Divine Destruction (The Return of Divinity Book 1)
Page 1
Contents
Dedication
Copyright
Opening
Prologue
Watching
Called Away
Metatron
Transplacement
The Dream of Sand
The Equation
Arrival
Whispers
Inner Strength
Second Contact
The Dream of Children
Broken Hearts
Hard Data
Farewells
Facing Reality
Three Minds in One
Darkness and Dawn
Clean Before Death
The View
Remorse
Investigation
Salvation
Arrival
Fourth Confrontation
Clean Up
Jobo Way
The Beginning
A Call from Work
Analysis
Watching the Watchers
Third Contact
The Trail
Unexpected
Our Decision
The Countdown
The Coroner
Electronic Voice
Convinced
Rails
Identities
Grace and Mercy
Prayer and Knowledge
A Mother's Love
Change Begins
The Press
True Panic
Escape
Blood and Regret
The Hammer
A Train of Thought
The United Nations
Change
I would like to thank my editor, Elizabeth Keenan.
Without her attention to detail and a ferocious appetite to argue, this book you are about to read would seem feral, untamed, and without direction. Elizabeth took the time to school me on writing. She has made me a better writer.
My favorite proof reader, Ann Wasmer.
From the start, Ann was supportive and excited reading my first drafts. She kept me going with excellent and insightful feedback. I can’t thank Ann enough.
My far away support, Jamie Showrank.
Jamie prodded me to go the way of Amazon and eBook instead of bashing my face against the firm wall of physical book publishers. It was a tremendous spark.
My second mind.
This may seem odd to most readers but I feel compelled to recognize and show appreciation to that other part of me. My imagination is more than just the additional unrecognized flavor in my sauce. My imagination has its own mind. Its own personality. Since I was old enough to speak, people have been telling me to make something out of my imagination. In my youth I made my own toys. My imagination had the vocation of entertaining the public me. For decades I believed my imagination was responsible for my achievements across my varied professional careers. But one night my imagination showed me its true self and how wrong I was about my other self. I was given a dream. That dream was repeated over the next two years. A second dream followed, and was repeated. I puzzled what to do with those two dreams.
I give you the beginning of the story which spans those two dreams.
Copyright © 2015 Lester Suggs
All rights reserved.
“Angels, created by God from light, are an entirely different creation to humans. Unlike humans they are devoid of free will. Angels do the bidding of their Lord.”
Prologue
Gabriel stood in shadow just inside the temple’s outer walls. Two guards lay limp near the north gate. He had dragged the heavy guards as far as this body could. The seven day walk from the coast had left the fisherman’s body weak and tired. Thinking, Gabriel couldn’t recall stopping for food on the long walk. The water skin had run dry on the sixth day. Gabriel would need to take better care of future vessels. But this body’s purpose was nearly at an end. There were no instructions to worry for the physical well being of a vessel for visits this short. Checking, this selfless version of Gabriel had no instruction for a long term mission. He queried again and made a note to follow up once back in Heaven.
From the distance the Archangel heard a tone. His awareness counted twelve muted beats. Each a deep throng. Long pauses between tones. The midnight service would begin soon. The automaton Gabriel checked the condition of his physical form to ensure he wouldn’t cause unnecessary fright from the priest. He would fail his mission if this vessel’s form was missing a finger, toe, eye, or had an open wound Gabriel wasn’t aware. If he would be allowed on Earth with his full consciousness he would laugh at that last thought. But that thought was quickly suppressed under layers of control, conditioning, and elaborate programming.
Gabriel moved from beneath the shadows and quickly passed under the four torches placed outside the entrance of the Sanctuary. Coming into the antechamber the Holy automaton representation of God’s Sword paused. An instruction processed and a small prayer said aloud, albeit quietly. Words never heard by a human ear. Removing his sandals, Gabriel stepped toward the massive doors that separated the anteroom and the Sanctuary proper. The doors were black and banded by crude iron straps for strength. Large iron and bronze nails dotted the straps and cross beams.
Gabriel stopped again and listened for any sign he would be interrupted. At first there was no sound whatsoever. The night was silent. Then he could hear Zechariah begin his prayers. His voice almost in a song. Worshippers would come to seek God’s blessing soon. These midnight services were meant more as a celestial milestone more than a requirement for sacrament. Even so, some would come.
A guard stepped through the right hand door and startled the vessel and Gabriel. The Archangel’s wings, in their pure Angelic energy form, burst from his vessel’s physical form. The visual effect was one of light overlaid and then cresting the fisherman’s back. This caused the guard’s mouth and eyes to open to their fullest and a short gurgle passed the guard’s throat. In the next moment, the guard’s flesh was turned to ash in an instantaneous wave passing from feet to head. Since Gabriel’s feet, rather the feet of his vessel Gabriel possessed, were touching ground, it was easier to spread the pestilent through physical contact. The ash figure stood for a few moments before the leather and bronze armor pulled the form apart and thudded to the ground. Gabriel caught the helmet and paced it quietly on a bench.
Gabriel waited at the door, listening again. He heard nothing. His programming began searching for correct response and action if he had been seen or heard reducing the guard. But, the priest began speaking again, continuing the invocation. Quietly, Gabriel opened the left door and stepped around the spilled ashes and bits of boiled leather armor. Zechariah stood before a large alter, candles lit on either side. A large metal bowl was centered on the alter. Smoke poured from incense in the bowl. Gabriel noted the earthy smell. A hint of spice mixed with the open air inside the temple. Tapestries covered the sand colored walls to the left and right but the wall directly behind the alter was bare of cloth. Instead the crude symbol of divine majesty - a polished bronze lamp with a single flame was centered on a stone shelf. In regular intervals sconce lamps lined the circular interior walls. At this time of night the ceiling wasn’t visible above the candle light. The effect was as if the ceiling went on forever. The darkness above complete. Almost a solid. However, the sounds of crickets could be heard above him. There were openings to the air above him, he realized.
Gabriel moved the vessel’s form inside the sanctuary. The large door quietly thunked behind him. Carefully, he looked into every shadow of the room, ensuring he and the priest were alone. Quietly he approached the priest. His bare feet padded over clean sand. Five pace
s behind Zechariah he stopped and reached out with his senses. Pulses of passive energy spread out above and around Gabriel. Three swallows and a martin nested in the rafters above. A small band of golden jackal was making its way into the city seeking stray house pets, let out for the night. Gabriel could sense dozens of domesticated house pets near. Some towns folk were coming up the hill to receive the priest’s blessing. But no humans were within extended ear shot.
The Archangel made the vessel clear its throat. The priest made a startled shudder tilting his head slightly to one side in an effort to catch the sound again.
“Zechariah, priest, “ Gabriel said through the voice of the captured fisherman.
Zechariah placed a crude tome upon the alter and turned to meet the voice.
“You interrupt my service to God in the temple of our lord!” Zechariah said. His anger was bluster Gabriel knew.
Gabriel stepped closer. “Leave or I’ll call the guard.”
“Be silent,” the fisherman said without control. He stepped closer.
“Who are you?” the priest asked.
Fear, Gabriel felt fear from the priest. ‘Good,’ thought Gabriel. He stepped closer again. Gabriel and the priest were in arms reach of each other now. He knew the priest could see his dirty sun burnt face. And his eyes.
And the priest did. Gabriel marveled in the change of expression of the priest.
“Your eyes! They are as the night sky but swimming in a river of blue. Who are you?” the priest asked again.
“God commands you to leave this temple. Go to your wife. Be kind to her. Be with her. She will bare a son. John will be his name.”
“My wife and I are too far along in our lives to have children. Our children have grand children. Who are you to speak such words?”
Gabriel stepped half the distance and placed a hand on Zechariah’s shoulder.
“John will usher in the physical form of God on Earth,” Gabriel said.
He watched as the priest’s expression changed again. And again.
“If you speak for God, rain fire down from the heavens. Quiet the night. Let us step outside while you blot out the stars,” Zechariah demanded.
Gabriel could see the courage rise within the old man despite the words from God. He affixed a look of anger upon his physical form and stood in silence, granting Zechariah a moment to reconsider.
“Guard!” Zechariah shouted. “Guard!” The priest step aside Gabriel to make his way to the door.
Gabriel reached out and held Zechariah fast and let slip his proof upon Zechariah. Massive blue-white wings grew from the man Gabriel had possessed and opened, illuminating the temple with blinding perfection.
“I am the sword of God. The only divine messenger to Earth. I am vengeance, judgment, eyes of our Lord, and through me I take your voice. You shall remain mute until the deeds I have given you are met.”
Zechariah stood motionless in Gabriel’s grip. His eyes had opened and dilated against Gabriel’s brilliance.
Gabriel released Zechariah and made his way to the darkened doors. He drew in his angelic energy and his vessel passed through the anteroom and into the courtyard. Zechariah followed Gabriel. The priest could not remove the look of frightened wonder from his face.
As was normal for this ceremony, after Zechariah had given his observance to God he would come to the courtyard and bless the faithful who would brave the night. Gabriel passed between the few people kneeling in the courtyard, appearing as just another monthly pilgrim. Zechariah stopped when he saw the small gathering and raised his hand to offer his blessing. But no words came from the priest. He took in a deeper breath but could not form sound. In frustration he bent and lifted a rock, throwing it in the direction of the gate. Gabriel, and the fisherman he possessed, were no longer there.
Gabriel walked until he could no longer hear the sounds of the sleeping city. Coyote calls floated with the fog. This body was exhausted. Together they found a low rock upon a ridge and sat. Gabriel found and read the holy code for removing himself from the fisherman. Deep inside the automaton a small voice asked for the procedure to wait. Gabriel paused. Curious.
“Give this soul until dawn,” the voice said. “You have taken him from his wife, his children.” This voice was comforting to Gabriel, in this controlled state, if he could recognize comfort. It was his voice. Part of him could not acknowledge but obeyed. Just this time.
They faced the east and waited. In time the darkness yielded to metal gray, which yielded quickly to a marriage of pinks. Then orange. When the yellow wave of sunrise washed across the horizon Gabriel allowed the inner voice to speak to the fisherman. The programming didn’t allow this behavior. But there was no stopping his other voice.
“Thank you for your service to God. There are wonders you have witnessed as we have shared this body. Knowledge you cannot understand. I’ve heard your questions, your comments. I’ve watched your thoughts. I am sorry.”
The fisherman began to cry. His face warmed by the rising sun. Blots of light assaulting his vision.
“We will speak again,” the smaller voice said.
Gabriel’s energy form stood but the fisherman remained seated. He stepped away from the fisherman and looked at the sky. The sun was chasing the stars away. A deep blue took over and softened the sun’s crash through darkness. Gabriel clinched his fists and his form was shot into the sky as light. A thin line racing to Heaven.
The fisherman closed his eyes. His body shuddered. His mind was his alone again. What had happened? And as his mind attempted to structure and comprehend, it crashed. A headache cascaded over him. Blood vessels dissolved. There was nothing the fisherman could manage but to scream. When the coyote’s reply was over the fisherman’s body was cooling. It’s soul no longer there to keep him warm.
Watching
Two thousand years later; Gabriel stood, his eyes closed, right hand outstretched onto the transpanel. In his mind he watched Banthid children playing on a river bank. Each child attempted to toss a stone upsetting another child's stone formation. Gabriel witnessed a warm day, on a tranquil planet, the children seemingly making up the game as they went, throwing stones in relation to another stone. Now and again the children would laugh, as children do. They spoke to each other in a limited language but complete enough to convey action and sentient thoughts. One of the girls was half interested in the activity of her playmates. She looked often into the distance as if waiting for something to come over the horizon. The others would shrug into her and prod her when it was her turn to move a stone. But her attention always returned to the sky or the horizon. The other children began to make rude sounds to redirect her attention. But the other children only increased her agitation. Gabriel made a mental note of witnessing yet another child on yet another distant planet within yet another universe able to detect an Archangel's observation. Would he lead his report with this news or finish it with this footnote? Gabriel could decide this later. The likelihood this protocol would be rewritten was slim to none. Besides, he enjoyed watching the children play.
The transpanel conveyed more than visual and audio data. The images and sounds were clear within Gabriel's mind, and live. This day was happening in real time in the universe, Gamma. From his transmitted vantage point, Gabriel also felt the coolness from the heavy cover of trees and the occasional breeze. When the breeze parted the trees above, he could embrace their Sun's warmth upon his face, shoulders, and arms.
Gabriel liked Submergence Room Twelve not because it was currently and probably permanently connected to the Gamma universe; he liked coming to this room because the room smelled of his colleague, Urial. The memory of her filled his senses. The way the Archangel looked at him. The thrill the presence gave Gabriel. Distracted, his viewing nearly filtered into gray and he had to force himself on the task: evaluating Azrael's messenger work upon these beings. Gabriel enjoyed watching the Banthid people. The Banthid were just beginning to act in an organized and civil manner, building small settlements.
They grew, cultivated, and shared crops and live stock. The education of the children was shared among village elders. The Banthid were struggling with the written language, and were finding it difficult to record and interpret their growing list of village laws.
Gabriel focused his attention onto the voices of the children, listening for any reference from Azrael's last visit. Gabriel knew the first words of God, and with each sentence spoken Gabriel compared them against Heaven's encoded encyclopedia. But during this morning’s review there was no reference. Nothing. No mention. Gabriel forced the transpanel to point six on the Banthid world — the town center of the second largest population area. Although the indigenous people named themselves, they have yet to collectively decide upon a name for their planet.
A tone sounded within Gabriel's mind signifying his viewing time was at an end. Slowly the images of native terrestrial beings, simple buildings, plants, animals, and the untold number of other life forms began to fade from Gabriel's mind. Gabriel remembered a time, eons ago, when he used to try to hold onto the images. An uncountable number of viewings later, Gabriel knew when he heard the sound it was for a purpose and he needed to move on. Usually, someone was waiting to use the room. But time limits were set to keep Archangels from becoming attached to their subjects. Delivering the word to dwellers and planting seeds of the positive consciousness were attributes Archangels searched out.
An Angel came into the submergence room to prepare it for the next Archangel, and looked apologetically up at Gabriel in surprise. This Angel was here to inspect the room for anything out of the ordinary and to reset the transpanel. He could not understand why someone would be tasked with such work. But no two Archangels were alike, and Archangels were set apart from other Angels. Did others not reset the panel themselves? Gabriel made it a habit to leave the room as he found it: sparkling clean, with the transpanel reset as to not offer residual data for the next observer. Gabriel returned the look with a smile and acceptance, putting the Angel at ease. Angels, common Angels, were significantly smaller than Archangels due to their task and nature of their work. The difference in size, about eighty percent to an Archangel, communicated volumes on stature, area of expertise, and roles, without words being exchanged. The smaller Angels were never called upon to fight. Well, not “never”. And now Angels simply did everything within the confines of universe prime: Heaven. Gabriel guessed he had lingered too long and that his thoughts of others had allowed his presence to build. With a nod of further compliance, Gabriel released his mental hold on Submergence Room Twelve and left through the open archway. Thankfully, there were few institutional doors in Heaven.