Sunday, June 19, 2011

Chapter Nineteen

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. 



 Ash Storm

© Jeannie St. John Taylor
“He caused the east wind to blow in the heavens,
and by his power he led out the south wind.” Psalm 78:26

Atarah made her way down the mountain on wobbly legs. Her empty arms ached for the baby. Obviously, Tirza had stolen him to force Atarah and Shua back to the mountain. The woman needed slaves to bring in supplies and they fit her purposes nicely. Tirza knew they wouldn’t try to run without the baby. Used and deceived. Atarah’s heart tight fisted at the injustice. She pushed away thoughts of The Dream. The Light no longer comforted her. She tried to wipe her mind blank, but the truth tormented her.
Tirza would hold Gadreel captive until all the food needed by the community was harvested and stored, but by then it would be too late for Atarah and Shua. By then giants would have desolated the fields and spared nothing anyone could scavenge for a journey. By then Peleg would have forced his rancid self on both of them. Bile rose into her throat and she turned to heave.
 She squared her shoulders. None of that mattered. She’d do anything necessary to spare Gadreel. Even if it meant adding her bones to a pile in one of the temples.
 “Come this way.” Shua touched Atarah’s arm and motioned beyond the golden barley fields below. “One of Tirza’s men said the others are harvesting grapes and wheat. We’re supposed to collect pods from some of those tall plants beyond the barley. It’s too dark to really see them from here, but we’ll be able to see them when we get close.” She pointed to a dark area several fields away.
Moonlight shone on the white ash covering the ground, making the fields and meadows nearly as brilliant as day. The brightness was such a relief after the thick darkness of the underground. Atarah idly wondered if Mother might see them as dark moving dots if something prompted her to stare out over the fields below.
The two women moved along in ankle-deep ash which crept between foot and sandal, abrading their soles and toes. Until she felt the dryness of the light gray powder again, Atarah had forgotten the eruption they witnessed from the ledge. Strong winds had blown much of the ash off the tops of leaves and grasses. A piquant fragrance wafted up from the field. Atarah reached to her side and, without breaking pace, snapped a fuzzy green leaf from a waist-high plant. She held it to her nose. “Mmmm. Mint.” The smell made her feel cleansed. Almost alive.
“I knew I smelled mint.” Shua excitedly copied Atarah’s actions, pulling off a leaf and breathing in the aroma before stuffing the herb in her mouth. “I’d rather have mint as tea, but the leaves taste great after Hoda’s bread.”
“And Peleg’s breath.”
Shua laughed.
“The mint plants are all around us. We’re crushing stems with every step.” Atarah removed her scarf and tied the fabric in a knot and looped the scarf over her shoulder, forming a pocket at her side. Picking as she walked, she loaded the pouch with the perfumed herb. “Gadreel will love this.”
When the scarf began to bulge, she tilted her head as she massaged her neck and rolled her shoulders. A flash of color caught her eye. Orange rivers of molten fire threaded down more than one far-away slope. She turned first to one side then the other, surveying the mountains. The eruptions were directly in her line of vision. Why hadn’t she noticed before? She chided herself for her lack of observance. This was life or death. She couldn’t allow anything to distract her from seeing the obvious. Brilliant rolling color should have been the first bit of information her eyes picked up when she walked out of the cave.
“Look!” Atarah pointed and counted. “Ten. There have been ten eruptions.”
 “Wow!” Shua scanned the slopes. “What’s going on?”
“Not sure, but Noah’s mountain seems unaffected. As always.” Atarah pointed behind them. “It’s that one.” From this lower vantage she couldn’t see the shape of the ark and vaguely wondered how she recognized the mountain.
Shua’s head swiveled to ascertain the location. “Hopefully, Tirza won’t send us there to collect.” She sounded nearly as afraid of the ark as of giants or Dagaar.
Atarah understood. Dread filled her when she thought of the ark, too. Even though her views about Noah had changed, long-held attitudes didn’t just evaporate overnight.
The sweet fragrance of allspice wafted on the shifting breeze and Atarah closed her eyes, basking briefly in the pleasure.
“The variety of plants is mind-boggling. There’s like a feast of smells here.”
“Unfortunately. Abundance draws the giants,” Atarah said.
She marveled that she could carry on a normal conversation while her emotions felt as though they were rotted with gangrene. She’d never realized before that her mind could run along on two levels simultaneously. The surface of her mind took note of the scenery and chatted with Shua. Yet all the while her deeper self refused to release the worry about Gadreel. Plus she stayed on the alert for giants and Dagaar and Peleg and Tirza and the danger of being too close to the ark. Maybe that was six levels. And occasionally her thoughts flitted home to stew about Mother. Who knew how many levels?
“I figured out why those bushes we’re supposed to harvest are so far away,” Atarah mused. “We’re giant-bait.”
A rueful smile lifted one corner of Shua’s mouth. “Our screams will give the others time to escape?”
“Yes.” Atarah scowled. “Even worse, I’m afraid Tirza deliberately sent us a long way from Gadreel. Scares me.” The image of the baby sent a flush of fear and powerlessness through Atarah. She paused to pull in a deep calming breath. 
A revolting odor stung her lungs and the small hairs on the back of her neck lifted. “Giants!” she hissed. Dropping to the ground she yanked the slave down beside her.
Shua sniffed and her eyes shot open. She wrinkled her nose in disgust. “The gods help us!”
Should they stay put or run? If they held very still they might escape detection.  “Can you tell which direction that odor is coming from?” Atarah longed to cover her nose, but instinctively understood that as the monsters closed in the smell would grow stronger. She needed to know when that happened.
Hunkered down in the tall grass, the women sniffed the wind and scanned the fields. Another strong whiff of the odor sent a shudder through Atarah. “That way.” She indicated a broad field of chalky white flowers covering a rolling hill.
“Why can’t we see them?”
“Don’t know.” As she strained to pick up movement, a long-ago memory of an afternoon excursion to the valley with Father nudged Atarah. That smell. . .  She gasped. “Buckwheat!” A husky chuckle escaped her lips. “That’s the smell of buckwheat. I’d forgotten how terrible buckwheat stinks.”
            “That’s buckwheat?”
            “Yes!” 
“Oh my.” Shua pinched her nostrils. The two shook with quiet giggles.
            “I’m surprised the smell is so strong at night,” Atarah managed to whisper between breathy snickers. “The ‘fragrance’ usually fades by noon. Also, I think the flowers may be blooming in the off-season.”
            “Things are out-of-sync everywhere these days.”
             A picture of Gadreel popped unwanted into Atarah’s mind. She brushed away the thought along with a loose strand of hair and retrieved her basket. She couldn’t let herself think about what might be happening to Gadreel. She glanced at her feet rubbed bloody by ash. Neither would she focus on her own pain.
“Let’s go.” Atarah retrieved her basket and took off at a determined run.
They pushed the pace for a few minutes to make up for lost time before tiring and moving along at a more reasonable speed.
“Tirza didn’t even bother sending someone to keep an eye on us,” Shua mused as they neared their destination.
“Didn’t need to. She knows I won’t leave the baby.”
Atarah led the way into a planting of bushes that rose to twice her height. “Here we are.” She gazed at the pod-filled foliage. “These look like small trees.” A spicy scent tickled her nostrils. “Do I smell cardamom?” Reaching high overhead she pulled down a branch and sniffed the three pods growing in a clump at the end. “Cardamom. These bushes belong to Father. He’s the only one around here who grows exotic seeds.”
“Ironic isn’t it?” Shua stifled a giggle. “You’ll be stealing from yourself.”
“Not from myself. Maybe from Dagaar.” Somehow Atarah managed to say his name without shuddering. “I’ve been disinherited by now.” She commenced pulling branches down and stripping them of pods as quickly as possible. The faster they filled containers the sooner they could see Gadreel.
“They don’t need cardamom, you know.” Atarah talked as she worked. “It’s a luxury and they’re in survival mode. They just sent us out here because the plants are so far away.” Since they’d already discussed their role as a warning system she didn’t mention the giants again. Atarah was too numb to fret about the dangers threatening her. She was exhausting all her energy worrying about Gadreel, even though she kept telling herself over and over the baby was not in danger. Tirza wouldn’t hurt him. She needed Gadreel to control Atarah and Shua.
Unfortunately, Atarah didn’t believe a word of it.
As soon as her basket was a quarter full, she decided to test the weight of the over-sized container. Plucking the pods off one final branch, she let the harvested limb snap upward. Bending at the waist, she lifted. Even though she’d grown accustomed to lugging a chubby baby, the weight of the green pods surprised her. “These will be too heavy if we can’t balance them on our heads,” she told Shua.
She gathered her muscles and jerked the basket upward. Pods spilled before she got past her shoulders. Distressed, she set the wicker on the ground and scooped them up. “Can you do it?”
“I don’t know. I’m a house slave, remember? Nobody ever taught me field skills.” 
“Try.” Atarah hurried to help. Together they raised Shua’s basket and positioned it atop her head. She placed a hand on either side and practiced walking. “You’re right. It doesn’t feel too heavy this way.”
“Good. Now we just have to figure out how you’re going to help get mine situated.” But when either tried to help the other while balancing her own load, pods tumbled from their baskets. Eventually they filled Shua’s basket to the brim together and started back to the cave with it resting on her head.
Fixing her eyes on the white waterfall, Atarah half-dragged half-carried her partially-full load. She limped along shunting her basket from one thigh to the other with each step until Shua suggested they switch for awhile.
 “That sounds good.” Atarah set her load on the ground and angled her head back and forth stretching her neck. She helped Shua lower her load before raising her tunic to examine both legs in the moonlight. She gingerly prodded her thighs where the basket thumped her.
“Bruised?” Shua asked as they settled the full basket on Atarah’s hair.
“Afraid so.” Atarah staggered a couple of steps before finding her stride. “The change helps. Thanks.”
Shua tried lugging her new basket the way she’d seen Atarah do it, then lowered the container of pods to the ground and walked backward dragging a path through the ash.
“Wonder what Tirza will do when she discovers we only filled one basket,” Atarah wondered aloud.
“Why don’t you pray to your god and find out?”
The slave’s disapproving tone surprised Atarah, but before she had time to say anything Shua exclaimed over the powdery grit seeping in through the holes in her basket. Her shoulders slumped in dismay. “I thought the load felt heavier because I was tired.” She sighed and lifted the basket, using Atarah’s method. She was obviously weary.
“Time to trade,” Atarah said.
“We don’t have to.”
 “We should swap every little bit to make things easier,” Atarah assured her. “Help me put this down.”
Before Shua could reach for the basket, a sudden gust of wind threw Atarah off balance. She took a few running steps to keep from falling and plopped her load to the ground in a field of wheat. Cardamom pods popped up and out. She sat down hard amidst the golden plants and covered her face with her hands, brittle and teary. Though the waterfall was only a short distance away, she couldn’t go another step. Not even with Gadreel so close.
Shua sank down beside her. “We’ll never find all the pods.”
“We’re not going to try.” Atarah snapped off a head of wheat and rubbed it between her palms. “We’ll pile the lighter-weight wheat on top of the pods. That should make Tirza happy. It’s food.” Husks removed, she handed the meat of the grain to Shua and broke off another head for herself. “Eat.”
“Where’d you learn that?”
“On a trip with Father.” She shouted above a steady wind. “Years ago.” Revived by the bit of sustenance, the women pulled wheat and piled stems and heads on top of the cardamom. Wind lifted their skirts and whipped the fabric sideways. Mint leaves flew from Atarah’s pouch. Ash swirled in the air and field stalks bent double. And still the intensity of the wind increased.
“The wind will knock the basket off our heads,” Atarah yelled. “We’ll have to carry them in front of us. I’ll take the heavy one.”
Through the haze, Atarah could see other gatherers appear out of nowhere, rushing toward the cave. No longer balancing crops on heads, pairs carried baskets between them.
Step by careful step, Atarah and her slave pushed against the wind and ash. Their eyes remained fixed on the waterfall. Atarah ducked her head into her shoulder to avoid breathing grit.
“That ash stings,” Shua shouted.
“Cover your face.”
Atarah shielded her eyes and stole a glance at the scene behind. The base of Noah’s mountain had disappeared behind a wall of hazy gray.
That’s when she recognized the enormous dark cloud racing across the fields. What resembled a close-up version of the ash she’d seen bursting from the mountain during the eruption sped toward her along the ground. The ominous shape pulsed with intermittent light. Jagged spears of white fire shot back and forth through the cloud’s interior.
Atarah knew instantly that the massive cloud was comprised of ash whipped up and driven by the fierce wind. She’d been warned about such storms since childhood. She had also heard of lightning, but never actually witnessed the phenomenon and had no idea such power could be sparked by ash particles rubbing against one another.
Terrified, she lost her hold on her basket. She knew she should move, but couldn’t force her muscles to take action. The strange juxtaposition of the storm with the full round moon hanging peacefully in an undisturbed band of black sky above the chaos mesmerized her. It was surreal. Clutching handfuls of wheat stalks, she froze, transfixed.
Shua stood with her back to the wind and ash. Screaming. And screaming.
Finally, her screams snapped Atarah back to reality. She grabbed the hysterical slave’s arm and dragged her toward the still-visible waterfall, praying they wouldn’t smother in the thick air. The world turned black and the waterfall disappeared. Atarah yanked her slave to the ground. She covered her own nose and mouth with her robe and blindly helped Shua do the same. Breathing through several layers of cloth, the women located the granite cliff and felt along the smooth rock to the cave.

******
Prone on the wet cave floor, Atarah listened to the wind howling above the roar of water. Tears of relief seeped from under her closed lashes. They were safe. For now.
She pulled herself to a sitting position and splashed water into her eyes. Blinking, she opened them slowly, wiping away grit. Touching Shua’s cheek with the backs of her fingers, she shouted over the noise. “You okay?”
The slave’s eyes fluttered open and she grinned unexpectedly. “I’ve got ash in my ears.” Her laugh changed to a cough and she sat up to spit out black ash.
“Me, too. And look at my nails!” Atarah held up her hands.
“Your nails?” Shua said incredulously. “Look at your clothes and hair and the grime on your face and . . . Who are you anyway?”
Atarah felt her hair and laughter rang out for a brief moment. Then she remembered Gadreel. She leapt to her feet, her heart pounding with urgency. “How are we going to find our way to Gadreel without a torch?” 
“Oh, I don’t think that’ll be a problem.” A torch flared, burnishing the rock walls of the cave. Peleg’s malevolent grin flickered in the light. Five of the muscular men who had accompanied Tirza earlier formed a wall of force behind him, arms crossed.
“Clean them up before you bring them to me,” Peleg commanded. He flicked the back of his hand toward Atarah. “I’ll take her first.”
City of a Thousand Gods 
can now be pre-ordered as a paperback 
on Amazon.com. 
Copies will be available to ship in two weeks. 
There are forty-four chapters in the book. 

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Chapter Eighteen

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. 
A Way Outside

© Jeannie St. John Taylor 
“Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be frightened, and do not be dismayed, for the LORD your God is with you wherever you go.” Josh. 1:9

            Distracted by last night’s Dream, Atarah had to force herself to concentrate on Gadreel as he crawled back and forth between the beds chasing the long stem of grass she’d pulled from their bed. She should be giving him quality time while Shua washed up at the spring outside. Instead, she was treating him like a pet cat, dragging the fluffy end of the weed along the floor, then lifting the grass to encourage him to reach up. Oh well, the new game seemed to make him happy and she needed time to think. To figure out what the Dream meant when the Light told her it was going to do something new.
“You have too much energy for me.” She tweaked Gadreel’s nose and made him giggle. “But of course you get to sleep and play while I work, don’t you?” She took his hands, pulled him into a standing position and planted a loud smooch on his forehead. His legs buckled and he started to scream.
She immediately scooped him up comforting the baby as she walked back and forth between the beds with him. “Shhh. Your little bum didn’t even touch the floor. You are not hurt.” His cries changed to a whine and he lay his head on her shoulder. She paced as she held him, finally able to concentrate on the meaning of the Dream.
The Light had enveloped her once again as she slept in the night. “Behold, I am doing a new thing,” the Light with a voice like many waters told her. “Do you not perceive it? So be very strong and courageous.”
At first she assumed the Light meant she would escape. But later she remembered the part about being strong and courageous and fear started creeping around her like fog, leaving her with a presentiment that something even worse than the events of the last couple of weeks could happen. The light must know she was about to face a time when she would need an extra-strong dose of courage and direction.
She didn’t like the idea of that, especially since the voice had given her no direction except to be strong. She didn’t feel courageous. She felt weak. She wanted to hole up in this room where she felt reasonably, if illogically, secure.
The situation reminded her of the way she’d felt as a little girl when she and Shua burrowed into the garden hedge to hide from Father. She could see his feet pacing beside the hedge while her shoulders hunched in fright and branches poked into the flesh of her arms and legs. She knew he could reach in and yank her out at any moment. Yet the foliage offered a measure of protection. If they could just stay very, very still he would never find them.
That’s exactly how she felt now.
            The baby quieted and she sat him on the bed so she could pick dried curdled milk from his face with her fingernail. Her hair drifted forward and Gadreel grabbed tendrils in chubby hands. “Ouch!” With a smile she kissed each cheek in turn and gently extracted her hair.
“Hey, let’s play a fun game.” She flipped her scarf into the air, letting the fabric billow so it would drift onto the baby. As the scarf settled over his head and face she slowly pulled it away, letting the fabric caress him. He giggled and grabbed for the scarf, she laughed and jerked it out of his hands. He fell backward onto the bed laughing and they started the game over. e lHe lau
She couldn’t help a twinge of sadness thinking how much better one of her gauzy scarves would feel to the baby. Still, though she hated the feel of the coarse fabric, she was grateful Mother had thought ahead and dressed her in slave attire. The common clothing allowed Atarah to blend in. An embroidered veil sewn with jewels set in gold filigree would have immediately alerted the inhabitants of this place to her privileged position. She had no idea what wealth could mean for her down here, but she guessed the appearance of riches could cause problems. Residents of the commune might resent her or try to extort from her or . . . what? Maybe she’d end up in the heap of dry bones back at the temple. Her brain couldn’t sort through all the possibilities or even figure out if her thoughts were logical.
She simply knew she faced enough trouble without adding money to the mix. Especially since she herself no longer owned anything. After a lifetime of luxury it was difficult to comprehend the fact that she was poverty stricken.
 “She knows, doesn’t she?” Shua appeared in the doorway with damp hair. A dark spot near the bottom of her robe revealing how she’d dried her hair. A worried expression creased her face.
“Who knows what?”
“You know who,” Shua snorted. “She knows everything.”
Of course she knew. Tirza. Atarah concentrated on finger-combing the baby’s curls. “I don’t think she knows.”
“Really.” Sarcasm migrated from Shua’s face to her voice. “Then why won’t you look at me?”
Atarah sighed. Why wouldn’t she give Shua eye contact? Because Atarah was her mother’s daughter. Avoid. Ignore. Pretend. “I suppose she might know,” Atarah acceded reluctantly.
“She keeps staring at his fingers. Like she can’t help herself.”
“I know.” Atarah leaned her cheek on the baby’s head. He snuggled into her while she played over his palm with her fingertips. “But she may not know giants have six fingers.”
“She said he was big for his age.” Shua moved to sit on the bed opposite Atarah.
“No. She just said he was big. Not big for his age. She doesn’t know his age. People talk like that to babies. It’s just a way of saying babies are cute.”
“I hope so.” Shua rubbed her thumb nail against her lower teeth.
“I’m sure that’s all she meant. She wasn’t saying, ‘You’re big so I can tell you’re going to grow up and become . . .’” Atarah broke off mid-sentence, refusing to put words to the thought.
Shua finished for her. “Grow up to become a monster who takes all the food and when the food is gone eats people.”
Stunned, Atarah instinctively cupped a protective hand over the baby’s cheek and stared at Shua in disbelief. “Don’t ever say that again!”
 “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean it.” Shua leaned forward and patted the baby’s leg. Gadreel  leaned shyly away from her and into Atarah as though he understood the slave had been disloyal. Shua’s eyes glistened with regret. “I’m sorry, Sweetie. You’ll never grow up to become one of those nasty giants. You couldn’t.”
“Of course you won’t!” Atarah was glad the baby couldn’t understand. She puffed a raspberry on his belly, walked her fingers over to his ribs and tickled. He giggled.
Atarah blew another loud sound under the baby’s double chin and began to speak the mantra she and Shua had rehearsed many times over the last months. “We’ll love you so much you’ll be the best boy.” They’d repeated the words so often both women fully believed the lie.
“And we’ll keep you safe,” Shua continued.
“You’ll prove to everyone that you are kind and nice, won’t you?” Atarah tickled Gadreel as she baby-talked to him. “Won’t you?” He stretched away from her, giggling.
Smiling, Shua supported his back while he continued to laugh, showing his single front tooth.
Shua sobered. “And he’ll protect us when he grows up.” Her eyes beseeched Atarah for confirmation. “He’ll love us because we love him.”
“That’s right.” Atarah hugged the baby desperately. “With all the love we give this one he’ll have no choice but to love us back.” And she would never tell him that his grandfather and mother and father tried to kill him. That knowledge could ruin him. 
“He’ll have to know his father was a Nephal, won’t he?” Shua anxiously chewed the nail on her pinkie finger.
Atarah shrugged. “We’ll see. If we can keep him away from people he might not notice he’s different.”
Silence hung between them.
“If Tirza knows he’s a young giant, why is she letting us stay?”  
An icy rivulet of fear trickled down Atarah’s spine. Why couldn’t Shua just let it drop? “We don’t have to think about that right now.”
But she did think about it. What did Tirza gain by letting them stay? Letting a young giant boy stay? As hard as she tried, Atarah couldn’t fathom the reasons.
A primal fear rose within her.
**********
She should never have trusted Tirza. Atarah scanned the group assembled in the open area outside the sleeping room while the word “betrayal” twanged in her brain. Was Peleg among them? She had allowed a desire for security to lure her into staying put when she and Shua should have been courageous and fled.
“I thought our whereabouts was supposed to remain secret.” Atarah’s anger flashed toward Tirza.
“Don’t worry.” Tirza lifted her chin and haughty defensiveness laced her tone. “I told you, Peleg’s not here. He’s the man-in-charge who stays back with a few workers to keep the place humming. He’s too good to go out with us ordinary people.”
Several of the impatient-looking men and women holding large baskets sniggered at Tirza’s comment. Evidentially, they didn’t like Peleg any better than Atarah did.
“Are you coming or not?” Tirza began walking and gestured for the group to follow. “Because these people have a long night of work ahead and they don’t intend to wait on you. I thought you said you wanted to do your part.”
“I do.” Relieved that Peleg wasn’t with the others, Atarah looped the long-handled basket Tirza had provided over her shoulder. She pasted a pleasant expression over the sheepish look on her face. She had misjudged Tirza once again. Hoisting Gadreel higher on her hip, she fell in step with Shua near the middle of the group, just behind Tirza. A group of shirtless muscular men, each bearing several baskets on their shoulders, brought up the rear.
Atarah had several reasons for wanting to go on the gathering excursion: Helping gather food would repay Tirza for her kindness, they would move out of Peleg’s range and before first light she and Shua and the baby could steal away unnoticed. “I was shocked she brought people and revealed where she’d hidden us,” Atarah whispered to Shua. The sounds of marching feet and low conversation covered her words.
“Me, too. Someone is bound to tell Peleg. I’m scared.”
“I know.” But they wouldn’t be there when he came for them. Atarah intended to flee before returning in the morning. “Try to map out the way outside in your head just in case we’re forced to return for some reason.”
Shua’s eyes communicated agreement and the two women hiked in silence. Atarah strained to memorize tunnel turns and flights of winding stairs. The focused concentration squeezed her brain until it felt tight in her skull. She would not forget the way out. Gadreel’s life might depend on her remembering.
To Atarah’s surprise, a brief twenty minutes after they began the tangy smell of falling water rushed through the tunnel on wind that rapidly dropped the temperature. The breeze stirred excitement in her, stimulating senses dulled by days spent underground. Atarah bent into the wind, amazed at the sounds of eager chatter swelling around her. These people longed for fresh air and the outside world as much as she did.
“Watch out. The rocks are slick up here!” someone shouted back.
Soon the roar of a waterfall deadened every other sound and mist blew into the cavern. At the mouth of the cave, the group clustered in front of a curtain of falling water bouncing with light reflected from torches. Gadreel awakened giggling and tried to grab the spray while Atarah rubbed his bare legs to warm him. The thrill of imminent freedom lifted small bumps on her arm.
Many of the people laughed and whirled in circles in the spray, dancing with hands raised over heads. Atarah found herself laughing and bouncing the baby. Shua mirrored her joy. They both knew that soon they’d be free! Away from the city and its gods! Away from Peleg! Free to find a place where they could settle down and raise the baby. Maybe plant a few crops to feed the three of them so there’d be little need for outside contact. Even as she thought about the necessity of staying isolated, Atarah realized how that need conflicted with her desire to find a husband.
No matter. Never marrying was a small price to pay for the baby’s life.
Tirza strode to the front of the group and the jubilation stilled. She raised a hand and all eyes swung toward her. “The mission tonight is urgent.” Her voice rose easily above the roar of the water. “Giants may be headed our way. Though they’ve never raided these parts before, reliable sources tell us that once they consume all crops in an area they turn on the humans.” A murmur spread across the group.
“They eat people?” someone shouted.
Tirza did not mince words. “Yes. But only after all other food is gone.”
“Cannibals!”
“They’re not really cannibals,” Tirza asserted, “because they aren’t human. They’re half Nephilim and half human – a new species. But know this . . . ” She paused to let her eyes rake the group threateningly, “every single one of them is evil through and through and they would enjoy slaughtering you. We have to gather as much food as possible over the next few days. Because once they arrive every last bit of anything to eat will be gone.”
This was a different Tirza than the friendly woman who chatted so easily as she led them to their hiding place. This was the Tirza who had assumed control of the community shortly after they met. This Tirza was completely in control of the situation – Peleg’s and Hoda’s daughter. At that realization, Atarah clutched the baby more tightly
“What do they look like,” a woman asked. The woman with the sad dark eyes stood beside her, weeping silently.
“What do they smell like is a better question,” Tirza retorted sarcastically. “You’ll smell them before you see them. Guaranteed. They’re taller than the Nephilim and they all have six fingers on each hand and six toes on each foot.” She broke off and looked directly at Atarah. 
Atarah felt a cold chill that had nothing to do with the mist. She protectively covered Gadreel’s hand with hers. How would the group react when they understood he was . . . she couldn’t bring herself to even think the word ‘giant’ in connection with her sweet child.
“Believe me, you’ll have no trouble recognizing them.” Tirza told the group. “Just be on the lookout and retreat to the waterfall the moment you get a whiff of anything strange. Once you can see a giant you can’t outrun him.”
“They’ll follow us in and kill us!”
“They’re too tall to get past the back of the cave. Once you get to the smaller tunnels you should be safe.” Tirza spoke calmly, reassuring them. “But we must have food to live. Which is why Peleg decided that for the next few days we’ll gather as much as possible without even trying to cover our tracks. He’s gambling that when people of the city notice missing food they’ll assume the giants have already arrived and stay inside the gates. That will leave us free to gather all we want.”
Atarah’s mind flitted to her home. Mother would hide in one of the secret places built for such an event if the giants breached the city.
 “Because our spies learned the giants are coming, I was able to come up with a plan to save all our lives.” A glisten of emotion rose in Tirza’s eyes. “Nevertheless, no one can prevent the monsters from stealing all the food. So gather as much and as quickly as you can. Our lives depend on you.”
Tirza continued to give instructions. “Every time you fill a basket, bring it back to the waterfall, grab an empty one and my boys here will transport the full one back home.” She waved toward the men with extra baskets who now surrounded the crowd. “We’re going to be fine. We just need to work harder than ever.”
Tirza ended her speech, beamed a benevolent smile of encouragement around the group and everyone started toward the exit behind the waterfall. Tears stained the cheeks of a few women, but for the most part resolute expressions hardened faces. Aware this was a life or death situation, they intended to throw themselves into the task. Atarah herself determined to gather as much as she could. For tonight only. She would not go back to the underground and risk Peleg.
She and Shua walked near the rear of the gatherers following the slippery path that led behind the waterfall. The dark slit of sky at the end of the path beckoned. Atarah’s heart leaped in her chest. Balancing the baby and the basket, she quickened her steps.
In response to her change in pace, the man just ahead tossed a warning over his shoulder. “Slow down! If you fall here you’re a gonner. I don’t want you taking me with you.” 
Moments later, Atarah stepped from behind the curtain of water and stood with Shua on the side of a dry mountain watching workers wind down a path to still vineyards below. On her left, granite polished smooth by the wind-blown ash of previous eruptions mirrored the light of a full moon. The night seemed as bright as day. She could pick out the color of azure blue chickery. Yellow ocher kissed the crest of one hill where the moonlight touched the tops of wheat stalks.
Atarah breathed in the fragrance of aromatic lavender and honeysuckle as she struggled to hoist the basket onto her shoulders as she’d seen the others do. But the baby made the task difficult. Atarah didn’t care. The cool night and the view and the fresh air and the freedom were bliss. She felt giddy. She decided she would keep the basket slung over her shoulder. She could set it down when she picked and drag it along behind her as she moved down rows. She didn’t have to work exactly like everyone else.
A shadow fell across the path and Tirza, flanked by her “boys”, blocked the way ahead, smiling disarmingly. “Here, let me help you. That’s a little awkward with the baby, isn’t it?”
“No, no.” Atarah protested. “I can do it.”
Tirza had already taken the baby.
Atarah quickly positioned the basket on her head and reached for Gadreel, but Tirza twirled the baby out of her grasp and headed back toward the waterfall. “I’ll keep him for you till you finish working. We need everyone to be as efficient as possible tonight.”
Determination clenched in Atarah’s stomach. “No. I won’t be separated from my  baby.” She took a step toward Tirza only to find a broad-shouldered brute standing in the way, hands folded into his armpits. Locking her eyes with a hard gaze, he angled his head to the side and spit.
Behold, I am doing a new thing.
No. No. No!

I would like to extend a warm welcome to all novel readers from Denmark. I love hearing from brothers and sisters in the body of Christ around the world. I love finding you when I look at the stats for my blog. I hope you'll pass the word about the novel.
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Sunday, June 5, 2011

Chapter Seventeen

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. 

Intruders
 © Jeannie St. John Taylor

“And now, the giants, who are produced from the spirits and flesh, shall be called evil spirits upon the earth, and on the earth shall be their dwelling. Evil spirits have proceeded from their bodies. Because they are born from men, and from the holy Watchers is their beginning and primal origin, they shall be evil spirits on earth, and evil spirits shall they be called.” Book of Enoch, Section One 15:8 – 10

“Stop!” a familiar voice hissed close to Atarah’s ear. “It’s me. Tirza!”
Still only half awake, Atarah ceased struggling and opened her eyes, momentarily uncertain whether Tirza offered help or a threat. Remembering the baby, Atarah’s eyes swept the bed beside her. Empty. She bolted upright, shoving aside Tirza’s hand, adrenaline pumping. “Where’s . . .”
“Shhh!” Tirza pressed a finger against her own lips and raised her eyebrows in warning. She nodded toward Shua who stood cradling the baby in the narrow space between the two hollowed-out stone beds of hay. His head rested contentedly on her shoulder. As soon as Tirza saw Atarah’s eyes light on the baby, she placed a hand on Atarah’s shoulder to get her attention and pivoted slowly to point toward the door.
That’s when Atarah heard the wheezing followed by a nasty laugh. Dagaar.
She leapt to her feet, panicked, but with a quick shake of the head Tirza warned her to silence then slid her eyes sideways toward the sleeping child.
Yes. Right. Atarah didn’t want to awaken Gadreel . Baby sounds, even happy ones, would attract her enemy’s attention. Atarah’s eyes raked the room for a hiding place. Nothing. The usual ones were useless here. The wooden table was too small to hide anyone. Dug into the rock wall, there was no space under or behind the beds, but . . .
Frantically, Atarah clawed at the hay. Perhaps they could burrow into the dried grass and keep Gadreel out of sight until Dagaar passed by. Tirza placed a restraining hand on Atarah’s arm and shook her head. With her mouth in a tight line, she crooked a finger and angled her head toward the door way. She wanted Atarah to go with her!
Reluctantly, Atarah stood. Tirza was right. Dagaar was too close. Atarah’s only hope consisted in distracting Dagaar before he found their sleeping quarters and the baby. He might chase her and overlook Gadreel. Glancing back to make certain Shua and the baby stayed safely in the room, Atarah strode past Tirza and out the door. Directly toward the voices. 
            Before Atarah got five steps, Tirza grabbed her arm and yanked her to the wall. Hard. Confused, Atarah rubbed the back of her head while she questioned the other woman with her eyes. With her hand firmly on Atarah’s shoulder and her back tightly against the wall, Tirza demonstrated what she expected, inching sideways toward the sound. Atarah imitated her movements.
The volume grew continually louder and the words more distinct while currents of fear swirled through Atarah. Her eyes darted about the wide space, peering into every shadowed corner and crevice, but she couldn’t locate the owner of the voice. The place appeared empty. How was that possible?
Tirza stopped and pointed upward. Atarah followed her gaze to a small hole in the ceiling. The voices came from there. Dagaar and his men were engaged in an argument on the floor directly above them.
“Fools!” Dagaar bellowed. The hole magnified his voice. Atarah suspected she could hear him if he whispered. “She is here and we will find her!” He launched into a tirade of filthy intimidations, giving Atarah the impression some of the men had threatened to give up and return home.
One of Dagaar’s cronies swore and called him a foul name. In the confused jumble of angry voices that followed, Atarah couldn’t make out words.
Finally, Dagaar shouted them down. As soon as everyone quieted, he switched from angry-forceful to slimy-conciliatory. “You can do whatever you wish with her after I’m finished.” Eager guffaws once again melded them into a unit. Someone spat.
Atarah shuddered and Tirza placed a reassuring hand on her arm.
“And then . . .” Dagaar oozed, driving the frenetic blood lust of his men. “we’ll smell fresh blood and burning baby-boy flesh.” Laughter burst through the hole.
Shivers crawled down Atarah’s arms and her fingernails bit into her palms.
“What’s this?” Another male voice interrupted the festivity.
Silence. Shuffling sounds filtered downward. “Someone deliberately drilled that.” Dagaar spoke softly. Atarah had been correct in her earlier guess about being able to hear whispers.
They’d spotted the hole.
“What’s it for?”
“Hey, look!” Another voice. Still whispering. There must be more men with Dagaar than Atarah had thought. “You can see all the way through. There’s another tunnel. Or maybe a room, I can’t tell for sure because I can’t see any walls.”
Atarah squeezed Tirza’s hand in silent thanks for her foresight in insisting they remain where they wouldn’t be spotted.
“We couldn’t see if there wasn’t a light burning down there.” Dagaar reasoned.
“I think she’s down there.” someone whispered.
Dagaar wheezed and Atarah knew he was laughing. “We’ve got her.” Atarah’s heart flipped.
“But what’s with the hole?” someone questioned.
Silence told Atarah they were puzzling out the riddle.
Dagaar cursed. “It’s for transmitting sound!” He whispered yet more quietly. “So that whoever built this place could hear enemies approach.” He swore again in a low voice. “They could be listening to us right now. Keep quiet while we find the way down. There’s got to be stairs or a tunnel.”
Atarah spun around without a word and lurched the short distance back down the corridor to Shua and the baby. Tirza stayed on her heels.
“Was that Dagaar?” Shua asked. Miraculously, the baby still slept.
Tirza stood between Atarah and the door.
Atarah nodded. “We have to leave. Now!” she whispered. “Dagaar and his men could be here any second!”
Tirza blocked the exit, her voice low and commanding. “No! You can’t go yet.”
            Angrily, Atarah whirled toward her with false bravado. “You can’t stop us!” She had no idea how they’d get past the stronger woman or what they would do afterward, but surely even weak from hunger the two of them together could fend off Tirza. They’d run blindly to escape Dagaar before. They could do it again.
            “I’m trying to help you.” Tirza hissed. “Do you want them to hear us?”            
Uncertainty wavered through Atarah’s sleep-deprived brain. Could she trust Tirza?

            The doubt must have shown on her face because Tirza said, “I know you’re wondering if you can trust me. Think . . . did I get you away from Peleg?”
“Yes.” The strange relationship Tirza shared with her father almost made Atarah feel grateful for her own father.
“Did I keep you from discovery out there?”
Atarah nodded.
“You don’t know where to go and I do. Plus, there are very few entrances to this place and our people already sealed them all off. The men who are after you can’t get in unless we open the doorways from the inside.” Irritation raised Tirza’s volume and she clapped her hand over her mouth and turned an ear toward the door, listening, before shaking her head with a sigh. She was obviously upset with herself for shouting.  “Well, you’re safe if we both keep quiet.”
“Why does noise matter,” Shua asked suspiciously, “if they can’t get to us here?”
 “You want to expose the location of my people to men who kill, rape and destroy?” Tirza rolled her eyes in disgust. “That’s gratitude. And you’re the ones who brought them here.”
“We didn’t bring . . .” Shua began.
Tirza interrupted. “Do you have any idea what those men will do if they hear us? They don’t sound like nice men.”
Atarah didn’t want to think about everything that could happen.
“If they hear voices they’ll eventually figure out someone lives here and find a way in. They’ll rape and pillage my home and you’ll be the ones responsible for harming people who helped you. Do you want that?”
The injustice of the accusation flashed hot in Atarah, but instead of going on the defensive she covered her anger and said, “I’m sorry. We appreciate all you’ve done for us.” No use antagonizing Tirza further. Atarah did not know if she trusted Tirza or not, hadn’t the woman just said the men couldn’t get down to them here? Was she lying or overreacting by worrying uselessly about her friends? At the moment her motives didn’t matter. Atarah needed her. She had worse things than Tirza to worry about. Like Peleg, Dagaar . . . she could go on. She resisted the urge to look at Shua who, she guessed, was thinking the same things.
“You’re tired and hungry.” Tirza smiled and gestured toward the table which held two loaves of bread and the bowl of curdled milk she’d brought earlier. “Eat while you can. The community is running low on food.”
Alarm must have registered on Atarah’s face because Tirza chuckled.
“It’s not that desperate, I said we were running low, not running out. We always have milk from the goats even if they have to eat our beds to stay alive, and tonight we go gathering. Everyone is required to help, so I’ll be back to get you later.”
“Gathering?” The possibility of returning to the temple to retrieve stored food drew a cold line of fear down Atarah’s back.
“Don’t worry, Peleg doesn’t go along. We glean from the fields and orchards outside after dark. We collect enough to keep us well fed without taking so much the owners of the fields notice. After tonight we may even have honey for the curdled milk. Someone scouted out a lion’s carcass with a honeycomb inside.” 
Tirza planned to show them the way out! Atarah’s heart soared. They could flee to safety. With every limb trembling, she sank onto the pile of grass where she’d slept the night before. She needed food.
“You eat first. I’ll hold Gadreel ,” Atarah held out her arms. The baby didn’t awaken when the slave transferred him. She wondered if he slept so much and so soundly because of a growth spurt. Atarah could see a difference in him just over the last few days.
Shua bit a large chunk from one loaf. “Delicious.”
“You have to be hungry.” Tirza’s mouth quirked into a grin. “Hoda made that and she’s a rotten cook. Peleg chose her for her looks.”
Was that an attempt at humor? Unwilling to offend, Atarah squeaked out a polite chuckle while Shua giggled.
“So how are your parents?” Atarah asked cautiously.
The baby whimpered and opened his eyes. Atarah swayed with him, grateful to look in his face rather than at Tirza.
“Peleg didn’t mention you, if that’s what you’re asking.”
Chiding herself for her transparency, Atarah stood and bounced the baby on her hip. She picked up one of the loaves with her free hand and broke off a piece for Gadreel. “Want some bread?” she cooed.  He wriggled chubby fingers and broke into a sparsely-toothed grin. The dampness of the underground crimped his fine curls into frizz. Atarah didn’t bother to smooth it and, since Tirza had already mentioned his extra fingers, she made no attempt to hide them.
“You don’t need to concern yourself with Peleg right now.” Tirza leaned against the door jamb and rubbed her forehead. “He has other things on his mind -- rumors of giants headed this way.”
Shock ripped through Atarah.
“Giants?” A dark flush colored Shua’s cheeks.
“I know. Giants scare me, too, but we’re safe here.” Tirza turned to Atarah. “You should eat.”
“We can’t be safe from the giants!” Shua still suffered from nightmares of the giants from her youth even though the beasts had not come near the City of a Thousand Gods as long as she’d lived there.
Atarah set the baby on the floor and placed the bowl of curdled milk in front of him. She put a comforting arm around Shua.
 “I assume you noticed the size of the tunnel entrance when you came in here.” Tirza said. “It was barely big enough for you to squeeze through, right?”
“Right,” Shua answered.
Gadreel played in the slimy mush, dipping his fingers into the bowl before bringing them joyfully to his mouth. Soon he’d smeared his face with a thick coating of white.
“Could a giant make it through?”
“No?” Shua sounded doubtful but hopeful.
 “A giant in one of those would be like a buffalo stuffed into a fox’s hole.” Tirza strangled herself and stuck out her tongue. “They would have to fold in half to pass through even the highest part of most tunnels.”
Shua giggled.
Atarah understood Tirza’s statement as an exaggeration and appreciated her efforts to quell Shua’s fears. She broke a loaf in half and began to eat. Shua was right. The bread tasted and smelled delicious.
“The Nephilim have to duck heads when they walk through those corridors and the giants are much taller,” Tirza assured them.
 The bite of bread caught in Atarah’s throat. She bent forward coughing and choking. Tirza grabbed the baby while Shua slapped her on the back.
“The Nephilim know about this place?” Atarah finally choked out her question.
A quizzical expression furrowed Tirza’s brow. “Of course. They’re our gods. We can’t keep out our gods.”
Atarah’s knees wobbled. Zaquiel must know about this place.
“They fit through the small entrances?” Shua’s eyes met Atarah’s. She had obviously remembered Zaquiel, too.
“They don’t have to. We meet them inside the temples. Each temple has one entrance big enough for the Nephilim. We don’t know their location.”
“Temples? There’s more than one temple?” Zaquiel could show up anywhere at any time.
Shua pressed a fist to her mouth, visibly upset. “How often do they come?”
 “We have no idea. They just suddenly appear.” Tirza handed the baby back to Atarah. “We stay prepared. And when they arrive we drop everything and go meet their needs.”
The phrase “staying prepared” explained the fully stocked temple.
“When anyone arrives – Nephilim or human -- we keep track of every movement by listening through the warning holes. That’s how we knew your whereabouts.” Tirza inclined her head toward the door. “And that’s how I knew where those horrid men were.”
Atarah commenced eating again. Strength from the food was finally beginning to flow into her, clearing her thoughts. The way Tirza casually handed Gadreel back to her and willingly offered information eased several niggling concerns. For the first time, Atarah relaxed enough to notice the weariness-etched lines in Tirza’s face. Atarah found herself softening toward the woman. What had she suffered? With a father like Peleg, Atarah didn’t want to know.
“How long did you track us?” Atarah asked with feigned indifference.
“An entire day. Impressed?” Tirza smiled.
Atarah tried to remember how many days or weeks since they left home, but her mind blanked. However, if Peleg tracked them for one day only she and Shua had gone undetected for a good while. And that told her Tirza and her people must live deep in the underground.
“You were moving in circles a lot,” Tirza continued, “plus we keep lookouts. Peleg says there are at lease thirty levels wandering back and forth through the mountain. So we keep guards on duty day and night and when anyone gets too close we seal off all exits. You passed several.”
“Several guards?” Atarah licked the curdled milk off Gadreel ’s fingers and regarded Tirza curiously.
“Not guards. Exits. Entrances.” Tirza shrugged. “You wouldn’t have seen them because you didn’t know what to watch for. When you’re focused on the path it’s nearly impossible to see an extra boulder plugging a hole. Just looks like another rock against another wall.”
“We might have gotten here sooner if we’d gone down one of those corridors we discounted.”
“Not necessarily. A lot of the tunnels lead nowhere and some entrances are simple openings without tunnels leading to them. Easy to miss.” Tirza pushed away from the door and stretched. “You can stay with us for as long as you like. We don’t have much food left, but I’ll bring more bread later and the goats continue to give milk – even when we have to feed them our beds.” She chuckled.
“How can we ever thank you?” Atarah asked.
“You can thank us by helping gather food later. We have to bring in as much as we can before the giants get to it.” Tirza stooped to tweak the baby’s nose. “You’re such a big boy,” she cooed. “Yes you are.”
“No, he’s not!” Atarah shot off the words too quickly then bit her lip.
 A knowing smile appeared briefly in Tirza’s eyes. “I’ll be back.” She waved goodbye then poked her head back through the door. “Just stay put so Peleg doesn’t catch your scent.”
After few moments, Atarah ran after her. She caught up to her by the pool of water. “One more question.”
“Go ahead.” Tirza bent to drink from cupped hands.
“If you seal off all the exits when you hear intruders,” Atarah asked, “why didn’t you close off the one we came through?”
Tirza froze, her hands still brimming with water. After several moments she straightened. When she looked at Atarah, her eyes swam with pain. “Peleg wants the two of you.” 
A shiver of dread rippled from Atarah’s soul.





Sunday, May 29, 2011

Chapter Sixteen

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. 

Community 
© Jeannie St. John Taylor 

“’For I know the plans I have for you,’ declares the LORD, ‘plans for wholeness and not for evil, to give you a future and a hope.’” Jeremiah 29:11

Rising cautiously to her feet, Atarah’s gaze swept the area, evaluating her surroundings. This wasn’t the temple. Like the temple, the space was hewn from mountain rock and large enough to accommodate many people, but the similarities stopped there. A single central room held many of the comforts of home and almost looked as though it had been lifted from one of the poorer homes in the city above.
Mismatched furniture constructed of wood and arranged for work and relaxation clustered around the space. In one area, a table with one leg missing was propped up with a stone. It stood between two rough straight chairs much like the ones found in the slave quarters behind Atarah’s home. Chipped cups and bowls of fired clay rested on small tables. Oil lamps with broken handles flickered from table tops and niches cut into walls. Except for the four long polished tables carved from the granite walls, the space appeared to be furnished with objects city residents had tossed out.
At the far end of the room, bright-white lambs snuggled with their mothers, and chickens pecked at pebbles scattered across the floor. Strange what chickens would consume to make gullets function smoothly. Atarah marveled that the place could feel cozy even though it reeked of livestock odors.
Around the perimeter of the space, multiple wooden doors blocked the view into what Atarah suspected might be family living and sleeping quarters. A few thick doors hung open, offering glimpses of cramped dark interiors.
Evidentially she and Shua had barged into the communal dwelling of the fifteen to twenty people clustered around them staring as though the two women were an entirely new species. Hadn’t Shua told her that sometimes escaped slaves lived down here? Fatigue and hunger so muddied Atarah’s thoughts she could only vaguely remember words and events from mere days earlier. Several of these people who wore rough brown clothing similar to Atarah’s had the hardened appearance of slaves. But one beautiful young woman with large dark eyes and nearly-black hair didn’t look like a slave at all. She carried herself with an elegance that belied her attire.
Atarah wiped the baby’s face and swayed from foot to foot hoping to quiet him. With her hands shaking and knees threatening to buckle under her, she gathered her wits to speak. “Thank you for. . .”
“Oh, she’s thanking us.” The mocking voice of the older woman who had spoken at first left the distinct impression of a person not pleased.
Atarah didn’t blame her. Them. They likely all felt hostility toward the trio. Who would be thrilled with strangers breaking in uninvited with a shrieking baby? She started over. “I’m sorry  . . .”
“Sit.” An older gentleman with a wart on his nose, apparently the leader of the group, interrupted Atarah by pointing to a backless bench dead center of the room. Atarah and Shua obediently walked over and settled themselves on the hard surface. He stood directly in front of them, shoulder to shoulder with the woman who had spoken earlier, studying them. Were the two husband and wife?
They appeared to be a matched set. Both were as wrinkled as elephants and nearly as large. Folds of fat hung from under the man’s chins. Her eyes bulged with fat. Though he bald, thick nose hair grew from his nostrils. The woman’s hair hung thin down her back in strings of non-descript shades of gray. Both wore dirty linen, a step up from the rough brown apparel of the other residents. Atarah picked up their unwashed odor even though she couldn’t remember the last time she herself had bathed properly.
With raised eyebrows and an intimidating look, the man dismissed the rest of the inhabitants. Without a word they spread across the space, busily attending to pre-assigned chores. Atarah counted eighteen people in all, none emaciated. Obviously everyone got enough to eat. Good news for the newcomers.
The woman waited a few beats then, never taking her eyes off Atarah, turned her head slightly and addressed the man in harsh tones loud enough for everyone in the room to hear. “You made a huge mistake.”
“Hush, Hoda!” His snarl trumped her nastiness. The odor of rotten teeth made Atarah’s stomach roll.oHo
“You had no right to welcome them,” Hoda said.
This was their version of a welcome?
With narrowed eyes, the man slowly pivoted to glare at the woman. Hoda pressed her lips into a line, jutted out her chin and folded arms over her drooping chest. The couple stared at one another. Atarah felt Shua’s damp fingertips slid over and make contact with hers. Atarah wanted to pat her reassuringly, but sensed she dare not move.
Tension sizzled through the room and activity increased. A pale red-haired woman bent to concentrate on threading her shuttle through the yarn on a loom. A grey-haired woman loaded a pan into one of the dome-shaped ovens. One man kneaded a loaf of bread while two more worked at a wine press. The dark-haired woman kept her sad gaze on Atarah as she stirred a large metal pot with a wooden implement.
While the man continued to glare at the woman Atarah and Shua sat rigidly, reluctant to draw attention to themselves. No one spoke. Not a word. Unnerving.
Finally, Hoda snapped, “Fine. Just make the right decision, Peleg.” She turned on her heel and stalked away.
Peleg crossed his arms over his protruding middle and planted his feet defiantly as he watched Hoda retreat. “I already decided,” he shouted just before she exited the room.
Hoda stopped, her back to him.
A man and woman drinking from a bowl at one of the long tables exchanged smirks. The woman at the loom worked faster. Another woman hurried to collect a kitchen utensil. The dark-haired woman paused on her way to set a bowl on one of the large tables, her eyes dark pools of sorrow.
“I’m keeping both women and the baby,” Peleg taunted. “They’re mine.”
Hoda’s shoulders drooped. 
A horse-faced young woman with strong arms wandered into the room leading three brown spotted goats with swollen teats. Noticing Hoda and Peleg, she stopped and glanced sharply at Atarah and Shua.
A goat bleated.
Hoda straightened. “Never too many wombs for Peleg,” her voice sang out in derision as she exited the room.
            Goose flesh raised on Atarah’s arms. She shut her eyes and envisioned the Light. Fear not.
Cursing, Peleg tore across the room and disappeared after Hoda. Scuffling and shouting reverberated through the corridor for several minutes. Eventually, the shrieking receded into the distance and Atarah could no longer understand the garbled argument, but knowing the fight revolved around her and Shua was frightening.
“Wombs?” Shua gripped Atarah’s hand hard enough to cut off Atarah’s circulation. Gadreel jabbered happy nonsense.
“Hold my animals for a minute, will you?” The woman with goats handed her animals off to a man about her age and tiptoed off toward Peleg’s and Hoda’s voices.
The aroma wafting from an oven near the tables floated into Atarah’s awareness. Her stomach growled. How long had it been since they’d eaten? The baby started to whimper softly and Atarah rubbed his back. His suffering caused her pain and she could do nothing to help him at the moment.
Shua trembled visibly, sending a pang of guilt through Atarah. She blamed herself for Shua’s misery as well as the baby’s. “You hungry or scared?” With the room still full of people, Atarah mouthed the choice.
“Both,” Shua mouthed back. Tears shone in her eyes. “And tired.”
“Me, too.” Atarah could see into a small room directly across from them. Dried grasses filled long narrow trenches hollowed into the rock. Beds? Oh to sink into one of those and drift peacefully off to sleep! But first she’d feed the baby. Then she’d sleep forever.
The goat-girl ambled cheerfully back into the room. “They’ll be awhile,” she announced with a laugh. “Let’s enjoy!” She twirled and pumped her arms in the air. The inhabitants snickered, visibly relaxing. A murmur of conversation filled the formerly-silent room.
“Gehazi! Milk them for me, will you?” the girl called to the man who held the goats for her. “Bring some milk in a skin for the baby.”
“Will do.”
Atarah watched him lead the animals to one of the areas bordering the main space. The girl retrieved a loaf of bread fresh from the oven, wrapped her scarf around it to protect her hands from the heat and hurried over. “You must be starving.” She split the loaf in half for Atarah and Shua. Atarah broke off pieces for the baby as she ate. “I’m Tirza. And you are . . . ?”
Atarah told her.
“We could hear you for the better part of a day,” Tirza told them. “Near the end, I thought those men were going to catch you. Did you know you were running in circles a lot?”
She left no time for Atarah or Shua to answer before she turned her attention to the baby.
“What a cutie! His eyes fill up most of his face, don’t they?” Talking so fast Atarah could barely follow her, the girl held her arms out for Gadreel. “Here. Let me take him for you. You must be totally exhausted and he looks heavy. Love those lavender eyes!”
“Um.” Atarah stiffened, searching her brain for a response. She didn’t want to hand over the baby. “I’m afraid he’ll scream for anyone else. Maybe when he gets used to you . . .” She settled him on her own lap and gave him another piece of bread. He sucked noisily.
“Oh, that’s okay.” The girl grinned. “What a sweet little guy.”  She reached out, pinched his cheek and patted his arm. Too tired to think quickly, Atarah didn’t cover his hands in time. “Look at those fingers! How cute!” The girl sat cross-legged on the floor in front of them, elbows propped on her knees and ran her forefinger down the length of Gadreel ’s fingers one at a time counting them. “One . . . two . . . three . . . four . . . five . . . six!” She finished with a gentle tickle to the baby’s tummy.
Gadreel giggled. Blood pumped into Atarah’s ears and she exchanged a look with Shua. “Could we have a drink of water?” Atarah’s mouth was so dry she could barely ask the question.
“Oh! How thoughtless of me. You’re thirsty!” The girl turned and shouted, “Elath! Bring something to drink!” Without missing a beat she continued to prattle.
One of the men carried over a bowl of liquid and offered a sipping-reed to Atarah. She didn’t want to take the first drink since Shua was thirsty, too, but she thought it better not to offend. She shot an apologetic glance toward Shua, hoping the slave understood. Placing the reed between her lips, she greedily pulled in a deep draft of the liquid. Immediately, she doubled over choking and wheezing, her throat on fire.
Tirza jumped up to whack Atarah on the back several times while Atarah continued to gasp repeatedly, unable to catch a normal breath. “Someone bring water!” Tirza shouted angrily.
Shua snatched the baby from Atarah’s useless hands.
 “You buffoons gave her barley wine!” Tirza accused, her face crimson with rage. “Idiots!’
The woman with the sad eyes thrust a bowl of water into Atarah’s hands and she drank, but several minutes passed before she could finally control her breathing again. By then Shua had quenched her thirst, the baby sucked on a skin of milk and the woman with the sad eyes had withdrawn. Atarah continued to tremble.
“He deliberately gave you strong wine!” Tirza scowled at Elath who was continuing to laugh with several of his fellows. “Offering the wine to thirsty people is a great joke down here. No one can drink that stuff straight at first, and they know that. I still mix water with my wine and I’ve lived here my entire life.” Still frowning and shaking her head, she handed Atarah the bread she had dropped onto the floor when the spasms first overtook her. “Better eat a little.”
Tirza tossed a curse Elath’s direction. “That wasn’t funny. You trying to kill the woman?” She was even less attractive when angry. Her words did nothing more than elicit more guffaws from the men. Elath lifted his drink with an elegant bow and drained the remainder of the wine. He wiped his mouth with his sleeve and burped. Laughter rippled around the room.
“Buffoons!” Tirza muttered. “Bullies! Let’s get out of here. They’re worthless.” Without a word, she took Gadreel from Shua and swung him around to ride on her hip. “Looks like you could use some sleep. Come on. I’ll show you a place where you can hide from Peleg until he forgets about you.”
Atarah wasn’t so sure he’d forget, but with sleep calling she didn’t care.
“Watch out for Hoda, too,” Tirza warned. “She sees you as a threat and she would just as soon kill you as look at you. Do not trust her.”
Tirza chattered non-stop through the trek to supposed safety. Atarah and Shua told her they were from the City of a Thousand Gods but not much else -- though Tirza did guess correctly that Atarah was not a slave. Shua prodded the girl with questions. Gadreel seemed content to be carried by her and Atarah was too deadened by fatigue to argue. Tirza seemed kind enough.
They climbed one flight of stairs, wound through several connecting rooms and down more steps. Atarah tried to keep her bearings, but the dizzying numbers of chambers and hallways and steps left her completely confused.
Remembering the voluminous amounts of information gushing from Tirza proved impossible for Atarah’s fatigued brain. She hoped Shua could take everything in because Atarah felt like a dead person walking. She’d heard of some primitive cultures hiking as they slept and  suspected she might be doing just that -- fading in and out of consciousness as she trailed after Tirza.
Still, Atarah managed to focus on occasional snippets of news. One such morsel astonished her right out of her drowsiness.
“Oh, I’m used to their nonsense,” Tirza was saying. “They’ve shrieked at one another like that my whole life. The fights can continue at high volume for hours and hours.” Atarah assumed the girl spoke of Hoda and Peleg. “I don’t know where they find the energy to drag things out so long. Mother usually comes out of her sleeping space a day or two after one of their nights-of-fury with a few bruises and they both seem as happy as lions eating zebra.”
Was Tirza saying Hoda was her mother?
“They like fighting?” Shua asked incredulously.
 Tirza chuckled. “I think they’re addicted to the emotional highs and lows that come with the fights. And I know Mother enjoys holding some sort of weird power over the man who terrifies the whole community.”
“So you’re saying Hoda is your mother?” Shua seemed at ease questioning Tirza.
“She is.”
A surprisingly brief answer for a talker, but Atarah didn’t think she’d want to admit a relationship with Hoda either.
“Peleg’s your father?”
“Might be. Mother says any one of a hundred men could be my father. She was a temple prostitute back then.”
The way the girl alternated between calling Hoda by her given name and using the woman’s parental title struck Atarah as strange. Of course now she understood why Tirza could get away with bossing the other inhabitants. Her parents’ power gave her influence when they disappeared for awhile. Tirza could take charge without anyone disputing her right to do so.
Tirza continued to lead onward. Unlike the tunnels they’d wandered earlier, this place held room after room after room. The area the group occupied was massive. Atarah’s guess about the tiniest rooms functioning as sleeping quarters turned out to be correct. But more than the few residents they’d met at first lived down here. The women passed people everywhere. Scores of them. Atarah lost count. The place teemed with inhabitants going about daily lives who, Tirza assured them, had no interest in giving the women up to Peleg. Atarah began to believe they really could find a safe place to sleep where Peleg wouldn’t molest them.
“We’re almost there.” Tirza moved Gadreel to her shoulder where he could look around more easily.
 She pointed out pits scattered throughout one of the more spacious rooms they walked through. In one of the holes, Tirza explained, animal skins were soaked in a solution of lime and cold water to burn hair off the hides in the first step toward tanning. After the skins steeped in the bath for several days, women would scrape away the remaining hair and stretch them. Two women fastening one of the finished hides to wooden planks waved as they passed.
Pits in another place held ash soaking in the water that would transform the gray powder into lye for soap-making. Another pit aged pickles in salt brine. An olive press had been set up in another of the hollowed out holes.
“Almost there,” Tirza finally promised again. She patted Atarah’s shoulder. “You’re tired.”
They passed a room where a number of the cavities were grouped together. “This is where we ferment spirits. That pit is for stomping grapes during harvest season. The others are storage holes. If you get thirsty, you’re close enough to bop in for a drink.” Grinning, Tirza pointed to a great bowl filled with the barley wine Atarah had choked on earlier.
Wearily, Atarah smiled and rolled her eyes. “Any water?” She liked this girl.
“Water is right there.” Tirza indicated a bubbling well. “And . . . here we are.” With a flourish, she led them into a tiny room a few steps from the well. The space held two sleeping trenches filled with dried grass. Atarah longed to collapse into one. Instead she lifted the baby from Tirza and gently laid him down. 
 “Let’s see. Anything else?” Tirza tapped her chin with one finger. “Oh. Relief area. Right over there.” She pointed. “Water from the well flushes away the elimination then crashes out of the underground as a waterfall. Keeps everything nice and fresh.” She winked and quirked her mouth. “Genius, don’t you think? You were wondering why it smelled only musty and not stinky here, right?”
Shua laughed, obviously at ease with Tirza.
 “I’ll bring food in the morning. And goats’ milk. There shouldn’t be anyone else coming down here so you’ll be safe. During wine-making season people from other communities use our presses, but the entire area stays empty this time of year.”
 “Other communities?” Atarah’s mouth dropped open.
“The numbers change all the time, but there may be as many as fifty different communities down here. I may have to switch you to one of those to keep you away from Peleg.” She stepped out the door. “See you in the morning.”
Sinking onto the bed beside the baby, Atarah closed her eyes.
“How could people like Hoda and Peleg raise someone like Tirza?” Shua’s question roused Atarah only momentarily.
“She’s very kind,” Atarah mumbled, but somewhere down deep she had already begun to doubt. If only she could stay awake to keep guard or maybe . . . the unfinished thought transformed to a misty cloud as she drifted off to sleep.
Atarah had no idea how long she’d slept when she awakened to a hand clamped over her mouth and hot breath on the side of her face. Kicking and clawing at her assailant, she blindly fought for her life.