Abraham Allegiant (Chronicles of the Nephilim Book 4) (21 page)

Chapter 37

A year passed. In Borsippa, Semiramis was getting impatient. Nimrod’s madness was increasing and she wanted to get Mardon on the throne as soon as possible. Mardon would have fits of rage when things would not go his way. One time he killed the royal chef and several servers when a meal of fowl was served with an arrow flint still stuck in the bird. It was an obvious oversight but Nimrod construed it as an attempt on his life.

But today was the day she had planned to bring it up again. Nimrod had just returned from a hunt on the steppe. She dressed up in an erotic outfit reminiscent of her past life as a harlot. She entered Nimrod’s bathhouse and stood before him. It had been months since they had copulated. He was becoming less and less interested in her and was taking to raping male servants at whim. She had hoped that her experienced display of feminine wiles would arouse him.

He saw her approach him. He was sitting in his bath. She had brought two minstrels with her to play erotic music in the background. He stared at her as she began to strip off her clothes to the music. She was much older now and had lost her youthfulness, but she still had the skill required to move her body in a serpentine way that was hypnotic. Exposing just enough skin to titillate, then withdrawing to fuel the hunger. It would have made any man pant with desire.

But Nimrod watched her with lifeless eyes, daring her to keep going.

So she did.

She finally stripped off all her garments and poured oil on her body to create a glistening accent. She rubbed it around with self-eroticism.

Nimrod was awakening.

She smiled with pleasure and entered the water completely naked. The water shimmered off the oil on her still smooth skin. Her voluptuous curves cut through the water with grace.

She eased herself down and went below the waterline. Nimrod moaned with pleasure and held her head below until she was losing her breath. He pulled her up sputtering to fill her lungs with air.

Then he assaulted her.

He could no longer have normal sexual relations. His descent into depravity had stolen any ability to enter into beauty, love, or normal sensuality. He had to treat his sexual partners as victims with force. He had to rape or he would not find satisfaction. If they were too submissive, he would beat them and force them to fight back.

He nearly drowned her several times. Bringing her to the edge of death is what excited him the most. He would have preferred killing her at his moment of climax, which he often did with servants. But of course, she was the queen, and he needed her to administer the kingdom in his lack of interest in petty bureaucracy.

She had become devious and controlling in her ruling. He knew what she was doing, but he did not care. He knew she wanted power and was desperate to get their son Mardon on the throne as her puppet. But he had his spies. And as soon as he caught wind of a planned coup or assassination, he would immediately execute her. Until that time, she was of use to him because he did not want to handle the day-to-day vagaries of ruling over people. And he certainly could not trust anyone else either.

And if she thought Mardon would do her bidding, she was only fooling herself. Nimrod figured that he would not kill Mardon because should Nimrod fail to achieve his satisfaction against El Shaddai for taking away his kingdom, Mardon was his final dice to play. Nimrod would find some final pleasure in his own passing, knowing that he was unleashing hell on earth with the ascent of Mardon to the throne.

He lay in the bloody water recovering his own breath. Semiramis limped over to him and laid her head with a blackened eye on his chest. She raised her bruised arm and stroked the hair on his chest. She coughed some of the water up from her lungs. She knew she had to get out of the water soon to bandage her wounds or she would die from loss of blood. But for just this minute, she wanted to submit to her king, her husband.

She had silent tears that blended with the water going down her purple bruised cheeks. She wheezed with the pain of a couple of broken ribs.

Nimrod looked out into the distance and said, “If you are going to ask me to install Mardon as co-regent, you are going to be sorely displeased.”

She pulled back and looked at him with surprise. He knew why she was there today and it made her boil.

But she kept her cool.

“Nimrod, I cannot handle the administration of the kingdom by myself any longer. I am getting old and it is overwhelming me.”

“You will have to make do,” he said.

“You are never here,” she said.

“Precisely why I do not want him as co-regent,” he said. “I do not trust him in my absence.”

“Then why have you bothered to father him and train him all these years?”

“He will have his day. Right now, I am more concerned about building my armed forces. I have the numbers, but they are untrained. Mostly captured slaves and civilians.”

She stood up and looked down on him. “Do you really think you will achieve your former glory? Will you continue to your dying hour in this obsessive pursuit of the impossible?”

He looked up at her, and said simply, “Yes.”

“We are cursed of El Shaddai. What do you hope to achieve?”

He grabbed her throat and drew her close.

He answered, “But one thing: To vanquish his Chosen Seed.”

He shoved her away like an unwanted pet.

She stormed out of the bath, grabbing her clothes.

He watched her with cold unfeeling eyes as she limped out of the bathhouse.

 

Semiramis had given up planning a coup. She knew that Nimrod was too paranoid and would see it coming. He had too many spies. There was only one way she would ever see him overthrown and that would be in battle with a king mightier than he. Before the Dispersion that would have been impossible, but now, he was just another king in a world of kings fighting for dominance.

It gave her some satisfaction to know that he was descending into the rage of madness in the face of his humiliating loss of power.

In her private drawing room, Semiramis sat down and composed a letter on a clay tablet. She placed it in its clay envelope and sealed it with the Queen’s seal. Death awaited anyone who opened it other than its intended recipient.

That intended recipient was King Chedorlaomer of Elam, Nimrod’s most feared nemesis.

Chapter 38

Within the last year, Lot had moved his tent near Sodom, learned the rudiments of their language, sold his entire stock and herd and moved into the city. He released his household to find their own way in their new urban lifestyle. He found a woman named Ado, who had no family, married her, and their first child was on its way.

He had moved quickly because he had known what he wanted. He had been dreaming of this for so long and he did not want to wait any longer.

At first, it was exciting. Life in a big city was bustling and energetic. People seemed more progressive than in the rural areas. They were more open-minded about things. They did not judge you for being different because everyone was different. Yet everyone was united by a common vision: The city-state.

It was as if the city was itself one big family of communal existence, with the king as the father or midwife taking care of his children. This made real families less needed as everyone was equal with one another and all were citizens of the state, which protected as many aspects of life as was possible, from the wages of the workers to the welfare of those who could not work. It took the pressure off of immediate families to shoulder each other’s burdens because the king would take care of them. They would simply ship off their aged and infirm to government facilities so they could get back to maximizing their service for the collective.

The city was something bigger than the individual, something higher than one’s self to live for, and it was in that higher cause that they found their meaning and purpose. The individual would die and go to Sheol, but the city that they had invested their lives in would go on forever.

But after his initial excitement wore down, Lot began to see that all was not well in the “Cities of Love.” The government promoted tolerance of all religious devotion. They maintained shrines for gods from all over Canaan. Ashtart was the supreme goddess of the pentapolis and resided in Sodom, entertaining visiting deities like Molech, Asherah, and Dagon.

There was tolerance for all the gods — except one: El Shaddai, the Creator God of all things, the god that Lot worshipped. El Shaddai was burned in effigy, mocked and criticized as being, ironically, an intolerant tyrant who demanded exclusive devotion and was thus unworthy of anything but ridicule. If anyone was discovered to have any kind of personal devotion to El Shaddai, they were imprisoned, tortured, and made an example of.

Needless to say, Lot kept his faith to himself. He told no one of his family background for fear of them discovering his religion. He never told anyone who he really was.

He also saw that the society that touted itself as the “Cities of Love” was actually quite inhospitable to strangers and visitors. Traveling merchants who came to sell their wares in the cities were usually beat up and run out of town because they were considered greedy. But really it was because their prices were so cheap and the local workers were greedy for controlling the marketplace. The city was taking so much of the workers’ income that they barely had enough to live on, so they did not want anyone else to have what they could not.

There was a circle of rape chairs in the marketplace for the citizens to take the traveling merchants to before they sent them off without their destroyed caravan of goods.

There were no weapons in the city because of the weapons control laws. Yet, Lot had seen more murders in this city than he had in any of the cities of Mesopotamia that had no such laws. He wondered what would be causing such strife and violence if not the implements of violence. But he knew better. He knew evil was bound up in the heart of mankind and that if you took away swords from good men, then only evil men would find a way to have swords and end up killing the good.

But the depth of depravity that shook his soul was the sexual perversity that saturated the cities. There was no respect for persons, animals or even things, as they engaged in rampant carnal excess. Regardless of the abortifacient herbs and potions, there was an explosion of births that the citizens had no desire to take responsibility for. This epidemic of unwanted infants became a source for human sacrifice to Molech the underworld deity. Others just left their infants in the wilderness to die of exposure to the elements and wild animals.
It was called a “necessary evil.” Everyone claimed it was a tragedy so many babies had to be sacrificed, but they had to fight for mother’s right to sacrifice their offspring or the gods would curse them with oppression, which was ironically what Lot constantly felt living there as a citizen.

As an elder in the city gates, he had the undesirable privilege of seeing some of the darkest secrets behind the curtains of the ruling class of Ashtart. He had discovered that she was breeding giants through the line of Canaan and sending them to different parts of the country. But it was increasingly apparent that she also engaged in the Sacred Marriage rite of copulation with the daughters of men. Such violation of the heavenly earthly divide had been a strictly forbidden behavior since the Flood. Though she had made a commitment to Mastema to avoid these excesses that brought down such judgment, she could not help herself. She could not keep away from her taste for the strange flesh of humans. She was addicted to it, and she was getting more strident about her carnal defiance. Word was getting out.

Lot was grieved to his soul. But he could not pack up and leave. He had released most of his servants and household and had sold everything. He was invested. He figured that the only way he might have a positive influence on his society was to get involved with the political process, to try to bring change from within. Maybe he could make a difference by becoming an elder of the city. These were the men who acted as judges over the disputes of the people. They would sit in the city gates and render decisions that became binding under the authority of the king.

So he continued to hide his religious devotion to El Shaddai, and joined the government to try to make a difference.

He had no idea what was coming.

Chapter 39

Good and Mighty
King Chedorlaomer, I write this letter to you with a sad and grieved heart. Nimrod, the king of Shinar has gone mad. He is no longer competent to reign in this region. He is wantonly executing random citizens, he is causing starvation of his people, and he is planning to reconquer his lost territory to recreate a new slave empire.

But as of yet, his armed forces are weak and untrained. He is a prime target for victory over this region and I plead on behalf of the people of Shinar that you come and liberate us from this tyranny.

I can assure you that his son, Mardon, would be a fair ruler and obedient devoted vassal of your lordship if he should be allowed to ascend to the throne in your good graces.

Please make haste before Nimrod discovers my loyalty to you. And make sure to execute the bearer of this letter.

Forever in your debt,

Queen Semiramis of Shinar.

 

Chedorlaomer looked up from reading the clay tablet. He gazed at the messenger who waited for a command or reply to be sent. He nodded to the guard behind the messenger who promptly drew his dagger and slit the messenger’s throat, dropping him to the floor.

Chedorlaomer grinned with satisfaction. He had been waiting for just this opportunity. In the past he had been the fiercest of Nimrod’s vassal rulers. He was used by the mighty hunter king to subdue Sodom and Gomorrah and the cities of the plain in Canaan and to secure the King’s Highway for safe trade. He had done Nimrod’s bidding with clenched teeth just waiting for the fall of the cruel despot.

That fall came with the Confusion of Tongues and the great Dispersion when Babel was demolished and abandoned. But he had thought Nimrod was gone, vanished into Sheol. He had after all lost everything from his invincible golem army to his mighty cosmic mountain to his guardian storm god.

It was delightful just to remember the glorious downfall. And even more satisfying that Chedorlaomer had gained Nimrod’s most valued advantage.

He considered it outrageous that Nimrod was on the rise again. Fallen kings were never so obstinate as to think they could regain their former glory. But then again, Nimrod was not the usual fallen king. He was a Naphil giant, born of exalted pride, and his obsession was blinding of all reason.

He handed the tablet to his guardian counselor and asked, “What say you? Shall I muster my forces for the final slaughter of King Nimrod?”

The guardian counselor took the tablet and read it. He crushed it into dust in his huge muscular hands and said, “I have a better plan.”

The guardian counselor was the mighty storm god Marduk, king of the gods.

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