With the pistol he gestured to his lieutenant across the church. He left

six of his men guarding the monks, four at the doorway and one at each

side wall. The others bunched up and followed him to the entrance to the

maqdas.

The doors were locked. Nogo rattled the ancient padlock impatiently.

'Open this immediately, you old crow!' he shouted at  ali Hora who still

lay in a bundle, moaning and sobbing.

'He is too far gone in senility,' the lieutenant shook his head. 'His

mind has gone, colonel. He does not understand the command.'

'Break it open, then,' Nogo ordered, 'No, don't waste any more time.

Shoot the lock away. The wood is rotten.'

Obediently the lieutenant stepped up to the door, and gestured his men

to stand well clear. He aimed his AK-47 into the wood of the door lintel

and fired a long, continuous burst.

Dust and chips of wood and stone flew in a cloud, and fresh yellow

splinters splattered the paving. The noise of gunfire and the whine of

ricochets was deafening in the echoing hall of the qiddist, and the

monks wailed and howled and covered their ears and their eyes where they

knelt. The lieutenant stepped back from the shattered door. The black

wrought-iron hasp and staple hung at an angle, the supporting woodwork

almost shot through.

'Break it down now!' Nogo ordered, and five of his men ran forward and

put their shoulders to the sagging door. At their combined thrust there

was a crackling, rending sound, and now the monks were screaming' Some

of them had covered their heads with the skirts of their shammas so as

not to have to witness this sacrilege;,others were tearing at their

faces with their fingernails, leaving long bloody gouges down their own

cheeks.

'Again!' roared Nogo, and his men rushed the door once more, using their

shoulders in unison. The lock was ripped away from its fastenings, and

they pushed the massive door fully open and peered into the dim recesses

of I the maqdas beyond. The chamber was lit only by a few smoky oil

lamps.

Now suddenly even these non-Christians were reluctant to cross that

threshold into the holy place. They all hung back, even Tuma Nogo,

despite his defiant Protestations of non-belief.

'Nahoot!' He looked back over his shoulder at the bedraggled and still

sweating Egyptian. 'This is your job now. Herr von Schiller has ordered

you to find the things we want. Come here.'

As Nahoot came forward, Nogo seized his arm and thrust him. through the

doorway. 'Get in there, oh follower of the Prophet. The Trinity of

Christian gods cannot harm you.

He stepped into the maqdas immediately after Nahoot and shone his torch

around the low chamber. The beam of light danced over the shelves of

votive offerings, sparkling on the glass and precious stones, on the

brass and gold and silver. It stopped on the high cedarwood altar,

lighting the Epiphany crown and the chalices, reflected from the

communion plate and the tall silver Coptic cross.

'Beyond the altar,' Nahoot cried out with excitement.

'The barred gateway! This is the place where the Polaroids were taken.'

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