“Have they broken through?”
David nodded. “It is over.”
She struggled against him. “We must run!”
His brow furrowed, then cleared. “No, Herod’s troops have broken through to the base of the fortress. A contingent climbs now with supplies. The rest of the men are returning to camp.”
The sounds of battle outside the tent—they were victory cries, the pounding of weaponry in jubilation.
She sighed and relaxed against Herod’s couch. Then glanced at her surroundings. “David, let me stand!” Herod would return any moment. It would not do for him to find her lounging. “I am fine.”
Indeed, it was only a moment after she stood at David’s side before Herod strode into his tent, flinging armor from his body.
He lifted his head to his staff, assembling quickly in a line that cut through the middle of the space.
“Pack everything at once. We are going up.”
The line broke, and the tent so recently assembled was again torn apart, deflating like a burst wineskin, and packed into wagons and carts.
It took the better part of an hour to trek the switchback path up the red cliff to the fortress. Herod rode his own horse, its hooves picking over the loose gravel with care, as though he wanted to ride onto the plateau as a conquering general. His personal staff followed at an appropriate distance on foot. Three or four of the women climbed behind Lydia, with Riva trailing, her expression glum.
Three women, Herod had said. Three women he cared about. Salome and Cypros, his sister and mother. And Mariamme.
Lydia’s heart pounded with the exertion of the climb, and something more. She had come a long way to serve Mariamme. Would the woman be a tyrant like Cleopatra? As gentle as Octavia? Herod clearly cared for her, but he had said little of her character. He did not seem to think highly of her mother, Alexandra.
From the height of the cliff the desert stretched to the edges of the horizon, with only rock formations and the Salt Sea to break its silent desolation. They marched without speaking, each lost to his own thoughts.
But just before breaching the top of the winding path, a shout of welcome rang out and a single man rushed from the lip of the plateau.
Herod swung from his horse, arms outstretched. “Joseph! How glad I am to see your ugly face!”
The two embraced, Joseph pulled Herod upward, and a servant caught the reins of Herod’s horse. They followed.
Chaos reigned on the top of Masada.
Everywhere men barked commands. Women scattered and clustered, some holding babies, others with bulging pouches. And the noise! How had they not heard this cacophony as they climbed? The hot wind that threatened to send them all over the edge must have torn it from them and flung it skyward, for here among the rock-built ramparts the chatter bounced and echoed and deafened.
Lydia pushed forward into the enclosure only because others waited on the narrow path behind. Others jostled and edged around her.
Herod was following his brother Joseph, and where Herod went, his staff followed, so they all walked forward to a large building, crudely constructed from peach-colored stone and mud-brick, near the point of the elongated plateau.
A guard at the door stepped aside for Herod, but the newly titled king of Judea hesitated, glanced back at his staff. Was it a nervous insecurity in his expression?
“You”—he waved a finger in Lydia’s direction—“the girl from Egypt. Lydia. Come.”
She broke from the others with only a glance at David. Herod ducked under the lintel to enter the building and she followed.
The interior was dimly lit, and it took a moment to make out the figures of two women, one standing and the other seated.
The woman standing, perhaps about forty years old, sneered at him. “Well, Herod, another few days and we would have shriveled like field grass and blown off the plateau.”
But Herod’s attention was on the woman still sitting, hands resting in her lap and gaze cast downward. She wore a simple tunic with a light mantle the color of sapphires across her shoulders and
a matching blue head covering. When she raised her head, it was Lydia’s face she focused on, not Herod’s.
So innocent. Somehow, in all these months, Lydia had conjured an image of a woman as sophisticated as Cleopatra, hardened to a polished edge by the intricacies of political life.
But Mariamme’s lightly freckled skin and wide blue-green eyes held nothing of hardness. Lydia had heard from the staff that Mariamme was a singular beauty, and they had not exaggerated. But the girl had a sweet perfection that went beyond physical beauty, an inner sadness that provoked a strange feeling of protectiveness in Lydia.
“Mariamme, my beloved.” Herod was at her feet, kneeling, grasping her hands.
She allowed his touch but did not seem to welcome it. Her gaze was still upon Lydia, and in that tiny slice of a moment as their eyes connected, it was as if the girl opened her heart for Lydia to read, shared all the secrets that perhaps her mother did not even know.
An invisible thread of connection tugged at Lydia and she smiled, offering her friendship in that instant, seeing the answering smile from Mariamme as it was accepted.
Herod was glancing back at Lydia, tracing Mariamme’s attention. “Yes, yes, the girl. I have brought you Cleopatra’s finest handmaid, my love. Fit for a queen, she is. Served in the grand palace of Egypt for years, and prized for her way with children. And she is an artisan of some sort—I cannot remember—”
Mariamme rose, the movement smooth and elegant. She took a step toward Lydia, hands outstretched.
Lydia met her halfway, returning the handclasp.
“Thank you, Herod. I am certain she will serve me well.” Mariamme’s voice was serene, like cool water, and quiet.
Herod scrambled to his feet and circled to stand before her again.
Lydia took a step backward to allow the two to reunite.
Herod took Mariamme by the shoulders. “Our time is nearly come, my love.”
Alexandra cleared her throat and Herod dropped his hands, but not before flinging a withering glance in her direction.
“We have only to take Jerusalem now. And after this victory they will be at the gates to welcome us, I have no doubt. And then we will be married and you shall sit upon the throne of Judea as my queen.”
Alexandra snorted. “She is a queen with or without you, Herod. Her Hasmonean blood makes her queen, while your blood is as common as—”
“Silence, woman!” Herod’s hiss of a command held venom. “I have been granted kingship by right of descent from my father, Antipater, have been declared so by the Senate of Rome, and have earned it on the battlefield. Let me not hear your insults again.”
Alexandra’s gaze rolled to the ceiling, but she held her tongue.
Herod turned back to Mariamme, his hands taking hers once more. “It is time, my love. Time to reclaim Jerusalem.”
Accommodations at the Masada fortress were better than the desert tents, but not much. The sun beat as mercilessly and the wind tore at everything without respite. Lydia assisted Mariamme in packing her things, but there was little to be done in that regard. Instead, it was the supplies for feeding the soldiers and women that required the most work, and Lydia left
Mariamme the second morning to help, if only to speed them all toward Jerusalem.
She paused at the entrance of the large stone building where the provisions were housed and the men ate their meals. A dozen soldiers and a few women packed the room, lining crates with straw. One man, also dressed as a soldier, stood apart with a critical eye and hands on his hips. She crossed the room to him.
His glance flicked at her and then back to his workers. “Do not tell me those women are insisting on a finer meal
today
when we are trying—”
“I am here to help.”
He looked her up and down. “Help with what, little girl? Have those arms ever carried anything heavier than a platter of figs or an ivory comb?”
She frowned. “Have I somehow offended you before we’ve even met?”
He gave a patronizing little laugh and bowed. “My apologies, my lady. I am Simon. It is my job to get every worthless scrap off this plateau, down to the desert, and to the walls of Jerusalem. It is your job, I understand, to keep one woman pretty.”
“Ah, I see. It is not
me
you dislike, but only my position.”
He blinked and scowled. “I did not say I dislike you.”
It was Lydia’s turn to laugh, and when she did Simon looked at her once more, this time with more interest.
He was an attractive man, though perhaps ten years older than she. Tall, but with a lean build, skin a bit darker than the average Jew, and wavy dark hair in need of a trim. A day’s worth of stubble clung to his sharp jawline and dark shadows sagged beneath his eyes. Had he slept since they arrived?
“I am Lydia. The princess Mariamme has no need of me at the moment, and I came to see if I could be useful to you.”
“The
princess
? I see the would-be king Herod has you trained already.”
“I spoke of Mariamme’s Hasmonean descent, not her marriage to Herod. But you are part of his troops. Do you not support his kingship? Believe that the Parthian influence must be removed from your land?”
In response, Simon berated a passing slave girl for moving too slowly.
The girl jumped at his harsh rebuke, glanced at Lydia with tear-filled eyes, then ran.
Simon watched her go, then cleared his throat. “I am accustomed to commanding soldiers. I forget how delicately women must be handled.”
Lydia straightened. “You’ll find me able to take instruction, and to give it. Give me something to do or to oversee. Perhaps you could rest awhile.”
“Ha!” Simon jabbed a thumb toward the soldiers packing crates. “And you think my men would take orders from a pretty young girl?”
“Perhaps not, when they are accustomed to . . . you.”
He turned on her, arms crossed. “I don’t know where you’ve come from, little Lydia, but clearly you do not know much of this world. Nothing is as simple as you seem to think. Perhaps you should run back to your princess and see if she needs her feet washed or a cup lifted to her lips.”
His condescension stung, but she only nodded and pointed to one of the soldiers. “And you should tell your men that amphorae packed so closely will expand in the heat as we travel and arrive
cracked and empty.” She smiled. “But since that is your job, I’m certain you already knew that.”
She turned and strolled from the building but could feel his gaze on her back.
Indeed, over the next few days of frantic preparations, as everyone worked to pack crates and saddlebags, to load animals and small wagons, Lydia felt Simon’s glance turn toward her more than once, though she could not understand why. He had made his disdain for her, for Mariamme, and even somehow for Herod, very clear.
It took days to ready the hundreds of people and their belongings, to bury the dead on the battlefield, and to break down the soldiers’ camps—both Roman and Galilean. No one seemed sorrowful to leave the fortress they had feared would be their tomb, and Herod was heard declaring more than once that enlarging and improving the fortress, even building a palace up here, would be the first of his many planned building projects when he had secured his kingship.
When at last the thousands set out for Jerusalem, David calculated for Lydia that only a week remained until the Day of Atonement, Yom HaKippurim
.
“Already you are becoming a Jew, Lydia.” He grinned and pointed north across the desert. “Only a Jew would be eager to see such a day in the City of God.”
She had told him nothing of her task, and he never asked about the wooden box that weighted the bottom of her sack of belongings.
Days of walking, nights of sleeping under the cold stars, more walking. From the pit of the Salt Sea to the heights of the city, it seemed they had walked not only northward but a mile upward.
The march gave Lydia little time to spend with Mariamme, who rode in a roofed chariot with her mother and her younger brother, Aristobulus, bouncing over the rutted ground until her teeth must have rattled. Lydia was glad to walk.
Herod instructed his brother Joseph to keep a close watch on Mariamme’s brother, Aristobulus, to be certain he didn’t slip away to join Antigonus’s ranks, then chose to ride with his own mother and sister. He was clearly devoted to both. Along the way the story was whispered more than once of the night they had all escaped from Jerusalem a year earlier, when one of the loaded wagons, in which his mother was traveling, overturned. Herod thought Cypros had been killed, and in the misery of his nighttime flight and the loss of his mother, he nearly ended his own life.
Of Herod’s sister, Lydia had yet seen little. Salome was like a mountain cat—dark and sleek, moving unseen in the shadows. Her presence seemed to be felt everywhere and yet she appeared nowhere.
On the fourth day, Simon appeared at her side, though he did not look at her or speak to her, only kept walking. She left him to his silence for as long as she could, but if he did not wish to speak to her, why did he walk with her?
When she could tolerate the strangeness no longer, she thought of a question. “What do you know of Salome, Herod’s sister?”