CHAPTER 26 - The Burial

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Pontius Pilate, now visibly aged and trembling on the balcony, is attended by his huge grey‑pelt dog Banga. A drenched foreign guest, revealed to be the head of Pilate’s secret guard, arrives and reports the completion of the night’s burial: three condemned men—Dysmas, Gestas, and Yeshua Ha‑Nozri—have been retrieved from the hill, a deep pit dug in a solitary ravine north of Yershalaim, and the bodies interred with chitons, rings placed on their fingers (one notch for Yeshua, two for Dysmas, three for Gestas), and the grave sealed with stones. The burial party, led by the assistant Tolmai, is praised, and Pilate gifts a seal ring to Aphranius as a memento.

Aphranius then presents a blood‑stained purse containing thirty tetradrachmas, explaining that Judas of Kiriath was murdered that night near Gethsemane. He describes how Judas, after an ill‑fated encounter with Niza, was ambushed by two masked killers, robbed of his purse, and stabbed in the heart. The murderers wrapped the money and a note in a hide, fled into the olive grove, crossed the Kedron, and eventually rode away in a horse‑drawn procession that led them back to Jerusalem’s southern gate, where the rider changed disguise, entered the city, and disappeared. Aphranius argues that no woman could have lured Judas, that the motive must have been money, and that Judas likely hid his own funds in a secluded spot—specifically the olive‑press area of Gethsemane. Pilate orders Aphranius to search that locale the next morning and to locate the murderers.

Pilate interrogates Aphranius about the circumstances of Judas’s death, the source of the money, and the involvement of the high priest’s palace. He learns that the money packet was tossed over the fence of Kaifa’s palace without a note, confirming the killers’ attempt to frame the priests. Pilate briefly considers whether Judas might have committed suicide, but Aphranius dismisses the idea. Pilate then decides to try Aphranius for failing to protect Judas, but after a brief tirade he pardons him, rewarding the burial detachment, reprimanding the secret guard who lost Judas, and instructing that Matthew Levi be brought to him at once.

Matthew Levi, a ragged, mud‑covered man, is summoned. He refuses to sit in Pilate’s chair, explains he is filthy, and asks for the knife he had lost. Pilate gives him a bread‑knife taken from the centurion Mark, and Levi produces a parchment containing cryptic verses about death, life, and vice. Pilate examines it, offers Levi a position in his Caesarean library to copy papyri, and threatens him with execution if he refuses to cooperate. Levi declines, declares his intent to kill another man in Yershalaim, and warns Pilate of further bloodshed. Pilate admits he himself killed Judas.

Finally, exhausted, Pilate removes his cloak, belt, and sandal, lies on the couch he had set up on the balcony, and places his hand on Banga’s neck. Both fall asleep as the moon hangs high, the night deepening around them. The chapter ends with Pilate’s dream of walking on a moonbeam and the ominous image of a torch‑wielding centurion looming nearby.