Crimson Cord : Rahab's Story (9781441221155)

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Crimson Cord : Rahab's Story (9781441221155) Page 14

by Smith, Jill Eileen


  She straightened and stood, then met Tendaji at the door near the courtyard, informing him that she was not available for visitors.

  18

  If things go as we told her, and Rahab lives through the taking of Jericho . . .”

  At Mishael’s words, Salmon glanced up from the stick he was whittling. “What about her?” Rahab was the last person he wanted to talk about right now. But he couldn’t seem to get her out of his thoughts.

  “Where will she go? What will become of her family? Once we destroy their town and their people, we will have to take them in. Won’t Rahab have to marry one of our people?” Mishael’s expression held confusion mingled with his telltale concern as he met Salmon’s gaze. He quoted Moses’ words. “‘When you go out to war against your enemies, and the Lord your God gives them into your hand and you take them captive, and you see among the captives a beautiful woman, and you desire to take her to be your wife . . .’”

  Salmon looked at Mishael askance. “No one in Israel is going to want to marry a prostitute.”

  Mishael glanced beyond the low fire toward the mouth of the cave. “Can our God not redeem a prostitute?”

  “They are defiled, Mishael. Prostitution defiles a land. Do you not remember Zimri and Kozbi?”

  “Captives of war can repent and be joined to our tribes.”

  “You’re assuming that just because she wants to save her life that she has repented and wants to leave her soiled work.” Salmon heard the bitter tone in his voice.

  “I did not doubt her sincerity.” Mishael’s quiet words silenced Salmon’s response. Let Joshua decide her fate. Was it not he who had Yahweh’s ear? Why should Salmon care what happened to Rahab or her family?

  “All that matters is that we get back to Joshua and give a good report.” He set the flint knife down. “And hope the prostitute keeps her word.”

  “If she does, Joshua might think it best for someone to marry her if she is to stay among us,” Mishael said again.

  Salmon scowled at his friend. “Or she lives like a widow outside the camp. Stop troubling yourself over a woman who means nothing. Her fate is God’s, not ours.”

  Three uneventful days later, Salmon climbed to the top of the hill above the cave and scanned the horizon in each direction, his gaze landing on the gates of Jericho in the distance. No sign of the king’s men filled the valley.

  “It appears they’ve given up,” he said when he joined Mishael again near the cave’s mouth.

  Mishael tucked his flint knife into his belt and girded his robe to make walking easier, as Salmon had already done. “Are you ready then?”

  Salmon nodded. He was more than ready to return to the Israelite camp.

  They skirted a wide path from Jericho, avoiding any hint of the sentries’ notice, keeping to the tree lines and traveling most often by night. Salmon pushed himself, anxious to return, to plan how best to take the city. War strategies were always the best remedy for wayward thoughts.

  Two nights later, he plopped beside Mishael on the banks of the Jordan near the place they had crossed nearly a week earlier. “What happens if Joshua doesn’t approve of our deal with Rahab?” The thought had troubled him the closer they got to the river’s edge. He had given his word, but a part of him had wagered that she would not keep hers, freeing him from the guilt of bargaining with a prostitute.

  “He will approve. Why wouldn’t he?” Mishael tied the straps of both sandals together and put them around his neck.

  “She is a prostitute. He wouldn’t expect us to make such a bargain.” Weariness crept over him, but he bent forward to untie his sandals as well. Every muscle ached with the day’s trek, fueled by the guilt, the worry. “I should never have promised her.”

  “She did not give you much choice. She helped us escape and did not give us away. Doesn’t that count for something with you?” Mishael’s normally congenial tone turned angry. “Why do you beat yourself up so? She saved our lives. We will save hers. So be it.”

  Salmon did not respond as Mishael stood and reached for a low-hanging branch. Salmon draped his sandals over his neck and came up behind him. The river was narrower at this spot, and not so deep they couldn’t swim if their feet slipped on any moss-covered rocks. Mishael’s sure footing gave Salmon’s weary body strength to continue.

  “Don’t fall in,” Mishael called as he grasped the tree on the other side. “I don’t want to have to fetch you out.”

  Salmon grasped the same branch moments later. “Be grateful you didn’t have to. I would have had to dunk you.”

  They both crawled up the embankment and sat a moment, panting from the exertion.

  “Be kind to her when you tell Joshua the tale.”

  Salmon’s gaze snapped to Mishael’s. “I am always kind.”

  “You disdain her. And your thoughts toward her are not kind.”

  “So now you have the ability to know my thoughts?” Salmon met Mishael’s gaze, then quickly retrieved his sandals and tied them on his feet. “We need to go. It will be too dark to find Joshua’s tent among the throng.”

  “Just don’t forget what I said.” Mishael fell into step beside him, and the two passed the Tent of Meeting and came to Joshua’s door soon after.

  “How did it go?” Joshua reclined on a mat across from them in his sitting room, his smile serious and unassuming. “I see you made it there and back unharmed.”

  Salmon nodded. “Yes. The trip was . . . interesting.”

  Joshua looked from man to man. “Tell me everything.”

  Salmon talked throughout the meal they shared, with Mishael interjecting here and there, until they came to speak of Rahab.

  “So you stayed with a prostitute?”

  “Not exactly stayed,” Salmon said, feeling his defenses rising. “It became apparent that a woman of her profession, one with the ear of the king, would have information that could prove useful. We merely questioned her.”

  “And she proved to be quite helpful to us,” Mishael said.

  Salmon glanced at his friend. “Yes. Yes, she did.” He held Joshua’s gaze. “While we were talking with her, the king’s guards appeared at her gate. Someone had reported our presence to him, and Rahab said the guards watched her house closely. She hid us from them and sent them off another way. Then she let us down through her window by a rope.”

  Joshua clasped his hands in front of him. “A brave woman. One of obvious faith.”

  “Or she is very good at saying what she must to get her way.” Salmon looked down, half ashamed of the judgment he felt toward her. He drew a slow breath and once more met Joshua’s gaze. “She made us promise to spare her and her family when we come to take the land.”

  “And did you?”

  “Yes, my lord, on the condition she keeps her end of the bargain.” Salmon set his empty clay bowl on the tray in front of him and wiped his mouth with the back of his sleeve. “So far, everything she has said and done for us has come to pass.”

  “The Lord has surely given the whole land into our hands,” Mishael added. “All of the people are melting in fear because of us.”

  “According to Rahab,” Salmon added. “Though I think because of her unique situation, she is more aware than most.”

  Joshua nodded but said nothing for the space of many breaths. “The Lord is in this,” he said at last. “He used this woman to spare your lives. When we take Jericho, we will do the same for her.” He stood then, and the men stood with him. “Get some sleep. Tomorrow we will travel back to the Jordan.”

  The journey from Shittim to the Jordan took longer for their large company than it did for just two men. By the third day, Salmon found himself in Joshua’s tent once more.

  “As heads of your tribes,” Joshua said, “go throughout the camp and tell the people: ‘When you see the ark of the covenant of the Lord your God, and the Levitical priests carrying it, you are to move out from your positions and follow it. Then you will know which way to go, since you have never been this
way before. But keep a distance of about two thousand cubits between you and the ark—do not go near it.’”

  Twelve men nodded their agreement.

  “Tell the people to gather here near my tent before nightfall. Any questions?” Joshua’s gaze swept the group. “Good. When you have finished, report to me.”

  Salmon left the tent and glanced at the sun, blinking against its glare. He had wanted to ask where the priests would be leading them, but he had been with Joshua long enough to know that when the time was right, he would tell them what they needed to know.

  “I should have sent another of your tribe to do the work today, my friend,” Joshua said hours later when Salmon returned, sweating and mopping his brow with a swatch of linen cloth. “You look as though you have barely slept since you returned from Jericho.”

  Salmon rubbed the back of his neck. “I’ve slept.”

  Joshua raised a brow.

  “Just carried along by some fitful dreams, is all.” Salmon felt Joshua’s scrutiny as he met the man’s gaze. “And anxious to be on with the next step of our journey.” It was partly the truth. He itched to pursue the land Adonai had promised them. He could not tell Joshua that a beautiful prostitute had invaded his waking and sleeping.

  Other heads of the tribes trickled into the tent, and Joshua bid them sit to eat and rest in its shade.

  Joshua’s wife Eliana and their two daughters brought trays of cheeses and figs and pistachios newly picked from nearby trees, and placed them before the men. Talk of war and strategies for taking Jericho were tossed about until the sun had moved to near dusk.

  Joshua motioned for the men to precede him out of the tent where a crowd had gathered, their numbers too great to count. He stood before the group and raised his hands for silence. “Consecrate yourselves,” he said, “for tomorrow the Lord will do amazing things among you.”

  What sorts of amazing things? The question burned in Salmon, even as a sense of humility filled him. How did a man consecrate his mind from wandering to forbidden places?

  The thought burdened and angered him as he followed the crowd to gather what was needed for his trek to the river at dawn. To wash and don fresh clothing seemed so outward, as though even a foreigner could do so and fit right in with the rest of their tribes. But what soap, what hyssop could cleanse a person from all that held him captive? What cleansing could purify the hidden places of his heart?

  “Take up the ark of the covenant and pass on ahead of the people,” Joshua told the priests the morning after their purification. “When you reach the edge of the Jordan’s waters, go and stand in the river.”

  Salmon stood far from the priests, as Joshua had commanded, watching as the men carried the ark on long poles that rested on their shoulders. They passed through the crowd, who had kept a wide berth around them. When the priests had passed out of earshot of Joshua, he turned to the crowd and raised his arms.

  “Come here and listen to the words of the Lord your God,” he said. “This is how you will know that the living God is among you and that He will certainly drive out before you the Canaanites, Hittites, Hivites, Perizzites, Girgashites, Amorites, and Jebusites. See, the ark of the covenant of the Lord of all the earth will go into the Jordan ahead of you.” He glanced at the men closest to him, eyeing each one in turn. “Now then,” he continued, “choose twelve men from the tribes of Israel, one from each tribe. And as soon as the priests who carry the ark of the Lord—the Lord of all the earth—set foot in the Jordan, its waters flowing downstream will be cut off and stand up in a heap.”

  Salmon felt a tap on his shoulder and smiled as Mishael came up alongside him. “Everyone knows you are a leader in Judah. You should be one of the twelve.”

  Salmon shrugged one shoulder. “Caleb is the elder among us. And I do not deserve to be a leader any more than the other men.” Never mind that his father had been a prince in Judah. His wayward thoughts toward Rahab of late had taught him not to think so highly of himself. Surely a truly consecrated man would keep his thoughts as pure as his body.

  “Maybe not, but Joshua picked you in the past. In case you haven’t noticed, he has chosen younger men to lead.” Mishael fell into step beside Salmon as the priests continued forward.

  “That’s because there are no old men left except for himself and Caleb.” But perhaps Caleb did not want such duties, though he did often sit in on meetings when they strategized for war.

  “Well, whether you like it or not, Joshua has picked you more than once, and the men I’ve talked to agree with his choice.”

  Salmon glanced at his conniving friend and almost thought to reprimand him with an offhand remark, but thought better of it. Purity of heart also meant purity of tongue. Oh, what a wretched man he was!

  “The Jordan is still at flood stage,” Mishael said, as though Salmon did not already know it. “Do you really think Adonai will stop the waters as He did for the people when Moses led them through the Red Sea?”

  Salmon considered the question, not wishing to speak too quickly. Did he believe it? Or would he only believe it when he saw it happen? “If Joshua says Adonai will do this, then I believe him. The Lord is with Joshua as He was with Moses.” He glanced heavenward, then toward the sounds of the Jordan, which was barely hidden by grasses and underbrush. “But this will be a sight to see.”

  The priests carrying the ark stopped at the water’s edge, and all of the people stopped with them, keeping their distance. Together, as if they had rehearsed how they would manage the slippery bank, the priests each put one foot in front of the other and touched the water’s edge.

  Salmon strained to see upstream, though if he were closer to the priests he could get a better view. But even from his place behind them, he could see the waters receding from the middle of the river. The swatch of dry land grew wider and wider as the waters piled up high so far upstream that Salmon could not see where they stopped. The priests carrying the ark stepped into the middle of the river. When the space around them grew wide enough to let the people pass in safety, the entire camp of Israel crossed the Jordan on dry ground.

  Salmon moved with the tribe of Judah to the edge of the bank. The sound of the river pulsed in the distance, a thing leashed. Had it only moments ago flooded the riverbed? Yet his feet did not sink into muck, the ground so dry dust clung to his sandals.

  Awe filled him as he looked to his left and right, straining for a glimpse of the waters. But trees and a bend in the river blocked his view. He glanced at Mishael, tempted to run to the other side and race down the bank for a closer look. But the crowd pressed in on them. Salmon’s heart beat to the tune of heady silence and reverent fear.

  When the last Israelite sandal touched the other side of the Jordan, Joshua called the twelve leaders together. “Go over before the ark of the Lord your God into the middle of the Jordan,” he said. “Each of you is to take up a stone on his shoulder, according to the number of the tribes of the Israelites, to serve as a sign among you. In the future, when your children ask you, ‘What do these stones mean?’ tell them that the flow of the Jordan was cut off before the ark of the covenant of the Lord. When it crossed the Jordan, the waters of the Jordan were cut off. These stones are to be a memorial to the people of Israel forever.”

  The head of Judah’s tribe, Salmon turned toward the river once more and led the group of twelve men back onto the dry riverbed at the prescribed distance from the ark. Rocks lined the river’s floor, some large, some ground to pebbles and sand. Salmon dug around a large boulder and hefted it onto his shoulder, then turned back to where Joshua and the people waited.

  He slowly lowered the huge rock and placed it near Joshua’s feet. One by one, eleven other tribal leaders did the same.

  “Come out of the river,” Joshua called to the priests.

  They moved as one man. As their feet left the riverbed to touch the grassy banks, a thunderous roar shook the air, submersing all other sounds. Water crashed over the Jordan’s bed, whooshing near the plac
e where Salmon stood, its foaming silver spray like a wide yawning mouth. Flood stage returned in full force. But not one of them had been left or drowned in its fury.

  19

  Rahab sat before her dressing table as dusk fell over the town, and Tendaji lit the torches in the courtyards. Her sister Adara pulled a shell comb through her long dark hair, fussing with a knot at the end.

  “Ouch! Don’t tug so hard.”

  “Well, next time tie a scarf over your head when you sleep, or wear it in a braid. You toss too much and it gets all tangled.” Adara pulled gently this time and freed the knot at last.

  “I hate sleeping in a headscarf. And I can’t help it if I toss and turn.” She loathed the way her voice lifted to a whine. She cleared her throat. “That is,” she said in a more cultured tone, “I like things as they are. Just be careful with the tangles, please.”

  Adara drew the comb once more through her hair and began the work of pinning it in place. “Who do you see first tonight?”

  Her question caused the familiar longing to be free of this life to surface in full force. Rahab had canceled her customers for nearly a week, but too soon her silver had depleted and Dabir demanded an accounting. She could not ignore her life or refuse to continue the work he demanded. If she did, he would suspect something. She could not risk the life of her Israelite rescuers even to save herself many more weeks of pain. The thought left her listless.

  She glanced at her too-curious sister, wishing not for the first time that her father would find her a man and betroth her. “Does it matter? They are all egotistical children.” Please, God of Israel, don’t let my sister end up doing what I do. Don’t let Dabir even consider the idea. She took great care that Adara left long before any men arrived.

  “Surely some are more pleasing than others,” Adara said. “You used to care for Dabir.”

  Rahab’s stomach tightened. “I was a fool to ever flirt with Dabir. I never cared for him.”

 

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