“What happened to the snakes?” Antigone called out.
“Alexander hates them,” Simeon replied. “I suspect they were raked out and put in sacks.”
“They were sacred,” Antigone countered.
“Not to Alexander,” Miriam snapped. She walked up to the pillar and looked at the metal clasps. They had been intricately made by some blacksmith many years earlier. They were hinged. One part was riveted to the pillar; the other could swing backward and forward. There were three clasps in all; at the back of the pillar protruded a wooden peg on which the Crown had rested. Miriam scrutinized this carefully. She walked back, taking care when she crossed the row of spikes dividing the two pits.
“It’s nothing more than a dirty chamber, is it?” Antigone declared, getting to her feet. “The glory and the power are gone.”
Miriam knelt and stared at the pillar.
“Antigone,” she pleaded, “can’t you help us? Didn’t Jocasta ever tell you how the Crown could be removed?”
“It was a secret,” the priestess replied, “handed down from one high priestess to another.”
Miriam sat, the iron bar with its protruding plate at the end nestling against her waist.
“Tell me,” she said, “the Crown was removed on certain occasions?”
“Aye, on great feasts no more than two, three times a year.” Antigone replied absentmindedly.
“So.” Miriam made herself comfortable. She grasped the iron bar; it was cool in her sweaty grasp. “The high priestess came in here by herself?”
“Yes,” Antigone replied. “Everyone else would wait outside. Once she was ready, Jocasta would unlock the bronze doors and release the bar. The doors would swing open. Everyone would file in, and Jocasta would hold up the Crown. Whatever the occasion was, the taking of oaths or pledges, the leaders of the council would touch the Crown held by Jocasta with the tips of their fingers. When the ceremony was over they would retire.”
“Was the Crown heavy?” Simeon asked.
“Oh, no,” Antigone replied, “it looked much heavier than it was. In fact, it seemed very light.”
“But where was the secret kept,” Simeon persisted, “I mean, if the high priestess died suddenly?”
“I don’t know,” Antigone confessed. “You saw the pectoral that Jocasta wore; that was her symbol of office.”
Miriam stared down at the floor. She recalled that awful, half-burned cadaver. “The pectoral wasn’t there!” she murmured. “When Jocasta was killed, I am sure the pectoral was gone!”
“Perhaps her killer took it,” Antigone replied, “or the soldier who found the corpse?”
“No, no he wouldn’t have taken it,” Miriam countered. “Such looting would mean crucifixion.” Miriam moved and, as she did, felt a tug, as if the dagger in the sash around her waist had been pulled. She moved away from the iron bar.
“What on earth?” She took the dagger out and crouched down. She pushed the blade close to the iron plate on the end of the bar; the dagger stuck to it.
“Simeon, here, look!”
Her brother hastened across. She did it again, the dagger stuck hard against the side of the plate.
“It’s a magnet,” Miriam declared, springing to her feet. She crouched down on hands and knees, moving along the iron bar. The clasps that held it to iron stands riveted into the ground were not soldered fast and could be pulled back. Miriam, assisted by Simeon, now pulled these loose and lifted the bar up. It was as long as one of the great pikes carried by the guards regiment in battle and, like them, surprisingly light.
“It’s hollow,” Simeon exclaimed.
Miriam lowered the pole; it swayed precariously in her hand. She recalled how soldiers managed their pikes in battle. She turned slightly sideways and, coming to the edge of the charcoal pit, lowered the pole. At first she was clumsy but eventually, helped by Simeon and watched by round-eyed Antigone, they lowered the pole so that the magnet at the end caught the iron clasps. These were easily pulled back. She tried each one.
“The clasps are well oiled,” she murmured. “They come away, and because of the wooden peg at the back, the Crown would remain firm.” She thrust the pole into Simeon’s hand, went across, placed her dagger on top of the pillar, and going back, lowered the pole again. The magnet caught the dagger. She lifted this up, pulling the pole back as if it were a piece of rope, and with a cry of triumph, she snatched the dagger from the end. She turned, face bright.
“That’s how it was done! That’s the secret! Using the plate on the end of the pole you can release the clasps and then, with the magnet, simply lift the Crown off!”
“It’s even easier than that.” Simeon examined the iron plate, pointing to how it tapered to a sharp end. “If you are unsure of the magnet, you can use this to prize the clasp loose and then hook up the Crown.”
“That’s how it was done,” Miriam exclaimed. “The high priestess kept to the ritual; she did not bring anything into the shrine.”
Antigone stared, mouth half open in surprise.
“Jocasta knew that,” Simeon confirmed, “but the one who stole the Crown. How would he know?”
“The pectoral,” Miriam declared. “That’s why the assassin burned Jocasta’s corpse. He wasn’t trying to hide any sign of torture but to disguise the fact that he had taken the pectoral. Don’t you remember?” Miriam continued excitedly, “the pectoral had a pendant in the center.”
“Of course,” Antigone added, “it must have been some form of locket that contained instructions on how to remove the Crown.”
“In the end the secret wasn’t so hard to figure out,” Miriam declared. “It’s just that we never realized that the iron guardrail was really a rod, with a hook and magnet on the end.” She laughed. “It was more a puzzle than a mystery.”
“Yet you are no further to reclaiming the Crown!”
“No, I’m not,” Miriam replied. “And, for all I know, it may now be many miles from Thebes.” She heard a rapping on the door. “Lift the bar,” she urged.
Antigone did so. “Come in!” she called.
The officer entered, helmet cradled under his arm.
“Mistress Miriam, Demetrius is outside. He has something to show you.”
Miriam followed him out. Demetrius was holding the bridle of a horse; across its back, covered with a bloody, dirty sheet, was the corpse of a man. Miriam glimpsed a blood-stained head on one side and the military boots dangling down over the other.
“You were right.” Demetrius cheeks were tear-stained. “It didn’t take us very long.”
Miriam went down and lifted the corpse’s head. A deep gash gouged one side where the skull had been staved in; the rest of the face was covered in dust.
“We found the horse about eight miles from Thebes,” Demetrius exclaimed, coming around. “It was off the main highway, cropping some grass. There was no sign of Alcibiades.”
“Wouldn’t the assassin have driven the horse away?” Simeon asked.
“He would have tried,” Demetrius explained, “but it’s a cavalry mount. It would always return to where its rider had left it.”
“So how did you find Alcibiades?”
“We searched through a rocky outcrop. We found bloodstains, signs of a newly dug grave.” Demetrius gently touched the corpse. “I’m taking you back to the Cadmea,” he murmured, his face tight. His eyes had a wild angry look.
“He was no traitor, Israelite. He was a soldier, a good companion. He would get drunk, and, yes, he had his weaknesses, but he was a brave Macedonian. I won’t hear differently. I’ll build a funeral pyre; he deserves a hero’s end.”
“Do that,” Miriam replied. She clasped Demetrius’s hand. “He was no traitor. He was probably lured out to some meeting and then killed.” She looked up at the lowering sky and felt the rain on her face. “But don’t build the pyre tonight,” she murmured, “we are going to be drenched. Tomorrow perhaps.” Miriam thanked Antigone and, followed by Simeon, took the path through the olive grove back toward the camp.