“What are you doing in Israel anyway?” Sanderson asked her.
“I have a team digging in Caesarea,” she said. “Routine stuff.”
Jordan suspected by the tone of her voice that it wasn’t routine. Interesting.
The rover slid down a rocky outcropping, then entered what appeared to be a straight passageway.
“Look at the walls.” She rotated the rover’s cameras. “Sharp-edged chipping.”
“So?” Jordan prompted.
“This tunnel is man-made. Dug out by hand and chisel.”
“Way down there? At the heart of the mountain?” He stepped closer to her. “Who do you think dug it out? The Jewish rebels who died here?”
“Maybe.” She leaned away from him. Personal space issues. He moved back a fraction. “Or the Byzantine monks who lived on the mountain centuries later. Without more evidence, it’s impossible to say. I’m guessing this little guy might be the first one down this passage in a very long time.”
The ROV climbed over a pile of rubble, halogen headlamps painting the pitch-black crevasse sickly white.
“Damn,” Erin said.
“What is it?” Jordan asked.
She turned the rover fully to the right to show a pile of broken stones.
“And?” To Jordan, it didn’t look that different from any other pile of rocks.
“Look at the top.” She traced the image on the monitor with her finger. “That was a tunnel, but it’s collapsed.”
“So has a lot of stuff,” Sanderson put in. “Why is that a big deal?”
“Look at the sides,” she said. “Those are fairly modern drill marks.”
Jordan leaned forward excitedly. “Which means?”
“It means that someone cut their way into this tunnel sometime in the last hundred years or so.” Erin sighed. “And probably stole anything of value.”
“Maybe
She turned the rover forward again, and it rolled down the path, eventually reaching an open area.
“Stop there,” Jordan said. “What’s this place?”
“Looks like an underground storage chamber.” Erin turned the rover around to get a look at the empty room. No broken canisters yet.
Focusing on his corporal, Jordan asked, “How are the readings?”
Sanderson hunched over a neighboring monitor. He might have trouble piloting the ROV, but the kid knew his instrumentation. “Plenty of secondary breakdown products. No active agent. Still, these are by far the hottest spikes I’ve seen here. I’d say that chamber is the source of the gas.”
A camera angled up to display an arched ceiling.
“That looks like a church,” Sanderson said.
Erin shook her head. “More likely a subterranean temple or tomb. The building style is ancient.” She touched the screen, as if that would help her feel the stone.
“What is that box?” Jordan asked.
“I think it’s a sarcophagus, but I can’t be certain until I get closer. The light doesn’t go that far.”
She sent the ROV forward, but it stopped. She pushed on both joysticks, then let go with an impatient sigh.
“Stuck again?” Jordan asked. They were so close.
“End of the line,” she said. “Literally. That’s as far as the ROV’s tether can reach.”
She left the camera pointed at the sarcophagus. “Definitely appears to be a burial container. If so, somebody important must be interred there.”
“Important enough to booby-trap the chamber?” That might explain it.
“It’s possible, but Egyptians—not Jews—were notorious for engineering elaborate traps.” She rubbed her lower lip. “It doesn’t make sense.”
“Nothing does here.” Sanderson snorted. “Like cinnamon-scented nerve gas.”
She swiveled her chair around. “What?”
Jordan scowled at Sanderson, then admitted what they’d found. “One of the anomalies about this gas. We’ve detected traces of cinnamon in it.”
“Well, that makes
“How so?” It didn’t make any sense to Jordan.
“Cinnamon was a rare spice during ancient times,” she lectured. “For the rich, it was burned in funeral rites as a scent favored by God. It’s mentioned multiple times in the Bible. Moses was commanded to use it when preparing an anointing oil.”
“So the cinnamon is probably a contaminant?” Jordan was grateful for the information. All he knew about cinnamon was that he liked it on French toast.
“The concentration is too high in the gas residue to be just a contaminant,” Sanderson piped up.
“What else can you tell me about the ancient uses for cinnamon?” Jordan asked.
“If I’d known there would be a quiz, I’d have studied.” Erin offered a soft smile; its warmth caught him off guard. “Let’s see, they used it as a digestive aid. Stopping colds. As a mosquito repellent.”
“Research it,” Jordan ordered. He strode to stand behind Sanderson, as jazzed as if he’d downed a triple espresso.
Sanderson’s fingers flew across the keyboard. “On it.”
“What?” she asked. “What did I do?”
“Maybe solved part of my problem,” Jordan said. “Most mosquito repellents are around two chemical bonds away from nerve gas. The first nerve gas—”