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The Chronicles of the Kings Collection

Page 147

by Lynn Austin


  “I can arrange for this to take place tomorrow after—”

  “Tonight, Zerah. I want to seek Urim and Thummim tonight. That way I’m in control.”

  Manasseh expected another pouting comment from Zerah about his sudden lack of trust, but Zerah simply said, “As you wish,” and headed toward the Temple chamber where the high priest’s ephod was stored. Manasseh followed, grateful that the Levites hadn’t taken the ancient breastpiece with them when they fled six years ago.

  As soon as Zerah brought out the wooden box and opened the lid, Manasseh reached into the pocket behind the twelve precious gems and made certain it contained two stones—Thummim for “yes,” Urim for “no.” They were identical in size and shape but one was black, one white. He would take no chances that Zerah might trick him.

  “Is there a ceremony involved?” he asked. “Where are we supposed to do this?”

  Zerah slipped the ephod over his head and fastened the chains that held it in place. “There’s no ceremony,” he said, replacing the stones. “We can do this wherever you’d like. Why don’t we go back to the courtyard by the altar?”

  As they walked side by side across the Temple grounds again, Manasseh recalled the stories his father had told about how King David consulted the Urim and Thummim for guidance. Maybe King Hezekiah had consulted it, as well. Maybe that was his source of certainty. Manasseh’s heart pounded with excitement as he prepared to hear God’s answer and know His will with certainty, just as his father had.

  By the time they returned to the main courtyard, Zerah’s priests had cleared everything away except the basins containing the omens. The sacrifices had all been placed on the altar to burn, filling the courtyard with their sweet aroma. Manasseh’s nerves tingled with excitement. “What am I supposed to do?” he asked Zerah.

  “We’ve already offered enough sacrifices for you. Just ask your question. But keep it simple—yes or no.”

  Manasseh considered all of the things he wanted to know—was he right in deciding not to become an Assyrian vassal? Would Esarhaddon send his army to attack Jerusalem if he defied him? Would God provide a miracle for him as He had for King Hezekiah? But even as Manasseh pondered all of these questions, the thought of following in his father’s footsteps and facing hundreds of thousands of Assyrian troops brought an icy sweat to his forehead. He decided to begin with the simplest question.

  “Should I sign this treaty with Assyria and become their vassal?” he asked.

  Zerah closed his eyes and lifted his hands, beseeching the gods in prayer. Manasseh was too overwrought to focus on any of Zerah’s words. The prayer seemed to last until dawn. Finally Zerah ended with amen—so be it. Manasseh held his breath as Zerah reached inside the breastpiece and drew out a stone.

  It was Thummim. Yes.

  The answer stunned Manasseh. “What? That’s it?” he cried. “God wants me to become an Assyrian vassal?” The courtyard seemed to sway beneath his feet. “I don’t understand. Why is God abandoning me? Why won’t He help me stand up to them the way He helped my father?”

  “Those aren’t yes or no questions, Your Majesty.”

  “I-I don’t want to be an Assyrian vassal! What about our sovereignty?”

  “I tried to warn you to decide for yourself.”

  Zerah started to return the stone to its pouch inside the breastpiece, but Manasseh snatched it from him. “Let me see that.” He stared at the stone as if willpower alone could make it change color in his hand, giving him the answer he wanted. “I don’t understand,” he murmured again, then closed his fist around it, longing to hurl it into the giant altar’s flames.

  Zerah took Manasseh’s hand and gently uncurled his fingers to remove the stone from his grasp. “You need to get some rest, Your Majesty. You’ve had a long, trying day.”

  He nodded mutely. He felt drained of strength. God wasn’t going to help him as He’d helped his father. There would be no miraculous plague. He would have to forfeit his sovereignty, pay tribute.

  Why wouldn’t God help him? What about all the sacrifices he’d made, all his devotion?

  “Isn’t there anything else I can do?” he pleaded.

  Zerah shook his head. “The answer is clear, Your Majesty.”

  Manasseh turned his back and allowed his bodyguards to lead him down the hill to his palace.

  As soon as King Manasseh was out of sight, Zerah hurried inside the Temple storage chamber and sank down on a bench as his trembling knees finally gave out. If Manasseh had discovered the tiny dot of hardened wax no larger than a pen stroke, it would have cost Zerah his life. Thankfully, the crisis had passed. Manasseh hadn’t noticed the bead of wax that marked the Thummim stone, nor would he ever know that Zerah had placed it there in order to distinguish it from the Urim if the need ever arose. He was glad he’d had the foresight to mark one of the stones in case of an emergency—such as the one tonight.

  The ordeal had been grueling for Zerah, but in the end, using the ephod had turned out to be the quickest way to accomplish what Zerah had intended all along—signing the treaty with Assyria. It spared him the time and trouble of slowly leading Manasseh to the same conclusion with omens and sorceries. Zerah had dreaded the exhausting work of exploiting his relationship with Manasseh, manipulating the strings of his emotions. Now everything could continue as before.

  Zerah had faith in his gods and in his own spiritual power—up to a point. In spite of his assurances to the king, he had no idea which spirits or spells Isaiah had called upon to summon the plague on the Assyrians, nor would he know how to control such lethal powers if he did succeed in conjuring them. The king expected the impossible.

  He caressed the Thummim one last time before placing it inside the breastpiece. Then he unfastened the high priest’s ephod and returned it to the box, closing the lid until next time.

  Miriam sat at her table beside the outdoor oven, humming to herself as she kneaded bread for their noon meal. Her body rocked in rhythm with her song as she repeated each step—folding the dough, pushing it with the heel of her hand, spinning it a quarter turn, folding it again. She enjoyed breadmaking because it was one of the few daily tasks she could still do. So many other jobs, such as wringing laundry and weaving cloth, were impossible with her crippled hands.

  She shielded her eyes and glanced up to gauge the sun’s height. There was plenty of time for the bread to rise and then bake. It would still be warm when Joshua arrived home for lunch in a few hours. She covered the dough with a cloth when she was finished and placed it in the sun to rise, then wiped the flour off her hands. She heard the back gate creak open, and when she looked up she was surprised to see Joshua. He stood in the courtyard as if carved from stone, staring into space with a vacant gaze, watching a scene she couldn’t see. Her immediate fear was that something had happened to Nathan. She groped for her crutches and struggled to her feet.

  “What’s wrong?”

  He gave a start, as if he hadn’t noticed her until then. “I just came from a meeting with Prince Amariah,” he said slowly. “Our homeland is gone.”

  “What do you mean, it’s gone?” She hobbled over to him and reached up to touch his face, trying to draw him back to her, back from the place inside himself where he so often retreated. He brushed her hand away in an absent gesture, as if shooing a fly.

  “We just received the latest news from Judah. King Manasseh has forfeited our sovereignty to the Assyrians.”

  “But why? Was there a war or something?”

  “No. That’s what’s so ironic. Not one Assyrian soldier ever left Nineveh. Their emperor announced that he was building a new empire, and Manasseh signed up as his willing vassal.”

  Joshua’s voice was calm, almost dreamy, but Miriam saw the repressed rage in his clenched jaw and rigid shoulders, heard it in his wheezing lungs. She needed to help him douse the flames of his anger before they burned up everything that was good in him.

  “What will this mean?” she asked.

  “It m
eans that our country has lost its independence. It means that everything my father worked for, all of his prayers, his faith, were for nothing. One of the greatest miracles in the history of our nation has been canceled with one stamp of Manasseh’s royal seal. . . . And it means that we’ll never be able to go home now, unless we’re content to be Assyrian slaves.”

  “Is Egypt in danger? Could the Assyrians come here?”

  He shook his head as if the question was irrelevant. “Pharaoh has armed garrisons like this one all across the nation. He’s ready for the Assyrians.”

  “Then what’s wrong, love?”

  “I don’t want to fight for Pharaoh, I want to fight for my own country. Manasseh never should have given in. We could stand up to the Assyrians just like Abba and King Hezekiah once did. I begged Amariah to send our men and me to Jerusalem. Pharaoh would give us all the weapons we needed. We could convince plenty of other Judeans to join us and fight for our freedom. God would surely give us the victory.”

  “What did Prince Amariah say?”

  “He won’t do it. He thinks this is God’s revenge, that God is using the Assyrians to punish Manasseh.”

  “Isn’t that what you wanted, Joshua? Didn’t you want God to punish Manasseh?”

  He shook his head slowly from side to side, his gaze turned inward again. “No. I wanted to punish him myself.” He moved away from her like a man walking in his sleep.

  “Joshua, where are you going?” He didn’t answer. Instead, he drifted out through the courtyard gate, leaving it to swing open in the breeze behind him. “Joshua, wait! Can’t you talk to me about it?” He didn’t seem to hear her.

  Miriam knew that he was heading to the nearby riverbank to be alone. She also knew from experience that being alone was the worst possible thing for him. He couldn’t pray when he was this upset, and his anger would slowly grow and swell like the rising bread dough, with no release. She considered sending one of the servants to the marketplace to find Jerimoth, then decided that it was her job to console her husband, not Jerimoth’s.

  Joshua was such a complex man, and so much smarter than she was. Miriam looked at life in simple terms, while Joshua made everything complicated. He tried too hard to analyze and organize everything, even things he couldn’t change. Why had God ever put them together? Could it be that Joshua sometimes needed her practical, commonsense approach to life as a balance?

  It would take her nearly thirty minutes to walk the same distance he could walk in five, but she steeled herself for the long, arduous trek over rough terrain to the riverbank, dragging her useless legs. Three times her crippled limbs gave out and she fell, struggling alone like an overturned turtle until she righted herself. When she finally found Joshua he was standing close to the shore, staring downriver toward the sea, his shoulders slumped in defeat. He didn’t see Miriam limping toward him until she staggered up behind him and collapsed to the beach in exhaustion.

  “Miriam! What are you doing here?” he said angrily.

  “Following you.”

  He sank to his knees beside her, and she felt his hands trembling with fury when he gripped her shoulders. “You know you can’t walk this far over rough ground! What a stupid, dangerous thing to do! What if you fell?”

  “I did fall—three times!”

  “You could have hurt yourself.”

  “Then don’t run away from me, Joshua. Share your problems with me.”

  All at once the anger drained from his face, and he clasped Miriam to his chest, clutching her tightly. “I’m sorry . . . I’m so sorry.”

  “I want to help you, Joshua. It breaks my heart to see you so unhappy. I don’t know what to do for you.”

  “I don’t know, either.”

  He sat back with a sigh and turned her around so she could lean comfortably against him, cradled in his arms. She listened to the gentle lap of water against the shore and the slow thudding of his heartbeat as she rested to recover her strength. The air wheezed through his chest as he struggled to breathe.

  “What’s it like there?” she asked after a long silence.

  “Where?”

  “That place where you go, inside yourself. Where you mourn and grieve.”

  “It’s horrible, Miriam. You don’t want to know.”

  “But I need to know. . . . You go there so often.”

  “I don’t want to drag you there with me. That’s why I left the house.”

  Miriam felt her own anger rise as she turned to face him. “It’s not your life and my life anymore, it’s our life. We’re one flesh. That means we share everything—the sorrows as well as the joys. If you won’t take me there, how can I help you find your way back to me?”

  He didn’t reply, and Miriam sensed the struggle he was waging with his demons of depression. “What goes on inside of you, Joshua? If you explain it to me in simple terms that I can understand, maybe you’ll understand it better yourself.”

  He sighed and settled her against his chest again, his hand tracing idle patterns on her shoulder. “Did I ever tell you about my father’s tunnel?” he asked.

  “I don’t think so.”

  “He carved it out of solid rock beneath the mountain in Jerusalem to channel water from the Gihon spring to the Pool of Siloam. He took me inside it once when I was nine or ten years old. We had an oil lamp with us, but as soon as we rounded the first curve and the light from the entrance disappeared, the darkness tried to swallow every shard of light. I could feel the weight of all that darkness, and the weight of the mountain above my head, closing in on me, trying to crush out my life. With every step I took, the water seemed to grow deeper and colder, and I didn’t think we’d ever find our way back to the light again. I was terrified, but I was too ashamed to tell Abba. The only thing that made it bearable at all, the only thing that got me through it, was Abba’s presence beside me.”

  He folded her hand between his own.

  “That’s what it feels like, Miriam. Like a mountain of darkness that I can feel, darkness that tries to swallow every bit of light and crush me beneath its weight. It’s like I’m wading through water that’s cold and deep, and it keeps rising—to my waist, to my chest, to my chin—until I feel myself being sucked under and I’m about to drown.” His wheezing worsened, and she worried that he wouldn’t be able to catch his breath.

  “God keeps closing all the doors,” he continued. “Hemming me in, taking away more and more choices, forcing me to wander deeper and deeper into the mountain. I’m terrified. Lost. What if I can’t find my way out again? And Abba’s gone. He isn’t beside me anymore.”

  “But God is still with you.”

  “That’s the most terrifying part of all. God seems a long way off. Sometimes it feels like I left Him behind in Jerusalem. I can’t feel His presence here among all these foreign gods.”

  She studied his face, desperate to help him. Miriam knew that false cheer and easy answers wouldn’t help him; only the truth. “You know what I see, Joshua? The darkness comes every time you get angry with God. You’re angry with Him today because of what happened in Judah. He didn’t work things out the way you wanted Him to. But He doesn’t leave you—you walk away from Him, away from His light. You enter the tunnel yourself every time you find it impossible to go in the direction He wants you to go, impossible to accept His will for your life.”

  “How can I accept His will when I don’t understand it? Why does He keep taking away everything I love? You know what my biggest fear is? That He’ll take you away from me, too. He’s taken so much already.”

  “I could get angry and depressed for what I’ve lost, too—not only is our baby gone, but I can barely walk, and my hands don’t work right, and I’ll be crippled like this for the rest of my life. I’ve always been so independent. I never wanted anyone to be in charge but me. But maybe that’s why God allowed me to be crippled—so I’d see how much I need other people. So I’d learn to lean on them, to trust them. Maybe it was the only way I could learn to trust God.
Don’t you ever wonder what He wants you to learn from all this, Joshua?”

  “I guess I thought I was finished learning.”

  She leaned into him, nestling closer. “I trust your love, Joshua. I trust that you would never do anything to harm me, that you only want what’s good for me.”

  “It’s true, Miriam. I’d give you my own arms and legs if I could.”

  “Then you have to believe that it’s the same with God. If the Assyrians take over Judah, if we live on Elephantine Island for the rest of our lives—whatever happens—it’s for our own good and for His purposes.” As he toyed with a lock of her hair, she noticed that his breathing had eased a bit.

  “How many times have you saved my life now?” he asked. “God must have put you on this earth just for me.”

  She smiled. “Maybe that’s why He hasn’t given us a baby. Maybe my hands are already full taking care of you.”

  He kissed her then, and Miriam knew that he would find his way out of his dark tunnel again, into the light.

  18

  Nathan awoke from the nightmare with his heart pounding, his body drenched with sweat. It was his running dream, the one in which someone pursued him down dark, lonely streets while he tried to flee on legs as heavy and awkward as tree stumps. He had no idea what he was running from. In his panic, he never dared to glance over his shoulder and see. The familiar dream should have lost its power to terrify him after all these years but it hadn’t, and at age eighteen, his childish fear embarrassed him.

  He rolled off his sleeping mat and stumbled out to the courtyard to wash, squinting in the glare of the dawning sun. When his limbs finally stopped trembling, he went back inside for breakfast. Miriam was usually up by now, fixing their morning meal, but Joshua sat in her place, slicing cucumbers into thick, uneven pieces.

  “Want some?” he asked, holding out the plate.

  Nathan shook his head. “You didn’t cut off the peels. Miriam always does.”

  “I guess I forgot.”

 

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