himself, the Messiah. This is the place where Paul may have created the first western Church, the first organized worship, maybe somewhere hidden out there among the craters and the sulphur of the Phlegraean Fields. Taught them what they should believe, how they should live. Given them the Gospel.’

‘I wonder how much of it was the original one.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘Well, Paul didn’t know Jesus in life, had never met him. And Jesus never wrote anything down, right? It makes you wonder.’

‘Paul claimed to have had a vision, to have seen the risen Christ.’

‘I grew up with all this stuff, remember? Greek Orthodox. I loved the beauty of it, the rituals. But I’m just a nuts-and-bolts man, Jack. If we can follow a trail of hard facts, then I’m good with it. This early Christianity stuff is like looking through one of those kids’ kaleidoscope tubes, endlessly shifting lenses and prisms. I want facts, hard data, stuff written by those who were there at the time, texts that have never been tampered with. As far as I can tell, the only hard facts we have are those names scratched on that amphora we found yesterday at the bottom of the Mediterranean.’

‘I hear you.’ Jack grinned, and flipped off the autopilot. ‘Speculation out, facts in.’

‘I wonder what the old Sibyl would have thought of it all.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘Christianity. Followers of a new religion, gathering here under her very nose.’

‘Okay. Final bit of speculation,’ Jack said. ‘Hard facts first. By the late Roman period, Cumae had become a focus for Christian worship. The temples were converted to churches, the cave of the Sibyl was reused for burials. The place is riddled with Christian tombs, almost like a catacomb.’

‘And the speculation? I’ll allow you.’

‘There’s a long-standing Christian tradition that the Sibyl foretold the coming of Christ. In Virgil’s Eclogues, poems written about a hundred years before Vesuvius erupted, we’re told of being at the end of the last age predicted by Cumae’s Sibyl, and of a boy’s birth preceding a golden age. Later Christians read this as a Messianic prophecy. And then there’s the Dies Irae, the Day of Wrath, a medieval hymn used in the Catholic requiem mass until 1970. I’ve just been looking at it again, while you were asleep. The first lines are “ Dies irae! Dies illa Solvet saeclum in favilla teste David cum Sibylla! Day of wrath and terror looming! Heaven and earth to ash consuming, David’s word and Sibyl’s truth foredooming!” It’s usually thought to be medieval, thirteenth century, but there may be an ancient source behind it, one that’s now lost to us.’

‘The Sibyl would certainly have had her ear to the ground, in that cave,’ Costas said.

‘Go on.’

‘Well, that verse all sounds pretty apocalyptic,’ Costas said. ‘I mean, heaven and earth to ash consuming. That sounds like a volcanic eruption to me.’

‘Pure speculation.’ Jack smiled at Costas, then put his hands on the helicopter controls. He stared out of the window, thinking hard. It was possible, just possible, that the Sibyl knew something big was about to happen. There had been a catastrophic earthquake a few years before, in AD 62, bad enough to topple much of Pompeii. Maybe creating the Sibylline prophecies involved keeping a close eye on the Phlegraean Fields, divination and augury based on all the changing moods of the underworld. It suddenly seemed plausible. That mystique, that power, based on knowledge that few others had, on hard science. Jack turned back to Costas. ‘The Sibyl may have known her days were numbered. Already she was becoming a curio, a tourist attraction. Only a few supplicants were now coming seeking utterances, with few of the gifts and payments that had sustained the oracle in the past. And she had a pretty good idea where Vesuvius was heading.’

‘And what better way to go than with a bang,’ Costas added.

‘Precisely. Maybe the Sibyl fed this idea to the Christians who lived here, hung out in the Phlegraean Fields. There’s no clear indication that Jesus’ teaching had the kingdom of heaven preceded by an apocalypse, even though this idea has gripped Christians over the centuries. Maybe it has its origins here, in the Christians who may have perished in the inferno of AD 79. I hate to think what was running through their minds in those final moments. When Paul had brought the Gospel to them twenty years before, I doubt whether they envisaged the end being a pyroclastic flow followed by incineration.’

‘Speculation built on speculation, Jack.’

‘You’re right.’ Jack grinned, and brought the Lynx out of its circling pattern and on to a course due east, along the coast towards the rising sun. ‘Time to find some hard facts. We’re coming inbound.’

‘Roger that.’ Costas flipped down his designer sunglasses and stared to the east. ‘And speaking of fire and brimstone, I’m seeing a volcano dead ahead.’

6

J ack leaned forward on the railing over the archaeological precinct, taking in the extraordinary scene in front of him as the morning sunlight began to pick out the alleyways and dark spaces of the Roman town below. He felt tired, as tired as he ever had been, with the sense of heaviness that always came after a deep dive. He knew that his system was still working overtime to flush out the excess nitrogen from the dive the day before, yet the feeling also came from a profound sense of contentment. In the space of twelve hours he had moved from one of the most remarkable underwater discoveries of his career to one of the most famous archaeological sites in the world, a place that had left an indelible impression on him when he had first visited as a schoolboy. Herculaneum. It had been a scorching afternoon, and he had found the frigidarium of the bathhouse, a cool, dark place where he had sat in a corner for over an hour, listening to the drip of condensation from the damp walls and conjuring up the people who had last used it almost two thousand years before. Herculaneum seemed shabbier now, neglected in places, but had changed little over the years, and it still took his breath away. He could hardly believe that they were about to be the first archaeologists in over two hundred years to excavate the place, inside the tunnel Maria and Maurice had discovered the day before.

‘Text message for you, Jack.’ Costas passed up the cell phone without looking. He was squatting with his back against the railing, focusing entirely on a complex systems diagram on his laptop. ‘It’s from Maria.’

Jack read the message, and grunted. ‘Another half-hour, maybe less. Good news is, the transaction’s been done.’ He and Costas had already been waiting over an hour since landing the helicopter, time well spent showing Costas round the archaeological site, but neither of them was used to being at the beck and call of officialdom and the delay was becoming an irritation.

Costas took back the phone, and squinted up at Jack. ‘I still can’t believe we’re doing this. Paying baksheesh. It’s like something from The French Connection.’

‘That’s Naples for you,’ Jack said. ‘Bandit country.’

‘So the idea is our money goes towards the upkeep of the site, conservation work.’ Costas turned round and gestured at a dusty roof above a crumbling ancient wall. ‘Like all the other foreign money that’s been pumped in here in the past.’

‘I was frank with the IMU board of directors,’ Jack said. ‘There’s no way round it. If you want to work in this place, you cough up.’

‘Basically, we’re paying a bribe.’

‘Not exactly how I put it to the board, but that’s about the size of it,’ Jack replied, looking at his watch. ‘Now we just have to wait while they confirm the electronic transfer. You may as well stick with your work for a while longer. I’m going back to the first century AD.’ Jack turned again towards the site, took a deep breath and slowly exhaled. As a child travelling around the world, he had developed an unusual imagination, an ability to use a few images to transport himself back into the distant past, almost a trance-like state. But here he hardly needed it, as the past was in front of him with extraordinary clarity, complete in almost every detail.

Herculaneum was that rarest of archaeological sites, without the compressions and distortions of time, with little of the complex layering of history seen in most ancient ruins. Here, the city of AD 79 was so well preserved it was almost habitable, the flat-roofed structures nearly identical to the modern suburb above the edges of the excavated area. Jack’s eye moved up beyond the rooftops to the blackened cone of Vesuvius, rearing up in the background. The image seemed to epitomize the underlying continuity of the human condition, and the indomitable

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