Table of Contents
Holy Smoke
Contents
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Map
Gamaliel’s World
Floorplan
Chapter I
Chapter II
Chapter III
Chapter IV
Chapter V
Chapter VI
Chapter VII
Chapter VIII
Chapter IX
Chapter X
Chapter XI
Chapter XII
Chapter XIII
Chapter XIV
Chapter XV
Chapter XVI
Chapter XVII
Chapter XVIII
Chapter XIX
Chapter XX
Chapter XXI
Chapter XXII
Chapter XXIII
Chapter XXIV
Chapter XXV
Chapter XXVI
Chapter XXVII
Chapter XXVIII
Chapter XXIX
Chapter XXX
Chapter XXXI
Chapter XXXII
Chapter XXXIII
Chapter XXXIV
Chapter XXXV
Chapter XXXVI
Chapter XXXVII
Chapter XXXVIII
Chapter XXXIX
Chapter XL
Chapter XLI
Chapter XLII
Chapter XLIII
Chapter XLIV
Chapter XLV
Chapter XLVI
Chapter LVII
Chapter XLVIII
Chapter XLIX
Chapter L
Notes
More from this Author
Contact Us
Holy Smoke: A Jerusalem Mystery
Frederick Ramsay
Poisoned Pen Press (2013)
* * *
Rating: ★★★★☆
Tags: General, Mystery & Detective, Historical, Fiction
The year is 29 C. E. and Jerusalem chafes under the Roman Empire's continued presence and oppressive rule. But in spite of that unpleasant fact of life, life goes on—but not for everyone. People die, some because it is their time, others by misadventure. One death in particular brings the City's daily routine to a halt. A badly scorched body is found behind the veil of The Holy of Holies—the Temple's inner sanctum, the most sacred space on earth for the Jews. No one except the High Priest may enter this place and he only once a year on the Day of Atonement. This is no casual violation and the authorities are in an uproar.Gamaliel, the Rabban of the Sanhedrin, the ranking rabbi in all of Judea, finds himself drawn into solving this delicate mystery while dark agents with unholy interests, plot to seize control of much of the trade in certain highly profitable imports from the east and west.Loukas, the physician, plays “Watson” to Gamaliel's “Sherlock” as the tangled web of intrigue and murder is slowly unraveled, but not before more bodies, both literal and figurative pop up. All the while Yeshua, the radical rabbi from the Galilee, continues to annoy the High Priest and smoke, Holy Smoke, from the sacrifices rise from the Temple.
Review
''The third in a trilogy set in first-century Jerusalem not only offers a finally wrought mystery, but includes intriguing information on the religious and secular life of the period.'' --Kirkus
''Ramsay earns high marks for the series' premise.'' --Publishers Weekly
About the Author
Dr. Frederick Ramsay was born in Baltimore, Maryland. He received his doctorate from the University of Illinois-Westside Medical Campus. After a stint in the Army, he joined the faculty of the University of Maryland, School of Medicine, teaching Anatomy, Embryology and Histology; engaged in research and also served as an Associate Dean. During this time he also pursued studies in theology and in 1971 was ordained an Episcopal priest. He is the author of several scientific and general articles, tracts, theses, and co-author of The Baltimore Declaration. He is an accomplished public speaker and once hosted a television spot, Prognosis, on the evening news for WMAR-TV, Baltimore. He is also an iconographer with works displayed around the world. He lives in Surprise, Arizona with his wife and partner, Susan.
Holy Smoke
A Jerusalem Mystery
Frederick Ramsay
www.FrederickRamsay.com
Poisoned Pen Press
Copyright © 2013 by Frederick Ramsay
First E-book Edition 2013
ISBN: 9781615954285 ebook
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.
The historical characters and events portrayed in this book are inventions of the author or used fictitiously.
Poisoned Pen Press
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[email protected]
Contents
Holy Smoke
Contents
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Map
Gamaliel’s World
Floorplan
Chapter I
Chapter II
Chapter III
Chapter IV
Chapter V
Chapter VI
Chapter VII
Chapter VIII
Chapter IX
Chapter X
Chapter XI
Chapter XII
Chapter XIII
Chapter XIV
Chapter XV
Chapter XVI
Chapter XVII
Chapter XVIII
Chapter XIX
Chapter XX
Chapter XXI
Chapter XXII
Chapter XXIII
Chapter XXIV
Chapter XXV
Chapter XXVI
Chapter XXVII
Chapter XXVIII
Chapter XXIX
Chapter XXX
Chapter XXXI
Chapter XXXII
Chapter XXXIII
Chapter XXXIV
Chapter XXXV
Chapter XXXVI
Chapter XXXVII
Chapter XXXVIII
Chapter XXXIX
Chapter XL
Chapter XLI
Chapter XLII
Chapter XLIII
Chapter XLIV
Chapter XLV
Chapter XLVI
Chapter LVII
Chapter XLVIII
Chapter XLIX
Chapter L
Notes
More from this Author
Contact Us
Dedication
To: Kerri Sandusky
When Susan sailed through seminary,
you were the keel on her ship.
Acknowledgments
As always, a shout-out to the folks at Poisoned Pen Press. I won’t list them by name. I attempted to do that in the past and invariably left someone off the list. It’s enough to say, modesty aside, that they consistently publish the finest mysteries here and abroad. They do that because of their abundant enthusiasm, and professionalism, and because they really love what they do. Those of us who have the privilege to write for the Press can never thank them enough. So, to the gang over on Goldwater Boulevard and also to Loretta Warner, many thanks.
Holy Smoke is the second in a trilogy set in first-century Jerusalem. The action in the first in the series, The Eighth Veil, took place in Herod’s palace. Holy Smoke is set in the Temple. I have appended a few notes at the end of the book
which I hope will help readers make their way through the vagaries of that time and place and connect them with a few of its major players. Some of the words used in the text are transliterated Hebrew, Greek, or Latin. Most particularly Ha Shem, The Name; kohen, kohanim, priest, priests; Elohim, The Lord. I have italicized them even though many have made it into the English lexicon. I have done so to emphasize them and the place they held in the thought processes of the time. For the same reason I capitalized Law, when it refers to Torah, and Temple, the heart of the city and its peoples’ faith.
Enjoy.
Whoever did not see Jerusalem in its days of glory,
never saw a beautiful city in their life.
—Talmud: Succah 51b
Map
Gamaliel’s World
ASSYRIA: A Semitic kingdom on the Upper Tigris; today, northern Iraq
BITHNYIA: Bithnyia/Pontus, a Roman province lying along the south coast of the Black Sea; today, Turkey
CAPPADOCIA: a Roman province in Central Anatolia, capital Caesarea; today, Turkey (Kayseri)
EGYPT: still Egypt
KHORASAN: a country that straddled the trade routes into India and present-day China; today, Afghanistan
MACEDONIA: a kingdom on the northeast of the Greek Peninsula that rose to great power under Philip II and Alexander; today, the Republic of Macedonia
JUDEA: a Roman province; today, Israel
PARTHIA: a political power in Persia; today, northeast Iran. Note: Gamaliel has trouble distinguishing between Assyria and Parthia
Floorplan
Jerusalem, 29 C.E.
A= Holy of Holies
B = The Holy Place
C = Altar of Sacrifice
D =Laver (water basin)
E= Lepers
F= Wood
G = Oil
H = Nazarenes
I = Incense Altar
J = Nicanor Gate
K = Beautiful Gate
Herod’s Temple
This diagram represents what scholars suppose the Temple might have looked like in the early first century. It is offered here to help the reader visualize the relative locations of the places mentioned in the narrative. The thin vertical line between A and B is the Veil, a curtain the thickness of which has been the subject of debate. Some affirm it had to be thick and heavy, other insist it was a single layer of fabric. No one knows for sure. The four rooms at the right, frequently called the Treasury, were designated for their use, either to store material or deal with a particular issue common to the time.
The Temple was destroyed in 70 CE, and nothing was built on the site until the seventh century, when Muslim Umayyad Caliph Abd al-Malik restored the city’s walls and the mount, and built the structure commonly known as The Dome of the Rock.
Chapter I
Because his cadre of kohanim had drawn this particular week to perform the priestly functions, Josef ben Josef would be the one to discover the body. Had he remained by the Altar of Sacrifice where he’d been assigned, had his curiosity not willed his feet across the porch and into the Holy Place, had he not paused and looked at the Great Veil, he might not have been the one to raise the alarm and cause the high priest’s face to turn as red as Moses. Also, he would not have lost his place on the roster of kohanim and ended his days in Bethlehem herding goats and sheep instead of remaining a priest in the service of Ha Shem. He had one glorious moment as a priest in the city of David, in the Temple, and then—finished.
There could be no doubt about the body, although it had yet to be brought into view. A heavy cord of elaborate construction snaked out from under the Veil and, indeed, provided the only evidence of its existence, but what else could be attached to its other end? Josef’s cries of alarm at the edges of the Holy of Holies brought his colleagues scurrying into the most sacred area of Herod’s Temple. The steps of Nicanor Gate, which lead from the Court of the Priests into the Holy Place, the antechamber to the Holy of Holies, seemed to be as far as they dared go. There they gathered, wailed, and seemed incapable of moving one way or the other. Instead, they stood like the pillars of salt one sees down by the Great Salt Sea, like Lot’s wife. Even after being joined by the high priest, Caiaphas himself, they remained inert, in a state of fearful confusion. That is until the rabban of the Sanhedrin arrived. His presence seemed to restore a small measure of order and calm. He paused, seeming to measure the mood of the moment, studied Josef, the other five priests, the high priest, and then asked for an explanation. Josef stammered his story as best he could.
“Has anyone determined with certainty that there is, in fact, a body attached to the end of this cord? Pulled on it, perhaps?” the Rabban asked. The men glanced at one another and shuffled their feet, embarrassed. “No? Then doesn’t it seem reasonable to do so?”
The kohanim turned to the high priest for confirmation. Holy Writ did not prescribe the lashing of a cord to the ankle of anyone entering the Holy of Holies, although there had been talk about it for years and many assumed it was part of Temple protocol. In any case, there could be no accompanying instructions as what one was to do if the worst actually happened, that is if some unclean person did, in fact, dare to enter the Holy of Holies, approach the Name-That-May-Not-Be-Spoken, and been struck down for his impiety.
The high priest put his fists against his ears, clenched his teeth, and growled something in Aramaic that Josef did not catch. The rabban, on the other hand, had a half smile on his face that he did not attempt to hide. Did this most honorable man find this awful situation amusing? Perhaps his enjoyment derived from the high priest’s discomfort. Josef had heard talk. He had not paid it any mind at the time, but now he wished he had.
“High Priest,” the Rabban said, “you will have to bring this dead person to light sooner or later. Let’s have it done now.”
The high priest nodded. There were no precedents for this. How could there be?
“And let us hope that it is, indeed, a man at the end of that rope and not one of your sacrificial animals gone astray.”
An animal from the pens that held the bulls and rams: was that even possible? Again, it seemed to Josef that the rabban took some perverse pleasure in the high priest’s discomfort.
“Or perhaps this is some pagan’s idea of sacrilege and he turned swine loose in there.”
The image of a dead pig lying behind the Veil with the other end of the cord tied to its leg caused Josef’s stomach to turn over. He swallowed the vomit that formed in his throat. It would not do to add to the desecration by being sick, not now. He took a deep breath and forced the blasphemous image from his mind. The rabban, he saw, stood with his head cocked to one side, apparently waiting on the high priest. Time ground to a halt. Whatever lurked behind the Veil was too appalling for any of them to contemplate. But contemplate it they must.
“Impossible, Rabban. What a thought!” Finally, it seemed, the high priest had found his voice. Turning to the priests he added, “All of you will go to the Laver and wash. Sacrifice an unspotted ram and dip your hands in its blood and sprinkle it on your tunic. You must pray the prayer of consecration as you do so. When you have done all these things assemble in the Holy Place and await my direction. You, Nathan, you climb into the observation room. It is early, but there may be enough light for you to see what lies at the end of this cord.”
The priests hurried off to do as they had been directed. Surely Caiaphas would know what needed to be done. Had he not served as high priest longer than anyone in memory—recent memory at least? He had. Josef refused to listen to the talk in the streets of his corruption and political maneuvering. Caiaphas stood last in the line of Aaron, the one man closest to the Lord. Even Gamaliel, the rabban, did not sit so close as that.
Josef rushed to catch up with his co-workers and begin the rite of purification the high priest decreed.
Chapter II
Gamaliel served the Sanhedrin as its rabban, the rabbi’s rabbi, so to speak, the final arbiter of what was, and what was not, an acceptabl
e interpretation of the Law. In addition, and more to his liking, he trained young men in the art of disputation and reading the same Law. Because of those two undertakings, he found himself frequently in the company of the high priest. The two of them did not always agree on the nature and enforcement of the Law and were frequently at odds both publicly and, more often, privately. Even so, he would never have anticipated that he would spend the next several days dealing with the consequences of a corpse in the Temple.
On awakening that morning at his usual early hour, he felt wearier than when he’d retired. He blamed Caiaphas for that. They had passed the previous night in disputation. Would the high priest never let the issue of the marginally heretical rabbis go? It seemed obvious to Gamaliel that proper instruction in the righteous interpretation of the Word by those capable of doing so should be sufficient to counter any of the eccentric interpretations being offered by the Nation’s wandering band of self-proclaimed rabbis, prophets, and would be messiahs.
Gamaliel told the high priest that when he found the time, he made a practice of drifting along the edges of the crowds gathered around these well intentioned, but ignorant, teachers and almost without exception believed there could be no dangerous outcome stemming from any of their teaching. That is, with the possible exception of the tall one from Nazareth. Yeshua, he was called. That one had a very different view of the Nation, the Lord, and the Law.
“That man seems to prefer teaching by telling stories or asking questions,” he’d said to Caiaphas.
“He’s Greek? He’s studied Aesop or Socrates?”
“I rather doubt it.”
He did not add that after listening to him, Gamaliel had decided that with some formal training and a firm hand to guide him, this Yeshua might someday make a good teacher of the Law. At the same time he wondered whether the Galilean might have spent some time with the teachers from Persia or Parthia, which if true, could slow that process down. Gamaliel didn’t know a great deal about the tenets held by the worshipers of Mazda, the Zoroastrians, and had only heard of the Avesta. His most immediate experience had come at the hands of a bullying Roman Tribune who’d hawked Mithras as the one true way, not Gamaliel’s “angry god.” Gamaliel harbored some doubts about the connection between the Mithras the Roman worshipped, who seemed pretty punishing himself, and the Mithras the Parthians held to. What little he did know of their odd monotheistic sect persuaded him that on the whole it was not a bad thing to discuss so long as the declaiming rabbi eventually turned his listeners back to see Judaism as the final and perfected Way. If this Yeshua harbored any notions in that direction, he would doubtless understand that important distinction.
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