots. 

Decius agreed, and we went trotting back down the hill.  We started at the cave’s mouth and headed west, intending to retrace his steps.  As I suspected, Bryson couldn’t track his own backside, so it fell to me to find his trail, which I did after a short search. 

As in all dry climates, the morning had warmed quickly.  Though I was more comfortable, this left one downside:  the air reeked of hacked off limbs, rotting intestines, and other detritus of the earlier battle. 

I glanced over to Bryson and grinned.  I’m not exactly fond of such things, but I got a bit of undeserved enjoyment from his queasiness.  So far, his return chips had failed; and our lives hung in the balance. 

“I assume your wife can operate the control room by herself, without that young fool’s assistance?” I said. 

“His name was Scott,” replied Bryson.  “He was my most promising student.” 

“What do you think he did?”  I asked.  “Sneak in on his own, or did he blackmail her by threatening to go to the media, or to the police to report your disappearance?” 

“Blackmail?” he replied.  “Is that all your twisted mind can think of?” 

“It’s why
we’re
here, Professor.” 

Bryson turned and stared.  “What?” 

“Like we told you earlier, Juliet wanted to send only Dr. Lavon.  He was the logical choice, since he’s studied this region for years and is the only one among us able to communicate properly with the locals.  This, by the way, was Lavon’s choice, too.  He wasn’t very excited to have company.” 

“So why
are
the rest of you here?” 

“Ray decided he wanted to go, too.  Once he accepted the idea that you had actually managed to pull this off, no one could stop him.” 

“Surely Juliet tried?” 

“She did, but Ray brought up the contract you had with his father.  If he couldn’t go, he threatened to shut your whole operation down, which, of course, would have left you – ”

“Lying in that cave.” 

“Yes.” 

“What about the woman?  Why is she here?” 

“Lavon leads a university archaeological team.  Conducting a dig according to the most rigorous scientific principles can be an expensive proposition.  Sharon’s family has provided the majority of their funding for the past three years.” 

“So she threatened to close his project down, too.” 

“Something like that.” 

“That doesn’t explain why you’re here.  What is it you want?” 

“Well, if we’re discussing blackmail, I wanted to speak with you about how to split up that billion dollars you made.” 

Bryson jaw dropped and he stared at me with wild eyes. 

I laughed.  “Just kidding, Professor.” 
Sort of

He wasn’t quite sure how to respond, so he just followed along as I traced his path.  It wasn’t pretty.  His trail crossed the tracks of the fleeing Zealots.  Dried blood covered part of a footprint, and carrion-eaters had not yet carried off the chunks of human entrails lying next to a rock a few feet away. 

I pointed to the remains and grew serious.  “You asked me what I wanted, Professor?  Actually, I’d like nothing more than to get the five of us together, press this button, and go back to Boston while we still can.” 

But he never responded.  Just then, his trail became so obvious that even he could trace it.  He charged forward. 

“Here it is,” he shouted, holding the video camera high in triumph. 

“You, um, might not want anyone else to see that,” I said. 

He dropped his arm quickly, with a sheepish grin on his face.  “Of course.” 

***

In a less dangerous moment, I would have found Bryson’s transformation fascinating.  Less than an hour earlier, he had wailed over his dead lab assistant like a long lost son.  Now that he had his camera, he didn’t give the kid another thought, so single-minded he had become. 

I asked him about it, and he explained that we could return and retrieve Scott the same way we had come back for him.  

Assuming we survived, I thought, but I decided not to argue. 

We went back to the cave to recover the kid’s chip – having no value to the soldiers, they had left it dangling on the string around his neck – but otherwise, prudence dictated that we not linger.  The Roman column had disappeared around a bend, and nearby, I spotted a hacked-off forearm lying beside a small scrub bush.  Something, vultures probably, had already taken a nibble. 

“I suggest we get back.  These people might have friends, and I don’t think we want to be around if they show up.” 

***

I asked Bryson to hand me the camera in exchange for my money bag, just in case Decius asked the Professor to demonstrate what he had found, but my concerns were unfounded.  The Roman said nothing to us when we returned.  Instead, he and the wounded men in the wagon appeared to be telling each other jokes. 

My first platoon sergeant had done the same thing, and for the same reason, I guessed:  to lift their spirits and thus enhance their odds of survival. 

The rest of our party was in surprisingly good humor as well, despite the fact that by modern Western standards, they had seen more than a lifetime’s worth of violent death.  Once we pulled away from the scene itself, Bryson, Lavon and Sharon began to relate to each other their impressions of what they had witnessed. 

Only Markowitz stayed out of the conversation.  He just stared back in silence at the birds circling over the battle site. 

After a little while, I grew concerned.  “You OK there, buddy?” I asked. 

He didn’t reply. 

Without acknowledging me at all, he stepped over to Lavon and tugged on his shoulder.  “Robert, can you ask this centurion what will happen to those bodies?” 

Lavon did so, but the Roman officer just looked at him blankly and shrugged, as if unable to comprehend why anyone would care. 

Quite frankly, I wondered the same thing. 

Decius turned and said something to the men in the wagon.  It must have been another joke, for the injured soldiers began laughing uproariously. 

Lavon told me later what they had said. 

“The dogs and vultures must eat, too,” replied one of the legionnaires.  “Would the gods approve of us depriving them of their sustenance?” 

As the soldiers burst out in laughter again, Lavon chuckled along with them.  As for me, I put the issue out of my mind. 

I shouldn’t have. 

 

Chapter 18
 

We marched for close to an hour before Publius brought our column to a halt just outside a small village.  As soon as we stopped, the Romans launched into a well-drilled routine.  Two lookouts scrambled up the nearest hill, about twenty yards away, where they stood with their backs to each other, each scanning a semicircle for potential threats. 

Two unlucky squads – the Roman term was
contuburnia
, Lavon explained – remained on guard while the others dropped their heavy burdens and quickly found shade underneath nearby olive trees, though an additional group of soldiers did not begin their break until they had erected an improvised cover to shield the wounded men in the wagon from the sun. 

As the soldiers rested, four servants who had accompanied them carried jugs of water and ladled refreshment out to each man before scurrying back to the center of the village to fill their containers from a crudely dug well. 

Like the soldiers, Bryson and Markowitz headed for some large rocks underneath a shade tree.  By contrast, Lavon and Bergfeld ran straight up a small hill to the edge of a three-foot stone wall that enclosed a flat, hard-packed surface about twenty-five feet in diameter.  I decided to join them. 

Sharon trained her sight on what looked like a sled leaning against the opposite side.  Pieces of it were flaking away at the edges, and compounding its bedraggled appearance, dozens of rock fragments were embedded into the wood on one side.  To me, it belonged either in a landfill or as décor in a cheap, all-you-can-eat steak house. 

“Wow, check that out!” she said. 

Lavon seemed equally excited.  I followed them around the wall’s perimeter but finally had to ask. 

“What’s so interesting about that piece of junk?”  

The subject of their enthusiasm turned out to be a threshing floor, and what I took for a sled was actually the threshing machine.  Local farmers would pile their sheaves of grain on the hard surface and hook up the sled behind a donkey or an ox, fragment side down. 

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