“Who lives on the lower level? Livestock?”
“Yes,” said Lavon, “along with household servants, if they have any. It’s quite a clever setup. They take full advantage of the terrain in an environment where construction lumber is prohibitively expensive.”
I glanced back around. “Clever” wasn’t the first word that occurred to me.
Taken as a whole, the ramshackle village reminded me of a more primitive version of a third world shantytown, though I suppose as in those places, these people did the best with what they had, which wasn’t much.
“Jesus would have been born in something like this,” said Lavon.
“This?” I asked.
“Not this particular town, of course, but it was this kind of house, we think. The upstairs part was full, so Mary and Joseph had to go to the lower level. It wasn’t quite as bad as the modern English version of the Christmas story makes it out to be. The mean old innkeeper wasn’t exiling them to the barn.”
“Childbirth without anesthetics — that would have been the bad part,” said Bergfeld.
I had never thought of it that way, nor had most men I was sure.
“How many people would you estimate live here?” I asked.
Lavon studied the village for a moment. “I’d guess about a hundred, more or less,” he said. “Bethlehem was probably about the same size,” he added.
“It’s an area the church’s critics get wrong,” said Bergfeld. “Some of them say that Herod’s slaughter of the infants never took place, since no source outside the Bible mentions it.”
“What they don’t understand,” said Lavon, “is that in the scheme of things in the ancient world, such an event — though tragic to the families involved — would have barely registered a blip.”
This day was turning out to be full of surprises, and we had barely begun. I had always pictured Bethlehem as a small but thriving town. Growing up, the priests had made Herod’s actions sound like the massacre of a large American grade school. I told them so.
This was not unusual.
“I grew up with the same impression,” said Lavon. “But a town of this size wouldn’t have held more than a handful of boys of the requisite age. Plus, they were peasants. No one else really cared.”
I was about to ask another question when we heard a trumpet blow, so we turned to head back. We walked toward the east, making a circle along the back side of the village.
As we neared the road, we encountered the only local residents who had remained behind. One miserable old woman kneaded dough, while her equally wretched companion placed it onto hot rocks, which she then covered with a flat clay pan.
A thin, faded tan-colored shawl covered each of their heads, while the rest of their clothing consisted of little more than rags. Neither woman even bothered to look up.
“They’re so pitiful,” said Bergfeld. “I wonder why they didn’t run like the others?”
I guessed it was because they had nothing left to lose.
Finally, one of them glanced at us, and Lavon reached under his tunic and pulled out two
Feeling a bit ashamed, I reached into my money pouch and did the same.
The trumpet blew again before we had time to do more, so we hustled back to the wagon. Decius watched us approach and greeted Lavon with a broad smile.
“Ah, Lavonius, you’re back,” he said. “You can tell your companions that they will no longer need to see Egypt. After such a wonder as this, they will undoubtedly find the Alexandria Lighthouse disappointing.”
The nearby Romans burst out laughing, as did we after Lavon translated. We all stood there for a minute or two while the soldiers talked amongst themselves; then Sharon interrupted with a question.
“Do you know the name of this village?”
None of them did, so Decius dispatched an Aramaic-speaking legionnaire to ask the two women. Moments later, the young man came trotting back.
“Emmaus,” he said.
Bergfeld and Lavon stared at each other for a brief instant before quickly turning away and staring at the ground.
“I’ll be damned,” I heard him mutter.
Decius eyed them curiously, as did I. I had heard the name before, but couldn’t for the life of me think of where. But that wasn’t my real concern. I could see the obvious question running through the Roman’s mind: how would travelers from the edge of the world have heard of such a pathetic little place?
I went back to the wagon to check on the wounded soldier I had treated and told Sharon to follow with some water. I made sure Decius saw it, too, better to reinforce the notion that we were useful people, worth keeping alive.
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Chapter 19
The soldiers re-packed and formed a marching column with their customary efficiency. Seeing that all was in order, Publius gave the command and we trundled forward once more to the east. As before, Sharon rode in the wagon and did her best to tend to the injured Romans, while the rest of us kept pace on foot.
Once we had settled into a rhythm, I pulled Lavon aside.
“Decius noticed that you recognized the name of that village,” I said.
“I know,” he admitted. “It took me by surprise.”
“Why was it so important?”
“Luke’s Gospel records that after the Resurrection, Jesus met two of his followers walking down the road from Jerusalem to Emmaus. They didn’t recognize him, and he had a little fun with them. He pretended to be a stranger who knew nothing of what had happened in Jerusalem over the previous few days.”
I was still confused. “OK, but that doesn’t explain the significance of the place.”
He considered this for a moment.
“It’s not the location,” he finally replied. “It’s the name itself. In our time,
“Is it mentioned anywhere else in the Bible?” I asked.
He shook his head. “I don’t think so.”
“I’m starting to think I should have paid more attention in Sunday school,” I said.
It was not the last time I would find myself echoing that sentiment over the next few days.
Both of us pondered this for a few minutes; then Lavon glanced over toward Bergfeld.
“We might have another problem as well,” he said. “Decius asked about her. Who was she? How was she related to the rest of us?”
“And?”
“I told him she was the second daughter of her father, our king.”
I gave Lavon an odd look. That wasn’t the story we had cooked up in Boston.
“I know,” he sighed. “It sounds really stupid. But we need to protect her, and I thought that if she were a princess, the soldiers would be less likely to molest her. In the first century, the daughter of a merchant, even a rich one, was often just another trading commodity.”
“Did he buy it?”
Lavon shrugged. “Maybe. He commented that her clothing did not match her station. I answered that by telling him we concealed her status because we were a small party, unable to defend ourselves against robbers. We didn’t want to make ourselves any more of a target than we already were.”