in September.”
He dropped his head, chastened, and we fell again to silence.
Then it was my turn. “You said that Rome was built on seven hills. What about under the seventh?”
He brightened a little. “The seventh hill. It could be so. And yet a hill has nothing to do with the sun.”
“A sun rises over it?” I was reaching now.
He shrugged. “Perhaps. It’s the best notion we have had thus far.”
“So which is the seventh?” My voice was bright with hope.
“I could name the seven for you—but there would be no way of really determining which hill is the ‘seventh,’ for God made all the lands on the same day.” His hand reached up to rub his chin. “I could tell you with some confidence of the name of the one which would be considered the first hill, for tradition has it Rome was founded on the Palatine hill by Romulus. But as to the ‘last,’ I could not say. The others are named—let me see—Aventine, Capitoline, Quirinal, Viminal, Esquiline, and Caelian.”
Once again I could not help but admire his knowledge, un-helpful though it was in the present case. “But we’re looking for one that you can get underneath,” I reminded him. “That cannot be true of them all, surely?”
He shook his head. “Sadly, your assertion is not true—all the hills could well have subterranea—this very place where we now shelter is only one of the myriad underground tunnels in Rome. In fact”—the blue eyes blazed again—“we are under a hill now! Did you not see the ancient mound, when we entered through a dark door?”
“So you are saying that this might be one of the hills?” I gestured above my head, looking about me properly for the first time. I’d been so caught up in our desperate discourse that I had not noticed what was before my very eyes. I got to my feet. “What is this place?”
He stood, too, his posture giving weight to his words, like an actor. “A labyrinth of the dead. The Catacombs.”
I licked suddenly dry lips. “A labyrinth of . . . of the . . . dead?” I gave a shiver despite myself.
“To be sure,” he replied breezily. “All these cavities”—he pointed to the rectangular holes in the walls, set at regular intervals—“are graves. Observe, you can see the bones within, and the winding sheets too.”
I backed away from the charnel.
“And they are clearly respected still in this modern day—see, the devotional candles still burn.”
I cared not if the candles burned, I wanted out of this bone house and my fear showed in my face.
“Don’t be afeared. Death holds no horrors for those who believe in the afterlife.”
But I wasn’t sure I was one of those people.
“Think once more of San Lorenzo in his agony. There are many tombs here in the Catacombs, it’s true; yet there is peace and hope also.”
I had to disagree. “It’s pretty sinister, if you ask me.”
“You find it so? I feel only serenity, for this was a place of great faith.”
“How do you mean?”
“The first Christians used to worship in such places in the days when the Romans worshipped their false pagan deities and to name God or his Son could spell death. But the true faith is evident in these inscriptions—look . . . perhaps there is somewhat here that will instruct us.”
“You think?”
“It cannot hurt to look for clues.” He read for me the Latin characters scratched on the wall, spidery characters hewn into the stone, yet surprisingly neat and regular after the wear of centuries—a labor of love. “Here’s a reference to seven!”
“Soothly?” I came to see. “Anything about suns?”
“No . . . I was mistaken. They are family names . . . a deacon named Severus, and here”—his voice grew soft—“his daughter who died while he still lived, another seven as I thought, but now I see she was named Severa after her father.” He read as if he intoned a prayer. “ ‘The mortal body is buried here until He makes it rise again. And the Lord who has taken from Severa her chaste, pure, and forever inviolable soul with her saintly spirit will give it back adorned with spiritual glory. She lived nine years, eleven months, and fifteen days. Thus she passed from this earthly life.’ ”
I was touched by the fate of the little girl even so long ago, touched by the father who loved her enough to stand in this dark place weeping and carving by the light of a