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Authors: Joan Wolf

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BOOK: This Scarlet Cord
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Edri steepled his hands and looked grave. “I was there when the king and the prince drove down the main street today. The crowd cheered Tamur as if he were some great military hero.”

Arazu let out a long frustrated breath and the three of them sat for a while in silence. The servant came in with the wine jug but Arazu waved him away. Finally he said, “If Tamur succeeds in deposing Makamaron, then we are done. The prince will appoint the members of his own circle to take our places.”

Edri, the treasurer, slammed his hand down on the wicker arm of his chair. “There must be something we can do to stop this royal upstart.”

The high priest sighed. “It is going to happen eventually. Makamaron is an aging man. With the festival of the New Year coming up, my great fear is that he will fail to complete the sacred marriage. I have asked him if he is adequate to the task, and he insists he is, but I have my doubts. If he should fail to consummate the union, and the hierodule tells the prince he has failed, then Tamur will have solid grounds for deposing his father.”

No one disagreed. Belief was strong among the Canaanite people that the fertility and strength of the nation were bound up with the sexual and physical prowess of the king. If the king was impotent, then the land and the flocks and the people would wither. If the king could not make the sacred marriage, then it was time for him to step down and turn his sacral role over to his son.

“Who is the hierodule this year?” the treasurer asked.

“Arsay,” the high priest responded.

Silence fell as they considered this comment. Arsay was one of the priestesses of the Temple of Asherah. It was her turn to be the hierodule, the stand-in for the goddess Asherah, who would be the king’s partner in the making of the sacred marriage. But Arsay’s brother also happened to be one of the prince’s closest friends. The chances that she would hold her tongue about any failure on the king’s part were next to none.

“We need at least another year out of Makamaron,” Arazu said. “If we can make money from this deal with the Gaza merchants, we will be in a much better position when he must finally relinquish the kingship.”

The high priest leaned forward as if he had just thought of something. “What if we get a new hierodule? Someone whose loyalty is to us? Someone who will keep quiet if the king proves incompetent.”

The others looked at him with respect.

“That is an excellent idea,” Arazu said. “But who can we get? I don’t believe we can trust any of the priestesses.”

“I must think about it,” the high priest replied.

Edri said, “We don’t have much time. We are within a week of the festival.”

“I know, I know,” the high priest returned. “It is the only way we can assure Makamaron will keep his throne, however.”

The three men agreed and they all decided to give some serious thought to finding a woman to take Arsay’s place as hierodule in the coming New Year festival.

“What a collection of villains they are,” Sala said disgustedly as he and his father walked away from Lord Arazu’s house.

“They are that. But their villainy may work in our favor. A divided city will fall more easily than one that is united.”

“But, Father . . .” Sala fixed his eyes on the high wall that protected the Upper City, then moved beyond to the huge embankment and wall that surrounded the entire town. “What that ugly-looking treasurer said about Jericho withstanding a siege has some truth. Look at those walls. This city could hold out forever within walls like this—especially if they have water and food.”

“That may be how it looks, Sala, but did it not look just as impossible for the Israelites to escape from Egypt? Yet they did it because it was Elohim’s will. We have heard of the terrible plagues Elohim sent upon the Egyptians to force Pharaoh to release our people. Why should He not also lift His hand at Jericho?”

Sala walked beside his father and thought about what Lord Nahshon had said. His father had been on fire ever since he had first met with Joshua, the Israelite leader, and Lord Nahshon had passed his passion along to his son. Sala had no doubts that Canaan was the Promised Land that Elohim had given to Abraham for the Israelite people. When Joshua had asked Sala and his father to go to Jericho in order to discover the military weaknesses of the city, Sala had been both thrilled and honored to accept such an assignment.

Thus far the army of the Israelites had been brilliantly successful, mowing down the armies of Heshbon and Og and destroying all those who lived in their lands. The entrance into Canaan itself lay through Jericho, and Sala understood that Joshua’s army would be just as merciless here if it were able to get into the city.

It is only right that this should happen. Elohim is with us and this is what He wishes—His land to be in the possession of His people. I must put my trust in Elohim. If we follow His will, He will always be with us
.

Sala and his father had passed through the wall that separated the two parts of the city and the Sign of the Olive was right in front of them.

“Shall we stop for some supper?” Lord Nahshon asked.

Sala agreed and they found a table and ordered food. Sala was eating and watching the people walk by on the street. He took particular notice of one family group, mainly because other people on the street were turning their heads to watch as the three women and two men passed by. As they drew closer, Sala’s eyes were drawn to one of the girls. Her head carriage and walk were so proud and lovely that she reminded him of a ship in full sail.

He looked closer and felt his eyes widen. She was an amazingly beautiful girl. Her black hair fell in a shining loose braid over her shoulder, her skin glowed, her full mouth . . . Sala shook his head as if to clear it.

She stopped outside the wine shop door and looked in. For the first time Sala saw her huge dark eyes. His own mouth dropped open. He remembered those eyes. He would never forget them, filled with terror as she raced down the street in Gaza toward him.

Rahab
. He said the word soundlessly. The two men with her were looking around the shop as well, clearly searching for a free table. There were none to be had and the family was turning away when, without any conscious thought, Sala leaped to his feet and ran out into the street to stand in front of them and stop them from leaving. He looked at the girl’s startled face and said, “Rahab!”

She looked back and for a terrible minute he thought she didn’t know who he was. Then her face broke into a radiant smile.

“Sala! Is it really you?” Her voice was even huskier than he remembered.

“Yes.” He tried to laugh. “It is really me.”

“What are you doing here?”

They said it at the same time, and then they laughed together. Her teeth were so white, her mouth so delicious.

What had happened to the skinny, brave little girl he remembered?

“I am here with my family for a visit,” she said. “What about you? Are you here with your father?”

Suddenly he realized what he had done.
Rahab’s family knows we are Israelites. They could reveal our true identities
.

His father’s voice spoke from behind him. “Who are these people, Aru?”

“Lord Nahshon!” Rahab said eagerly. “Don’t you remember me? I’m Rahab—the girl Sala rescued from the kidnappers. This is my family. You met my brother, Shemu, when he came to bring me home. This is his wife, Atene, and my father, Mepu, and my mother, Kata.”

She was glowing with delight at this unexpected reunion. Sala glanced at his father’s grim face, then looked back at Rahab. He knew very well that he should not have stopped her, but somehow he could not bring himself to be sorry.

Nine

R
AHAB COULD HARDLY BELIEVE HER EYES.
I
T WAS
S
ALA.
Here in Jericho. Right now—right in front of her! She wanted to hug him but settled for a smile.

He looked so good. He was taller than his father now, and so handsome. She liked everything about his face: his thin curved nose, his warm brown eyes, his clean-cut cheekbones. He looked older too, more like a man than a boy.

She heard her father saying, “Who is this man, Rahab?”

“It’s Sala, Papa. Remember the time I was a kid—”

“Stop!” Sala’s voice was deeper than she remembered it, and he was staring desperately into her eyes. “Don’t say any more, Rahab, not until we can go somewhere private.”

Lord Nahshon stepped forward and spoke to Rahab’s father. “I am sorry to be so discourteous, but my son is right. We must not give out our names until we are sure we cannot be overheard.”

“What is going on here?” Rahab’s father sounded suspicious, and Rahab suddenly understood what Sala meant. They were Israelites, he and his father. What were they doing in Jericho?

“Father, I know these people too,” Shemu said quietly. He looked at Sala’s father and asked, “Where can we go?”

“The common room of the inn where we are staying should be empty right now.”

And so the two parties formed into one and together they left the cobbled main street of the Lower City and moved into the narrow dirt roads where the poorer people lived. Mepu made Rahab walk between him and Kata, Shemu and Atene followed behind them, and Sala and his father walked last. Rahab wanted so much to turn and look at him, but she restrained herself, knowing how unwise it would be to call attention to their party.

The old inn’s common room was indeed empty, and the seven of them sat on benches around two scarred wooden tables they pulled together.

Rahab’s father looked grimly at Sala’s father. “Now, will you kindly tell me who you are and what this is all about?”

“My son is the boy who saved your daughter when she was running away from the slavers in Gaza,” Lord Nahshon replied quietly, his mouth set in a grim hard line. “He should never have accosted your daughter the way he did. I am sorry for his bad manners.”

“Bad manners?”
Kata rarely spoke up in company, and Rahab looked with astonishment at her mother. “If it was not for him my daughter would be a slave in Egypt!” She gave Sala a warm smile. “I am happy to have this opportunity to thank you myself, Sala.”

Sala flushed, said, “Thank you,” and shot a quick glance at Rahab.

She gave him a brief smile.

Lord Nahshon was going on. “It was not only bad manners, madam, it was dangerous. Dangerous for my son and me, that is. We are Israelites—you know this—and the mood in Jericho right now is not favorable toward my people.”

Rahab jumped as her father slapped his hand against the table. “Just exactly what
are
you Israelites doing in Jericho, if I may ask.”

Sala leaned forward. “It was because of me, sir. I have always thought your idea of shipping your excess products into Egypt was a good one; it would benefit you and it would benefit us. I talked my father into following up on this venture and that is why we are in Jericho. We did not realize when we set out that the Israelite army was so close.”

Mepu looked unconvinced. “If you wanted to follow up on my scheme, why did you not come to my farm to speak to me? Why did you come to the city?”

“We did not know where you lived,” Sala replied. “All we knew was that Rahab’s family lived on a farm within the territory of Jericho. So we came here to the city itself to see if we might find someone we could talk to who might be interested in the idea.” He looked at Rahab. “When I saw you, I was so surprised, I didn’t think.”

“I am glad you didn’t.”

Her father shot her an angry look and she lowered her eyes.

Shemu said, “What I don’t understand is how you expected anyone in Jericho to want to do business with Israelites. They have been systematically destroying every kingdom they pass through, and now they apparently have the deluded idea that they can take over Canaan. The last person anyone in Jericho would want to deal with is an Israelite.”

Sala gave her brother such a charming smile that Rahab blinked. “You see, Shemu, we haven’t told anyone we’re Israelites. We’ve said we’re Canaanites from Gaza. I assure you that our company can ship out of Gaza too, if we choose, so that part is not a lie.”

Silence fell around the table. Rahab sneaked a peek at Sala and found him looking at her. She gave him a quick grin, then looked down at the table and began tracing a deep scratch with her finger.

Finally Mepu said slowly, “So your presence in Jericho has nothing to do with the Israelite army that is almost at our door?”

“Nothing,” Lord Nahshon replied firmly. “I do not approve of war. It is bad for business.”

Mepu’s skeptical look made Rahab nervous. If her father should decide to report Sala, he would be arrested. She shivered at the thought.

She listened as Sala said, “The Israelites would be mad to try to attack this city, sir. The walls . . .” He lifted his hands and shrugged to demonstrate the uselessness of any attack on such a monstrous barrier.

“We know that,” Rahab’s father answered. “But do
they
?”

“They will once they get a good look,” Sala replied. “Believe me, sir, we are here to trade with Jericho, not to collude in her destruction. Jericho’s fall will hurt our business, not help us. Self-interest alone demands that we wish you well.”

BOOK: This Scarlet Cord
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