30 Pieces of Silver: An Extremely Controversial Historical Thriller

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30 Pieces of Silver: An Extremely Controversial Historical Thriller Page 24

by McCray, Carolyn


  “Look, I am sick of being chased. I’m even sicker of being shot at, and I’m completely done with feeling behind the curve. You two are going to tell me everything you know about the bones and this fucking group who’s got a hard-on for them.”

  Lochum sputtered, “I have never heard such a—”

  “Your arrogance almost got us all killed, so I think I’ve kind of been granted immunity from your bullshit, professor. Take a seat and start explaining what the fuck is going on.”

  “And if I do not?”

  Brandt let every ounce of frustration and resentment he felt toward the older man flavor his words. “Then I will instruct Lopez to set us down somewhere in the middle of Romania, kick your ass out the plane, then continue to Istanbul with Rebecca.” He turned to the doctor. “You got any problem with that plan?”

  She might not be able to meet his gaze, but he had read her mood correctly, because Rebecca just shrugged at Lochum. “He’s saved our butts. He deserves to be in the loop, completely.”

  The older man looked at Rebecca, then at Brandt, as if he could not understand a word either of them said. It was going to take Lochum a couple of minutes to catch up, so he sat across the conference table from the doctor.

  “Let’s start with why Lochum is so sure Jesus survived the cross.”

  * * *

  Perhaps if Brandt wanted to talk about feelings or the kiss that almost felt like a myth, Rebecca might have been ill at ease, but his straightforward manner made her feel right at home. Lecturing about ancient biblical history was in her wheelhouse.

  “Lochum has pored over all proto-Christian accounts of the crucifixion and is certain that Jesus planned and manipulated events in such a way to assure his survival of the cross.”

  Brandt leaned forward. “Like what?”

  Rebecca did not make the same mistake again of underestimating the sergeant’s intelligence and familiarity with the subject. She spoke to him as if he were a fellow doctor. “The timing of Jesus’ arrest is critical. No matter if you believe Judas was asked to betray him or he did so of his own accord, Jesus certainly prompted the action at the Last Supper.”

  “When he said whoever dipped his bread last should go and get the betrayal over with?”

  Even though Rebecca should have not been surprised at his understanding, she still was. Grad students sometimes took weeks to make the connection.

  “Yes. If we can rely on the basic timeline described in the Bible that put the arrest on a Thursday night. Late enough that no official would be called for a tribunal.”

  Brandt nodded. “If it had been done earlier in the day he might have been condemned and would have spent the night on the cross?”

  “Exactly. This way he would not face any inquisition until at least six the next morning, when the Jewish day traditionally started.”

  “But what you have both missed is that that the betrayal was made to the chief priests, not to the governor, nor to the Romans,” Lochum added. It seemed the professor had decided to join the class. “Jesus was of such consequence that giving himself over to the local authorities assured him hours of reprieve while they tried to figure out what to do with him.”

  Rebecca watched Brandt as he listened to the professor. The sergeant soaked the words in. His face looked as if he were back in that time calculating the plan himself. His eyes weighed the pros and cons of every maneuver they discussed.

  “So you think he anticipated the priests deferring to Herod and then the governor giving authority back to Pontius?” the sergeant asked.

  “Anticipated? My dear soldier, he counted on it. All the delays pushed the final decision to crucify him to late afternoon.”

  Brandt shook his head. “The Bible gives no exact timeline.”

  “The canonical Bible? No. The Gospels and Gnostic writings that are not included in the abridged version? Absolutely,” Lochum answered.

  Rebecca felt her head bob back and forth as if she were watching a tennis match.

  “Even so, how could Jesus have been so sure that they would allow his family to take him down from the cross? The Romans would leave the bodies up for days upon days.”

  “That is where—”

  Lochum was interrupted as the plane shook violently. Rebecca held her breath. How could the Knot have found them again? Brandt was out of his seat, jerking the door open.

  Davidson and Svengurd were on the floor, trying to gather themselves, when the intercom sparked to life.

  “Just a little turbulence, people. Nothing to worry about, but I would pay attention to the seat belt sign in the future.”

  Shaking his head, Brandt rejoined them. “I’m sorry, professor, go on.”

  Obviously far more shaken than he wanted to admit, Lochum did not immediately answer, so Rebecca stepped in. “That is where the day of the week comes in. The Romans were brutal oppressors, but they also walked a fine line to keep the populace complacent so they always allowed the bodies to be removed at sunset on the Sabbath.”

  “Friday,” Brandt said, seeming to understand. “So if we believe these other documents, Jesus was put up on the cross in the late afternoon and expected to be brought down by sunset? That would be just a few hours.”

  “Well, glad to see those in uniform can follow a simple logic tree,” Lochum retorted, clearly recovered from the minor shock.

  Brandt glanced at Rebecca, and she almost laughed. She had never seen a look that so clearly said, “Is he an ass, or what?” But the sergeant did not verbalize this sentiment as he turned back to Lochum.

  “All right, let’s take the timeline for granted. The Romans crucified lots of people on Friday, and no one else lived to tell about it. Why would Jesus think he could survive?”

  “I am not here to spoon-feed you, sergeant. The events are taught at every Sunday school class. Can you not expand your mind enough to conceive of the fruition of the plan?”

  * * *

  Okay, now the prick was just pissing him off, but Brandt stopped shy of saying that. Instead he looked at Rebecca, but she shrugged.

  “I hate to say it, but Lochum is right. The rest is pretty straightforward.”

  Now when she suggested it, it did not sound that demeaning. Easily he called up the story of the crucifixion, turning the events over in his own mind to find that, sure enough, if Rebecca hadn’t been right.

  “If anyone was alive before they were brought down, the Romans would break their legs,” Brandt said, answering his own question.

  The doctor nodded solemnly. “By sledgehammering the femurs—causing enough pain, blood loss, or more likely fatal fat embolisms. The point of the crucifixion was actually to torture with a slow, agonizing death, but if push came to shove, they could execute a man efficiently.”

  Still, this information only led to more questions. “Okay. He was crucified with two others. The Romans broke their legs, but not Jesus’.”

  “Because?” Lochum asked.

  Brandt shot a scathing look to the professor, but the older man had risen and was pacing behind Rebecca. And she was strangely grinning at Brandt.

  “What happened just before they broke the other two’s legs?”

  Mind racing, he spoke as he recited the story in his head. “Jesus asked for water but was given vinegar instead.” Finally the proposed scheme gelled in his mind. “After a sip, Jesus fell dead.” He looked at Rebecca. “You are suggesting he was purposefully drugged to mimic death?”

  “Either that, or I’m sorry to be blasphemous, but Jesus was a wimp. The other two, being crucified, were in pain but hale and hearty to the point they had to be killed before they were taken down.”

  “But Jesus was scourged before he was taken to the cross,” Brandt retorted hotly. Somehow this had gone from a detached academic discussion to a defense of his faith. Jesus had given up his spirit to God, not startled to death like a scared rabbit.

  “Like you said yourself, Brandt, men survived days on the cross. Sometimes they were still alive when s
cavengers began eating their extremities, and yet Jesus dies after only a few hours?” She hurried along. “Even if you don’t believe our timeline, he was up there for a maximum of ten hours. Still not very long in terms of the times.”

  “He gave his spirit up,” Brandt said through clenched teeth.

  Rebecca’s face softened, and she placed a hand over his. “But the whole purpose of being crucified was to suffer for his people. Why would he just give up? That version of the story just doesn’t track with the rest of the crucifixion saga.”

  As much as he wanted to argue, Brandt found the words sticking in his throat. He had never thought of the crucifixion in such a way. Who would? It was Jesus’ final sacrifice that mattered to the faithful, not esoteric concerns like timelines and tonics.

  “Do not forget the wound to the ribs,” Lochum pointed out. Almost sounding gleeful that Brandt’s beliefs were being unwoven.

  Rebecca shrugged sympathetically. “If he were truly dead when the centurion stabbed his ribs, he would not have bled freely. As a soldier, you know that.”

  Something deep in Brandt’s chest hurt. Why had he never considered that aspect of the suffering? If truly dead, Jesus’ blood would have coagulated almost immediately and come out thick and clotted.

  “So there you have it. Jesus was a fraud,” Lochum said, quite satisfied with himself.

  Brandt was on his feet, his fist rising on its own. The bastard had gone too far, when Rebecca touched his arm.

  “Not even he believes that,” she said as she gently lowered his fist. “We’re not saying Jesus did not suffer, or that he survived the cross for his own benefit, but he did all this so that he could be certain to fulfill the prophecies that he would resurrect.”

  The professor shrugged. “Yeah, or what she said.”

  * * *

  Rebecca almost punched Lochum herself. The old man was just being cruel now. Obviously Brandt was struggling to digest all that he had been told, which kind of freaked her out. The sergeant hadn’t been shaken when he charged through the native-infested jungle, or when they were drowning in the caves—not even when they were almost shot out of the sky.

  To see him so wounded hurt her.

  Brandt recovered quickly, though. “Fine. For now we will consider your theory as a hard fact. What does that have to do with the bones from Paris and Budapest?”

  How she wished she had her laptop. This discussion would be much quicker with visual aids.

  “Obviously those who attended the crucifixion had to be familiar with the plot. Mary, his brother Jude, his sister Ruth, and his acolyte John,” the professor said as if discussing the Kennedy assassination.

  The sergeant’s jaw clenched and unclenched. Lochum seriously needed to learn some decorum.

  Rebecca cut in before he could insult Brandt any further. “We always suspected that the Jews had secreted the crucified bodies away and moved them far from Jerusalem about the time it fell to the Romans—AD 60.”

  “But now you think it was even more organized than that?” Brandt asked, still with pain in his voice.

  She went to open her laptop, but again it was gone. Life was a hell of a lot harder without a keyboard. “From the silver coins and the writings on John’s bones, we think a very tight group of those intimate with Jesus, those we now know are called the Knot, cared for his remains and systematically took steps to hide the bones. In particular, ‘the man without contempt’ carried Christ’s bones to Turkey.”

  Brandt leaned back in his chair. “And each one has obscure clues to the entire mystery?”

  Lochum could not take it any longer. “There were thirty conspirators. Thirty coins. And we are shy of just three. We have a 33 percent chance that Jesus lies in Istanbul. If not there, whoever is found will lead us to his remains.”

  Brandt looked at Rebecca. “You said that if I gave you a few hours you could pinpoint our search.”

  “Well, I didn’t say exactly—”

  His frown silenced her excuses. Pulling out the papers she and Lochum had been working on, Rebecca put them together like a puzzle.

  “Unfortunately, this is a relatively small bone and much of the writings regard James’ life…”

  “But you found something?” It wasn’t so much a question as an edict.

  The professor was faster than she. “Besides the fact for some reason unknown to anyone at the time, Emperor Constantine decided to move the capital of Rome to an obscure city to the east? If that doesn’t prove Istanbul is our destination, what will?”

  Ignoring his outburst, Rebecca pointed to the center page. “Remember this translation is by hand without my software to perfect the syntax and…” She stalled again as Brandt raised an eyebrow. “Anyway, the most pertinent passage reads ‘He who loved Him best.’ Rebecca looked up. “We think he is the same as the ‘man without contempt.”… ‘Dreamed a dream where a beautiful woman whispered to him that a fish shall show you, and a boar will lead the way.’”

  “A reference to an ancient myth regarding the establishment of Istanbul,” Lochum interjected.

  The sergeant looked at her again, so Rebecca continued. “But this is where it gets tricky, and I’m not at all certain I have broken down the syntax properly… ‘He cried to the Heavens as his back broke. The bones had become heavier and heavier as if they wished to go no further. He prayed for forgiveness as he slumped to the ground, in his task, failed. The villagers tried to comfort him, but understood none of his language.”

  Lochum’s head bobbed rapidly. “Again, proof that he was far from Jerusalem.”

  Rebecca pointed to a section that was red inked. “Then there’s a line we can’t make out, but it picks back up at, ‘With care they buried both the bones that had become such a burden and those of their bearer with the blessing of the goddess.”

  Brandt interrupted Lochum. “Goddess equals Istanbul, got it.”

  “Finally,” the professor snorted.

  The two men had a short-lived staring contest, then Rebecca cleared her throat as she read the rest of the passage. “Then years later and with a prayer on his lips, he who had spent his life in search, found the most sacred bones and tied them in a satchel of silk and took them to the holy man who spoke of God, his son, and he that followed. It was decided the favored one would be laid within the most sacred sanctuary, and so it was.”

  First Brandt studied her face, then turned the page around and read the words silently. “Um, is it just me or do the two passages not jive?”

  Sighing, she looked at Lochum. That was exactly what the two of them had been fighting over for the past hour. The man was like a pit bull with a steak bone. He refused to let go of a theory even after everything that had happened. Rebecca felt that they could not hone in on any one conclusion until they took in all the information and pieced it together, but Lochum had distinctly different thoughts.

  “No matter. We know where we must start, the Hagia Sophia, the seat of Constantine’s holy power, and that is enough.”

  With that said, the professor grabbed all the pages up and left the room, slamming the door behind him.

  “Why do you put up with all his crap?” Brandt asked point-blank.

  “Well, for all his bluster he truly is an expert in—”

  “No, I mean you couldn’t care less about proving this supposed Passover plot to save Christ from the cross.” He held her gaze. “So, I will rephrase my question, why are you going to Istanbul?”

  As hard as she tried to speak, her lips only opened and closed like a guppy’s. Since the kiss it seemed that she had lost the ability to form complete sentences around Brandt that were not in ancient verse.

  “You’re using him to achieve your own goal, correct?”

  God, how she wished Lochum would come back in.

  “I wouldn’t call it—” Rebecca bit her lip trying to regroup her thoughts. “I mean we act synergistically and, but, then—”

  Brandt had the oddest smile on his face. Did he know her desire t
o find the “smart gene” in Jesus’ genome, or was he just trolling? If he knew her true intent, would he think her more noble, or worse than Lochum?

  “Yeah, boss, you might want to look out the right window,” their pilot said over the intercom.

  By now Rebecca was well versed in Lopez’s many tones, and this one indicated they were in deep shit.

  * * *

  There it was, fuel spewing from the wing. They must have taken some shrapnel during the missile attack. Worse, tiny sparks flew from a fried casing. It was a recipe for a midair explosion. He jerked the conference door open and charged to the cockpit.

  “Land us!”

  Groggy, but waking quickly, Davidson was already in the copilot’s seat. “That’s the problem, Sarge. A high-speed, low-altitude landing is dangerous under normal circumstances and—”

  The wing caught fire, washing the cockpit in bright yellows and oranges.

  “No more dangerous than flying while on fire, I suppose,” Brandt growled, but he could see that Lopez was already scouting an area up ahead.

  “That’s Pleven ahead, with a nice stretch of highway.”

  Brandt had to squint to see the road. Sure enough there was a nice and empty Bulgarian four-lane road right in front of them. They were lucky it was the middle of the night, or traffic would have made it impossible to land. Their only problem now was that they were rapidly approaching Pleven’s urban center. City lights twinkled closer and closer.

  “Do it.”

  “Buckle up,” Lopez responded. Brandt went to argue, but the corporal faced him. “I’m serious.”

  Okay, when Lopez was that worried, Brandt buckled up. Getting back to the cabin, he found Svengurd, Lochum, and Rebecca already strapped in.

  “Hang on!”

 

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