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‘Everett was having fun, wasn’t he?’ Costas said.

‘What do you mean?’

‘Well, all this business was deadly serious for him, of course, hiding the ancient gospel and leaving this trail, but he was also having fun.’

‘He loved puzzles,’ Jeremy replied. ‘A codebreaker.’

‘A bit like Claudius.’

‘A treasure hunt can be like a game of chess,’ Jack murmured. ‘With someone who thinks they’re always one move ahead of you, and leaves openings to make the game last longer, and then you trounce them.’

‘I thought you were an archaeologist, not a treasure-hunter, Jack,’ Costas said, with a twinkle in his eye. ‘I’m getting seriously worried about you.’

‘Bingo!’ Jeremy said excitedly. ‘It worked!’ Six words had appeared on the screen.

‘Well I’ll be damned,’ Jack murmured.

‘It’s in German, of course.’

‘Ah.’

‘How’s your German?’ Jeremy asked, scribbling down the words on his notepad.

‘Rusty.’ Jack paused, scanning the words. ‘Grabeskirche. I think that’s church, though there might be a more specific meaning. But I know a man who can help.’ He dug his cell phone out of his pocket, flipped it open and pressed the number for the IMU secure line. ‘Sandy, this is Jack. Please find Maurice Hiebermeyer and have him call me asap. Thanks.’ He held the phone expectantly, and a moment later it chirped. ‘Maurice? Good to hear you.’ Jeremy ripped a sheet of paper from his pad and gave it to Jack, who took it with the pencil and walked outside. A few minutes later he returned, still holding the phone open. ‘I read the words to him, and he’s going to mull it over for a moment then call me back.’

‘How is our friend?’ Costas asked.

‘He’s in a pizzeria in Naples,’ Jack replied. ‘Seems to have had a change of heart about the place. Says as long as you actually want to string along the bureaucracy, it’s a piece of cake. All you have to do is show up at the superintendency in the morning and throw another spanner in the works, then you can go away and relax for the rest of the day. He’s on his second circuit of the pizzerias. Says even if we were allowed back into the passageway in Herculaneum again, he wouldn’t fit.’

‘Cue his latest discovery in the Egyptian desert, the one he’s been trying to tell you about,’ Costas said. ‘No tight passageways, more room to maneouvre. Would we care to join him? Finally?’

‘Nope. Didn’t even mention it. His mouth was full.’

‘What did he say, seriously?’

‘He’s really taken the initiative. The authorities had already used him as a media figure when they got him in to excavate the tunnel, the famous Egyptologist, showing they’d got the best person in to do the job. He’s fluent in Italian, and they probably hadn’t reckoned that he’d become an overnight star on Italian TV. He’s used it to our advantage. The superintendency wanted him to front a big press event on the Anubis statue, and he insisted it take place in the villa site, outside the tunnel entrance. That way, he and Maria were able to keep an eye on things. He’s made a huge play in the media about the dangers of the site, the need to seal it up until the funding’s there for a complete excavation of the villa, once and for all. He insisted that the superintendency concrete up the entrance to the tunnel while he watched. They were only too happy to oblige, of course, but at least it means we know that what lies at the end is still intact.’

‘Amazing guy,’ Costas murmured, then eyed Jack closely. ‘Was he able to find out anything about Elizabeth?’

Jack shook his head. ‘Nothing.’ The phone chirped, and he rushed outside again. He returned a moment later, pocketing the phone, looking at the notebook. ‘Here it is.’ He cleared his throat, and read slowly: ‘“The word of Jesus is in the grave chapel.”’

There was silence for a moment, and they all looked at the painting on the wall.

‘The word of Jesus,’ Costas said. ‘Surely that means the gospel, what we’re after.’

‘It might,’ Jack murmured.

‘And the grave chapel. That must be this room. He’s telling us the gospel is somewhere in this room?’

‘Or he’s simply telling us that this room is a burial chapel.’

‘Not much of a clue.’

‘It doesn’t add up.’ Jack looked around the austere interior, then back to the painting. ‘He could have hidden it here. But somehow it’s too obvious. He would have known that anyone standing here, anyone who’d reached the point of decrypting those Greek letters, would have known something of his life, his background. There’s something more, something we haven’t recognized. There’s a big piece missing.’

‘Nineteen seventeen,’ Jeremy murmured. ‘That’s the key year.’

‘I can’t see what else we can tease out of it,’ Jack said.

‘Did Everett remain here, after Montgomery left?’ Costas asked.

Morgan looked up, distracted. ‘Huh?’

‘In 1917. When Everett and Montgomery came here. The war was still on, and Everett was still a British intelligence officer. Did he remain in the States, working with the Americans?’

‘Ah. I forgot to say.’ Morgan cleared his throat. ‘I was in London and had a few days in the National Archives at Kew. To my astonishment I found a file of his personal correspondence, mainly related to his wound, doctors’ reports, medical board evaluations, stuff that couldn’t be classified as top secret because it was routine officers’ papers, unrelated to his intelligence activities. What they’d forgotten was that medical reports specify where a soldier’s being posted next, on the basis of the fitness recommendation. It turns out Everett already knew his next posting, assigned to him just before the trip to America. The British Army realized they needed decryption experts at the front, ideally officers with field experience. And somewhere along the line, the War Office discovered that Everett was not just a mathematician but had also studied Arabic at university. That made him a real prize. After returning from America in 1917 he became a cipher officer with British Middle Eastern forces, on the other big British front of the First World War, fighting the Ottoman Empire. He accompanied General Allenby in the liberation of Jerusalem.’

Jack suddenly went still. He let his pencil drop, and looked up at Morgan. ‘Say that again.’

‘Everett was in Jerusalem in late 1917. We only have that faded picture of him as an old man to go on, but I believe you can actually make him out in the famous photograph of Allenby and his staff dismounted, walking through the Jaffa Gate on the eleventh of December of 1917. I believe he’s one of the officers behind T. E. Lawrence, Lawrence of Arabia. We know they walked on through the Old City to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, where they prayed in the square. Everett stayed on in Jerusalem as an intelligence officer with the British occupying forces for the remainder of the war. They had plenty of time on their hands after the Turkish defeat, and that explains how he drafted an architectural treatise on the Holy Sepulchre, the manuscript of his I told you about that I’ve been working up for publication. After his demobilization from the army in 1919 he returned to America and spent the rest of his life here in this nunnery. His lungs had been so badly damaged in the gas attack in 1916 that he was unable to travel again, and he eventually became an invalid.’

Jack had his back to them still, and was staring at the painting. ‘Well I’ll be damned,’ he whispered.

‘That usually means something,’ Costas said.

‘I know where Everett buried his treasure.’ Jack stood up quickly, and turned round with a broad smile on his face. ‘That message in the letters. The word of Jesus is in the grave chapel. Not grave chapel. Maurice has given us a literal translation. There was no reason why he should have done otherwise. But my German isn’t that rusty. I knew that word was familiar. It’s from the last time I was in Jerusalem. It’s the German for Holy Sepulchre.’