The Third Day (45 page)

Read The Third Day Online

Authors: David Epperson

The archaeologist reluctantly agreed, and we both rose slowly, as if to make a grand demonstration of our peaceful intent. 

***

Some times in life, we get to make our own choices.  On other occasions, despite our most careful calculations, our choices are made for us. 

This became such a moment. 

As we considered Decius’s ultimatum, Lavon and I had focused so single-mindedly on delaying the Romans long enough for the LED to turn green that neither of us recognized that Naomi had reached her final tipping point. 

Before we could stand fully upright to surrender, she cut loose with an unrestrained burst of profanity, berating both the Romans and our own party with equal vigor. 

Her face reflected a volatile mixture of anger and betrayal, and it was only with great difficulty that Lavon managed to prevent her from grabbing a weapon. 

It suddenly dawned on me why. 

“She thinks we’re selling her out!” I shouted. 

She did indeed. Despite Lavon’s best efforts to persuade her to the contrary, he could do nothing but hang on for dear life to prevent her from hurting either him or herself.  

Sharon ran over to help, but by this point, Decius had lost patience.  Somewhat reluctantly, he signaled for the dozen men at his side to proceed ahead. 

I took one glance back, where I saw Bryson huddled behind a rock.  Then I picked up my sword. 

“Might as well go down fighting,” I said. 

The Romans advanced slowly and methodically, reluctant to take casualties when the result of the engagement seemed so certain. 


What color, Professor?
” I asked. 

“Still yellow,” he muttered.  “I don’t know what could be keeping her.” 

He mumbled some other excuses, too, but I had lost any desire to listen.  By now, the legionnaires had come to within twenty five yards of our position. 

I called Sharon to come over to my side. 

“Twenty yards!” I cried out. 

Lavon understood, though he continued to wrestle with Naomi.  If we timed it just right, we’d have time to fall on our own swords afterward. 

“Fifteen! 
What color, Professor?”
 

Still yellow. 

“Ten!” I shouted, though this time, I did so more to buck up my own courage than to convey any meaningful information. 

I was struggling to keep my eyes open, to look my impending doom square in the face, when a man who had gotten us into so much trouble saved us in the end.  

I heard a shout – really more of a primeval scream – coming from just behind where I stood. 

“You bastards!”

“Noooo!” yelled Bryson. 

But it was too late. 

One Roman had gone out ahead of his comrades, but the man slipped on a damp stone and fell hard.  Immediately upon seeing this, Markowitz rushed forward to take his revenge – his people’s revenge. 

His blow caught the legionnaire squarely in the eye as he rammed the point forward with all his might.  Then he yanked the sword back out and screamed for his next opponent just as three others tossed their long javelins. 

At that range, the soldiers could not miss, and what their spears started, they finished with their swords. 

Our party could only stare in shock at the dismal scene.  As the Romans resumed their final advance, I reached around to grasp the back of Sharon’s neck.  

“I’m sorry,” I muttered, as I held up my blade. 

I kept it pointed toward the Romans, hoping to wait until the absolute last infinitesimal fraction of a microsecond to carry out the awful deed that I knew I had to perform. 

***

And that was it.  The next thing I recalled, the five of us lay sprawled on a smooth white floor.  I rolled over, grabbed my weapon, and quickly jumped to my feet, looking left and right, like a wild man ready to pounce. 

It was only then that I realized we had made it home. 

 

Chapter 66
 

I tossed my sword to one side, completely indifferent to any damage I might have done to the polished ceramic floor. 

While I verified that I still possessed the correct number of appendages, all connected in their proper places – a legacy habit from hundreds of low altitude parachute jumps – the sliding panel opened, and Juliet Bryson rushed in to embrace her husband. 

The others just sat on the floor in stunned silence, though they gradually relaxed as they, too, realized that we were no longer in mortal peril. 

Everyone but Naomi, that is.  She huddled against Lavon, and her eyes darted back and forth like a panicked animal. 

I couldn’t help but laugh. 

I reached down to help her up, but she didn’t budge.  Instead, she squeezed Lavon even tighter and stared into his eyes with an imploring, questioning gaze. 

“Where are we?” she asked. 

Lavon smiled.  “We’re back, in our country, as we promised.” 

To no one’s surprise, she remained doubtful, although we had clearly gone
somewhere

“How did we get here?  Where are the soldiers?” 

I didn’t wait for his answer.  However Lavon chose to explain it, his response couldn’t be quick. 

Instead, I slid through the open door and continued into the changing room.  There, I rummaged through the kit I had left behind and found five bottles of water, a handful of MREs, and a dozen energy bars. 

When I returned to the chamber, I could see that despite Naomi’s remaining uncertainty, Lavon had at least managed to reassure her that we had no intention of abandoning her to the Romans or to Herod’s goons.  Sharon’s relaxed attitude also bolstered her confidence that nothing untoward would happen. 

I passed around the MREs, and we attacked the food like ravenous wolves; likewise, we drained the water in seconds.  Unlike the rest of our group, though, Naomi did not cast her bottle aside after finishing it.  Instead, she slowly rotated it, puzzled by the odd transparent material. 

Lavon tried to explain, but quickly discovered how much background information we take for granted. 

And that wasn’t her only worry. 

“This writing:  these are Roman letters.” 

Though she couldn’t read, she recognized the script, and her tone reflected a concern that perhaps we had not escaped trouble after all. 

Lavon took the bottle and examined the label.  “Hydro-max Pure Spring Water,” he deadpanned. 
“Ideally Formulated for Low-Carb Diets.”
 

Seriously, it said that. 

We all laughed, and between our amusement and the wildly varying typefaces on the bottle, Lavon managed to convince her that we had left our pursuers far behind. 

To make things even more interesting for her, I reached into my bag and pulled out another surprise. 

I handed her a flashlight, and Lavon directed her to press the large yellow on-switch. 

She fumbled it in sudden alarm the first time, but after she saw us laugh, she picked it back up and switched it on and off, over and over again. As she did so, her expression shifted from a tentative apprehension to open delight. 

“Light, without fire,” Lavon explained.  “Did I not promise that if you helped us, you would see wonders beyond your imagination?” 

She barely acknowledged his reply.  Instead, she continued to flip the switch on and off and to dance the beam across the room.  The effect was like watching a small child who had just unwrapped the hottest new toy. 

This would be fun. 

A few seconds later, Naomi focused the light on me, with a huge, playful smile on her face. 

“Welcome to our world,” I said.  “And to America, a magnificent country, where the food is fat free but the people are not.” 

Lavon flashed his best smile as he translated, though he skipped the last part.  Some things just couldn’t be explained. 

I was certain she would adapt over time.  I could only hope that she would have a more peaceful experience in our country than we had had in hers. 

***

And that brought us back to our unfinished business. 

Juliet had finally overcome the initial shock of seeing her husband, once again alive and well, and she glanced around the room to assess us more carefully. 

Her head count came up two short. 

“Where are Ray and Scott?” she asked. 

“Dead,” I replied, without any real emotion in my voice.  “It’s a long story.” 

She gasped, although she couldn’t have been completely surprised at the news.  When we failed to return after a brief interval, she had to have suspected that our endeavor had run into unexpected difficulties, if not outright disaster. 

After a moment’s silence, her husband whispered something into her ear.  Whatever he said was instantly reassuring; for she recovered her composure and gestured toward Naomi for the first time. 

“Who are you?” she asked. 

“She helped us,” said Lavon.  “It will take some time to explain how.” 

***

The Professor spent the next half hour outlining the basics of our excursion.  Finally, though, the rest of us grew impatient.  The moment of truth had arrived. 

Juliet led us into the conference room, and after a brief pause for Naomi to grow comfortable with wall-mounted light switches and overhead projectors, we all settled into the chairs closest to the drop-down screen. 

By that point, I wasn’t sure who was more nervous.  Although Naomi might not have understood the intricacies of how we commanded light to appear on a whim, she also had no conception of the infinitely more transcendent mystery that Bryson’s device was about to reveal. 

I, for one, felt a veritable swarm of butterflies emerge from their cocoons in my stomach as Juliet booted up the computer.  From the others’ expressions, I could see that they did as well. 

The screen displayed the familiar blue backdrop while the Professor hooked his camera to the machine.  When he finished, he glanced around the room and we all took a deep breath. 

“Here we go,” he said. 

Then he pressed ‘play.’ 

As with his earlier venture, the screen first displayed only the date and time: 
2029 04 15; 02 30 00

Bryson started to explain that the camera’s date couldn’t be set before the year 1950, but we had already gotten the idea:  Sunday, April 15, of the year 29 AD, at two-thirty in the morning. 

A few seconds later, we could begin to make out the tomb in the full moonlight.  A Temple guardsman, dressed in full uniform with his right hand resting on the hilt of his sword, stood on each side of the entrance. 

“That’s the tomb?” exclaimed Juliet. 

We all mumbled our concurrence without taking our eyes off the screen.  The guards weren’t moving around much, though it was obvious that neither man was asleep. 

“Where did you get caught?” I asked Bryson. 

“I tried to sneak up behind the location where I placed the camera,” he said, admitting for the first time what we had suspected:  that his real goal had been to witness the event in person. 

“But I had the bad luck to run into the spot where the relief crew was taking a break,” he continued. 

Personally, I thought he had become disoriented in the twists and turns of the quarry’s many trails, but whatever had really transpired, it was no longer our primary concern. 

We all kept our full attention focused on the image on the screen, though for nearly an hour, very little happened. 

The guards appeared to chat back and forth – undoubtedly complaining, like soldiers everywhere, about why
they
got stuck standing out in the cold all night while their colleagues dozed comfortably in their beds. 

But their voices were too low and the camera too far away for the microphone to pick up enough details for Naomi to translate. 

2029 04 15; 03 27 42

A few minutes later, we saw the first real movement.  The initial two guards stepped away from their posts as two others took their places. 

“Shift change, by the look of it,” said Lavon. 

The same relative inactivity continued as before, though, and I couldn’t help but chuckle as the others grew restless.  Ordinary sentry detail remained as boring as it ever was, two millennia later.  Some things truly never changed. 

2029 04 15; 04 08 17

“When does it start getting light?” asked Sharon. 

Juliet had printed out a sunrise/sunset table and read out the numbers. 

“Nautical twilight begins at 4:17.  Civil twilight, the time when dawn first begins to break, starts at 4:46.” 

Upon hearing this, my butterflies began to leap around in a renewed burst of activity.  For that matter, everyone’s did.  Whatever was going to happen would do so very soon. 

2029 04 15; 04 16 52

Though the guards remained at their posts, they suddenly perked up, and one of them noticed something to his left.  He craned his head and called out to his colleagues. 

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