by Asaf Ashery
ANGRY ROBOT
An imprint of Watkins Media Ltd
Unit 11, Shepperton House
89 Shepperton Road
London N1 3DF
UK
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Where angels fear to tread…
An Angry Robot paperback original, 2020
Copyright © Asaf Ashery 2020
Cover by Francesca Corsini
Edited by Christopher Slaney and Rose Green
Set in Meridien
All rights reserved. Asaf Ashery asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
This novel is entirely a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Sales of this book without a front cover may be unauthorized. If this book is coverless, it may have been reported to the publisher as “unsold and destroyed” and neither the author nor the publisher may have received payment for it.
Angry Robot and the Angry Robot icon are registered trademarks of Watkins Media Ltd.
ISBN 978 0 85766 838 7
Ebook ISBN 978 0 85766 850 9
Printed and bound in the United Kingdom by TJ International.
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
To Yael, my everything, I will always love you.
To Mazzy, my beloved & loyal friend, I will always miss you.
CONTENTS
THE FIRST DAY OF THE COUNTING OF THE OMER
PROLOGUE
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
THE FIRST GATE GLORY
THE SEVENTH DAY OF THE COUNTING OF THE OMER
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
THE SECOND GATE GRACE
THE TENTH DAY A WEEK AND THREE DAYS OF THE COUNTING OF THE OMER
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
THE THIRD GATE ETERNITY
THE FIFTEENTH DAY TWO WEEKS AND A DAY OF THE COUNTING OF THE OMER
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
THE FOURTH GATE WISDOM
THE TWENTY-FOURTH DAY THREE WEEKS AND THREE DAYS OF THE COUNTING OF THE OMER
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
THE FIFTH GATE INSIGHT
THE THIRTY-FIFTH DAY FIVE WEEKS OF THE COUNTING OF THE OMER
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
THE SIXTH GATE JUDGMENT
THE THIRTY-SIXTH DAY FIVE WEEKS AND A DAY OF THE COUNTING OF THE OMER.
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
CHAPTER THIRTY
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
THE SEVENTH GATE FOUNDATION
THE THIRTY-NINTH DAY FIVE WEEKS AND FOUR DAYS OF THE COUNTING OF THE OMER.
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
THE EIGHTH GATE MAJESTY
THE FORTIETH DAY FIVE WEEKS AND FIVE DAYS OF THE COUNTING OF THE OMER
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
CHAPTER FORTY
THE NINTH GATE CROWN
THE FORTIETH DAY FIVE WEEKS AND FIVE DAYS OF THE COUNTING OF THE OMER
CHAPTER FORTY-TWO
CHAPTER FORTY-THREE
CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR
EPILOGUE
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
THE FIRST DAY
OF THE COUNTING OF THE OMER*
“And it came to pass, when men began to multiply on the face of the earth, and daughters were born unto them, that the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and they took them wives of all which they chose. And the Lord said, My Spirit shall not always strive with man, for that he also is flesh: yet his days shall be a hundred and twenty years. There were Nephilim in the earth in those days; and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bore children to them, the same became mighty men which were of old, men of renown.”
(GENESIS 6:1-4)
*According to the Torah (Lev. 23:15), Jews are obligated to count the days from Passover to Pentecost. This counting is a reminder of the link between the Exodus and harvest season.
PROLOGUE
It was the seventh raven to swoop down since his shift began.
Several were perched on the high fence or hopping on the grass in odd bounding motions between warming themselves in the outward-bound beams of the searchlights.
Jacob would have been OK with this if relieving Yaniv five minutes earlier hadn’t meant stepping into the shift from hell.
Never mind that he was assigned to serve with Borislav Sverenko, the most intimidating security guard on the detail; but to be the only religious guard in the unit on the first night of Passover seemed to him more than bad luck or lack of consideration.
He had an uneasy feeling about it.
Noises validated his premonition: the Rottweilers, usually quiet as they patrolled the space between the two fences, were barking loudly; the ravens kept returning in large black flocks and couldn’t stop cawing. He was beyond thinking it was all just a coincidence.
It was also the time of year – Passover and the Counting of the Omer.
His father, Shlomo Rosenkrantz, was found on the floor by the entrance to the synagogue, on the eve of the “Great Sabbath,” the Sabbath immediately before Passover. His chest was wide open and charred. His heart missing. The pathologist said it was the first time he had ever seen spontaneous combustion, and that the heart must have exploded from all the pressure.
Jacob’s terror was threefold. First was a feeling, an instinct. It was in the air, you could almost smell it. You know it’s there, but you don’t know where it’s coming from. No specific details. Nothing to latch onto, and then deny, to calm yourself down.
The second thing was the ridiculous security surrounding the house. He wondered from whom the owner was protecting himself. To reach the mansion at the top of the driveway, you had to pass an exterior fence, two Humvees patrolling it, a strip dotted with incendiary flare mines, an electrified barbed wire fence, jumpy guard dogs, and watchtowers manned by people with above average sniper skills.
The lord of the manor did not like visitors.
Jacob and Borislav sat a few yards from the gate, at the end of the access road to the manor, in a booth of bulletproof glass dubbed “The Aquarium.” In front of them was a vehicle barrier.
The third thing was that Jacob suspected Borislav was anxious.
Standing nearly seven feet tall, Borislav weighed 220 proportionately distributed pounds. Jacob estimated that the thickest part of his thigh was thinner than Borislav’s neck.
The Russian giant always looked like a bull in the ring: restrained, a bit apathetic, but liable to charge at any moment. Borislav was from the Ukraine, but everyone called him “The Russian”. He had seen action as a commando in Afghanistan and Chechnya. Two weeks earlier, on a shift, Borislav told Jacob in a rare
moment of candor that once, in Afghanistan, he had lain for several days in the snow, at the foot of a mountain, his cheek pressed into his rifle butt, until he found the perfect moment to fire at someone’s head. It was the only time he had killed a man without looking him in the eye.
Tonight, for the first time since Jacob had met the giant, Borislav appeared worried, possibly even frightened.
When scary things get scared, it’s never a good sign.
Jacob assumed that tonight, too, the conversation would be wanting, so he had brought along a book. Taking it out of his backpack, he let his wandering eyes rest for two seconds on the face of his Aquarium buddy.
Apparently, Borislav was not picked for the job for his physical frame alone but also for his facility with language. Nobody could better imply the subtext, “Any particular reason you’re gawking at me like this?” by asking the question, “What’s that book about?”
“It’s by S. Yizhar. About his experience in the Yom Kippur War.”
“Isn’t that a Jewish holiday?”
“Yes, but there was also a war in 1973.”
As often, when talking to new immigrants, he found himself simplifying phrases, as if talking to a child, not sure if he was doing his interlocutor a favor by dumbing things down.
“How many died in it?”
“Twenty-five hundred, maybe more.”
His companion’s nostrils flared disdainfully, but he kept quiet. Jacob felt a little resentful that the national trauma did not even register with Borislav.
“What?”
“It’s no big deal, really.”
“What are you talking about?”
“Look, you think on a small scale. You’re spoiled. In Russia, in Stalingrad, how many died? A hundred thousand people. It didn’t stop Russia from electing Khrushchev.”
“What’s Khrushchev got to do with it?”
“He was, what d’you call it, political commissar there.”
Jacob resorted to pathos to explain the impact of the ‘73 war.
“We’re a small country, not many people. We thought it was the destruction of the Third Temple…”
“I’m going to see why the dogs are barking.” Borislav cut him short.
He extricated himself from the glass booth, bending his big frame to pass under the barrier.
His powerful Maglite shone a white beam into the night, exposing the flock of ravens crowding the fences and the lawn. As Borislav made his way to the exterior fence, the birds took to the air, but, after a short whirl, returned to the same spot.
Jacob had read five pages of his book when the cabin door opened and the Ukrainian giant was back inside, a worried expression on his face. From somewhere else on the perimeter, searchlights were probing the sky.
Jacob thought he heard horses neighing and hooves galloping, but he was embarrassed to ask Borislav if he had too. In between the beams crisscrossing the starlit sky, a bright, gleaming rectangle suddenly appeared, descending to earth.
“Want to make a wish?” Jacob joked nervously.
“A million year-old star falls, and all you can think of is what’s in it for you.”
The rectangle slowed its descent and touched down lightly, then scooted toward the fences. Tiny dark crescents dropped from the sky, pounding on the roof and sides of the cabin. A horrible stench filled the air. Hundreds of ravens rose at once, flapping their wings noisily.
They rushed to get their weapons. Borislav clicked off the safety; Jacob did the same and followed him outside.
The ground was covered with crushed carob, which seemed to be the source of the terrible stench.
The fiery rectangle continued its progress on the ground, coming to a halt a few yards from the exterior fence. In the distance, Jacob could see a chariot of fire led by four horses.
The chariot was burning but was not consumed. Sparks flew, the sound of crackling wood came from its spokes, but they did not crumble.
Its chassis was enveloped in smoke, streams of electric energy and blazing, bluish light. The horses looked like nothing on earth. Red flashes lit up their eyes; they whinnied and stomped, crushing embers that dropped from their hooves. A dark human figure with long hair stepped down from the chariot, patted the first horse pleasantly and made his way to the fence using a long wooden staff.
Jacob was conflicted: he wanted to flee; adrenaline flooded his veins, but apparently his blood, which was supposed to set his muscles into motion, had turned viscous. He froze in his tracks and watched in horror the scene unfolding before his eyes.
Weapons rattled all around them, but the figure just kept plodding ahead.
A shot rang out, and the figure raised his walking stick.
The two Humvees were thrown in the air by a huge explosion, landing on their sides in flames. One of the drivers, set alight, crawled out of the wreckage and tried to roll in the dust. His screams were drowned out by the noise of shattered glass as the watchtowers collapsed, the guards tossed out like popcorn from a lidless pan. Having slipped their leashes and fled yelping into the night, the dogs triggered the mines and incendiary flares shot into the air with such intensity that Jacob and Borislav had to squeeze their eyes shut. Silence descended on the compound.
The figure in the black robe, with flowing hair and holding a gnarled, wooden staff cut from an almond tree was climbing the slope toward them.
As it grew closer, they could make out, by the light of the flares, the tangled hair and unshaven face of an old man. His robe was in tatters and had seen better days. A ram’s horn and a slaughterer’s blade were stuck in the broad sash around his waist.
His eyes gleamed and he hummed a marching song in a deep and sonorous tone.
For a split second, through the horror that gripped him, Jacob thought he recognized the tune.
Borislav was the first to recover. He screamed a loud, guttural battle cry and opened fire. The old man, however, did not even flinch. He closed the distance, and with a dexterous motion whipped out his slaughterer’s knife slicing Borislav in two at the waist. The Ukrainian looked surprised but didn’t utter a sound as his two halves crumpled to the ground. Only a few yards separated the mysterious figure from the main gate. A few yards and Jacob.
Time stood still. He heard the carobs squishing under the soles of the old man’s leather sandals. A smile appeared on the man’s face, the kind reserved for long-awaited encounters.
Jacob feared his heart would explode; his hands trembled, and he dropped his weapon.
The traffic barrier rose, its hinges groaning in protest. The old man advanced toward Jacob, whose pants now bore a big, dark stain, as a puddle of urine gathered at his feet. His face was ashen, and he started as the old man stopped in front of him and rummaged through a pocket in his cloak. The man’s face lit up when, after a few eternal seconds, he found what he was looking for: a small parcel wrapped in a gray rag. He held the cloth by its edges and motioned to Jacob to stretch out his hands. Jacob obeyed, and the old man placed the clammy bundle in them like an offering.
Animatedly, his thick crow-like voice began to recite a verse.
“Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the coming of the great and dreadful day of the Lord. And he shall turn the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to their fathers, lest I come and smite the earth with utter destruction.”
Jacob opened the package, which, to his utter astonishment, contained a bleeding, beating human heart.
A second before Elijah’s hand had ripped open his ribcage to tear out his heart, Jacob recognized the melody that heralded his death.
The lord of the manor, sitting in his parlor in the big house, looked out of the window and smiled disdainfully at the spectacle of blazing flames, explosions, and screams, like a child curiously watching ants fight a flood threatening to destroy their nest.
Throughout the long years he spent on earth, Shamhazai knew that one day the silence would be broken. Elijah now reached the top of the hill
and knocked on the door with his almond-tree staff.
CHAPTER ONE
When Shamhazai saw God’s servant climbing up the hill, the dark prophet looked, indeed, like the shadow of a doubt.
Shamhazai was reminded of his celestial love.
Love between God and His servants. Servants who were always ready to be called by name. But the love of Shamhazai and his brothers was not enough for God. He always wanted more. More lovers, more love.
Then God created man in His image. Male and female he created them. Adam and Lilith. The first woman and her man.
She even dared to call him by name from time to time. Shamhazai did not take offense, not really.
At first, Shamhazai did not pay her any mind. An archangel, a servant of the Almighty, can dispense with poor imitation. Until one day she pronounced his name in a new way. Sham-Ha-zai. Lips pursed, jaw trembling, teeth sibilating. A mating call. Instead of extolling and praising God, he found himself composing poems to her.
She was dark and comely, her eyelashes fluttered like turtledoves, her perky breasts like two erect towers.
Lilith, fairest among women.
Until one night she fled the garden.
Another woman was created, this time tailor-made to fit Adam, crafted from his own rib. Shamhazai continued to write to the goddess, to the woman who refused to be the mother of all the living, the one who fled from heaven, beyond the gate.
The others started referring to him derisively as Naphil – the fallen one – he who fell under the spell of Lilith. He bore the nickname with pride. His day of victory was not long in coming. The other woman was expelled from the Garden of Eden.
Opening the gate, he descended, together with all the other secret lovers of Lilith, all those whose Eden-like slumbers had been disturbed by persistent nocturnal visions. They numbered two hundred.
Lilith welcomed them with open arms, and a covenant was struck between them, a contract that fused flesh with flesh, a pact of fugitives from Heaven. Enraged at his wayward servants who had conspired against him, God tried to annihilate Lilith and her daughters by bringing a flood upon His creation to destroy all flesh, all spirit from the face of the earth, but Lilith and her daughters survived; Shamhazai and the other Nephilim carried them over the water on their wings.