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Authors: Tom Harper

BOOK: Secrets of the Dead
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But she wouldn’t escape that easily. Someone else had the same idea. Among the rumbling echoes of the explosion and shifting rubble, she heard the quickfire beat of footsteps chasing after her.

She couldn’t outrun him. All she could think of was to hide. The walls here were lined with
cubiculae
, the narrow shelves where the dead had once been laid to rest.
If it’s big enough for a corpse, it ought to be big enough for me
. She turned off the lamp on her head torch, lay down on the ground and squeezed her way in.

The rock pressed her like a vice. She turned her head ninety degrees, one cheek against the roof and the other against the floor. She pulled her arm as tight to her body as she could. She tried to breathe, but the rock beat down on her chest and forced the air out.

The footsteps came closer. A beam of light, dulled by dust or dying batteries, played along the stone corridor. Abby prayed he wouldn’t look down.

‘Abigail?’ Dust slurred Dragovi
ć
’s voice. ‘You think you can escape? You think Zoltán Dragovi
ć
ever forgets his enemies?’

He gave a cough that turned into a snarling laugh.

‘Let me give you a piece of advice, Abigail, from a man who has seen many dark places in this world. If you want to hide in the dark, you should not wear a reflective coat.’

Squeezed between the rock, she saw Dragovi
ć
’s boots stop six inches from her face. Even if she’d wanted to, she couldn’t have moved. She closed her eyes and listened for her own death.

More footsteps – what was he doing? A choked shout; a cry of surprise. A single gunshot, and a heavy thud that she felt rather than heard. Then nothing
.

In that ancient catacomb, time became a river flowing through her. She didn’t know how long she lay there in the grave. It could have been an hour, or a day or three. Her only companion was stone. Its smell filled her nose; it pressed against her ears until the blood pumping through them felt like the pulse of the rock. It embraced her, so that she no longer knew where flesh ended and rock began. With nowhere to flow, her tears pooled in her eyes. She wondered if, given a few millennia, they might bore a channel to the surface and well up as a spring.

But, by degrees, feeling returned. She felt pins and needles prickling her legs; an ache in her shoulder where a knob of rock dug into it. She reached out into the passage. The space felt good.

Tentatively, tugging with her free arm, she wriggled herself out of the niche into the tunnel. She felt the smooth plastic dome of her helmet, and when she flicked the switch on the lamp it came on.

Dragovi
ć
lay a few feet away, dead, a single bullet punched through his skull. Abby looked at him for a moment, just to be sure. Then she turned and headed for the light.

XLVII

Constantinople – July 337

THE PALACE IS
still unfinished, but renovations have already started. Murals have been whitewashed over, ready to take new paint; inscriptions filled in with cement. A whole mosaic floor showing the labours of ancient heroes has been lifted out, to be replaced with salutary scenes from the life of Christ. Through a doorway, I glimpse a room crowded with statues: a marble host stoically awaiting their fate. Soon they’ll be sold off, or recut into something more fashionable. I can empathise.

An age has passed. Constantine is sealed in his porphyry sarcophagus, surrounded by the Christian apostles. Porfyrius’s corpse, rescued from the rooftop, is embalmed and on a boat to Rome, in accordance with his last wishes. I don’t know what happened to Crispus. The body was gone by the time I came down from the rooftop.

I’m the last one left. An old man, standing in a corridor, waiting to hear his fate.

The door opens. A slave beckons me in. Flavius Ursus stands behind a desk, arms folded. Two secretaries sit in front of him
with
tablets and styli. A breeze blows through the open window from one of the inner courtyards, chattering with the sound of a fountain.

He dismisses the secretaries and studies me. His face is unreadable.

‘You’ve had an extraordinary life, Gaius Valerius.’

I note the past tense.

‘There’s been a lot of discussion of what you’ve done. Some men think you should be executed for your part in the plot against the Emperor. Others say you saved the empire.’

I stay silent. Whatever they’ve said, the judgement’s already been made.

‘Some people are saying that they saw Constantine that day, his spirit rising above the pyre to heaven. The new Bishop of Constantinople hasn’t contradicted them.’

The new Bishop of Constantinople is Eusebius. Constantius confirmed him in the post last week.

‘As for what you were doing on the roof, with known enemies of the state …’ He shakes his head. ‘If you hadn’t sent me that message, things might have been different. As it is, everything is settled as it should be.’

Everything is settled
. Constantine’s three sons – Constantius, Claudius and Constans – will divide their inheritance equally. Each with his own court, each with his own army needing conquests, battle and spoils.
I give it three years before there’s open war
.

‘You did the right thing,’ he says. ‘You’ve earned your rest. Go back to your villa in Moesia and enjoy your retirement.’

There’s something else he wants to say. He stares out the window into the courtyard, trying to find the words. He picks up a marble paperweight, a bird, and plays with it absent-mindedly.

‘You of all men ought to know. Up on the roof – was it really …?’

‘No,’ I say firmly.

‘I didn’t think so.’ He puts down the bird. His hand reaches for a piece of paper, another piece of work. Instinctively, he starts to read it. When he looks up, he’s surprised to see I’m still there.

‘My secretary will give you the necessary permissions on your way out. Go home to Moesia and rest.’

A reassuring smile, one old soldier to another.

‘If anything comes up, I’ll send someone.’

Belgrade, Serbia – June

It felt like the first day of summer. On Knez Mihailova, you could barely move for all the tables and chairs jamming the pavement outside the cafés. Geraniums spilled out from the concrete planters. Abby, dressed for work in a cream suit, sat bare-legged in the sun and picked away at an ice cream, letting it melt on her tongue. Behind her, a big-screen television showed a tennis match from Wimbledon.

She saw Nikoli
ć
, scanning the café tables with a newspaper under his arm, and waved him over.

‘You look well,’ she said.

‘You too.’

He ordered a coffee and angled his chair so as not to be distracted by the TV. He looked anxious, Abby thought.
Fair enough, given that last time we ended up making him our getaway driver
.

‘Thanks for agreeing to see me.’

‘A pleasure. You are in Belgrade on business?’

‘Different business to last time. I’m back in my old job with the International Criminal Tribunal. We’re here for some meetings.’

‘On the side of the sheriff. Last time, I was not so sure.’

‘Neither was I.’ It was the first time she’d been back to Belgrade since she’d fled that day in Nikoli
ć
’s car. She’d been nervous about returning; she’d avoided the Kalemegdan Citadel. But the seasons had changed – she’d changed.

As unemotionally as she could, she told him what had happened: the message hidden in the poem, how they’d gone to Istanbul –

‘But in 326, Constantine intended he would be buried in Rome,’ Nikoli
ć
interrupted.

‘If you’d been with us, you could have saved us a trip. We worked it out in the end.’

She carried on: the catacomb, the staurograms, and the sarcophagus that had been walled up for centuries. Nikoli
ć
heard her out in silence, letting his coffee go cold.

When she’d finished, he sat for a long time in silence.

‘Every time I see you, your story is more remarkable.’

Her ice cream had melted into a pool at the bottom of the dish. She scooped it up with her spoon.

‘Everything except the ending. The coffin was empty – it was all for nothing.’

‘Dragovi
ć
died,’ he reminded her. ‘I saw it on television – his body pulled out of the ground. They had to show it here so we would believe he was dead.’ He thought a moment longer.

‘Of course, there is another possibility.’

‘What?’

‘There is another legend associated with Constantine. His mother Helena made a pilgrimage to the Holy Land just before she died. There, it is said, the Christians showed her the place where the True Cross had been kept secret since the Crucifixion of Christ. One report says that she proved it was the right one by bringing an old peasant woman back from the dead.’

Behind her, on the grass at Wimbledon, the Serbian player had won a set. People at the surrounding tables applauded and shouted encouragement.

‘You think –?’

‘Your poem – this word which is
signum
in Latin,
tropaion
in Greek. I said it has many meanings. It can be a battle standard or a military insignia – but it is also used by religious writers to refer to the Cross.’


The saving sign that lights the path ahead
.’

‘And the symbol you found – the staurogram. I told you comes from the Greek word
stavros
, meaning “cross”. Many people think it is a variant of Constantine’s Christogram, but in fact it has a different origin. In very early manuscripts, scribes used it as an abbreviation, a shorthand symbol for writing “cross”.’

Abby considered it. ‘You’re saying we might have found the True Cross – the one Jesus was actually crucified on – and not even known it?’

Nikoli
ć
thought for a moment, then smiled in defeat. ‘Who knows? You said there was nothing in the coffin except dust. All history turns to dust eventually.’

He waved to the waiter for another coffee. ‘Maybe you can go down one time and have another look?’

She shivered at the thought. ‘It’s impossible. When Dragovi
ć
blew up the tomb, he didn’t just take out that bit of the catacomb. There was an apartment block sitting on top of it: the whole thing came down. The landlord poured about a million tons of concrete over it so he could rebuild quickly. It wasn’t Vatican land so there was nothing they could do.’

‘Maybe it is for the best.’ He laughed, though only to cover something more genuine. ‘The power to raise someone from
the
dead would be a terrible thing, much though we might wish it sometimes.’

Abby closed her eyes. The sun had moved, pushing back the shade of the umbrella so that her face was now fully exposed. The glare blinded her.

‘In the catacomb …’ She paused – this was something she hadn’t told anyone. But she found she wanted Nikoli
ć
to know. ‘At the end, when Dragovi
ć
got shot. There were carabinieri in the tunnels, but they hadn’t reached that part yet. And the bullet that killed him – they said they couldn’t match it to any of the guns they use. You don’t think …’

She slid her chair around, back into the shade, and shook her head decisively. ‘Of course not. No one comes back from the dead. Not really.’

‘Only in the Balkans.’ Nikoli
ć
unfolded his newspaper. On the front page, a hard-faced man with spiky white hair stared at the camera with a malevolence that hadn’t dimmed in the eighteen years since his exploits in Bosnia made him one of the world’s most notorious men.

‘Two years ago, this man’s family had a court declare him legally dead. Yesterday, police found him alive and well in a flat across the river in Zemun.’

Abby knew the ending to this one. ‘Tomorrow he’ll be on a plane to the Hague to stand trial for crimes against humanity. I’m on the same flight.’

Nikoli
ć
looked satisfied. ‘Was this something because of what happened to Dragovi
ć
?’

‘That’s classified.’ She grinned. ‘But yes. Whenever there’s a power shift, things open up. If we’re lucky, a few of the bad guys fall through the cracks into our hands.’ She took the bill out of the shotglass where the waiter had left it, and put some dinars on the table. ‘There’ll be someone else, a new Zoltán
Dragovi
ć
, picking up where he left off soon enough. It never goes away.’

‘But if there are people like you pushing back, they cannot win either.’

Abby blushed at the compliment. They both stood and shook hands.

‘I’ll probably be in Belgrade quite a lot in the next few months. Perhaps we could have dinner some time.’

‘I would like that.’

She leaned over and kissed him on the cheek. ‘Thank you for saving me.’

‘Go well, as the Romans used to say.’

Moesia – August 337

The fire’s burned low; the slaves have gone to bed. Cold steam beads on the vault of my bathhouse and drips in puddles on the floor. My tunic’s soaked. Perhaps the murderers won’t come tonight.

They’ll come soon, though. For all Flavius Ursus’s smiles, I know he won’t let me live. I know too much, not just from the last three months but the last thirty years. I’m the past. As long as I’m alive they’ll see me as a threat.

First they get rid of you, then they send the assassins
.

I stare at my reflection in the bottom of the empty pool, a blurry likeness drifting above the nymphs and gods in the tiles. This is me. I’ve spent my life among men who stood like gods; when I’m gone, their names and faces will survive in stone and mine will wash away from history.

Unless …

Did Crispus rise from the dead? Was Porfyrius’s story true, or just a vast lie to justify his coup? I’ve asked myself this question every hour of every day in the last two months. I
still
don’t know. Sometimes I think of the glazed eyes and say it couldn’t have been, but then I remember his last, forgiving smile and can’t imagine it was anyone else.

Have I spent my whole life worshipping the wrong gods? I feel like a traveller who’s nearing the end of a long journey, only to discover he’s been facing the wrong way all that time. I’ve gone too far from where I started. But how can I continue on this path, even one more step, if I know it’s the wrong direction?

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