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From: "Eros' Dreams" <eros_dreams@hotmail.com>
Subject: {Adhara} North From Jerusalem {M/F, rom, religious themes} <*>
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This story contains religious themes mixed with erotica that some
might find uncomfortable, especially if you are Christian. Just a
warning.
-- Adhara
NORTH FROM JERUSALEM
by Adhara Law
Copyright 1998 by Adhara Law (eros_dreams@hotmail.com). All rights
reserved. May not be reproduced or distributed, with the exception
of USENET posting and archiving, with express written permission by
the author (but if you ask nicely, I'll say yes ;-) ).
He was awakened by the burning rays of the midday sun that bored
relentlessly through his closed lids. He opened them, slowly. When he'd
last looked toward the sky, the deeply burnished sun had barely crept
over the horizon. Now it stood sentry above him; yellowish-white,
glaring.
He had long since passed the point of true pain; now there was only a
dull ache that traveled along his shoulders, back and arms, ending at
the wrists he could not move. He licked his lips and tasted blood, but
he was not sure where it came from.
"Drink."
He heard the distant voice and strained to see where it came from. As he
turned his face downward, a dripping rag appeared by his mouth. He
grasped it between his lips and sucked eagerly at the moisture, nearly
gagging at its bitterness but needing it all the same. It was taken away
as quickly as it appeared.
His head hung from its own weight, his muscles drained of the strength
to support it. The desert sand danced and shimmered as he scanned the
ground. A few feet below him he saw a young man carrying the reed that
held the rag up to him. His mouth worked to form words of thanks, but no
sound came out of the dry, parched throat.
"It will be over soon," the young man said. "Be strong."
And with that, he was gone. His head lolled onto his shoulder as he
surveyed the shadowless hill and saw others like him, hung bleeding and
broken to die a slow and excruciating death, while carrion picked at
their yet-living eyes. He wept, but only for them.
* * *
He knew that a molten desert by day could be a frozen wasteland by
night, but this felt wrong. Cool, still air enveloped his body. He
opened his eyes.
Walls of rock surrounded him as he lay on the dirt floor and looked up
to see two very familiar faces. One of them was smiling.
"You are alive," the face said. He could not tell if the man was trying
to convince him or himself. He tried to sit up but the man above him
gently held him down. "You need rest."
His mouth creaked open as he forced his voice from his throat. "Joseph."
He heard faint sounds of someone stirring from the other side of the
dark cave, and then she was beside him.
"I thought I had lost you forever," she said with reddened eyes, her
voice strong but trembling nonetheless.
The blend of terror and relief in her face made his eyes water. He tried
reaching for her hand but could barely lift his own.
Joseph put on a stern face. "You must rest, and then eat. You are still
recovering from both your punishment and the herb."
The herb. The vinegar...
Joseph understood the expression in his eyes. "It was to make them think
you had died. Any more and you would have."
At that, the woman could hold back no longer. Her tears fell out of her
like a torrential storm as her hands, covering her face, tried in vain
to stop them. "It's all right now, Mary," Joseph hushed, putting an arm
around her. "He's safe now."
The inky veil of unconsciousness fell over him as he reached for her in
comfort.
* * *
He awoke this time amidst the grass of a soft bed beneath him. Joseph
was there, across the room, speaking quietly to an old man. When he saw
that he'd awoke, he smiled and said something briefly to the old man
which he couldn't hear, and then sat by his side.
"We had to move you. It wasn't safe there," Joseph said. He reached for
a bowl on the table beside the bed. "Here. You must eat."
With more strength than he thought he had, he lifted his mouth to the
spoon that Joseph offered him. He had never tasted soup as delicious as
this. He thought that death had a way of wiping the tarnish off the
dullest of things.
"In two days," Joseph began as he fed him another spoonful, "we will
have to leave this place."
He swallowed the healing broth eagerly. "Where is Mary?"
"She is seeing to your affairs."
He nodded and opened his mouth for a last bite before his head sank to
the pillow. Every few hours for the next two days, he received the same
treatment, either from Joseph or Mary. He felt his strength return to
him, seeping slowly back into his aching skin and muscles. The monstrous
pain from his broken legs was now only a constant throb. Though his
bones and the wounds on his wrists, feet, and head would never
completely heal, he was alive, and he was beginning to feel it.
On the morning of the second day in the tiny house, Joseph came to him.
"It is time," he said.
The old man and Joseph carefully lifted him out of the grass bed and
carried him outside, where the sun hid behind the dark crags of the
mountains. He winced as they laid him as carefully as possible in the
clean, fresh grass of a large wagon, covered to protect him from the
desert sun. He felt the wagon jostle as someone else climbed in with
him. He looked up into Mary's face.
Her eyes reddened as she smiled at him, taking his hand in hers.
Relieved that he at last had the strength, he brought her small hand to
his face and laid it against his cheek.
Joseph climbed in behind Mary, placing small bags and boxes to either
side of him in the wagon. "We will go north towards Sychar, and then
east to Joppa," he said as he made room in the small wagon. "We should
not have any problems. I know the soldiers in Joppa well."
A few moments later, he felt the wagon move roughly forward as they set
out on their way. Mary sat beside him, looking out at the home she was
leaving, her hand on his. He strained to see her face from where he lay,
knowing that her eyes were struggling to remember every detail of the
place she knew she would never see again.
As the wagon moved slowly but steadily over the rough road towards
Sychar, Joseph and Mary tended to him, never leaving him along for a
moment. There were bags of herbs by his head that Joseph moistened and
slathered onto the wounds on his wrists and feet, wrapping them in rags
and checking them every few hours. On the second day of their journey,
the wagon was pulled to the side of the road so that the rags holding
the broken bones in his legs together could be changed with as little
pain as possible. Then they were on their way again, turning east to
Joppa and traveling as quickly as the oxen and wagon would allow.
It was nearly nightfall when he awoke to the sounds of creaking wagon
wheels, bazaar merchants, and seagulls. Joseph peeled back the flaps of
the wagon covering and looked briefly out into the night. "We are in
Joppa." He turned and leaned over him. "It is good that we arrived so
late in the day; we can find a room quietly and no one will bother us."
He propped himself up on his elbows, wanting to assist instead of lying
helplessly and watching his companions do all of the work. Joseph
disappeared while Mary sat quietly with him, sharing some dates. When
Joseph stuck his head through the flaps of the wagon, he motioned for
Mary to help him take the bags and boxes from the wagon. When that was
done, they lifted him, as they had five days before, and brought him
through a doorway into a room at a small inn. He smiled at them as they
laid him comfortably on the small bed.
When they had finished preparing for their stay, Joseph once again
checked his wounds. "Are you in pain?"
"My legs...they ache terribly."
Joseph nodded and reached for a small pouch, extracting a small handful
of brown leaves. "Chew these. They will help make the pain go away, and
then you can sleep."
He took the leaves in his hand. "Joseph of Arimathea," he said, the
quiet power of his voice restored after the long rest in the wagon. "You
are perhaps the smartest man I know."
Blood crept swiftly into Joseph's face as he smiled and turned away.
He chewed the leaves quietly under the ever-watchful eyes of Mary and
Joseph. The pain slowly faded from his legs as he felt the soft blanket
of sleep fall quietly over him. The dim light of the room faded as he
called softly for Mary.
* * *
Warmth and softness. Darkness. He awoke to these things, the dull ache
of his limbs and the effects of the narcotic leaves he'd chewed creating
a confusion he tried desperately to shake. He felt the warm velvet
softness of bare skin pressing against his own.
"Mary..."
A finger gently lay against his lips. "Everyone is asleep," she said,
her voice so quiet in the darkness that he had to strain to hear her.
He turned to the sound of her voice and forced his eyes to adjust to the
darkness that pressed in against him. Slowly he made out the shadow of
her face, framed by her long, dark hair, as she lay against his
shoulder. He painfully raised his hand to touch her cheek, caressing the
soft skin there.
She raised her head to look at him through the blackness. "I was
afraid..." she began, but choked off the words as she ran a hand through
his thick hair.
He gently wrapped his fingers around her delicate wrist. "There is no
need to be afraid now," he answered.
"But we have so far to go..." She touched her forehead to his rough,
unshaven cheek. "So much can happen. We're not safe yet."
Lifting her face to look into her eyes, he smiled. "Mary, do you think
that I could die, leave this world, without you?"
He felt her breath catch in her throat. Taking his face between the
palms of her hands, she kissed him, gently for fear of bringing more
pain than he already had. But he reveled in her kiss, drawing her closer
hungrily.
He broke away reluctantly. "You are my wife," he said into the darkness.
"Then love me as you would your wife," she answered, her voice raw and
deep.
He ran his hand, scarred and sore, over the back of her neck and through
her hair, letting the pain as he pressed against her skin run through
him like fire, tempered by the feel of her. He felt her stir next to
him, moving to shift the loose robe he wore. The fabric slid over him as
she exposed his chest and stomach, laying small kisses on his warm, damp
skin.
His eyes watered as he watched her, felt the terror in her when she
thought she had lost him forever. She loosened her own dress and gently
straddled him as she kissed the skin along his neck, his cheeks, and his
chin. He breathed her name to her, gently took her arms in his hands. He
ran his injured palms over her bare breasts as she lifted her brown
dress over her head and sighed with pleasure.
The deep green of her eyes as they watched him for signs of pain or
discomfort bore into him while she straddled him, moving him into her
carefully and beginning the slow rhythm of their consummation. Small
gasps escaped her. She leaned over him, spreading her long hair over his
chest as he gripped her arms and leaned his head back. They were locked
as one. A tear snaked down his temple as he embraced her, feeling the
peace and union he tried so hard to bring to others with his teachings.
She sensed him completely, knowing how to move so as to bring him
pleasure without pain. As their breathing synchronized into one, he laid
a hand to her cheek. "I love you, wife," he said, gasping as he released
himself into her.
Her tiny, almost soundless cries followed his as she pressed herself
into him. She lay herself next to his side and cradled his face in her
hand. "You must rest now, husband."
He felt the smile of her lips as they pressed into his, and he drifted
into dreamless sleep with her by his side.
* * *
Joseph was gently shaking him. "I want you to rest," he was saying, "but
we must get on board our ship first."
Mary was already lifting bags and boxes as he slowly surveyed the room,
judging by the light streaming through the window that the sun had just
risen. A young but tall boy was standing by the bed, looking as if he
was awaiting orders. Joseph signaled to him and in an instant, they were
lifting him carefully off of the bed.
Thankfully the inn was a short distance from the pier. Seagulls screamed
and circled the boats that dotted the shoreline of Joppa. Few residents
of the small sea town were out at this early hour; only sailors, too
busy with their ships to notice a man, a woman, and a small boy carrying
an invalid man with broken legs and bandages on his feet and hands, were
out and about now. They walked the length of the pier and boarded a
moderately sized ship, going below. He was placed delicately on a small
cot below a window.
He heard the sailors call to one another as the ship began moving,
rocking its way out of port and away from Joppa. He propped himself on
his elbows to stare out the window to the rolling sea. "Joseph," he said
quietly. "Where are we going?"
Joseph looked down at him, an almost fatherly smile on his face. "To
France."
He felt the blankets of comfort descend over him as Mary took his hand
gently in his.
------------------------------------------------------
Adhara Law: eros_dreams@hotmail.com
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