Sunday, April 24, 2011

Chapter Ten

If this is your first time reading with us, go to the archives at right, click the second arrow and the title Chapter One will drop down. Double click on that chapter and read it first, then proceed with the remainder of the book in order by clicking down the arrows.


Empty Home; Empty Heart

© Jeannie St. John Taylor

“Today if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts.” Psalm 95:7

Still shaken, Atarah’s mother opened the door of her bedchambers and walked immediately to the fireplace where she could stroke the mane of the wooden lion’s head. The carving was the last thing inside this house Atarah would ever touch and placing her own fingers on the face somehow made Mother feel closer to her daughter.
Her knees suddenly weak, Mother walked over to her bed. Borrowing strength from the tall mahogany bedpost, she held on with one hand and slid into a sitting position by the red velvet brocade drape.
She stared at the reflection of the woman in the mirror on the wall opposite her. She appeared as feeble now as she’d felt strong moments earlier when she stood in front of the slaves, commanding their respect. No. Demanding respect and obedience. Every slave had complied. Every single one. Even Dagaar. She marveled at the power she’d wielded for the first time in her life.
And the last time. With Nympha’s screams the slaves had scattered, deserting her like buzzards leaving a bloody carcass at the approach of hyenas. The vengeful glare Dagaar shot her direction chilled her. When Ishan returned home and Dagaar informed him she had helped their daughter escape she would pay a heavy price.
A small mirthless laugh at life’s penchant to shift so quickly escaped her lips. She idly noted the wrinkles around her mouth and eyes deepen. Her gaze roamed the room taking in ivory chairs, carved wood and opulent paintings. The luxury surrounding her no longer meant anything. She’d lost everything today. The baby. Atarah. Even Ishan.
Walking closer to the mirror she leaned forward studying flaccid skin and drooping jowls. How had she become that pale old woman? She placed the tips of her fingers on the cheekbones beside each ear and lifted. Years melted away. Present time faded and she was beautiful once again.
Desired.
She closed her eyes, drifting back to the night she made her choice. Once again she lounged on a large boulder at the edge of the garden, lovely Elika again. Her skin stretched smooth and taut over a shapely figure clothed in gauzy blue. The heady fragrance of lavender and honeysuckle teased her senses under a black sky twinkling with millions of stars. Every man present longed to possess her, and she reveled in the attention. Was that what had changed her? Had pride cause her downfall?
Or did the music vibrating through the breeze turn her into a different person? She remembered the excitement of dancing, twirling around and around, head back, arms overhead spiraling through the rows of lavender. That night marked the release of new cravings that led her thoughts astray.
Elika concentrated, straining to bring back events dimmed by time. She had stayed after the musicians left and music floated down the hillside as faint as the kiss of a butterfly’s wing. Only a few young people lounged on benches. She lingered at the edge of the garden mesmerized by turtles meandering through the rows of lavender with candles flickering on their shells.
The evening waned. The time to go home came and went and she knew she should leave. She knew. But she didn’t. Some wild thing had arisen inside her. Captured her. Elika remained while the young people preparing to worship shed their garments under the spreading trees. When crickets stopped chirping and the dashing Ishan slipped an arm around her waist, a welcome foil for the evening chill, she left willingly with him.
Until that night, Elika had worshipped no god but the One True God.
A few days later when young Noah pleaded with her to repent and return to God, she refused. She responded to the grief on her slave’s face with guilty defensiveness. Anger flared, she lifted her chin arrogantly and hardness crept into her soul.  
Years afterward Noah repeated his plea, assuring her God would forgive and welcome her back. But by then it was too late. Her friend’s goodness kept him from understanding the terrible things she’d done and the impossibility of his request. She couldn’t bring herself to confess the guilt that weighed her down even though she knew confession stood as a prerequisite for forgiveness.
 God would never forgive her. Never.
She could never forgive herself.



Sunday, April 17, 2011

Chapter Nine


Through the Wall
© Jeannie St. John Taylor

Again, when a wicked person turns away from the wickedness he has committed and does what is just and right, he shall save his life. Because he considered and turned away from all the transgressions that he had committed, he shall surely live; he shall not die.” Ezekiel 18: 27, 28
           
Bright light surrounded Atarah. She closed her eyes, arms out, palms up, soaking in the warmth that manifested as comfort rather than searing heat. Finally. She had missed this. Longed for the Light. Through closed lids the light shone brighter than a thousand suns, capable of flashing forth and vaporizing her instantly. She somehow knew that. Felt the possibility. But the light communicated a different purpose.
“Atarah, fear not, for I have redeemed you. I have called you by name; you are mine.” The voice, like the roar of many waters, came from the light. Was the light. “When you pass through the waters, I will be with you. You are precious in my eyes, and honored, and I love you. Fear not.”

For the second time in as many weeks an earthquake jolted Atarah to consciousness. She couldn’t sort out her whereabouts or how long she’d been asleep. Minutes? Days? Was that a baby crying?
Gadreel! He was still tied to her with the brown scarf.
The Dream! Fear not.
            “Help me dig out!” Shua hissed. Using only her hands, the slave was frantically sweeping dirt and rocks to open a low tunnel to the outside. 
Atarah hurried toward the slave, crawling on hands and knees. She kissed the top of the baby’s head. “Shhhh, shhhhh. It’ll be okay.” He shrieked and flailed as she tossed aside rocks and clawed away dirt with her bare hands. Small stones rained around them. She arched her body over the baby, shielding him. But despite her best efforts, a small stone struck the boy’s arm and his cries grew louder.
“Quiet him.” Shua snapped. “Dagaar’s out there!”
“God of Noah, help us!” The involuntary prayer shot from Atarah’s lips.
As though in response an explosion sounded in the distance. Immediately, a man’s voice began shouting terse instructions. Dagaar! Atarah could tell by the volume that he stood just on the other side of the wall. Right beside their hiding place. She stopped digging and threw both arms around Gadreel.
Pulling the baby to her chest to muffle his cries, Atarah strained to hear. The jumble of voices revealed ten or twenty men in Dagaar’s search party! Way more than she had expected. Pebbles from overhead bounced and tumbled around her. Shua stared at her with wide, terrified eyes, dirt covering her arms up to the elbows.
Suddenly, like a giant fist slamming into the earth, another violent quake hit, accompanied by the thunder of retreating feet. Fear not!
Silence followed, except for the loud shrieks of a baby-tantrum. Atarah sat without moving for several minutes. The baby battered her chest with his legs and feet. She didn’t try to stop him. Calming him was impossible when he escalated to this point.
A rock loosened by the quake smashed Atarah’s arm. She shook off the pain and began dragging rocks from the exit again. Shua stared without moving. “Dig!” Atarah commanded. “They’re gone.”
That might or might not be true, but Dagaar knew they were here. If she could hear Dagaar, he could hear Gadreel. And he had certainly heard her cry for help. He knew where they were. He’d be back.
Shua hissed at the baby as she removed rocks. “Quiet!” He continued shrieking.
“Don’t reprimand him again.” Atarah spoke sharply, finally herself again. “You’re upsetting him more.” Besides, what did the noise matter now?
            Seemingly working in tandem with the women, a small aftershock rattled additional rocks from the opening and a shaft of light burst through from the other side. The hole was barely large enough to maneuver.
            “Let’s go!” Atarah shouted.
She crawled through the escape as quickly as she could while holding a baby with one arm. Her leg struck a rock and the arm holding Gadreel scraped against sharp debris. Dust billowed around her. Choking, she fought her way outside. The instant she felt a change in the air, she jumped up and sprinted blindly forward. She held the edge of her robe over Gadreel to keep him from breathing dust. Her only plan revolved around outrunning Dagaar. Somehow.
Fear not!
Unexpectedly, she slammed into prickly foliage and stumbled backward. Momentarily stunned and unable to see because of the dust still obscuring her vision, Atarah spun in a circle to catch her bearings. What had she run into? Where was she? Where was Dagaar and his gang? Surely she’d escaped the alley. Had she evaded them? Breathing rapidly, she fluttered a hand to clear the air and saw the city wall rising in front of her. She’d run into the cedar hedge planted in front of it.
Shua materialized out of the haze, gasping for breath. Dagaar and his men were nowhere in sight. Gadreel was quiet.
“You okay?” Atarah couldn’t remember when Gadreel had stopped crying, how long the quake had lasted, or the direction in which her home lay. But it appeared they were alone. She checked over the baby, who smiled up at her, a layer of dust coating his face. She surprised herself by smiling back at him.
She blew away some of the gray dust from around the baby’s eyes and kissed the tip of his nose, evoking a giggle. With a surge of unexpected pleasure Atarah realized her presence provided his comfort and security. A smile briefly flicked up the corners of her mouth. Squinting to see through the thinning dust past piles of rubble, she adjusted the suddenly-heavy baby.
The slave trembled visibly.
With dust settling, the walls of the covered alley that had sheltered them moments earlier should be visible by now, but Atarah could see only rubble. “Where’s the alley?”
Shua glanced around and massaged her forehead. “I-I don’t know.” She looked as frightened and disoriented as Atarah felt. “It’s just . . . gone. We barely made it out in time.”
 An eerie silence hung over the landscape, adding a frightening strangeness to the desolate scene. Shua retraced their steps a short distance before turning back toward Atarah with an astonished look. “No one’s here,” she whispered.
“But Dagaar never gives up.” Apprehension gripped Atarah as she spoke his name. He was out there somewhere. Not knowing where made it worse.
Instead of responding, Shua froze, staring past Atarah with wide eyes, all the color draining from her face. Atarah whipped around expecting Dagaar. Instead, she saw a distant plume of gray ash rising above the wall. The explosion they’d heard had come from an erupting volcano. The running feet and shouting had been Dagaar and his cronies fleeing to safety. The slave’s arms hung uselessly at her side, her blank expression nearly catatonic.
 “Shua!” Atarah snapped. “I need your help!” The slave slowly rotated her head to stare at Atarah, a bewildered expression on her face. Atarah would have to find the escape in the wall by herself. Fortunately the slave had already told her about a hole somewhere near the base of that wall on the other side of the hedge. But once she found the hole, she had no idea what would happen.  
Fighting away thoughts of the sheer cliffs on the other side and the suffocating ash that would soon drift down to cover everything, Atarah wrapped her arms around Gadreel and dove into the spiky foliage. Surprisingly, on the other side of the aromatic greenery she found the space between the cedar and the wall wide enough to navigate.
Knowing she’d find the exit somewhere near the bottom, Atarah searched for it from a crouching position, dragging her hand along the rocky surface as she moved.
Nothing.
Her quads ached. The baby must have gained fifty pounds.
After several minutes, Atarah pushed back through the hedge to where Shua still stood staring vacantly. She gripped both the slave’s arms and shook her vigorously. “You know where it is! I don’t. Show me!”
A spark of recognition flickered in the slaves eyes. “There!” She pointed to a spot a few cubits down the hedge. 
“I tried there!” Anger born of fear and frustration flared in Atarah. “There’s no hole!”
“Yes there is.” The slave sprang to life and thrust aside cedar branches. She disappeared inside the hedge. Atarah found her sitting on the ground pushing against a large flat stone with her back, inching it away from a hidden opening. Atarah knelt beside the slave and threw all her strength into the task. Soon they managed to drive the stone to the end of a groove cut for it, exposing a nearly-waist-high triangular split in the wall.
Wind blustered through the opening, but it was the sight of the vista beyond that pushed Atarah backward, trembling. In the distance, an ash cloud advanced toward them from the mounting plume. A glowing river of orange trickled down the slopes of the mountain beneath it. Directly in front of her, vertical cliffs dropped away to rocks far below.
Memories of the eruptions she’d lived through as a kid flashed through her head. They had been deadly. Animals and people who couldn’t find shelter, suffocated and died as a result of the ash and toxic fumes. She remembered playing with a doll on her bed as she watched through the window, delighted when nearly-white ash covered the balcony and wrapped over the balustrade. She’d been completely unaware of the tragedy beyond the walls of her own house.
More than one eruption deposited ash in the streets. It took slaves and men of the city employing wagons pulled by camels and horses more than a year to haul away the ash from one volcanic event when the heavy ash mounded more than two feet deep. Later she’d heard a messenger claim no ash had fallen on Noah’s mountain. Father had scoffed.
Atarah gazed up at the plume. Dagaar didn’t need to find them. The ash would bring on their demise.
“I’ll go first,” Shua said. “I know how.”
“Go where?” Atarah saw only empty space.
As though on a mission, the suddenly-energized slave scooted through the triangle and seized a rope hanging on the other side. Holding onto the tether, she disappeared over the edge feet first. Moments later her faint voice floated up. Atarah couldn’t hear what she said.
Atarah ran her tongue over dusty lips and spit out grit. She inched forward on her bottom until her feet jutted out into thin air and she could see Shua. The slave balanced on a ledge below, holding onto an outcropping of rock and beckoning to Atarah. Wind whipped Shua’s clothing and hair. “Grab the rope,” she yelled.
Atarah closed her eyes and leaned her forehead on the arm braced against rock, taking deep breaths. They didn’t settle her. At all. She was so afraid of heights that standing on a stool buckled her knees.
Gadreel wriggled one hand free and poked two grubby fingers into her mouth. “Not now, lamb,” she murmured.
She could hear Shua speaking to her, but the wind whistling past the triangle drowned her out. Atarah had no idea what the slave was saying, but it didn’t matter. She could not do this.
But she had to.
She tucked the baby’s hand back into the wrap, pressed her lips to his forehead and moved closer to the opening where she could fasten her eyes on the ledge instead of the dizzying heights and the rocks far below. After checking the sling one more time she kissed Gadreel  and whispered, “God of Noah keep him safe,” into his hair. Easing her feet further out into space she drew a calming breath and with surprising confidence, reached out and seized the life line.
“Tie the rope around your waist,” Shua called.
“Won’t work.” She’d have to wrap the rope around Gadreel, too, and that would be too risky.
With her mouth set in a determined line, Atarah carefully wrapped the rope around her left wrist and grasped it firmly with the opposite hand. She closed her eyes and took a moment to relive The Dream, drawing courage from the memory. Fear not. Sucking in another deep breath, she pushed away from the safety of the triangle, dangling in space above the chasm. Wind whistled past her, thrashing her hair into wild patterns about her face. She twisted in the wind.
The baby squealed with joy.
Focusing on the ledge, Atarah lowered herself bit by bit in slow motion, the rope burning her wrist and hand. When her feet finally made contact with solid ground, Shua grasped her arm and guided her backward to a shallow cave someone had long ago hacked into side of the precipice. Atarah crumpled into a heap, her body shuddering.
“Press back against the rock until you stop shaking,” Shua’s face registered anxiety. “Let go of the rope.”
            “I-I d-don’t think I c-can.”  Atarah meant it. Her fingers were frozen in place. “You’ll h-have to p-pry my fingers free.”
Atarah’s lips quivered. She couldn’t seem to regain control of her body even though the ledge was wider than she had expected. She could sit with her legs stretched straight in front of her and shouldn’t have feared falling, but she did. Every time she opened her eyes the sharp drop into nothingness just a few hand-widths away sent a surge of nausea through her. She worried she might pass out.
Worse, she could now see that the ledge narrowed a just few cubits beyond. “Is that the way?”
Shua nodded.
Atarah leaned forward, threw up over the rim of the cliff and wiped her mouth on her sleeve. Gadreel wriggled and giggled in her lap. “Hold still, precious lamb.”
Shua flicked the rope several times until the section looped over a rock near the opening above fell free. She coiled the rope, looped it over her shoulder and eased into the depression beside Atarah.
There was no going back now.
Atarah craned her neck to look at the hole above. “You think Dagaar knows this place?”
“No.”  Worry creased Shua’s forehead. “Maybe.”
“We should pull up our knees so if anyone looks down . . .” An abrupt shiver jolted the ledge. Atarah screamed and immediately smacked a hand over her mouth. Gadreel  began to cry. The odor of her vomit on her sleeve assaulted her nostrils and she fought the urge to upchuck again.
            “Aftershock,” Shua said breathlessly.
            “We have to go.” Atarah crawled to her knees, then pulled herself to her feet, steadying herself against the side of the cliff.
            “Not yet.” Obviously reluctant to move, the slave held her position. “A stronger shock could. . . .”
            “Get up!” Atarah commanded. They weren’t safe here either. They weren’t safe anywhere. Finally in charge of her emotions again she ventured forth, placing one foot in front of the other. Her legs wobbled. “Get up now!”
Accustomed to obedience, Shua carefully stood.
“We can do this,” Atarah said. They had to.
The path stretched endlessly ahead.
Terrifying. 
Impossible.
Atarah led the way, trailing one hand over the face of the vertical rise for balance, holding onto stones that jutted out no more than a finger-width.
“Been here before?” Atarah called over her shoulder in an attempt to keep the slave’s thoughts occupied..
“Yes.” The wind blew Shua’s voice away.
“When?”
“Last . . . week.” The slave sounded short of breath and even more exhausted than Atarah felt.
“You sleep at all last week?”
“Not much.”
Stoically Atarah plodded forward, placing one foot in front of the other. On and on. Step after deliberate step. Growing more tired by the second. She could no longer risk even a brief glance backward to check on the slave.
Mercifully, the steady rhythm of her body soon lulled Gadreel to sleep. The limp baby felt heaver than before they left, but though Atarah found it difficult to maintain her equilibrium on a ledge that was sometimes little wider than her body, her job was easier with a quiet baby than a bouncy one.
Grey-white flecks of ash like the ones she’d seen years earlier began drifting around her. Atarah quickened her pace, her head throbbing with alarm. She couldn’t bend to catch the hem of her garment to draw up as protection for her face, but she did make sure cloth covered the baby. She managed to keep a hand over her nose most of the time.
“Breathe through your scarf,” she shouted back to Shua. The slave made no response.
A thin layer of grey coated the path rendering it potentially slippery. Atarah slowed her pace, her steps more timid. She expected the ash to puff in a cloud around her each time she set her foot, but the ash was apparently too heavy for that.
No one spoke now. The only sounds came from labored breathing and scuffing footfalls. Mist rolled in. Years earlier, the cloud after one eruption had masked toxic fumes. Did this one? She could no longer hear the slave behind her.
She paused to listen. Nothing.
After what seemed like hours, the ledge veered under a natural overhang and into the mountain. The uneven floor of a cave spread out beneath Atarah’s feet. She could no longer stand straight, but she could touch overhead rocks for added stability and the vertical cliff now dropped away several arms lengths behind her at the cave’s mouth. The ash below her feet thinned, then after a few steps, cleared completely.
No longer afraid of falling she stopped and peered behind her through the haze. “Shua?” She tried to shout, but her voice barely functioned. Wheezing coughs wracked her body. “Shua?”
Nothing.
Panic fluttered in Atarah’s chest. “Shua?”
A bent form appeared through the gray and Shua collapsed onto the floor of the cave gasping for breath. Atarah grabbed the slave’s arm to help her and together they staggered further into the cave where they’d be protected from the ash. Once there, still hunched over beneath the low ceiling, they fell into each other’s arms, sobbing with relief. Squeezed between them, the baby woke up crying.
Sinking to the floor, Atarah swayed back and forth in a futile attempt to console him. He couldn’t be comforted. She tried to spit on the edge of an inner clean garment to wash his face, but her tongue was too dry.
Water. They needed water.
Dismay swept through Atarah. They’d forgotten both the water and food when they fled the alley. Why hadn’t she thought of it before? What was the point of everything they’d been through without water or food?
“Water.” Shua’s voice came out as a hoarse crackle. She crept to the side of the cave and drew two containers from behind a boulder. Handing one to Atarah she tipped the other to her lips. Atarah let the baby guzzle down all he wanted before she drank.

An hour later, Atarah and her slave relaxed side by side, backs against a boulder, well away from the mouth of the cave in a section protected from ash and fumes. A torch flickered on the wall above. The baby played beside them on the scarf Atarah had spread on the cave floor. As they ate bread and cheese Shua explained how, over the course of the last two weeks, Mother had first dispatched her to find out if the cave actually existed and then to stash supplies near the mouth.
“How did you manage? You’re as scared of heights as I am.”
“I had no choice.” Shua looked bewildered. “I’m a slave.”
“But . . . “
“You just made the trip and you were scared.”  
“I guess you’re right. I did because there was no other choice.” Atarah cocked her head to study the slave. “I’ve never thought of you as a philosopher before, Shua.”
The slave grinned. Atarah changed positions and groaned. “Ohhhh. Everything hurts.” She gingerly manipulated an egg-sized bump on her forehead.
“That’s turning blue. Got a headache?”
“Bad one.” A fit of coughing overcame Atarah for a moment. “I feel like someone beat me up.” She pulled in a wheezing breath.
“Your mother sent a small flask of wine in case of injury. Need a sip?”
“No. Let’s save it in case we need a sedative for Gadreel at some point.”
Shua glanced up in surprise. “You’ve always criticized mothers who did that.”
“If sucking on a wine-soaked cloth at some point might keep him quiet and save his life, let him suck.” 
Cuts and bruises covered both women. Only the baby had survived the ordeal unharmed. The slave coughed less often than Atarah, probably because she’d been able to cover her mouth on the trek. But she looked drained.
The baby crawled to his aunt and fell forward onto her lap. She smiled and kissed him. His lips were blue from the cold. She settled him against her chest to warm him, enjoying the warmth his body offered her. She’d been so dog-tired and hungry she hadn’t realized how cold she was. “I hope its warmer further inside the cave.” Atarah’s statement was actually a question: Would the temperature warm?
“Should be.”
 “Dagaar can’t find his way through the ash, can he?”
“Probably not. Besides we took the rope.” Shua grinned and kicked the coil she’d tossed over a half-buried rock poking out of the cave floor.
“Are you sure there’s fresh water further on?”
“Yes.”
Why had Shua stopped giving her eye contact? Doubt poked a small hole into Atarah’s heart. “You don’t know what’s ahead, do you?”
“They say we’ll find water and tunnels all through the mountain. And several exits to the outside.”
They say? Who says?” Mistrust rushed acid-hot through the place doubt had opened.
“Other slaves.”
“How many others know about this place?”
“I think just one. She showed me the triangle and rope just before she escaped her master several months ago. I pushed the rock into place to cover the opening in the wall to keep everything secret.”
“You don’t know what happened to her? If she lived or died?”
The slave studied the cave floor.
“Did you tell Mother all this?”
Tears welled up in Shua’s eyes. “What choice did we have? Gadreel would have been killed if we didn’t do something.”
“Mother doesn’t know?”
Shua shook her head vigorously, flinging a tear onto her sleeve.
“Are you certain Dagaar isn’t aware of this place?”
“No.”
Atarah’s mistrust and fear manifested as a burst of anger. “You brought us down here not knowing if he knows how to find us or what lies ahead! What if the cave ends? What if there’s no water? No food? I’ve heard about caves ending in deep holes that can’t be crossed.” She was on her feet, holding the baby against her while she shouted. He started to bawl.
“I didn’t have time to explore inside the mountain.” Shua mumbled.
Calming herself with a few deep breaths, Atarah got her outward anger, if not her emotions, under control. There was no profit in scaring her slave. Or Gadreel. “We can’t stay here. Do you have any idea where we’re going?”
The slave said nothing.
“Then I think we’ll be better off if I lead the way.”
“I’ll pray for the gods to keep us alive.”
Was Shua trying to make her feel better? Atarah thought maybe it would be smarter to ask the God of Noah to save them since the other gods appeared to want them dead.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Chapter Eight

If you haven't read earlier chapters,
before you read this one go to the "Blog Archive" on the right side of this page. Click on an arrow and a title will drop down. Start reading with chapter one, then proceed to chapter two, etc. Reading in order will increase your enjoyment!

Leaving Home
© Jeannie St. John Taylor

“And the (fallen) angels, the children of the heaven, saw (the human women)
and lusted after them, and said to one another: ‘Come, let us choose us wives
from among the children of men and beget us children.’”
Book of Enoch, Section One 6:1

Huge chunks of stone littered the garden. A marble foot and leg rested in the fork of
a tree close to the house. Missing slabs of travertine rendered the home’s façade jagged in several places.
Shua led the way through a still-intact maze of hedges, wound around a clump of
small trees and past the orange azalea. Slaves had propped the dragon fountain against the yellow marble wall where its snout could poke through an arch to support the statue in an upright position. The colorful mosaic pavement that once surrounded the fountain lay crumbled.
Once on the other side of the pavement, Shua ducked behind the roots of an
upturned tree and froze. Atarah mirrored her actions. The slave, eyes wide with fear, silently raised her eyebrows, turned slightly toward Atarah and angled her head toward the house.
Nympha and her most recent flame had come out onto the balcony again and were
looking into the garden. How long had they been there? A chill quivered through Atarah and she suddenly realized she was gasping for breath, her heart beating loudly in her ears.
Her sister obviously hadn’t noticed them yet, because if she had she would be
shrieking for help. Still, she would see them if they moved now. Atarah tightened her arms around the baby praying he wouldn’t awaken and make a noise. If Nympha and her companion failed to go back into the house before Mother’s meeting ended, either Dagaar would discover Atarah’s absence or slaves returning to the summer kitchen would spot them. They dare not move.
Several minutes passed before Nympha casually looped an arm through the man’s
and they turned to enter the house. Instantly, Shua darted through an arch in the marble wall not far from the damaged dragon and sped down the breezeway on the other side. Atarah followed.
The baby whimpered, but by then Atarah could hear Nympha screaming from the
house. She must have discovered Gadreel was missing from Atarah’s chambers. Nympha’s commotion would cover the baby’s crying.
Shua led Atarah into the slave quarters and down a long dark hallway that wound
between the slave rooms and through another door hidden in a rough wooden wall. “Does Dagaar know about this place?” She fought back the fear closing around her. Why hadn’t the Dream come to prepare her? She needed the Light that always reminded her not to fear.
“I don’t think so.” Shua breathed hard, too. “Maybe.”
Behind the door, they entered the roofed privacy-alley that extended the length of the property and separated Atarah’s home from several large estates on the other side. Originally constructed to provide safety in the middle of a violent city, the alley was no longer in use. More than one unfortunate woman had been found raped and murdered in alleys like it across the city.
“Half of the roof has fallen in.” Atarah fumed. “And Dagaar probably knows about this alley!” Why had she trusted the slave?
Shua pointed in the direction of the house. “Fallen rocks and boulders have
completely blocked the only entrance Dagaar knows about. I don’t think anyone will figure out I opened up a way in here.”
They’d walked only a few feet in the opposite direction when a large boulder blocked their way. The slave blanched. “Oh no!”
“You didn’t clear this end?” Every muscle in Atarah’s body ached with fear.
      “I did. The boulder wasn’t here last night.”
“Then why’s the path closed off now?”
“This morning’s quake.”
Without hesitating, Atarah unwound her scarf from around the baby and thrust him
toward Shua. There was no time to be gentle. “Wait here.” She clambered to the top of a boulder two times taller than herself. Loose stones tumbled around her feet. Rough rock scraped her fingers. Thank goodness they weren’t in the alley when the quake hit. They could have been crushed.
            She lay atop the rock panting. Most of the roof above her head was gone, and outside light allowed her to see a good ways down the narrow tunnel. The going would be rough, but the way appeared passable and obviously they couldn’t stay where they were. They must go forward.
She reached for the baby. “Hand him to me.” She leaned over the side as far she could while Shua stood on tiptoe, holding him up to her. As soon as the baby was firmly in Atarah’s hands, Shua climbed up beside her. With Atarah in the lead now, the women slid to the ground behind the barrier and squeezed sideways down the tight tunnel. Progress was slow because of newly-fallen debris and rocks. Atarah fought claustrophobia, praying that the way ahead remained clear.
“There was a lot more space before,” Shua said.
“Are you starting to hyperventilate?”
“I’m claustrophobic. Doesn’t the small space bother you?”
“I’m trying not to think about it.” Atarah flashed a crooked smile. “Let’s just keep remembering that this morning’s cave-in is a good thing. Even if Dagaar finds the entrance he’ll think we couldn’t possibly have gotten past the big rock.”
“And he’s probably too big to get through here.”
They walked slowly, checking for loose rocks before each step. Sometimes the sky
could be seen above them where the ceiling had collapsed into the alley. At those times the women turned faces upward and sucked in deep gulps of fresh air. Once they were forced to scale another obstacle wedged into the passageway. From the vantage point at the top of the boulder, Atarah could survey the gardens at the back of neighboring manors and see ahead to where houses ended near the city wall. Nothing moved. How could the city appear so quiet and peaceful with disaster all around?
“No one’s out there,” Atarah commented. At least not yet. But Dagaar wasn’t stupid.
He’d figure out their plan eventually. They had to stay ahead of him.
They continued for more than half an hour, taking time to brush over their tracks in
the dust to erase any signs of their passing. Sometimes they went a step further and removed all disturbances in the dirt by dropping loose rocks on the path.
At times they shimmied through newly-dug holes at ground level. “You dig out all
these?” Atarah asked.
Shua nodded.
At length, they pressed through the smallest opening yet. On the other side, using a shovel conveniently left beside it, Atarah and the slave filled the gap with dirt and small rocks. Anyone following would conclude they’d searched in the wrong direction. Dagaar would never guess the trio had passed that way.
Shua pushed back against the wall and lowered herself onto the dirt looking as
exhausted as Atarah felt. “We can rest here.” No light shone through the impenetrable wall of fallen rock directly in front of them. The women huddled in a pocket of space just long and high enough to allow them to move around.
“Is this the temporary hiding place you mentioned?” Gadreel had fallen asleep again
and Atarah supported his bottom with both hands while resting her cheek on the top of his head.
“Yes. The way out is just beyond the wall.” Shua reached for a skin of water and a wedge of fabric-wrapped cheese stowed in a crack between two rocks. “We’ll eat this and save the food in my satchel for later since it’s easy to carry.”
Atarah took the skin and poured some of the liquid on the hem of her sleeve to give
the baby something to suck on when he awakened.  “We should move out before Dagaar has time to get here.”
Before the words were out of her mouth, a commotion sounded from the other side of the wall and panic raised the hairs on Atarah’s arm. Dagaar was already here.
 Shua started to her feet, but Atarah placed a restraining hand on her arm and spoke
with a calm assurance she did not feel. “He may not know we’re in here.”
            Just then the baby screwed up his face, ready to launch into a tantrum. But before he could utter a sound Atarah wrapped the water-soaked part of her sleeve around her finger and stuck it in his mouth, rubbing his gums. She was amazed she had come up with a way to calm the baby.
“That’s only a temporary solution.” Shua’s fear showed as irritation. “Gadreel’s going
to throw a fit eventually and you know it.”
“Not if we stay here and I keep him quiet. We have enough food and water to outwait Dagaar. After a while he’ll assume we’ve left the city another way.” Atarah wondered who she was trying to convince. “Once he’s gone we can get out of here.” And go where?
“But if we stay too long, another quake could kill us.”
“I don’t want to think about that.” Atarah nuzzled the baby, exhausted after the unaccustomed exertion.
“You can’t go to sleep.” Shua sounded desperate. “If I try to silence the baby when he’s this tired he’ll scream louder.”
“I know. I won’t go to sleep.” Atarah didn’t want to admit, even to herself, that simply staying awake would take a miracle since the drug hadn’t completely worn off. She sighed and closed her eyes. She was so afraid. She needed the Dream.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Chapter Seven

If you haven't read earlier chapters,
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Chapter Seven
Papyrus

© Jeannie St. John Taylor

“Papyrus paper was not the only use of the flowering fresh-water reed
that grew in great abundance along river banks and in marshes.
There were many things made from this adaptable plant which reached heights of five to nine feet.”

            “This is my favorite kind of weather.” Shem slid off his camel and loosely held the camel’s rope in his open palm as he gazed out over the distant purple mountains. “Slight chill in the air. Blustery wind. I’d forgotten about that amazing view. How long since we’ve been to the marshes on this side of the mountain? It’s impossible to doubt the One True God with a view like that, isn’t it?”
            “You sound like Father.” Ham rolled his eyes and ticked off points on his fingers. “I hate wind. I don’t want to wrestle papyrus reeds today. Snakes skulk in the papyrus.”
Shem chuckled. “Snakes skulk?”
“Alligators do. And you know there are alligators all over the marsh waiting to sidle up and chomp you.” Ham jumped nimbly from his still-standing camel.
Shem blew out an appreciative whistle. “Impressive.” He’d been floating along on a cloud of euphoria ever since God miraculously rescued Father. Even enduring his uncle for the past week hadn’t seemed so bad. Shem knew he’d eventually fret over the urgent need to find a wife again, but not right now. Right now all seemed right with the world. If God could save Father he could do anything. Anything. And watching Father enjoy the company of his long lost brother only added to the happy feeling. Gave Shem hope.
Fortunately, Shem had been able to ignore much of Paseah’s unpleasantness because Japheth had chosen the role of farmer for himself several years earlier. He wanted to remain close to the ark where he could plant and bring in crops and see his wife every day. Over the past few days, that choice of occupation had allowed Shem and Ham to escape much of the tension surrounding Paseah. After all, they had no choice but to continual with their usual job, did they? They had always worked as a team away from the ark on the more adventurous, if sometimes dangerous, task of collecting essentials necessary to supply the ark. They couldn’t forsake their duty now.
Shem smiled at the thought, more content than he’d been in years.
An impatient command from Ham telling his camel to settle down brought Shem out of his reverie. But when he glanced over, the camel was already kneeling, completely docile. Strange. Ham had seemed somehow anxious since he’d spent a couple of hours alone with Paseah. Shem couldn’t quite articulate the problem, but he knew Ham well enough to know something was eating at his brother.
“Problem?” Shem asked.
“I really don’t want to do this today,” Ham snapped.
“All we have to do is load six camels. How long can that take, a few hours?”  
Ham grimaced and refused to answer. Shem understood why some people used the expression “Brother!” to vent frustration and disgust.
“Tell you what. I’ll cut, you tie the plants into bundles and load.” Shem stripped off his outer garment and tied up his tunic with the leather belt he used for especially dirty work. Tossing his outer clothing on the ground, he pulled out a long knife and tested the blade with his thumb. Sharp. Good.
Shem waded into the marsh. Numbingly-cold water swallowed his feet, sending a shock through him. Whew! Goose flesh rose on his arms. “You don’t have to worry about snakes or alligators today,” he called over his shoulder to Ham. “Too cold.” He could see his brother hobbling the camels; preparing them for the next few hours of work. Shem had left Paseah’s nasty camel, Buzz, home with Japheth and Father even though Father had urged him to take the animal along because of his massive size and strength. That beast was one problem Shem did not need today.
The dense papyrus surrounding him towered several cubits over his head. A few of the slender stems rising from the murky water still supported spiked fan-like flowers. Today he would cut off those blooms and discard them.
He reached below the surface past his elbows and dug into mud, feeling around for the thick rhizomes where stems originated. Finding a tuber, he cut off five of the maroon leaves submerged at the base of one stem, sawed through the stalk itself, and javelined the plant to Ham.
The morning wore on, the weather warmed and no dangerous reptiles made an appearance. Eventually, confident no alligators or snakes hid in the reeds, Ham splashed out to collect the plants from his brother. As Shem harvested, Ham gathered the stems into bundles and carried them on his back to load onto the camels. They worked as one man, exchanging few words.
Near midday, Shem pulled up a long section of starchy rhizome for Mother to roast in a hot oven for the family’s evening meal. He sliced off a short piece for himself and washed it off. Knowing how Ham hated raw papyrus, Shem tossed a grin his brother’s direction as he popped the tidbit into his mouth.
“Disgusting,” Ham curled his lip. “Why do you chew that stuff?”
“I like it.”
“I don’t.”
“You like Mother’s vegetable stew when she adds papyrus.”
“That’s different. Boiled tastes better.”
Shem hooted and spat out the remains of the chewed tuber.
“That’s ghastly.” Ham scowled and averted his eyes. As he did so, Shem spotted slight movement just beyond his brother. A pair of eyes slid toward Ham over the skin of the water.
“Behind you!” Shem yelled. Without a second thought, he dived for the beast and grabbed his tail, yanking the rear end of the animal out of the water. Ham took off running. The gator curled back upon Shem, mouth baying, aiming for his face.
“Help me!” Shem shouted.
Halfway up the bank, Ham paused to look at Shem with wild unseeing eyes. He turned and scrambled onto the grass.
Shem was stunned by Ham’s retreat. Alone now, he hugged the gator’s massive tail to his chest, desperate to keep the strong back legs out of the water. The alligator thrashed back and forth like a whip. Shem felt himself losing his footing. Man and animal splashed into the water. Shem held onto the tail with everything in him. He kept it pressed against his chest so the creature couldn’t reach him with its deadly jaws.
The alligator rolled in the water, whipping his tail to shed the man. Pushing off the bottom with strong legs. Round and round. Dunking Shem. Drowning him. Each time Shem’s face broke the surface, he gasped for breath. He wouldn’t last much longer.
Finally, at the top of a revolution, he saw his brother plow into the water, rope in hand. White-faced, Ham lassoed the top of the gator’s open mouth. The creature continued to twirl. As he spun in the water, the whirling movement wrapped the remainder of the line around his mouth, drawing the top down and locking his jaws shut. 
Safe now from the baying mouth, Ham grabbed onto the tail with Shem. Together, the men wrestled the animal to shore where they bound the writhing tail and legs.
They sank onto the alligator’s back.
“Thought I was . . . ,” Shem wheezed, coughing and catching his breath, “a goner.”
Ham nodded. “Yeah. Me, too. Sorry.” His eyes were the size of a full moon and his body quaked visibly.
Shem didn’t know precisely to whom the “me, too” referred or exactly what his brother was apologizing for. He only knew he wanted to pop Ham in the nose. He valiantly fought the urge. “I considered dragging the gator into the grass by myself and feeding you to him.”
Ham released a weak laugh and Shem could tell his brother recognized the undercurrent of truth in the joke.
“It’s cold,” Ham said. “We’re both soaked. I say we have enough papyrus for today.”
“No.” Shem said adamantly. “Father said all six camels. Two more to go.”
“He’ll never know the difference if we unload them before he sees them.”
Shem stared at his brother in disbelief. Ham was a disgusting slug of a man today. Not himself at all. “You know what Father says.”
Ham rolled his eyes like a spoiled teenager again. “I know. ‘Always work your hardest, but work for God without trying to impress people.’” He rose to his feet and gathered his dry clothing. “I’m not going to work for anyone today. I’m going home.”
“No you’re not.” Shem stood, prepared to fight. It wouldn’t take much to convince him to pummel his brother right now. “We need pith for rope. And Mother wants some for floor mats.”
“She’ll live without mats and we can use that field of flax by the house for rope.”
“Flax rope isn’t as strong as papyrus. You know that.”
“Strong enough if we let the crop mature.”
“Too late. Japheth and Ulla harvested the plants for linen today.”
“Then we’ll do like the people in the city and make rope from date fiber.”
Shem was starting to shake from cold now. Crossing his arms over his chest, he rubbed them to warm himself. Something must be really bothering Ham for him to be such a fungus. Strangely, at that very moment Shem decided to cut his brother some slack. His anger evaporated.
“Look.” Shem’s tone was kind but unyielding. “Father wants papyrus ropes because they’re stronger. He wants papyrus for scrolls so he can make copies of the Book of Enoch for each of us. Therefore, I, for one, am going to harvest papyrus for him. And I’m going to stop yammering and start working so I can warm up. You go home.”
He turned his back to Ham and strode toward the water. “I know you’re scared of snakes and alligators, but it’s too cold for more reptiles. That was a fluke.”
“I’m not scared of them. I just don’t like them,” Ham shouted at Shem’s back.
“Fine. You don’t like them.” Shem thrust his hands into the water and felt for a stem. “Go home. I’ll finish up here.” The safely-tied-up alligator still hunkered on the grass near Ham. “Don’t worry, I’ll untie our friend and let him loose before I leave.” Shem began slashing stems while unwelcome negative thoughts once again rolled though his head. After floating a number of stems in the water, he gathered them and turned toward the camels.
Ham stood at the top of the bank looking at him, hands on hips, sheepish expression on his face. He wore the dry clothes he’d picked up earlier. When Shem reached the shore, Ham lifted the papyrus from his brother’s arms without a word. Back to himself again, Shem hoped.
Still, Shem’s pessimistic thoughts didn’t fade. He wondered which would be most difficult during and after the Flood: his brother, the dangerous animals, or the loneliness.