CHAPTER 16 - The Execution

Chapter 164,870 wordsCompleted

At dusk the Roman cavalry ala and two Cappadocian cohorts, under centurion Mark “Ratslayer,” seal the foot of Bald Mountain, leaving only a narrow passage from the Jaffa road. A cart carries three condemned men—Yeshua Ha‑Nozri, Dysmas, and Gestas—each marked “robber and rebel” in Aramaic and Greek, followed by carts loaded with posts, ropes, and execution tools, and a procession of about two thousand onlookers. The crowd dwindles under the scorching heat; only two dogs and some lizards remain on the hill.

Among the few remaining observers is a solitary black‑bearded man, Matthew Levi. His backstory is recounted: two days earlier he and Yeshua had worked in a garden at Bethphage; Yeshua left alone, Levi fell ill, recovered, and rushed to Yershalaim. In the crowd he plotted to slip between soldiers and stab Yeshua to save him, but lacking a knife he stole a bread‑knife from a shop, only to arrive too late. In despair he writes frantic notes on a parchment, curses God, and prays for Yeshua’s death. His curses seem to summon a sudden storm: the sun vanishes, a black cloud with fiery threads rolls in, thunder rolls, and wind lifts dust.

While the storm builds, a tribune (the commander of the cohort) arrives on a crimson chlamys, receives a whispered order from Ratslayer, and together with the centurion they inspect the three posts. The execution proceeds: each condemned man is bound to a post, speared, given a water‑soaked sponge, and then killed with a swift thrust to the heart while the executioner chants “Praise the magnanimous hegemon.” Yeshua, Dysmas, and Gestas die in succession; the hooded man confirms each death.

The storm reaches its peak; the centurion shouts “Raise the cordon!” and the soldiers scramble down the hill as rain floods the slope. Soldiers slip, drown, and the cavalry retreats. In the chaos, one figure—Matthew Levi—remains. He strips his water‑soaked tallith, wades through the water up to the posts, cuts the ropes, lifts Yeshua’s body, and then releases it. He does the same for the other two bodies, leaving the three corpses on the soaked ground. After a few minutes the bodies disappear, and the hill is left empty as the storm subsides.