The Djinn (The Order of the Knightshades Book 1)
Page 1
THE
DJINN
J. Kent Holloway
Published by Seven Realms Publishing, LLC
Copyright 2012 J. Kent Holloway
Kindle Edition, License Notes
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Prologue
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
Epilogue
Other Books By J. Kent Holloway
SPECIAL FEATURE:
Devil’s Child excerpt
(First Two Chapters)
PROLOGUE
Jerusalem, 946 BCE
Screams echoed from down the corridor as the sound of swords clanged from just a few chambers away. The weary king’s brow furrowed; his uncertainty betrayed by dull, pained eyes.
“My lord,” one of his advisors said. “Are you certain this will work?”
King Solomon shook his head. “I’m about as certain as I am of anything, Yosef. Truth be told, the magicks employed by Rakeesha to create these abominations are still rather new to me. I’ve no way of knowing how strong it will be.”
The mighty king glanced down at the clay figure resting unnaturally upon the stone dais and sighed. Such a tremendous waste. He should have known better, but his thirst for knowledge had grown almost as insatiable as his hunger for power.
Yahweh, forgive me, he thought as the sound of more of his soldiers dying at the hands of the twelve abominations created by his wife filled the chamber. When will I ever learn?
For someone renowned to have great wisdom, the revered monarch had made his fair share of mistakes. Chief among them was his own love for the fairer sex. His fascination with women after all had compelled him to take on nearly a thousand wives and concubines. A full nine-thousand and nine-hundred, ninety-nine more women than any man—no matter how brave, wise, or noble—could possibly handle. And more than one of them had caused a tremendous amount of grief for his kingdom and his God.
But Rakeesha had been different. Or so he’d thought. More beautiful than the painted sky over Cairo, the ebon beauty had been given to him as a gift from her father, a chieftain of a warrior tribe that now guarded one of Solomon’s many diamond mines. The spirited girl had never forgiven her father for the cruel way in which she’d been handed over to a king of a foreign land. Nor had she ever fully warmed up to the significantly older Solomon. That is, until about a year earlier.
“My lord, I’m not sure how much longer my men will be able to keep them in the Vault,” Meneniah, the captain of the guard, said. Fear and desperation evident on his face.
The king looked around the antechamber to the Vault…a place his servants had simply called the Hub. Torches burned within their wall sconces illuminating the intricately carved gold trellises that hugged each corner of the room. Several piles of gold, gems, and trinkets of all kinds lay scattered along the floor. The treasure was all that could be rescued from the inner sanctum of the Vault before the creatures had overtaken it. The rest, Solomon knew, would soon be sealed inside forever.
A mere trifle in the scheme of things. He had much more where that came from. The important thing was to stop these monsters from doing any further damage to his people.
More shouts arose from the Vault’s interior, followed immediately by some inhuman roar. Meneniah was right. They were running out of time.
Looking over at the high priest, Azariah, he nodded and held out his right hand. The priest placed a strange, cylindrical device in it before bowing and backing away. The king then turned his attention once more to the clay statue resting in front of him. Muttering a silent prayer, he gripped the cylindrical implement and began carving away at the clay along the figure’s forehead. He worked at it until a strange script was visible, then took his signet ring and pressed down upon the marking. His prayer escalated in volume as the pressure of his ring increased and he quickly felt heat building from around his ring finger. After three complete minutes of this, he withdrew his hand, backed away, and took in a deep breath.
It had not been the first time he’d done this. Nor was it the first time he’d waited anxiously to see if the ritual would succeed…whether or not the ring, believed by many to hold magical properties, would imbue his creation with “the breath of life.” On the contrary, he’d practiced this same ritual many times within the last year. Ever since catching his wife, Rakeesha, practicing her witchcraft on a warm, mid-summer night.
He’d been transfixed…spellbound…as he’d watched her sculpt a small feline animal from a pool of wet clay. So near perfect the facsimile was. Even the striations she’d carved to simulate fur seemed so real. So lifelike.
Imagine his surprise when he’d seen her carve a strange word, utter a string of imperceptible words, and breathe upon the figurine—only to watch as its paws began to move of its own volition. Of course, the cat facsimile had not survived long. The energy that had animated it dissipated within mere minutes of its own quickening.
When questioned, Rakeesha, who knew intimately of her husband’s insatiable lust for knowledge, had explained that these clay beings needed one of two things in order to maintain their animation. They required either the blood sacrifice of a young, healthy human or they needed the divine gift of life itself. Something, she hinted in the most subtle of ways, that Solomon alone was best suited to provide.
Needless to say, he’d spent the better part of the next three months pondering what she’d told him. Imagining the implications that such a thing provided. After all, with an entire army of these automatons, there would be no force on earth that could ever threaten Israel as there had been in the past. He would never have to risk a mother’s son or a wife’s husband in battle again.
And with this in mind, he’d approached Rakeesha and she’d agreed to teach him the secret, if not forbidden, art. He’d watched her sculpt the first three creatures with rapt fascination. Then, was he felt confident enough, he’d joined her in molding and fleshing out the next nine. Several painstaking days went by as their humanoid creations took shape.
Solomon shuddered at the memory. Twelve creatures. Each nearly nine feet tall. Their clay frames kept moist in the humid confines of the subterranean Vault in which they were constructed. Once animated, these monstrosities would be living, moving stone walls that no army would be able to vanquish.
“Sire!” Meneniah’s pleas broke him from his train of thought and he was once more in the present. “Nothing is happening. Why isn’t it working?”
Solomon looked once more at the figure. It had not moved an inch. There was no sign of life in it at all. Which was not really surprising. It had taken nearly ten full minutes the last time. Ten full minutes before he realized that his wife had completely betrayed him.
Of course, he should have known as much when she’d insisted
that she be the one to quicken them to life. Oh, her reasoning was solid enough. The king had never attempted such powerful sorcery before. One mistake could have devastating consequences for everyone involved. No, it just made sense to let his witch of a wife breathe life into their twelve clay soldiers by using his very own signet ring.
What he’d not anticipated was her complete and seething hatred for her husband. What he’d not been told by her was that the creatures would be enslaved to the person who brought them to life and no one else. So after the ritual was complete, she’d merely stood there for those excruciatingly long ten minutes and watched mirthlessly until the creatures she’d called golems began to move away from the walls that had seemed to birth them.
That’s when she began to laugh. A deep-throated, malicious cackle that sent ice shooting through his veins. As the golems moved forward, Rakeesha turned to face her husband…her king…and she continued to laugh for several seconds before speaking.
“For such a wise man, my lord, you are an utter and complete fool,” she’d hissed between clenched teeth. “For the crime of taking me against my will…for the cruelties you’ve shown my people…you and your kingdom will now suffer beyond your wildest imagination and I will be free of you once and for all.”
She then turned her attention back to her creations and hurled a string of curses in a foreign tongue in their direction. Once finished, she turned back to Solomon and let out one final laugh before pulling a dagger and dragging its razor edge across her own throat.
Her plan had been ruefully ingenious. Her commands had been given. The golems were now set on their path and with her death, any hope of forcing her to call her monsters off was lost forever.
That had been two days ago and her golems had dealt a devastating blow. Countless innocents lay dead or severely injured from their berserker’s rage. Soldiers had been torn asunder with simple flicks of the golems’ wrists. No weapon within Jerusalem’s arsenal could do them any harm. And Solomon had all but given up hope—until just a few hours before, when he’d conceived a way to end Rakeesha’s curse as best he could.
Though they did not have the means with which to destroy the creatures (his wife had omitted that in her lessons to him), they could still be restrained. And there was no more secure place within all Jerusalem than the subterranean tunnels of his own personal treasure vault. But merely luring them into the Vault was the easiest part—they would simply follow the soldiers of Solomon anywhere they moved. The difficult part would be containing them once inside the Vault’s interior. Because of the way in which it had been constructed, to attempt to seal the door from the outside would result in a total collapse of the tunnel system…which would threaten the very infrastructure of the city itself.
No, he knew he would need someone on the inside. Someone with strength enough to bring the ceiling down on top of everyone in the main Vault. And that, he surmised, would require another golem. So, he’d constructed one. Larger by a full two feet in height than the others. More massive…more powerful…than anything Rakeesha could have anticipated. This golem would act as Warden to the others. It would keep them in check for all eternity and the people of Israel would never have to fear the clay creatures’ wrath again.
“My king! It moves!” Azariah shouted. “It moves!”
Solomon watched as his own creation moved a single finger. Then another. A smile formed slowly across the king’s face as he watched the golem slowly sit up from the dais.
Good, Solomon thought. Now, by the grace of Yahweh, let us end this.
He moved over to the clay figure and mumbled a string of unintelligible words, then pointed toward the doorway of the Vault’s main chamber. Immediately, the creature turned and moved inside…into the mayhem beyond. The clash of swords and screams of his men still resonated from beyond, but there was nothing that could be done for them. They too would be trapped inside once the Warden accomplished its mission.
The king, captain of the guard, high priest, and handful of advisors stood in rapt silence as the battle raged beyond the door. Gradually, after several minutes, the screams of Meneniah’s guards dwindled away. Smoke roiled from the Vault’s interior, wafting over those watching in safety. Then, as suddenly as it had started, all fighting inside ceased. Solomon could make out nothing through the murky haze.
One heartbeat. Two. Three. Nothing happened. Four. Five.
Was that the sound of a foot shuffling against the rocky floor?
Six. Seven.
Yes, he was sure of it now. Something was definitely moving on the other side. Coming toward them.
Eight. Nine. Ten. Elev—
Without warning, the earth beneath the king’s feet rumbled. The subterranean depths of the Vault shook violently as dust and debris exploded from the portico in front of them. Then, with the sound of thunder, the entire ceiling from the Vault’s interior collapsed in front of them, sealing it off forever.
Solomon exhaled deeply as he struggled to steady his shaking limbs. It was finally over. The consequences of his own sin were now buried along with tons of stone, mortar, and blood.
After several long, silent moments, he turned to the high priest and handed him his ring. “Take this. Protect it with your life,” Solomon said gravely. “See to it that no one unworthy ever wields it again…including myself.”
And the last thing Solomon did before turning and walking away was to utter a brief prayer for those who fell to the thirteen abominations now resting quietly within the collapsed vault, followed immediately with another for God’s forgiveness.
1
Jerusalem, AD 1184
Thick streams of sweat clung to Horatio’s tunic as he clambered up the stone walkway toward the Jaffa Gate. The arid heat burned pitilessly through his tired lungs which heaved for breath with each exhausted stride. It was nearly midnight and the cool relief of the nighttime desert had failed to drift toward the City of David.
Horatio could not remember a time he was more miserable, or how many times he and his dimwitted cousin, Samuel, had already walked along the same path this evening.
Too many times, he thought, and nothing to show for their labors or discomfort. If he kept it up, his chain mail would surely rust from perspiration—or he’d die of dehydration. Either way, his skills and talents were being completely wasted. Countless battles won on behalf of Lord Gregory and this was the gratitude the pompous braggart showed him. He was a knight, after all. A knight of low birth, but a knight nevertheless. It was simply unthinkable…reduced to sentry duty—securing the gate until the caravan escorting a group of soon-to-be slaves for Gregory’s excavations arrived. Which was ridiculous when one considered it. The Jaffa Gate was unique among all the gates of Jerusalem for being built at a right angle—a natural defense against attackers and brigands coming up from the Jaffa Road. The architecture was the reason the baron had chosen this gate to receive his newest commodities.
Gregory had insisted the caravan arrive during the night with little to no pomp and ceremony. To keep the slave transaction as clandestine as possible, he’d opted to utilize only one of his knights as opposed to a full company as he would have if the mission was truly as important as he’d told Horatio.
No, the knight was beginning to believe the baron was having his fun with him. Teaching him a lesson from ever speaking out against the baron’s methods ever again. And what better way to teach an errant knight a bit of humility than by placing them on menial guard duty?
But the sentry work wasn’t what bothered him the most. It was the object he was forced to protect. Slavers. The very thing he’d questioned Gregory about. No, this assignment was all about a lesson in blind obedience.
Of course, he had been told the assignment was one of utmost importance. He’d been led to believe he’d been chosen for his valor…the last defense against a ghost, a myth, a…
“What was that?” asked Horatio.
“What was what?” His squire, Samuel, asked.
“Shut u
p and listen!”
“Listen to what?”
The knight didn’t answer. Clamping one gloved hand over Samuel’s mouth, Horatio cocked his head to the left, straining to identify the strange noise that jolted him from his sour reflections…but he could hear very little in the shell-like confines of the helmet.
He didn’t have time for this. The slave caravan would be advancing the hill any moment. Now was not the time to allow anything to slip through the perimeter.
Placing a finger to his lips, the young knight removed the headgear, struggling to keep the mesh neck protector from clinking the stillness from the night.
“What, pray tell, are we listening for?” Samuel’s hoarse whisper grated against the silence.
“If I knew that, then I wouldn’t have to be listening, now would I?”
“I dunno ‘bout that.”
“Do be quiet,” commanded Horatio, increasingly irritated with his wife for insisting he make Samuel his squire as he took up the Holy Cross, as the crusaders called the great quest to the Outremer, ‘the Land Beyond the Sea.’ “Just stand still and listen. I heard a strange noise, so just keep quiet for a few more seconds.” He paused and glared at his cousin. “Please,” he added.
Samuel merely nodded before becoming distracted by some unseen object within his own nose. His finger dug furiously to dislodge the nuisance. The sight disgusted Horatio, but at least it kept his squire occupied…and more importantly, kept the idiot quiet.
Tensing, Horatio peered into the darkness beyond, carefully listening for any signs of an intruder. The silence devoured all sounds, as if the very city of Jerusalem had been swallowed by the sweltering night. A few palm fronds swayed in a hot breeze coming up from the valley while the gentle song of locusts pulsed rhythmically all around them. But the noise the knight had originally heard was no more.
Horatio strained to place the sound—a gentle rustle of canvas in the wind, a flurry of light footsteps from wall’s walkway above. He just couldn’t put his finger on what it had been. Nor could he exorcize the uncomfortable sensation that the sound had elicited upon him. It was an irrational feeling, he was sure. Fear without merit. There simply was nothing out there. All was still.