“Maybe if this one,” he said, jerking a thumb toward the unconscious priest, “had told us what we were dealing with, we might have stood a better chance.”
“He came down to warn us.”
Jordan grimaced. “He came down to find that book. He had plenty of time to warn us before we went down, or to warn the men topside that those monsters were coming. But he didn’t.”
She found herself defending the priest, since the man couldn’t do it himself. “Still, he did fight to get us out of there. And he got us into that sarcophagus during the explosion.”
“Maybe he just needed our help to get the hell out of there.”
“Maybe.” She gestured across the wide expanse of sand. “But what do we do next?”
His face was stony. “For now, I think it’s best if he’s not moved. It’s about all we can do for him: keep him warm and quiet. After that explosion, rescue teams must be coming here from all directions. We should stay put. They’ll find us soon enough.”
He moved aside the coat and felt across Rhun’s body.
“What are you doing?”
“Looking for identification. I want to know who this guy really is. He’s certainly no ordinary priest.”
Erin felt bad at mugging the priest while he was unconscious, but she had to admit that she was just as curious.
Jordan didn’t discover any driver’s license or passport, but he did draw Rhun’s knife from a wrist sheath. He also discovered a leather water flask buttoned in a thigh pocket.
He unscrewed the cap and took a swig.
Thirsty, too, Erin held out her hand, wanting a drink.
Jordan twisted up his face and sniffed at the opening of the flask. “That’s not water.”
She frowned.
“It’s wine.”
She took the flask and sipped. He was right.
“This guy gets stranger and stranger,” Jordan said. “I mean look at this.”
He lifted Rhun’s knife, the curved blade shaped like a crescent. It shone silver in the moonlight.
“The weapon’s called a
He hooked a finger in a ring at the base of the hilt and demonstrated with fast flicks of his wrist how the weapon could be deployed in several different positions.
She looked away, flashing back to the battle, blood flying from that blade.
“Strange weapon for a priest,” he said.
To her, it was the
But Jordan wasn’t done. “Not only because most holy men don’t normally carry knives, but because of its origin. The weapon is from Indonesia. The style goes back more than eight hundred years. The ancient Sudanese copied the blade’s shape from the claws of a tiger.”
She looked at Rhun, remembering his skill.
Like his name, the weapon fit him.
“But here’s the oddest detail.” He held the knife where she could see it. “From the patina, I’d say this blade is at least a hundred years old.”
They both stared at the priest.
“Maybe far older.” Jordan’s voice dropped to a conspiratorial whisper. “What if he’s one of them?”
“One of whom?”
He raised one blond eyebrow.
She understood what he was implying. “A
“You saw how he lifted that crypt’s lid?” His voice held a challenge.
She accepted it. “He could’ve been riding a surge of adrenaline. Like women lifting cars off babies. I don’t know, but I rode from Caesarea with him. In broad daylight. You met him on Masada’s summit while the sun was still up.”
“Maybe these
She put a hand on Jordan’s warm forearm, but he shrugged it off and stood.
She stared down at the man in her lap, remembering his last revelation.
If this was true, what did it imply?
Questions burned through her: What revelations could be hidden within the pages of this lost Gospel? Why did the
Jordan must have read her train of thought.
“And that book,” he said. “The one that got so many good men killed. I’m pretty sure there are only
Erin shook her head, happy to return to a subject she knew something about. “Actually, there are many more Gospels. The Dead Sea Scrolls alone contain bits of a
“Then maybe the Church purged them. Wiped away any references.” He set his chin. “We now know how good the Church is at keeping secrets.”
It made a certain sense.