by Ted Dekker
On the post, Justin moaned.
Thomas broke from the shock that had frozen him, jerked out his sword, and leaped for his wife.
Mikil stepped forward, hand raised. “No, Thomas. You can’t defy the Council.”
But Thomas hardly heard her. “Let her go! Have you all gone mad?”
She moved into his path to block him. “Please—”
He swung his elbow and struck her jaw. She landed on her seat with a thump. Thomas thrust his sword at Jamous’s neck. “Untie my wife!”
“Don’t be a fool, Thomas.” Mikil spoke in a hurried, hushed tone, ignoring her reddening cheek. “The verdict has been cast. The fate of our people depends on this exchange.”
With those words, Thomas knew what had happened. Johan had double-crossed not only Justin, but him as well. Qurong had exchanged a promise of peace for the life of Justin, and the Council had accepted. Justin’s death would satisfy the law requiring death for treason against Elyon and allow a peace to be brokered even without requiring the Horde to bathe.
“It will never work,” Thomas said. “The peace won’t last! You think you can trust these Scabs to keep peace? Qurong is Tanis! He’s blinded by Teeleh, and he’s found a way to kill Elyon!”
“You trusted us,” Martyn said.
Thomas held the point of his sword against Jamous’s neck. He knew by Martyn’s tone that the people didn’t know about Thomas and Martyn’s agreement to betray Qurong.
“Did you hear me?” Thomas cried to the people. “Qurong is Tanis! This is Teeleh’s work, this murder. Open your eyes!”
No one responded. They were deaf and dumb, all of them!
“Please, Thomas,” Mikil pleaded quietly. “There’s no way to undo this.”
Rachelle’s eyes were wide and screaming at him. Free me! Don’t let them do this! He’s Elyon!
But Thomas knew that if he killed Jamous and freed his wife, he would be forced to defend both of them against the Guard, whose allegiance to Elyon, and by association to the Council, superseded their allegiance to him. If the Council had cast their verdict, there was no way to undo the verdict without killing the lot of them.
Thomas spun around and strode for Justin’s sagging body. He couldn’t risk Rachelle’s life, but neither could he stand by and let them work their treachery.
Is this really Elyon, Thomas? This swollen man who once served under you and dishonored you by refusing the position Mikil now holds? Elyon?
Rachelle had said so. He would die by her words.
“Stop him,” Ciphus said.
This time a dozen of his Guard stepped forward. His first impulse was to fight, and he instinctively braced for them.
“If you kill one of them in the service of defending the Council’s orders, then you and your wife will die with Justin,” Ciphus said.
They had lost their minds over this killing! His eyes ran along the line of villagers who stood behind the Council and Guard. There was a small girl there, staring around her mother, tears running down her cheeks. He recognized her from the Valley of Tuhan. It was Lucy, the one whom Justin had singled out and danced with. The girl’s mother was doing her best to keep her own sobs quiet.
“What has happened here?” he shouted.
“Finish your business,” Ciphus told Qurong.
There was a light of defiance in the Horde leader’s eyes. He nodded and his men leaned in to continue the beating.
Thomas tossed down his sword. “At least give me the courtesy of speaking to the general,” he said. “As one warrior to another. My business is still to defend my people, and I demand a council with Martyn.”
Martyn looked at Qurong, who dipped his head.
Thomas turned back to Mikil and indicated Rachelle. “One scratch on her and it will be your neck.” He faced the crowd. “What’s wrong with you? This is the kind of celebration you choose to end your Gathering?” Only a few seemed to hear.
Thomas gave Ciphus a parting glare, walked past Martyn, and headed toward the water’s edge, away from the execution.
Martyn walked to him. Behind them another bone cracked. Thomas held his jaw firm and looked over the lake water, clear and dark in the early night. The orange flames from a hundred torches shone on the glassy surface.
“This wasn’t what we agreed to.” His voice was shaky, far too emotional for a warrior of his stature, but he was having difficulty even breathing past the lump in his throat, much less speaking with authority.
“It was beyond my control,” Martyn said. “I didn’t know that the supreme leader would offer Justin’s life in exchange for peace. It wasn’t our plan.”
“You betray everyone except Tanis?”
Martyn didn’t bother responding. Justin had passed out, Thomas thought. Hoped. The only sound behind them was the thudding of fists and the snapping of bones. He felt nauseated and frantic, and he spoke quickly.
“I beg you, Johan, listen to me. Your men shot a woman last night. Did you hear about it?”
“I heard something, yes.”
“The woman was Rachelle. Your sister. You may not remember why you should have any allegiance to your own blood, but surely you remember simple facts. She was your sister.”
“And?”
“And Justin found her, barely alive, with four arrows in her. He healed her. There’s not a scratch on her. He told Rachelle that he has a lot riding on us. These were the same words he spoke to us fifteen years ago. Do you remember? Or has Teeleh completely consumed your mind? How could Justin have known what the boy told us? Unless he is the boy. You’re about to kill the same boy who led us to this lake fifteen years ago, when you yourself were still a boy!”
“Even if you are right, why should I care?”
“Because he made you, you . . . That is your Maker back there!”
Martyn stared out at the lake. Thomas prayed he would come to his senses, and for a moment he began to hope that the deep sentiments of Johan’s youth were rising to the surface.
Something had changed behind them. The beating had stopped.
“If that’s my Maker back there,” Martyn said, “then he would have made me to live with less pain.”
“Your pain is your choice, not his! If you would bathe, your pain would be gone.”
Martyn spit on the water. “I would rather die than bathe in this cursed lake.”
He turned and walked up the shore to the execution.
Thomas could no longer contain the emotion pent up in his chest. He stared out over the lake and let tears spill down his cheeks. If he turned around, the people would see, and he wasn’t sure he wanted that. But it was his Creator they were executing.
There was a pause behind him. He swallowed hard. How could it have come to this? Maybe Justin wasn’t Elyon. Had Elyon persuaded Johan to enter the desert? How could Elyon’s body break? Or worse, die? Elyon would never allow this!
Thomas turned around. The Scabs had strapped a rope around Justin’s ankles and were preparing to hang him upside down from the platform. He averted his eyes and walked up the bank, ignoring the Scabs and Council members who watched him. He had to find Marie and Samuel! But as soon as he thought it, he saw them, kneeling beside their mother.
Rachelle lay on her face behind a row of the Guard, weeping. Thomas slipped his arms under her body and lifted her up. “Come with me,” he said to his children.
They walked away from the crowd without another word.
It was their custom to honor the dead by facing rather than turning from their bodies at the funeral pyres. To hide one’s eyes because looking at the death was painful insulted the one actually facing that death.
Thomas helped a sagging, despondent Rachelle to the closest gazebo.
Marie and Samuel had both been crying, and now Marie spoke for the first time. “Why aren’t we honoring him, Papa?”
He couldn’t answer her.
“Put me down,” Rachelle said.
She took her children by their shoulders. “We are, Marie
. We will honor him.”
They hurried up the steps and gazed out over the crowd to the scene below. Thomas stepped up beside them and Rachelle gripped his arm. They watched the proceedings in stunned silence. The pummeling of Justin’s body continued. How they managed to break so many bones was beyond him.
Rachelle’s fingers dug into Thomas’s elbow each time they struck Justin. But she knew as well as he did that there was nothing they could do for him now.
Surely Ciphus hadn’t expected this kind of brutality. The Scabs were defiling the forest with their presence. Their smell drifted over the village like a fog. Those not directly involved let their attention wander and on occasion laughed.
Many of the Forest People watched in stunned silence. Many wept quietly. Many sobbed openly.
They stopped beating him and hauled him up by his feet, so that his head hung five or six feet above the ground. Thomas watched as a Scab walked up, squeezed Justin’s broken face, and then pushed him. His body swung like a deer carcass in a smoking shack. His arms hung limp, as if he were surrendering upside down.
Rachelle grunted. “Can’t you make them stop? If they have to kill him . . .” She couldn’t finish.
It didn’t matter. He knew what she was going to say. If they have to kill him, can’t they be forced to do it quickly? But neither of them could even say such a thing.
“It’s their way,” Thomas said. “They don’t understand suffering like we do. They live with it every day.”
“It’s not their way,” she said. “It’s the way of Teeleh.”
Ciphus held up his hand and walked out to the body. He walked around it, then faced the crowd.
“I know there are those among you who still think that here hangs a prophet.” His voice rang over the lake. “Let me ask you, would Elyon allow his prophet to suffer like this? You see, he is flesh and blood like the rest of us. Anyone who dares say that this mess of flesh is actually Elyon has lost his sense. Our Creator could never become so uncreated! He would never let a Scab abuse him, any more than he would let Teeleh abuse him. You see?”
He faced the Horde soldiers. “Hit him.”
One of the Scabs stepped forward and hammered Justin’s back. No one present could mistake the loud crack.
Ciphus cleared his throat. “You see, just a man.”
His words invited a fresh round of abuse from the other Horde guards. Three of them stepped forward and began slugging the body, laughing. Ciphus stepped back, surprised. In his eagerness to deflate Justin, he’d unexpectedly opened this door.
“Thomas,” Rachelle pleaded.
It was all he could stand. “Wait here.”
He jumped from the gazebo and ran straight for Ciphus. A murmur spread through the section of the crowd that saw him. The elder turned his head before Thomas reached the inner circle.
“Enough! To execute a man is one thing. If you insist on satisfying your blood lust, then do it quickly! But don’t humiliate the man who saved the Southern Forest and the Forest Guard just a week ago. Kill him if you must, but don’t mock his life.”
A thousand voices rose in agreement.
Ciphus seemed relieved. He frowned at Qurong. “It makes sense. Finish this.”
“The agreement was to kill him our way. Our way is to take a man’s spirit be—”
“You have taken his spirit!” Thomas yelled. “Now you’re taking the spirit of the people he served. Finish this!”
Qurong regarded him, then nodded at his men.
One of them grabbed a bucket of water they’d drawn from the lake earlier and splashed it in Justin’s face. Justin gasped.
Thomas couldn’t tell if Justin had opened his eyes, because the battered man faced the other way. But he did see something else that struck him as odd. Justin’s skin was starting to gray. How long had it been since his last bathing? As with all who’d trained with the Guard, he probably bathed every morning as was required. Justin had been in the desert, restricted to canteen water, but there hadn’t been a trace of the disease on him this morning.
“Drown him,” Qurong said.
Two of the Scabs hastily strapped a large stone on Justin’s body so that it would sink. A dozen others who had bound their legs with treated leather to protect them from the water stepped cautiously forward, staring at the lake.
“Drown him!” Martyn shouted in a sudden fit of rage.
They grabbed the tower’s hastily constructed supports and began to drag the platform down the shore, to the lake.
Justin’s body turned, and now Thomas saw his eyes. The left was swollen shut; the right was barely cracked. Justin’s sight met his own and stopped. For a long time Justin looked at him. Even past the swollen flesh there was no fear in his face, no regret, no accusation. Only sorrow.
Was he staring into Elyon’s eyes ? The thought struck a chord of terror deep in Thomas’s mind. This was the boy he’d met on top of the cliffs so long ago, the boy who could sing new worlds into existence. Who could turn the planet inside out, or split the globe in two for a day of play. Who could fill a lake that never ended with water so powerful that a single drop could undo any man or woman.
A tremor ran through Thomas’s bones. He’d dived into Elyon’s water, breathed it deep, screamed with its pleasure and with its pain. This man who hung by his feet as they hauled the device into the lake was Elyon?
Thomas’s chest swelled with grief. Tears were filling his eyes, and he didn’t know how to stop them. A lone child began to sob quietly behind him, and he turned. Lucy. She stood alone on the sand, crying.
Thomas impulsively stepped back, dropped to one knee, and drew her in. Neither spoke. He faced the water.
The Horde had pushed the tower ten feet off the shore, cursing bitterly as the water soaked past their leg coverings and ate at their cracked skin. The water was about four feet deep here, and Justin’s hands were submerged just past his wrists. He’d closed his eyes again, but his breathing was steady. He was awake.
All except for two of the Scabs hurried out of the water. Their hands were pink where they’d touched the water, and they wiped at them madly, trying to rub them free of the poison that had discolored them. They tore the leather from their legs and beat their flesh to alleviate the pain. Above the waist, their skin was still gray.
The two who’d stayed in the lake climbed up the tower, gripped the rope with both hands, and looked at Qurong.
A small voice, barely more than a whisper, came from Justin. His mouth had opened and he was speaking!
“Remember . . .”
Thomas stopped breathing to hear. What had he said?
“Remember me,” Justin said, louder this time, voice choking with emotion now. “Remember me!”
They all heard it and stood frozen.
Justin cried it out again in a terrible groan that echoed over the lake and cut straight to Thomas’s heart.
“Remember me, Johan!”
Johan?
Thomas looked to his left. Martyn stood stock still, face hidden by his hood, arms folded. Qurong glanced at his general, then quickly motioned his men to commence the drowning.
Justin was sobbing now. His tears fell into the water below his head. He began to groan loudly. Then he began to scream.
What was it? Why now?
Lucy wailed in his arms, and Thomas drew her in tight, as much for his own comfort as hers. He was sure that his heart had stopped. He couldn’t bear to watch this! He couldn’t stand by and see any man in such a horrible state of torment.
But he couldn’t dishonor the man by turning his head away.
Still Justin screamed, long terrible shrieks that cut the night like a razor. Thomas gritted his teeth and begged the sound to stop.
He noticed the change in Justin’s skin just before his head touched the water. The flesh on his chest and legs was now nearly white. It was flaking.
The disease was overtaking Justin before Thomas’s very eyes!
This was the source of his groans. The p
ain . . .
The skin on his chest suddenly began to crack like a dried lake bed. Someone began to yell behind him. “He has the disease!” But the cry was lost in a long scream of agony from Justin.
Thomas settled to his haunches and began to weep uncontrollably.
Justin’s head went under. Bubbles boiled from his mouth. His body jerked and heaved. He’s not holding his breath, Thomas thought. He was trying to pull the water up into his lungs, but it was difficult, hanging upside down.
Just as the water seemed to take its final, terrible toll on him, the two Scabs jerked him out of the lake. Water poured from his lungs. He gasped and sputtered.
Thomas stood to his feet, horrified by their extended torture.
They lowered him again. Again, Justin’s body jerked uncontrollably. Again, the water about his head boiled. Again, his diseased chest pumped deep, drawing, convulsing, spasming in rejection.
Again they pulled him from the water before he could drown.
Thomas tore for the water. “Kill him!” he screamed.
You are demanding the death of Elyon.
“Kill—”
A fist from one of the Scabs landed on his temple before he even knew the man was there. He dropped to the sand and struggled to push himself up.
“Finish it!” Ciphus said. “For the sake of Elyon, just finish this!”
“Our custom is to—”
“I don’t care what your custom is! Just kill him!”
A Scab on Thomas’s left suddenly rushed at the water. The general Martyn. Johan. He had a sword in his hand.
Thomas caught his breath. Something was wrong with this.
Not until Johan’s feet splashed water did Thomas note the leathers on his legs. Johan’s hood fell off his head, baring a face twisted in rage for all to see. He bore down on Justin, roaring with fury now.
“Die! Die!”
Before any of them knew his full intent, Johan thrust his sword into Justin’s belly, jerked it to one side, and pulled it back out. Blood gushed from the gaping wound and splashed into the water.
“Drown him!” Johan screamed.
The two Scabs on top of the platform dropped the body. Justin hung suspended in the water, body jerking.