Rule of God (Book Three of the Dominium Dei Trilogy) (12 page)

The last apostle John was released from the island prison of Patmos under Domitian’s successor Nerva and lived out his remaining days in Ephesus, where the former “son of thunder” told anyone who would listen to love one another. Nerva, meanwhile, barely lasted as long as John, dying only two years after his reign began.

The true identity of Clement of Rome, the Church’s reputed fourth bishop after the apostle Peter, is far less certain. Jesuit scholars such as William Fulco, professor of Ancient Mediterranean Studies at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, won’t even delve into speculation. Fulco is the historian of invaluable assistance to the author in the proper Latin translation and pronunciation of the title Dominium Dei, or “Rule of God.”

All the same, some historians dare speculate that Clement was actually the slain consul Flavius Clemens, and that the names became confused over the centuries. Other historians postulate that Clement was a freedman of Flavius Clemens, and still others another person entirely.

An unknown in history, perhaps, like the fictional playwright Athanasius of Athens.

Some accounts put the death of Clement close to or shortly after that of Domitian’s. But there is another account, favored by this author, that depicts Clement living a good bit longer than that.

In this account, Nerva’s successor Trajan banished Clement from Rome, and Clement went to Asia Minor, helping the churches there and performing several miracles worthy of Mucianus’s memoirs of the land. Later on, more than a decade after the events of
Dominium Dei,
Clement stood trial before his old friend, a very conflicted Pliny the Younger, who was now governor of Bithynia in Asia Minor. After a futile appeal on Pliny’s part to Caesar, Clement was martyred by being tied to an anchor and thrown from a boat into the Black Sea.

As for the centuries-old global conspiracy known as Dominium Dei, it doesn’t exist today in the 21
st
century. Never has, never will.

It’s all fiction…

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I’d like to express my deepest, heartfelt appreciation to the following individuals for their enormous encouragement and support during the extended preparation of the Dominium Dei Trilogy, beginning with my amazing wife and love of my life, Laura.

Thank you, John and Sandy Stonhouse, Stacey and Eric Wallen, Sarah and Firat Taydas, Craig and Jennifer Notari, Flint and Terrie Dille, Doug and Bonnie Lagerstrom, Jim Blew and Carole Randolph, Soon and Esther Chung, Claudia Pettit, Jimmy and Sonya Hodson, Mary Soler, and so many more.

You made the sun stand still so that I could finish this work.

PRAISE FOR THOMAS GREANIAS

“Thomas Greanias is the king of high-octane adventure!”

—Brad Thor

“Better than Dan Brown.”

—CBS News

“Irresistibly addicting!”


San Francisco Chronicle

“Gripping.”

—Chicago Tribune

“A superb writer who knows how to tell a tale with style and substance.”

—Nelson DeMille

PRAISE FOR
THE ATLANTIS TRILOGY

RAISING ATLANTIS

THE ATLANTIS PROPHECY

THE ATLANTIS REVELATION

“A thrill ride from start to finish!”

—Clive Cussler

“Lightning-paced, dagger-sharp and brilliantly executed.”

—James Rollins

“A roller coaster that will captivate readers of Dan Brown and Michael Crichton, penetrating one of the biggest mysteries of our time.”

—The Washington Post

“Extremely fast-paced. An exciting adventure.”

—Booklist

“A devilishly clever maelstrom of history, secrets and modern-day political intrigue. Relentlessly action-packed, with tantalizing twists and twirls on every page.

Pedal-to-the-metal thrills and throat-grabbing suspense.…

Marvelous!”

—Steve Berry

“Greanias keeps the pace breakneck… sweeping readers

right into Conrad’s struggle.”

—Publishers Weekly

“It’s rare to find a tale as well researched as it is entertaining, and this is it: a rollicking, globe-spanning thriller that pulled me in from the very first page.

Best of all, it’s pure fun.”

—Christopher Reich

“Finally, a hero worthy of our admiration!”

—FreshFiction.com

“An enchanting story with an incredible pace.”

—The Boston Globe

“A top-flight thriller.”

—BlogCritics.org

PRAISE FOR
THE PROMISED WAR

“This is great stuff and will keep you riveted to the pages.”

—ThrillerWriters.org

“A page-turner that portrays ancient Jericho as a city filled with airborne disease that would have killed the Israelites had they not killed the Canaanites.”

—World Magazine

“Thomas Greanias masterfully blends the best aspects of the modern thriller and historical fiction in
The Promised War.
The end result is his finest work to date. It is a pleasure to witness Thomas Greanias’s growth as a writer from book to book. Greanias keeps getting better.”

—Amazon.com/Megalith.com

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