Sunday, October 23, 2011

Chapter Thirty-Eight


After the Sacrifice

Wash your heart from evil that you may be saved.
How long shall your wicked thoughts lodge within you?” Jeremiah 4:14

            Elika swept through the crowded Room of Candles, elegant purple robes flowing in her wake. With light arm-touches and smiles she threaded her way through guests, greeting them warmly while taking care not to pause long enough for anyone to engage her in conversation. She hoped the smile pasted on her face would cover the grief overwhelming her heart and allow her to float along without being noticed. The mere thought of idle chatter was more than she could bear tonight. If anyone offered congratulations she might break down completely.
Earlier, Elika had dressed in a simple blue silk tunic and matching covering with opals bordering the sleeves. The muted colors matched her sad mood. But when Ishan saw her, a brief scowl darkened his face. Moments later, Dagaar appeared at her side with whispered instructions for her to return immediately to her quarters and put on something more suitable for a celebration.
A celebration. So that’s what Ishan called this post-sacrifice, post giant-attack travesty. She couldn’t bear to think the words. Couldn’t bear to remember she’d lost her daughter. Hatred for her husband had burbled up with hatred for herself chasing close behind, but she forced the emotion down on her way upstairs. Once in her room, she obediently changed to this elegant robe so heavy with embroidery and jewels she could barely stay on her feet. Why had she once felt queen-like wearing it? She despised it now. Purple was the color of passion and all passion had drained from Elika. She felt numb. Empty. A shell. The weight of the fabric dragged down her soul as well as her frail body.
As she moved through the room, the diamonds sparkling on the edge of her veil caught every candle flicker, mocking her broken heart. Flaunting the unspeakable price Ishan had paid to hang onto his wealth and prestige. The price she’d allowed him to pay.
Shua dead.
Gadreel dead.
Atarah dead.
With every step the jewels shouted accusations, flashing white like Dagaar’s evil grin. Elika dropped her head letting the veil fall across her face to hide her shame and sorrow.
Barely aware of the laughing crowd, Elika clutched folded arms to her waist while images of her daughter and grandson poured in. Tears prickled the backs of her lids. She wished she hadn’t forced herself to continue eavesdropping when she had overheard Dagaar bragging about capturing Atarah after the sacrifice. But if Atarah could suffer so at his hands, the least her mother could do was share in the tortures by listening to all her beloved daughter endured. So Elika listened. Because she hadn’t lifted a finger to help her daughter.
But she shouldn’t have listened. The details of the horrors played through Elika’s mind for the thousandth time. She shuddered.
“Are you all right, dear?” A hand grasped hers. “You’re shivering.”
Elika quickly cleared her face of emotion and straightened, face to face with Rizpah wearing her signature crimson. Ruby-studded scarlet silk puffed out in gathers at her wrist. A plunging neckline drew attention to the one feature of her aging body that still appeared youthful.
“You look lovely this evening,” Elika said. She forced the corners of her mouth into a smile though the rest of her face remained stiff.
Rizpah responded with an identical smile – one that didn’t reach her eyes. Relations between the two women had always been strained. “But it’s a little cool in here and you were shivering. Are you cold?”
The day had been warm and the room already felt too hot.
“A little.” Elika extracted her hand and rubbed her arms as though to warm herself.
 “I’m green with jealousy, you know.” Rizpah angled her head toward the other side of the room where a giggling Nympha leaned into Zaquiel. She gazed rapturously into his eyes. “Ishan tells me you’re the one who talked that gorgeous daughter of yours into giving up her son. You’re the star tonight.”
Elika opened her mouth to protest, her anger coming back into sharp focus. At least she’d had no part of initiating Nympha’s actions. At least that. She’d been weak, yes, but she hadn’t invited the horrors. She still believed there’d been no other choice.
Rizpah, intent on watching the unfolding romance across the room, prattled on. “Look at the two of them. Don’t they look fabulous together?”
The musicians Ishan had hired for the evening launched into a lively tune. Zaquiel grabbed Nympha and spiraled joyfully around the dance area.
“He seems crazy about her,” Rizpah crooned. 
“His affections for her have mysteriously renewed recently.” Elika failed miserably at disguising the bitterness in her voice.
 Rizpah didn’t notice. “I think you may have another grandson to offer Ninlel in a few months. You must be so proud.”
Bile rose to Elika’s throat. She pressed a hand to her mouth, swallowing as she stumbled backward. She swiftly covered her emotion by snapping her fingers for a slave to bring more food and drink. Squeezing Rizpah’s arm in a friendly gesture, she turned to leave. “I’ll send a slave down to build up the fire.”
Elika had no intention of ordering anyone to stoke fires in the heating facilities beneath the floor. Packed with bodies, this room would soon warm sufficiently to force slaves to wander about opening windows and waving ivory-handled papyrus fans for guests. But thanks to Rizpah, Elika now had an excuse to escape for a moment. She aimed for a door at the back of the room where slaves entered and exited.
“Enchanting celebration,” gushed a woman with gold chains entwined in braids piled atop of her head.
 “Congratulations on your lovely sacrifice,” purred another.
Elika smiled graciously and continued walking. She couldn’t help seething with anger toward her husband and everyone else cramming the room. Not a single person offered condolences about Atarah or Gadreel. Her heart caught as her daughter’s face flashed before her again.
She smiled brightly at a greeting from one of Ishan’s turbaned business associates. She hated pretending. Hated her attitude. Hated everyone in the room even though many had treated her well in the past. She hated her own weakness. Hated her false smile. But with the political climate prevailing in the city she knew she dare not show her true feelings if she hoped to survive. Though she couldn’t explain why -- even to herself, she’d stood behind Ishan for so long she didn’t know how to change now. She saw no way of extricating herself from the disaster she called her life.
Spotting a candle with a tiny blue flame, Elika caught the eye of a female slave and shifted her eyes toward the offending light. The girl hurried to replace it and Elika found herself wondering what would happen to the poor young thing later in the evening. Would the girl end up conceiving another child the community could offer Ninlel? Would she have any idea which of the celebrants had fathered the baby? Would she survive the attack? Would she care?
The room grew louder. Elika pushed through the door and turned left, intending to follow the stairs to the room below ground where slaves kept fires burning to heat the stone floors above. As far as she knew, the fire trenches stood vacant tonight. She could spend a few minutes alone there, gathering her thoughts where no one would search for her. Then she’d return to tell Rizpah the fires were blazing.
But before she reached the stairs, a voice behind a door to her right caught her attention. Dagaar. She froze. “What did you think we’d do?” Dagaar’s voice was loud. Mocking. He didn’t expect anyone from the celebration back here. “Just sashay up the ramp and waltz in after her pretty as you please?”
Who was he talking about? Atarah? Elika’s heart thumped in her throat.  
“She was alone.” The male voice oozed disrespect.
Atarah! They had to be talking about Atarah.
“We could have taken her easily.” A second unidentified man said disdainfully. “Just walked right in and . . .” He cursed. “But you just left her.”
Atarah was alive! Elika felt dizzy.
“I suppose you wanted Noah to sic one of his dragons on you?” Dagaar laughed menacingly.
“There are no dragons on the ark.”
“Oh, really. Huge lizard. Tiny little forearms. Thick hind legs. Big head. Sharp teeth. Tail the size of a tree trunk.”
“Liar!”
“Uzzi. Remember?”
There was a long pause, and when the man finally spoke he sounded cautious. Maybe even frightened. “Uzzi saw dragons?”
“Two young ones went on and he knew the adults had to be close behind. Why do you think he refused to stay and watch the ark any longer?” Dagaar snorted in derision. “The stories about the ark are true, idiot.”
On the ark. Atarah was alive on the ark! Dagaar had lied about all his cruel tales of torture. Why? To impress his friends?
 “The stories about the curse?” the man asked.
“Yes. The curse is true.”
“The curse doesn’t mention dragons.”
“Curses aren’t required to say how you’ll die a horrible death,” Dagaar ridiculed.
The door handle moved. The gods help her, they were coming out! Elika lifted her skirts and fled seconds before the door squeaked open. Out of sight around a corner, she slumped against the wall, trembling as she listened to retreating footsteps.
Atarah was alive! That had to be what they meant!
Joy raced through Elika’s bloodstream and burst forth as tears.
Atarah was alive! On Noah’s ark!
A jumble of elation mingled with hysteria bubbled into her throat. Sobbing silently, she pressed both hands over her mouth to keep from crying out. Her precious resourceful daughter had eluded an entire gang of thugs and found safety, the gods be praised.
Atarah was alive!
Elika had never been more proud. Or so ashamed. She had let her own daughter down when she made her watch that awful sacrifice and even tried to convince her Dagaar could be a good choice for a mate. Elika had actually made herself believe that lie could be true. Shame burned her face. Where did her daughter get her courage? Atarah was a better person than she. Stronger. Wiser. More courageous.
But was Atarah still in danger? Fear did a little flip in Elika’s stomach. She knew Noah well enough to know he wouldn’t harm anyone. Atarah should be safe there. Unless he’d changed. Or there really were dragons on the ark. Noah couldn’t protect anyone from meat-eating dragons.
No. No. She wouldn’t think about that. Atarah was alive and safe.
Lost in the turmoil of emotion, Elika didn’t realize she’d been walking until she felt a cold brass door handle in her hand. She had automatically wandered to the room she always sought out when upset. Ignoring the celebration to her back, she entered, closed the door and sat in front of her loom.
She picked up a hank of yarn, fully anticipating that she would choose bright colors of joy since she knew Atarah lived. Instead she found herself reaching for the somber hues of fog and darkest night. Dread clutched her chest. She ran her fingers down the carpet’s selvage then threaded the weft through vertical threads. As her fingers flew over the carpet, fearful thoughts tumbled through her head, writhing around one another like a nest of rattlesnakes.
All the threats and promises she’d heard Noah utter down through the years came back to her. Bombarded her. Tormented her. She could no longer deny he spoke truth. She’d probably known all along. Her hands moved faster, frantically tying knots. She worked as though she had to finish her carpet before the world suddenly came to an end. Her hands paused in midair.
The world was coming to an end.
Epiphany after epiphany blasted through Elika like a hurricane. The world was coming to an end. Noah’s God was the One True God. The only God. She had dishonored her body with demons who pretended to be gods. She’d done it to please a husband who loved wealth and prestige and false gods more than her. Done it because she desperately needed security and love.
She had betrayed her daughter. Betrayed her grandson.
She gasped for air, her fists clenching the dark scratchy hank of yarn in her lap.
No. She had not betrayed her grandson. She sat stock still in front of her weaving, unable to move, her tears melting the colors on her loom into a blurry mass. Much as she loved the baby, Ishan was right about Gadreel. Right about his species. Because Gadreel was a giant, a creature not intended by God, the baby had a corrupted soul. There were no creatures more evil than giants. Though she’d always clung to the hope her grandson might be different, she now accepted the fact that he would never have been.
The giants were referred to as “heroes” and “men of renown” for good reason. They were powerful. Creatures of their stature and strength could never resist oppressing ones weaker than they. Gadreel would have been no different.
Giants were already taking over the earth. Was the violence of the giants the thing compelling God to destroy the earth? Or was the evil rampant all around forcing God’s hand? The evil people of her community? The evil inside her?
Water would soon fall from the sky. She knew that now. And then what would happen? Groaning, Elika snatched up her tamping comb and pounded down the warp of her rug. And kept pounding. And pounding. And weeping.
She had no idea how much time passed, but by the time she heard Ishan open the door she’d made up her mind. She would go to the ark and find her daughter. Try to make her understand about Gadreel. If Atarah could forgive her, Elika would accept the invitation Noah had been offering the entire population for a hundred years. She would enter the ark to escape the Flood the One True God was bringing upon the earth.
Elika stood and faced her husband, face swollen and red, determination sparking from her eyes. She didn’t care what he did to her. She finally understood the truth and he’d have to kill her to change her mind.

Several hours later, Elika lay in Ishan’s arms in her own bedchamber on her own bed. Most of the partiers had gone home and the Room of Candles lurked dark and hollow at the bottom of the stairs. She could hear unpleasant sounds coming from the slave quarters and other parts of the house where some of the men of the city still shared slave girls, but she chose to block out the noises and enjoy the moment. 
She hadn’t felt this content in years and was amazed her husband had so quickly changed from the raging bull who entered the room. She didn’t understand what had caused him to soften and approach her with a tenderness he hadn’t shown her in years. With her face puffy and the color of one of Rizpah’s gowns he had to know she’d been crying. And tears customarily raised his ire. Besides, his demeanor hadn’t changed until she stated defiantly she had determined to board the ark. That statement seemed to shock him.
Instead of beating her or even shouting, he’d listened quietly with eyes full of compassion. Maybe he had sensed the change in her and realized he still needed her like she needed him. After she had her say, he took her hand and led her upstairs. They’d enjoyed a night of passion she didn’t think possible at her age. Why had she ever doubted his love for her?
“I’m sorry for everything I said. You know I didn’t mean those things.”
“Shhhh. Shhhh.” He caressed her lips with a fingertip. “You’re just sad about losing Atarah and Gadreel. I understand how upset you are.”
She hadn’t told him Atarah still lived and she wondered if he knew, but she didn’t want to discuss anything inflammatory right now. “I love you,” she whispered in his ear. This was the first time in years she’d been able to express her feelings. She still couldn’t believe he’d chosen her over joining the other after-party festivity. He still loved her! He might not say he loved her, but he’d never been able to say those words. She wanted to tell him how grateful she was. How much she had needed his comfort tonight. The words stuck in her throat. “Does your shoulder hurt?”
“A little. Growing old is no fun.”
“You’re not old,” she encouraged. She thought of her own age-spots and saggy skin and the pain that often throbbed in her neck. No one wanted to feel old and unattractive.
He flipped onto his back and shrugged one shoulder, hinting she massage away the discomfort. “I hope you appreciate this because ignoring the others and staying with you could cause us trouble.”
A bit of uneasiness slid into her chest. “I’m sorry.” She kneaded his shoulder. Noting the loose skin, she kneaded the spot where the bones joined beneath it. “Here?”
He nodded. “Hopefully, my willingness to sacrifice my grandson coupled with tonight’s celebration will encourage everyone to overlook my refusal to join the other men for one evening. We can’t afford to risk the displeasure of our friends.”
The apprehension tightened into an aching lump. She no longer cared about the opinion of their “friends,” but knew Ishan did and depended on her to keep up appearances. She was willing. But she hated to believe she’d once again allowed him to manipulate her into letting down her guard and trusting him only to learn he was the same old Ishan. So often her emotions climbed a mountain only to crash to the bottom of the cliff. The pain of disapproval and rejection always hit her with greater intensity when she allowed herself to trust.
What kept her clinging desperately to him anyway? What fueled the hope? What had Noah said to her so many years ago about people who married becoming “one flesh?” Was that why she couldn’t extricate herself from him? From the pain?
“I’m glad you showed them we stand as a united front.” Ishan patted her leg, then closed his eyes and sighed deeply while she rubbed his shoulder. Usually, when his back hurt she could detect the knots of pain in his muscles, but this pain was in the bone so she had to guess where to massage. She worked her fingers over his flesh while she consoled herself with the thought that even though he could have sent for a beautiful slave to do this for him he’d chosen her.
“You were an enchanting hostess tonight.”
She remembered the way she’d avoided conversation and hurried from the room and knew he couldn’t really mean that. Why was he flattering her?
“It would be disastrous if you ever told anyone else the things you said to me, you know. We just need to hope no gods overheard. Last thing we need is a double measure of wrath.”
That was why. He needed her. She’d guessed correctly earlier.
Ishan raised his head slightly from the pillows so he could look squarely at her. “The world is not coming to an end. You know that, right?”
“Of course.” Love and flattery equals manipulation and control.
“You mustn’t speak your doubts again.”
“Yes.”
He rolled his shoulder. “Up a little.”
She trailed a feather-light tickle up the length of his arm and drew small circles around his shoulder joint then moved to his bicep muscle. A tiny part of her dared long for him to mean the nice words. To truly feel proud of her.
 “Your arm feels good. Firm.”
He reached over to knead the bicep for himself. “Yes, it does. But then I work at staying strong.”
She recognized the words as a jab – an accusation – and apprehension rose. Though she knew he still viewed himself as youthful and considered her old, his impressions about his own youthfulness were inaccurate. True, she was aging, but so was he. Sometimes when she caught sight of him unexpectedly from a distance, she didn’t recognize the old man walking toward her. After a few moments up close she once again saw the husband of her youth, but she knew the truth. She’d never told him because she hated to hurt him. And she certainly wouldn’t say it now. She had longed for this moment with her husband for so long she refused to ruin the mood.
“If you said anything to anyone we’d look bad. We can’t afford that.”
“I know.”
“We were so fortunate to have the opportunity to offer Gadreel to the gods for the benefit of the community.” His voice rang with nobility.
Her head felt as though someone wrapped a tourniquet around her skull and pulled tight. She tried to say something – anything. No words came out. She smoothed her expression. “Mmmm.”
He must have accepted her murmur as agreement. “Think about all we accomplished with that sacrifice!”
How could he bear to speak those words? She wanted to stop her ears with her fingers, but she kept her face expressionless.
“We were willing to give up our beloved grandson.” Ishan eyes shone with pride. And arrogance. “A half-god. Who else has done that recently?” Energized, he chuckled triumphantly and swung his legs over the side of the bed. “And in the process we protected the entire city from the dangers of a grown-up giant. That ought to buy us a lot of prestige. Do you have any idea how much more important it is to sacrifice a young giant than a human child? I can’t tell you how proud I am.”
He chuckled again, then sobered and directed emphatic words toward her. “I expect you let Nympha know how proud you are. Tell her you think she’s brilliant.”
“Brilliant?”
“Brilliant. She chose to keep the only pregnancy that would benefit all of us.”
“She aborted others?”
“Of course.”
How did her husband know that? Maybe because he always preferred Nympha while Elika was closer to Atarah. Nympha confided in Ishan. The situation gradually came into focus for Elika. She kept her tone level and matter of fact though the realization hit like a rock to her temple. “Nympha aborted other babies.”
“Not babies. Fetuses.”
“But she gave birth to Gadreel because of the advantages of sacrificing a young giant.” Numbly she rolled over and lay with her back to her husband. Did it really matter? Elika wouldn’t have wanted any baby sacrificed. Her conscience hadn’t hardened that much.
“Like I said, brilliant. And I’m proud of you, too.” A beaming Ishan leaned over, propped himself on one elbow and placed a loud smooch on her lips.
Tonight’s rare bedroom scene had been Elika’s reward.
No longer trying to disguise the emotions playing over her face, Elika moved through the facts she’d just learned in slow motion. Her daughter had given birth to a child solely for the purpose of sacrificing him to a god. For financial gain. For prestige. She and Ishan planned every detail, probably before Gadreel’s conception. Nympha had never loved the baby. Elika had always known that. But she hadn’t known Nympha had killed Elika’s other grandchildren while they grew in her womb. A chill like icy water dripped down her spine. Ishan had known all along. Had he loved the baby at all? Ever? Had he ever loved her? Did he know that she would come to love the baby and suffer when the child died? She shook her head, trying to dispel the negative thoughts.
Ishan drew back and studied his wife, reading her face. After a few beats, he turned her toward him and gently cupped her face in his hands gazing sympathetically into her eyes. “I’m so sorry you have all those little broken blood vessels.” He stroked the apple of each cheek with his thumb. “It’s been hard watching you go downhill. You were so beautiful once. Remember?”
The final blow. Ishan’s personal style of retribution. The insidious finger of worthlessness pointed at Elika. All she ever had was her beauty and now that was gone.
Tears stung her eyes. He saw, and a smile momentarily tugged up one side of his mouth before he rose from the bed. As she watched the man she couldn’t stop needing stride out the door to join the other men of the city, the emptiness she’d grown accustomed to over many years settled around her again with painful familiarity. With it came the tightness in her chest. And the disgust. Shame scalded her face.
She lay on her back staring at the folds of fabric draped on her bedpost. She hated herself for her vulnerability. For the ugly need for love and affection that so controlled her she’d paid with her soul. Elika finally believed in the God of Noah, but it didn’t matter -- because she’d rejected him for too many years. Even if God would forgive her, which he wouldn’t, Atarah could never forgive her. Her daughter would always think of Elika as the mother who approved Gadreel’s death. Elika would always think of herself in those terms, too. Self loathing filled her.
Elika did not deserve mercy.
A picture of the carpet she’d sworn to never part with until death flashed before mind. And Elika knew. It didn’t matter that Noah spoke truth about the end of the world. Her world ended years ago and she hadn’t realized it until now. Time to finish the rug.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Chapter Thirty-Seven


Ark of Safety

“On the very same day Noah and his sons, Shem and Ham and Japheth, and the three wives of his sons with them entered the ark. And the rain fell upon the earth forty days and forty nights.”  Genesis 7:13,12

            Atarah huddled under the branches of a low hanging fir and pulled her robe about her, alone in a frightening forest. In the underground complex temperatures had remained constant and comfortable, but in this forest an unearthly chill had rolled in with the darkness. The shrill chirping of crickets which pulsed rapidly at dusk, gradually slowed with the falling temperatures until the sound died away completely. Now she heard nothing except the scuttling of unknown creatures and distant howling.
            She shivered, hastening the light of dawn.
            Splintered trees stripped of bark and limbs marched up this cursed mountain. The tree sheltering her was the only one sporting branches of green on the entire slope. Everything else hung on in ruins. Since an earthquake couldn’t cause this kind of devastation, the most logical explanation for the destruction must be the ark built on top of the mountain. The gods intended to obliterate all signs of Noah and his ark.
She assumed the man who rescued her must be one of Noah’s sons, and that led her to believe he planned to take her to the ark for safety. But the ark was no safer than her city or this mountain. In her exhausted state all the horror stories drilled into her about Noah’s ark from her youth had come rushing back and she couldn’t erase them.
They’d tormented her when Noah’s son came looking for her as she hid in a shallow cave behind falling water. He poked his head into the cave, calling her name, but instead of answering she curled into a fetal position, weeping silently. He couldn’t see her in the dim recesses of the cave. She stayed there until her soaked clothes rendered her so cold she was forced to leave to dry them.
She wondered if she should have at least let him know she was alive. Some part of her chided herself for not appreciating the risk Noah’s son took for her, but she couldn’t force herself to feel too badly. She no longer cared about anything. The bronze god, assisted by the priests and Zaquiel, had reached inside and ripped out her very essence. She felt raw. Empty.
Gadreel was gone. The Light was gone. And Shua was gone.
Shua, her slave, her friend, her betrayer, her protector.
And Mother. An image of Mother turning her back on Gadreel flashed into Atarah’s head. She would never forgive Mother. Though Mother still lived, she was dead to Atarah.
How could Atarah ever come to terms with any of those things? She wanted nothing more than to sink into oblivion. But because her death would mean victory for Dagaar, she refused to die.
Atarah pressed back against rough bark. She smelled pitch and moist earth in the air whistling through her one unclogged nostril. Her robe still clung damply to her arms, but her clothes no longer dripped and her tunic was surprisingly clean. Though she shivered from the cold, her face was hot and her brain felt thick and solid when she tried to figure anything out. She needed sleep, but frigid wind and agonizing thoughts kept her awake.
She’d heard Dagaar and his cronies searching the woods for her after the rhinos chased them away. Once darkness fell she no longer picked up any of their noises, but they’d start again at first light. With only a few hours remaining until dawn, she still couldn’t decide on a course of action. Her head ached trying to figure it out.
She saw only two choices: Dagaar or the ark. Neither sounded good. She would rather die than suffer horrors at Dagaar’s hand. Conversely, the vague dangers lurking inside the ominous structure at the top of the hill also terrified her. After meeting Noah and his son she wanted to believe the rumors false, but couldn’t shake her fear. Maybe she could find her way around the ark and down the other side of the mountain. Despite all the eruptions there had to be places left where she could live.
Through the crisp darkness, light filtered into Atarah’s hiding place and flowed around her. The Dream! But she wasn’t asleep. She closed her eyes and welcomed the intense Light, relaxing into the warmth and comfort like a weaned child cradled in her mother’s arms.
The voice of many waters seemed to whisper her name, “Atarah.”
Yes. Had she thought the word or spoken aloud? Had the Light spoken aloud?
“I call you by name. I name you though you do not know me.”
Who are you?
“I AM the God of Noah. The One True God. I AM the first and the last, the Creator. Before me no God was formed, nor shall there be any after me. Besides me there is no God.”
A sense of belonging, coursed into Atarah but memories that the Light had abandoned her rode in on the back of her gratitude. Why had the light left?
“I am with you always, even unto the ends of the earth. I will never leave you or forsake you. I will take you by the hand and keep you.”
It was true. She had pushed the Light away, but it came back again when she needed help. Probably was with her all along even though she had stopped feeling.
“You are precious in my eyes, and I love you. I am doing a new thing. Do you not perceive it? Don’t be afraid to enter my ark of safety. I have redeemed you. I will pour out my Spirit on your offspring and my blessings on your descendants.”
No! Gadreel was dead. She would never have children.
With that thought, the Light vanished. Suddenly alone and chilled to the bone, Atarah wondered if she had imagined the whole thing. Was she hallucinating because of the cold?  
“Check under that tree.” Dagaar’s voice. Stark reality set in. Her chest tightened and she stopped breathing. Heart thundering, she slid cautiously forward on her bottom and peered through the branches. Dots of light approached her tree from downhill.   
“Wait!” Dagaar called out. “Something moved over there.” In response, the lights veered off in the opposite direction.
Her survival instincts kicked in and violent trembling seized Atarah. The men would be back as soon as they realized they’d erred. They’d probably mistaken an animal for her. She had to leave. Now! Scrambling from under the tree, she fought away branches slapping her in the face and started up the hill on numb tingling feet. Soon, swearing from the direction in which the men disappeared told her they’d already discovered their mistake.
“Over there! Go!” They’d spotted her.
Aware that her white robe made her nearly glow-in-the-dark visible she briefly considered discarding it for the slightly-darker blue tunic she wore underneath, but decided that action would slow her down. A stick whacked her ankle, throwing her to the ground. She jumped up and started forward on wooden legs, angling up and toward the trail she’d left before dark. Shouted threats spurred her on. Running should be easier on the smoother ground, if she could find it. She fell again and jumped to her feet once more, the blood flowing now. She prayed the darkness hadn’t confused her sense of direction, hoped the rumors she’d heard about the ark proved false.
No. She wouldn’t thinly hope against hope. She would believe the rumors were false. She firmly believed Noah’s God had spoken to her and she would not be afraid to go to the ark. What had God called it? “My ark of safety.” She’d turned away from him again when she doubted his words about offspring, but now she knew he was still with her. Always would be with her even when she couldn’t feel his presence. She would run to his ark.
Her feet found the path and she ran faster. Heated from the exertion, she again wanted to toss aside her heavy robe. Even with her increased speed, the men shortened the distance between them. Torch-flames grew larger. The shouting sounded closer. Accustomed to stamina acquired as a result of strenuous work, the men had the added advantage of torches to light their way and keep them from tripping. They would catch her in no time. Her breath came in rasping sobs.
At the top of the trail she continued forward, following the path. She couldn’t see the ark in the dark, but prayed the trail led that direction. Despite a valiant effort, she moved slower and the men pounded closer. She heard their breathing, smelled the foul odor.
Staggering on rubbery legs, she couldn’t keep going unless God sent a miracle. “God of Noah, help me!”
Suddenly, an enormous hulk loomed out of the darkness ahead. The ark! The sheer size of it stunned her and, almost supernaturally new energy surged through her. The ark seemed to pull her forward. She flew along, light as a feather. As she got closer, she could make out the shape of an opening at the top of the ramp broad enough for all the men chasing her to go through shoulder to shoulder. She ran to it. As she plunged through, she glanced back.
The men holding torches had stopped at the base of the rise leading to the ramp, afraid.
She entered a dimly lit corridor and a palpable sense of peace enfolded her, thick and smooth like cream whipped with honey. She breathed deeply through mysteriously-clear sinuses. When the comforting aroma of aged pitch and cedar welcomed her, Atarah hugged herself and burst into tears of relief and joy. “Thank you God of Noah!”
A menacing shout from Dagaar stopped her in her tracks. “Atarah!” Her back stiffened. “Listen to me Atarah!” Staying in the shadows, she peeked carefully out the door. The group hadn’t moved. “Do you think Noah’s God is going to protect you in there?” His cruel laughter prompted guffaws from the men around him. “Who do you think told me to chase you here? Noah’s God. He knows you’re evil and he wanted you trapped in that place.”
Atarah wanted to flee further into the ark, but she couldn’t force her body forward.
“Come out to me, Atarah. I’ll take good care of you. I protect the things that belong to me.” Dagaar’s slimy tone reminded her of a gliding serpent. “I’m not the one you should fear. You’ll find that out soon enough.”
With Dagaar’s taunts ringing through the corridor at her back, Atarah fled the sound of his voice. She passed door after closed door, down one stairway and up another. She had completely lost her bearings by the time she paused to catch her breath and, to her surprise, realized that being lost on God’s ark felt good.
It was baffling that two labyrinths could feel so different. Dagaar and Zaquiel belonged to the dark tunnels swirling with evil beneath the city. Noah and his son who rescued her belonged to this peaceful place.
She leaned against the wall and closed her eyes, her mouth curled upward in a smile. The presence of Noah’s God hovered around this place and he would not permit evil here. With a certainly she didn’t understand, she knew her God would not allow Dagaar aboard. She had no idea how God would stop the fiend, but he would. She remembered the men still standing outside the ark afraid to enter. God had already stopped them.
She started walking again, feeling safe. And tired. Occasional torches dotting the corridor illuminated the way sufficiently to keep her from stumbling, but she would need stronger light to see inside the rooms if she planned to find a place where she could  spend the rest of the night. Atarah lifted a lighted torch from a wall sconce. Was the family occupying this place tonight or were they sleeping in a home somewhere? 
She shivered, suddenly conscious that her body heat was dropping rapidly since she stopped running. She removed her still-slightly-damp robe and draped it over her arm. Bringing the torch close she held a hand palm-out beside the flame, warming herself. She needed to find a place soon. 
Easing open a door, she held her torch inside. Piles of a yellowish-white substance climbed nearly as high as the ceiling, sparkling and dancing in the light. What in the world? Curiosity overcame her and she stepped inside to test it with a forefinger. When she touched the finger to her tongue she tasted salt. Noah had filled this room with the preservative.
The next doors opened to all manner of storage. Barley and oats filled one room. Rice was in the room next to it. Wooden boxes had been stacked to the ceiling in another. When she lifted the top of a near one she found it brimming with seed. Though the exotic opulence Atarah had grown up taking for granted didn’t exist here, every room overflowed with natural delights. Aromatic dried plants hung from the rafters in her favorite one – lavender, roses, sage, yellow marigolds, purple statice and hibiscus. She breathed in the heavenly fragrance for a few moments before continuing on her quest for a soft place to rest, confident she’d find something comfortable.
Atarah forgot her exhaustion and explored eagerly. The ark was a fantasy. Who could have dreamed of a boat on a dry mountain filled with treasures of food and exotic dried plants? The more wonders she stumbled across the more clearly she understood that Noah truly believed his dire warnings to her people. He believed a giant Flood would wipe them all out if they didn’t come onto the ark with him, and he had spent his life preparing to survive the waters. Surprisingly, he really had built his boat large enough to house thousands of people for the duration of the deluge. His invitation to the citizens of her city was not an empty one.
Straight ahead, a wall blocked off the hallway. The door set in the middle of it caught Atarah’s attention. Someone had carved vines and pomegranates into the surface, making it look like a place intended for human habitation. Though slightly apprehensive about snooping uninvited through someone else’s private space, especially when they might be sleeping, Atarah eased open the door.
She’d correctly guessed the purpose of the place. 
In front of her, a large room displayed everything a family might need to live comfortably. Several doors, including the one framing her, were set in each of its four walls. Like the temples under the city, a fire pit situated near the center of the room seemed intended to radiate heat through the space – only this one was covered with a metal covering. Maybe the metal enabled the fire pit to function as an oven. The acrid aroma of smoke still hung in the room and the space felt comfortably warm, but that was the only similarity between this room and the underground.
She deliberately bumped into a chair and scraped the wooden legs across the floor, announcing herself. When no one appeared, she knocked loudly on one of the doors. No one answered her knock. The place must be empty. Though she felt a little bad about snooping, she could look around without disturbing anyone.
A polished plank floor ran the length of the room in smooth lines under a long table flanked by benches. Chairs stood at each end of the table. Beyond the table, a loom with a half-woven blanket in shades of yellow and orange adorned one side of the room. Skeins of yarn and fibers of all colors poked out of baskets on the floor beside it. Atarah couldn’t help thinking of Mother.
One wall held all manner of bronze musical instruments. Atarah’s favorites included two flutes and a harp. Both tallow candles and beautifully-decorated oil lamps were set into niches at eye level. Every lamp, pot on the floor and cooking utensil on the walls had been fastened securely in place. Sturdy wooden crates were fastened to the floor with decorative bronze plates and held every useful object imaginable, from large pots to additional pillows to eating utensils. Each box had been custom-built to fit the object it held. Atarah shoved against one to see if it would move. She couldn’t budge it.
Waist-high shelves topped with an oiled wooden work surface apparently intended for food preparation or mending broken objects spread across another wall. The doors separated the shelves at regular intervals. Identical shelves occupied the opposite wall, bisected by an alcove holding an elegant desk inset with several types and shades of hardwood which someone had carved with a grape and leaf design. Corbels with matching grape clusters decorated the corners at the entrance to the alcove where the ceiling met the walls. Four lidded pottery vessels nearly as large as water-pots clustered beside the desk.
Everything in this room, from the desk to the pottery to all the items stored on the shelves below the work surfaces were secured by wooden bars or set in barred enclosures built specifically for them. Even the four sets of benches facing each other around the space had been secured to the floor.
It appeared Noah expected violent movement once the Flood commenced, and he’d made certain his ark would remain intact through the entire cataclysmic event. Only the harmless pillows on the benches were free to tumble freely in a storm. Well, he’d had plenty of time to do the planning and building. Mother said he’d been working on it for a hundred and twenty years.
Mother.
Gadreel.
Shua.
Atarah sank onto the bench and allowed herself the luxury of giving in to dark grief for a few moments. Then she stood erect, squared her shoulders and distracted herself by opening doors while she fought away the unbearable emptiness.
The door directly across from the one she’d entered led to another hallway. Three of the doors opened to simple homey bedrooms, all vacant. Supplies and work implements occupied other rooms. Row after row of sweet-smelling firewood crammed one room, rising all the way to the ceiling. Noah’s family would stay warm if the weather turned cold.
Another room contained stores of all sorts of preserved foods. The largest side-room housed a blacksmith shop and tools. Another held a pottery wheel. But the most unbelievable space was a large bathroom tiled with white stone and completed with a flushing-trough commode and shower, just like the homes in her city. She pumped a spout over the hands-cleansing bowl. No water. Well, of course not. They expected the Flood would bring in the water.
With the excitement wearing off, grief niggled at the edges of Atarah’s mind and squeezed her heart. Fatigue weighed her down. She could barely keep her eyes open.
The bedrooms beckoned, but she refused to take advantage of Noah and his family. She’d collect the pillows from two benches and sleep quite comfortably on the floor. As she gathered pillows, she noticed that she’d missed the last door. Unable to resist the unknown, even in her exhausted state, curiosity won and she opened the door.
This bedroom with its four-poster linen-covered bed and carved walls took her breath away. Who had crafted this room? Obviously the same person who’d made the desk and the main door.
The pottery jars lining the wall were exquisite. Atarah had never seen their match in the expensive pots Father imported. She’d never seen anything so magnificent as the colors of the pillows on the bed. Silk, weren’t they? She caressed the fabric. Unable to resist, Atarah tossed her robe on the floor by the bed to keep from soiling the beautiful covers and crawled in between silky sheets. She closed her eyes and snuggled into the sumptuous feather mattress.
She had no idea how long she’d slept when something startled her awake. Her eyes snapped open and her mind tripped and jumbled at the sight before her.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Chapter Thirty-Six


Time to
Depart 


“For in seven days I will send rain on the earth forty days and forty nights, and every living thing that I have made I will blot out from the face of the ground. On the very same day Noah and Noah’s sons, Shem, Ham and Japheth and Noah’s wife, and the three wives of his sons with them entered the ark.” Genesis 7:4, 13


Shem crawled out of bed and crept through the dark house. Closing the front door behind him to avoid waking the family, he pulled on an outer garment and made his way around the back of the house through the blustery wind to the small work building that housed his kick wheel. For hours he’d tried to relax and catch a few winks before tomorrow’s mad activities kicked in, but his mind wouldn’t stop churning.
Once inside the shop he lit a torch, grabbed a handful of wet clay from a lidded vat, pounded the pliable mud into a ball and slammed it down onto the revolving wheel head. Throwing pottery always settled his thoughts. He pushed against the gritty gray mass with the heel of his hand, centering the irregular lump as he mulled over the events of the night before. Breathing deeply of the pleasant aroma of damp earth, he wondered when he would smell clay again.
Shortly after he had arrived home well after dark, Father informed him that the rest of the family had gone to bed early because God had spoken again. He had instructed Father to tell the family to begin final preparations for the Flood at dawn the next morning – which was a couple of hours from right now. They were to carry all provisions not yet aboard and all personal items they might need onto the ark. Because this final time before the Flood would require long work hours, the family would remain on the ark while the remainder of the animals boarded. Then, one week later, God himself would shut the door locking the family inside.
The news so shocked Shem that he decided not to bother Father by telling him about Atarah. After Father retired, Shem fought the urge to wake his brothers and ask for help. Eventually, his better self won and he decided against disturbing anyone. Finding Atarah in the dark was impossible. Since his brothers had to be on the ark at first light or disobey God they would not be able to help him in the morning. No one could help Shem search for Atarah now. It was too late.
Choosing to spend this last night in the house with his family rather than on the ark, he went to bed berating himself for his failure. He should have had enough faith in God to try diligently to find Atarah years ago. Losing her was a burden Shem would bear alone.
Shem dipped a natural sponge into water and dribbled the liquid over rotating clay, struggling to sort out details in his head. Exactly seven days from today, Father had said, the windows of heaven would open and the fountains of the deep would burst forth. The earth would be completely covered with water and every living thing on dry land would die. Though Shem had no idea all that the prediction entailed, for the first time in his life he no longer doubted the catastrophe. He believed with every fiber of his being the world as he knew it would end.
In a week.
Seven days.
The world would end!
He shoved against the clay with such ferocity he nearly dislodged the mass from the wheel head. If he couldn’t locate Atarah and convince her of the truth of God’s words, she would never become his wife. She would die. A fresh surge of the panic he had experienced repeatedly over the past couple of days pumped through him. The problem was, yesterday as he searched he had called her name repeatedly, but she didn’t answer. She either couldn’t or wouldn’t.
She must have heard him. Going out to look for her before light this morning would be pointless if she didn’t want him to find her. Yet by dawn it would be too late. At dawn he must enter the ark or disobey Father – and God.
He held the clay steady until it stopped thumping against his palms and revolved smoothly. Thick slip coated his hands. Last night he’d related to Father everything that had happened concerning Atarah. Though sympathetic, the older man had been no help. No help at all. “You did your best,” Father reminded him. “You know she heard you.”
Shem hung his head, reluctant to think about her reasons for avoiding him.  
“She’s afraid.” Father placed a hand on Shem’s arm. “Now it’s up to God. Trust him.”  
Shem opened the lump of clay by dipping his fingers into the center. Had he been wrong to assume Atarah’s husband had turned against her? What if desperation was causing him to covet another man’s wife? He shuddered with disgust at himself. He had believed it was God who spoke to him, pointing out that Atarah would be his wife. Had he been wrong? Suffering from delusions of grander when he imagined that the Only True God would talk to him as well as to Father? It had never happened before.
A protuberance bumped near the bottom of the pot, growing as the walls thinned between his fingers. Unfortunately, the lump had the hard feel of a limestone fragment. He could have gently pricked a bubble and pressed out the air to save the pot, but the bit of hard limestone embedded so close to the base couldn’t be removed without collapsing the entire thing. Shem would eventually have to destroy his creation.
Frustrated, he continued to pull the walls upward even though the flaw inherent in the clay made his efforts pointless. The defect would eventually throw the pot off-kilter and ruin any attempt of forming something useful.
The exaggerated sense of sorrow that passed through him when he thought of destroying his creation brought a wry smile. Was God giving Shem a tiny glimpse into the Almighty’s own grief over the necessity of annihilating his creation? Were the turbulent winds trying to blow away the evil sullying the earth? Were the mountains exploding with long-overdue pent-up righteous anger?
The pot wobbled crazily. He sighed. The fragment. He shook his head and continued to work doggedly, though he understood all his work would end in futility. Even if he managed to produce a pot, the end product would be misshapen. It would have to be because of the hard piece of stone. He might pound the pot into a better form at the nearly-dry leather-hard stage, but the fragment would still explode when fired and destroy the vessel as well as nearby objects in the kiln.
Besides, there’d be no time to fire again before the Flood.
And yet, something inside him burned to bring the vessel to completion. He’d never been able to explain the visceral love he felt for clay. Not even to himself. He fervently loved every pot he created. He hated seeing even one vessel ruined.
The off-balance pot began to flop like a fish in his hands, prompting a sudden decision. Shem would look for Atarah right now. Even though searching in the dark flew in the face of logic.
Before his work could collapse completely, Shem swept the wet clay off the wheel head with his forearm and plunged his hands into a tub of water, cleansing them. If God wanted to direct Shem to Atarah he would find her. There were still nearly two hours left before morning. He strode out into the black night, fighting the blustery wind. Determined he would find her. Had God increased his faith again or was Shem just love-struck and illogical?
As quickly as possible he made his way to the last place he’d seen her. He squinted into the drying wind, praying to find her. He called her name gently. No sounds answered. He screamed for her until his voice limped out as a hoarse whisper.
Still no Atarah.
He climbed upward, hoping she might have tried to find her way to the ark. Nothing.
Pre-dawn shimmered on the horizon by the time he reluctantly headed home to do his duty and help load the ark, emotionally exhausted. He hadn’t gone far when he heard a faint voice. Whirling around, he raced through bare dirt and stone toward the sound.
Past a stand of trees, Shem spotted the flicker of a campfire. He crouched behind a boulder. From that position he could observe the mob who had chased them the day before. Several men sat around the fire eating. The lecherous man with the neck tattoo paced near the fire with his horse as he talked and gestured to his followers. Obviously agitated.
Seeing his frustration, hope that they might not have found Atarah rose again in Shem. Leaning forward, he strained to listen. Though the wind prevented him from hearing most of what they said, it blew a few words his direction. He learned that for some reason the men feared the ark and this mountain, but they had wanted Atarah badly enough to disregard their superstitions.
They’d found her once and lost her again.
Though that news caused Shem’s breathing and heart rate to accelerate, the information that she’d made it through the night without being captured eased his angst only slightly. He feared she might lie injured somewhere and he assumed the men still intended her harm.
The sky grew lighter by the second. Was it possible he still had time to find her?
The homicidal activity around the fire increased as an argument ensued about where to continue their search for Atarah. The tattooed man insisted they circle to the far side of the mountain. Two others, threatening mutiny, thought they should search closer to the ark. Those two stood to leave.
Suddenly, in an ominous twist, the tattooed man rammed a torch into the fire and thrust the flame above his head. “Burn her!” he shrieked. “Burn that cursed ark!” He powered the head of his torch onto the forest floor and the ground blazed to life. Laughing gleefully, the men with him raced across the mountainside touching torches to the ground. The rushing wind pushed the line of fire away from them and up the hillside toward Shem. The fiends intended to burn Atarah to death!
Shem leapt to his feet. “No!”
In the dawning light, the men turned to look at Shem. He could clearly make out the sneering face of the tattooed man. As one, the group pointed toward him and raucous laughter burst from their throats.
“She’s dead!” the tattooed man shouted. “And now you’re dead, too! Neither of you can survive the fire.” Laughing, he wiggled his fingers in goodbye as billowing smoke obscured him from Shem’s view.
Shem knew he spoke truth. All Shem could do now was save his own life by staying ahead of the fire. He sped toward the ark begging God to somehow help Atarah magically emerge from the forest unharmed. If she could just make it as far as the fire-protected expanse surrounding the house and ark she would be safe. He stood on bare dirt in the middle of the recently-harvested linen field between the house and ark, his eyes continually strafing the perimeter of the fire. After a few minutes dawn broke over the skyline and the blaze died down, but there was no sign of Atarah.
Smoke wafted up from the house chimney and breakfast aromas drifted over on the now-gentle wind. Mother was up.
Brokenhearted, Shem turned his back on the scorched smoldering hillside and walked slowly toward the ark. He’d go back to help his family later, after a few minutes alone. Not even the knowledge that the Flood would soon wipe out the evil men who caused Atarah’s death could ease his heartache. He stepped inside the ark and started toward the family quarters. Maybe spending a little time in his room would comfort him.
But before he stepped inside the door to the family quarters, grief pulled him up short. He couldn’t face that place. Not yet. He’d labored for years to craft the perfect living space for his wife without even knowing her identity -- but now he knew. “Atarah.” He reverently breathed her name. She would never see all he’d done for her, never know how much he loved her before he even met her.
The temptation to break free of the ark and look for her one final time seemed more than he could bear. He had no desire for a future without Atarah as his wife. It was possible she was still alive out there somewhere, wasn’t it? Perhaps he could find her before the Flood drowned her and succeeded where the mob had failed.
Suddenly the Flood towered over him as a mortal enemy. Feeling totally helpless, he pounded the corridor wall with clenched fists. He had been instructed to stay and prepare for the Flood with his family. Disobeying that command would mean turning his back on God. Shem must decide who he loved more. God or Atarah. A plea wrenched from the depths of his soul. “God help me!”
Immediately, tranquility flowed from the top of Shem’s head down to the bottom of his feet. He straightened and squared his shoulders. The choice was made. He would remain faithful to God. Lifting his face toward heaven he cried out, “Please punish them, God. I know you will punish them!” Though the words were true, the declaration brought no pleasure and did nothing to diminish his grief. He would never forget her, not even if he lived eight hundred more years.

Shem handed a pail of water to Ham who poured the liquid into a large urn. 
A streamlined version of the water-loading experience from a few nights earlier was in progress at the well by the ark. The winds had died down and a haze of smoke from last night’s fire hung in the mid-day air. With his emotions finally under control, Shem ignored the acrid smell and focused on the task at hand.
The brothers worked as a three-way relay team, pulling buckets from the well, filling urns and hoisting them onto Buzz’s cart. This would be the last water-hauling they’d do. The water taken into the ark today should provide all they needed until the Flood came. The possibility of finally being done with hauling water once and for all was good news. The unfortunate-though-not-surprising bad news: Buzz was not happy.
Shem and Ham cut a wide berth around the camel’s outstretched neck and lifted a water vessel onto the far side of Japheth’s cart. But on the return trip, Shem walked a little too close to the beast’s head and Buzz snapped at his bare arm, missing by a hair. Yelling for the camel to behave, Japheth hurried over, sprung onto the camel’s back and jumped on him with force a couple of times. Buzz slowly rolled his neck around and glared threateningly. If Buzz chose nasty, Buzz would stay nasty.
“Anyone know how those zebras got locked up downstairs?” Ham asked. “They’re already in the stall we set aside for them.”
“I shut them in.” Shem answered Ham’s question without making eye contact. “They were strolling onto the ark pretty as you please about the time I got here this morning.”
“They give you any trouble?”
Before Shem could respond, the entire sky pulsed with light, and at the same instant an ear-shattering bang split the air, vibrating the space around them. 
Shem jumped and clutched the water bucket as though the wooden pail might sprout legs and run away if he loosed his hold. Ham and Japheth stopped in their tracks, mouths agape. “What was that?” Japheth asked in an awed whisper.
“I’ve never seen anything like it,” Ham exclaimed.
Buzz bellowed and thrashed, showing the whites around his eyes.
His heart still thumping from the terrifying explosion of sound and light, Shem carefully set his bucket on the ground. Water had run down the front of his indigo work garment, leaving a long dark spot. “Is it possible,” he speculated, gazing into the sky, “that God just opened one of the windows of heaven?”
“I don’t see any water.” Ham held his palms up and looked into the sky. “Wouldn’t we see water if he were opening the heavens?”
Again, the clouds throbbed with light, but this time a lengthy rumbling accompanied the light show. “Gotta be connected to the coming rains,” Shem insisted. A picture of Atarah popped into his head unbidden. Though he’d accepted that she was dead, some irrational part of him couldn’t stop hoping she lived. If she was out there would she be frightened? The desire to protect her rose strong. He chided himself for his foolishness and pushed the thoughts away.   
By now the sky rumbled almost without stop. A series of zig-zagging flashes of light streaked downward. With each flash came a loud clap and Buzz bellowed frantically, rocking to free his hobbled legs. Japheth rushed over to him yelling over his shoulder. “Got enough water?”
“One more urn!” Shem shouted.
 “Let’s load this thing and get onto the ark.” Ham whipped into action, plopping another bucket into the well. Father and the women were already on the ark and he obviously hankered to join his wife.
Japheth hopped onto Buzz’s back again in an effort to settle the camel. “Look!” He pointed from his place astride Buzz.
Shem watched a column of wind finger out of the cloud and descend toward the earth. “It’s coming this way! Go!”
Japheth removed the hobble and Buzz bolted for the ark, the cart bumping wildly along with him. The three men followed at top speed. They hurled themselves through the door of the ark just as the whirlwind hit.