Garden of madness, p.1

Garden of Madness, page 1

 

Garden of Madness
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Garden of Madness


  ADVANCE ACCLAIM FOR GARDEN OF MADNESS

  “Mystical as the Seven Wonders, exotic as the Hanging Gardens. Higley has outdone herself with this exquisite story of intrigue, elegantly told and rich with all the flavors of ancient Babylon. Simply magnificent.”

  —TOSCA LEE, NEW YORK TIMES BEST-SELLING AUTHOR OFHAVAH: THE STORY OF EVE AND THE BOOKS OF MORTALS SERIES

  “Garden of Madness is a beautifully told tale, lush with details and rich with fascinating history. Tracy Higley just keeps getting better and better!”

  —GINGER GARRETT, AUTHOR OF DESIRED: THE UNTOLD STORY OF SAMSON & DELILAH

  “Garden of Madness is a superb rendering of a dynasty and kingdom rich in notoriety, opulence, and arrogance. Higley’s characters are as complex and tiered as the fabled Hanging Gardens in which this story unfolds its brilliant plots and twists. Complex and heart-stirring characters make this story un-put-downable! To not love this story would be . . . well, madness!”

  —RONIE KENDIG, AUTHOR OF THE DISCARDED HEROES SERIES

  “Even more riveting than the historical background is the mystery that Higley creates as the backdrop to her exploration of the ancient world . . . Readers will not be satisfied until they have discovered the truth along with Tiamat.”

  —SHANNON ROGERS FLYNT, PHD, SAMFORD UNIVERSITY

  “Each of Tracy Higley’s historical novels is more powerful than its predecessor, and Garden of Madness continues the trend. I was drawn into the ancient Babylonian world from the very first page and held spellbound until the last, savoring every moment of Tia’s journey from despair to redemption. Whether you’ve read Higley’s previous works, or are just discovering her amazing stories, you must not miss this one!”

  —JANELLE CLARE SCHNEIDER, AUTHOR AND SPIRITUAL DIRECTOR

  GARDEN of

  MADNESS

  GARDEN of

  MADNESS

  TRACY L. HIGLEY

  © 2012 by Tracy L. Higley

  All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or other—except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

  Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Thomas Nelson. Thomas Nelson is a registered trademark of Thomas Nelson, Inc.

  Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation. © 1996. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, Illinois 60189. All rights reserved.

  Thomas Nelson, Inc., titles may be purchased in bulk for educational, business, fund-raising, or sales promotional use. For information, please e-mail SpecialMarkets@ThomasNelson.com.

  Publisher’s Note: This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. All characters are fictional, and any similarity to people living or dead is purely coincidental.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Higley, T. L.

  Garden of madness / Tracy L. Higley.

  p. cm.

  ISBN 978-1-4016-8680-2 (trade paper)

  I. Title.

  PS3608.I375G37 2012

  813'.6--dc23

  2011052659

  Printed in the United States of America

  12 13 14 15 16 17 QG 6 5 4 3 2 1

  To my fantastic “Ffrinds”—

  Randy, John, Jim, Rick, Tosca, Meredith, Camy, and Mary

  This book has bounced along a road with lows and highs,

  and through the ride you have offered encouragement,

  support, advice, and hugs.

  I am honored by, and grateful for, your friendship.

  WORD LIST

  ashipu—a member of the Babylonian clergy with both healing and cultic responsibilities

  ashlû—measurement equivalent to about fifty yards

  asû—a Babylonian physician

  bêru—measurement equivalent to about five miles

  haruspicy—a form of divination, often using the entrails of animals

  heptascopy—examination of the liver, specifically, as a method of divination

  kalû—priests employed as singers and chanters in ritual worship

  kanû—measurement equivalent to about eight feet

  tanbûr—a fretted, stringed instrument, similar to a lute

  There is a God in heaven who reveals secrets . . .

  —DANIEL 2:28

  CONTENTS

  PROLOGUE

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  CHAPTER 19

  CHAPTER 20

  CHAPTER 21

  CHAPTER 22

  CHAPTER 23

  CHAPTER 24

  CHAPTER 25

  CHAPTER 26

  CHAPTER 27

  CHAPTER 28

  CHAPTER 29

  CHAPTER 30

  CHAPTER 31

  CHAPTER 32

  CHAPTER 33

  CHAPTER 34

  CHAPTER 35

  CHAPTER 36

  CHAPTER 37

  CHAPTER 38

  CHAPTER 39

  CHAPTER 40

  CHAPTER 41

  CHAPTER 42

  CHAPTER 43

  CHAPTER 44

  CHAPTER 45

  CHAPTER 46

  CHAPTER 47

  EPILOGUE

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  THE STORY BEHIND THE STORY . . . AND BEYOND

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  READING GROUP GUIDE

  PROLOGUE

  Babylon, 570 BC

  My name is Nebuchadnezzar. Let the nations hear it!

  I am ruler of Babylon, greatest empire on earth. Here in its capital city, I am like a god.

  Tonight, as the sun falls to its death in the western desert, I walk along the balconies I have built, overlooking the city I have built, and know there is none like me.

  I inhale the twilight air and catch the scent of a dozen sacrifices. Across the city, the smoke and flames lift from Etemenanki, the House of the Platform of Heaven and Earth. The priests sacrifice tonight in honor of Tiamat, for tomorrow she will be wed. Though I have questioned the wisdom of a marriage with the captive Judaeans, tomorrow will not be a day for questions. It will be a day of celebration, such as befits a princess.

  Tiamat comes to me now on the balcony, those dark eyes wide with entreaty. “Please, Father.”

  I encircle her shoulders in a warm embrace and turn her to the city.

  “There, Tia. There is our glorious Babylon. Do you not wish to serve her?”

  She leans her head against my chest, her voice thick. “Yes, of course. But I do not wish to marry.”

  I pat her shoulder, kiss the top of her head. My sweet Tia. Who would have foretold that she would become such a part of me?

  “Have no fear, dear one. Nothing shall change. Husband or not, I shall always love you. Always protect you.”

  She clutches me, a desperate grip around my waist.

  I release her arms and look into her eyes. “Go now. Your mother will be searching for you. Tomorrow will be a grand day, for you are the daughter of the greatest king Babylon has ever seen.”

  I use my thumb to rub a tear from her eye, give her a gentle push, and she is gone with a last look of grief that breaks my heart.

  The greatest king Babylon has ever seen. The words echo like raindrops plunking on stones. I try to ignore a tickling at the back of my thoughts. Something Belteshazzar told me, many months ago. A dream.

  I shake my head, willing my mind to be free of the memory. My longtime Jewish advisor, part of my kingdom since we were both youths, often troubles me with his advice. I keep him close because he has become a friend. I keep him close because he is too often right.

  But I do not want to think of Belteshazzar. Tonight is for me alone. For my pleasure, as I gaze across all that I have built, all that I have accomplished. This great Babylon, this royal residence with its Gardens to rival those created by the gods. Built by my mighty power. For the glory of my majesty. I grip the balcony wall, inhale the smoky sweetness again, and smile. It is good.

  I hear a voice and think perhaps Belteshazzar has found me after all, for the words sound like something he would say, and yet the voice . . . The voice is of another.

  “There is a decree gone out for you, Nebuchadnezzar. Your kingship has been stripped from you.”

  I turn to the traitorous words, but no one is there. And yet the voice continues, rumbling in my own chest, echoing in my head.

  “You will be driven from men to dwell with beasts. You will eat the herbs of oxen and seven times will pass over you, until you know that the Most High is ruler in the kingdom of men. To whom He wills power, He gives power.”

  The tickling is there again, in my mind. I roll my shoulders to ease the discomfort, but it grows. It grows to a scratching, a clawing at the inside of my head, until I fear I shall bleed within.

  The fear swells in me and I am frantic now. I rub my eyes, swat my ears, and still the scratching and

scraping goes on, digging away at my memories, at my sense of self, of who I am and what I have done, and I stare at the sky above and the stones below and bend my waist and fall upon the ground where it is better, better to be on the ground, and I want only to find food, food, food. And a two-legged one comes and makes noises with her mouth and clutches at me but I understand none of it, and even this knowledge that I do not understand is slipping, slipping from me as the sun slips into the desert.

  And in the darkness, I am no more.

  CHAPTER 1

  Seven years later

  The night her husband died, Tia ran with abandon.

  The city wall, wide enough for chariots to race upon its baked bricks, absorbed the slap of her bare feet and cooled her skin. She flew past the Ishtar Gate as though chased by demons, knowing the night guard in his stone tower would be watching. Leering. Tia ignored his attention.

  Tonight, this night, she wanted only to run.

  A lone trickle of sweat chased down her backbone. The desert chill soaked into her bones and somewhere in the vast sands beyond the city walls, a jackal shrieked over its kill. Her exhalation clouded the air and the quiet huffs of her breath kept time with her feet.

  Breathe, slap, slap, slap.

  They would be waiting. Expecting her. A tremor disturbed her rhythm. Her tears for Shealtiel were long spent, stolen by the desert air before they fell.

  Flames surged from the Tower and snagged her attention. Priests and their nightly sacrifices, promising to ensure the health of the city. For all of Babylon’s riches, the districts encircled by the double city walls smelled of poverty, disease, and hopelessness. But the palace was an oasis in a desert.

  She would not run the entire three bêru around the city. Not tonight. Only to the Marduk Gate and back to the Southern Palace, where her mother would be glaring her displeasure at both her absence and her choice of pastime. Tia had spent long days at Shealtiel’s bedside, waiting for the end. Could her mother not wait an hour?

  Too soon, the Marduk Gate loomed and Tia slowed. The guard leaned over the waist-high crenellation, thrust a torch above his head, and hailed the trespasser.

  “Only Tiamat.” She panted and lifted a hand. “Running.”

  He shrugged and shook his head, then turned back to his post, as though a princess running the city wall at night in the trousers of a Persian were a curiosity, nothing more. Perhaps he’d already seen her run. More likely, her reputation ran ahead of her. The night hid her flush of shame.

  But she could delay no longer. The guilt had solidified, a stone in her belly she could not ignore.

  She pivoted, sucked in a deep breath, and shot forward, legs and arms pounding for home.

  Home. Do I still call it such? When all that was precious had been taken? Married at fourteen. A widow by twenty-one. And every year a lie.

  “I shall always love you, always protect you.”

  He had spoken the words on the night he had been lost to her. And where was love? Where was protection? Not with Shealtiel.

  The night sky deepened above her head, and a crescent moon hung crooked against the blackness. Sataran and Aya rose in the east, overlapping in false union.

  “The brightest light in your lifetime’s sky,” an elderly mage had said of the merged stars. The scholar’s lessons on the workings of the cosmos interested her, and she paid attention. As a princess already married for treaty, she was fortunate to retain tutors.

  Ahead, the Ishtar Gate’s blue-glazed mosaics, splashed with yellow lions, surged against the purpling sky, and to its left the false wooded mountain built atop the palace for her mother, Amytis, equaled its height. Tia chose the east wall of the gate for a focal point and ignored the Gardens. Tonight the palace had already seen death. She needn’t also dwell on madness.

  Breathe, slap, slap, slap. Chest on fire, almost there.

  She reached the palace’s northeast corner, where it nearly brushed the city wall, and slowed to a stop, bent at the waist. Hands braced against her knees, she sucked in cold air. Her heartbeat quieted.

  When she turned back toward the palace, she saw what her mother had done.

  A distance of one kanû separated the wide inner city wall from the lip of the palace roof, slightly lower. Tia kept a length of cedar wood there on the roof, a plank narrow enough to discourage most, and braced it across the chasm for her nightly runs. When she returned, she would pull it back to the roof, where anyone who might venture past the guards on the wall would not gain access. Only during her run did this plank bridge the gap, awaiting her return.

  Amytis had removed it.

  Something like heat lightning snapped across Tia’s vision and left a bitter, metallic taste in her mouth. Her mother thought to teach her a lesson. Punish her for her manifold breaches of etiquette by forcing her to take the long way down, humiliate herself to the sentinel guard.

  She would not succeed.

  With a practiced eye Tia measured the distance from the ledge to the palace roof. She would have the advantage of going from a higher to a lower level. A controlled fall, really. Nothing more.

  But she made the mistake of looking over to the street level far below. Her senses spun and she gripped the wall.

  She scrambled onto the ledge, wide enough to take the stance needed for a long jump, and bent into position, one leg extended behind. The palace rooftop garden held only a small temple in its center, lit with three torches. Nothing to break her fall, or her legs, when she hit. She counted, steadying mind and body.

  The wind caught her hair, loosened during her run, and blew it across her eyes. She flicked her head to sweep it away, rocked twice on the balls of her feet, and leaped.

  The night air whooshed against her ears, and her legs cycled through the void as though she ran on air itself. The flimsy trousers whipped against her skin, and for one exhilarating moment Tia flew like an egret wheeling above the city and knew sweet freedom.

  This was how it should always be. My life. My choice. I alone control my destiny.

  She hit the stone roof grinning like a trick monkey, and it took five running steps to capture her balance.

  Glorious.

  Across the rooftop, a whisper of white fluttered. A swish of silk and a pinched expression disappeared through the opening to the stairs. Amytis had been waiting to see her stranded on the city wall, and Tia had soured her pleasure. The moment of victory faded, and Tia straightened her hair, smoothed her clothing.

  “Your skill is improving.” The eerie voice drifted to Tia across the dark roof and she flinched. A chill rippled through her skin.

  Shadir stood at the far end of the roof wall, where the platform ended and the palace wall rose higher to support the Gardens. His attention was pinned to the stars, and a scroll lay on the ledge before him, weighted with amulets.

  “You startled me, Shadir. Lurking there in the shadows.”

  The mage turned, slid his gaze down the length of her in sharp appraisal. “It would seem I am not the only one who prefers the night.”

  Long ago, Shadir had been one of her father’s chief advisors. Before—before the day of which they never spoke. Since that monstrous day, he held amorphous power over court and kingdom, power that few questioned and even fewer defied. His oiled hair hung in tight curls to his shoulders and the full beard and mustache concealed too much of his face, leaving hollow eyes that seemed to follow even when he did not turn his head.

  Tia shifted on her feet and eyed the door. “It is cooler to run at night.”

  The mage held himself unnaturally still. Did he even breathe?

  As a child Tia had believed Shadir could scan her thoughts like the night sky and read her secrets. Little relief had come with age. Another shudder ran its cold finger down her back.

  Tia lowered her chin, all the obeisance she would give, and escaped the rooftop. Behind her, he spoke in a tone more hiss than speech. “The night holds many dangers.”

  She shook off the unpleasant encounter. Better to ready herself for the unpleasantness she yet faced tonight.

  Her husband’s family would have arrived by this time, but sweating like a soldier and dressed like a Persian, she was in no state to make an appearance in the death chamber. Instead, she went to her own rooms, where her two slave women, Omarsa and Gula, sat vigil as though they were the grieving widows. They both jumped when Tia entered and busied themselves with lighting more oil lamps and fetching bathwater.

 

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