Read The Didymus Contingency Online
Authors: Jeremy Robinson
Tags: #Thomas, #Christian, #Action & Adventure, #Apostles, #Jesus Christ, #Fiction, #Christian Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Physicists, #Thrillers, #General, #Religious, #Time Travel, #Espionage
“But—”
Jesus opened one of Sally’s hands and placed his on top. “Open your eyes child, and believe.” Jesus removed his hand, letting the bullets roll into Sally’s open palm.
* * * * *
Tom and David sat on the hillside for an hour speaking about the events of the past weeks, while Jesus talked with Sally. David knew Sally would be getting an earful, but it was probably good for her, having been so shockingly exposed to Christianity, and who could be better suited to aid in the transition than Jesus himself?
But his thoughts didn’t linger on Sally and Jesus for long. What he was about to do was one of the hardest things he’d ever done. In a few minutes, David would be returning to the future with Sally and saying goodbye to Tom. He and Tom had been the best of friends and trustworthy partners for almost eighteen years. Now he had to return to the future without Tom, without his job at LightTech and without any plans for the future.
“So what now?” Tom asked.
“I take Sally back to the future and then... I don’t know what I’m going to do. But right now... We say goodbye.”
“You say that like you already know I’m staying.”
“I do know.”
Tom smiled. “You know, your knowledge of the Bible kind of takes the surprise out of things.”
David laughed. “Sorry.”
“So, what happens to me now? Is that recorded in the Bible?”
“A little, but the rest is recorded in history.”
Tom pursed his lips and nodded his head, clearly impressed with himself. “Really. So you know how I die then?”
“Yes,” David said as he looked at the grass, avoiding Tom’s eyes.
“How?”
“I believe the saying is something like: That’s for me to know and you to find out,” David said with a smile.
“As long as I outlive you, old man.”
David stood to his feet. “Old man... I suppose you’re right. We’re both old men now, but old men at the beginning of new lives.”
Tom stood next to him and looked at Jesus and Sally talking at the bottom of the hill. “For both of us... I’m going to miss you, partner.”
“We might see each other again.”
“Make sure of it.”
David lifted his wrist and shook the watch. “I might just come and pay you a visit every now and again.”
“I’ll be expecting you,” Tom said, as he extended his hand for David to shake.
David took Tom’s hand and pulled him in for a tight hug. Tom cringed in pain as his ribs began to shift. “The ribs, the ribs.”
David moved away and laughed. “Sorry! Sorry! And you think I’m old.”
The smile on David’s face slowly faded and he said, “We ought to go, or this will take all day.”
The two began walking toward Jesus and Sally.
As David grew closer to Sally, he could see her stunned expression. Her eyes were wide and her face was pale. When Tom and David stopped a few feet away, she didn’t even look at them.
“Ready to go?” David asked Sally.
“Huh? What?”
Jesus had obviously impressed her with something.
“Did we miss something?” Tom asked.
“I was just telling Sally about the future, the past, things to come that have already happened.” Jesus explained.
Tom chuckled. “You know, for the first time, I think I actually made sense of what you said.”
“Won’t be the last time,” Jesus replied and then looked at David. “You’re leaving?”
“You know I am,” David replied.
Jesus nodded. “We’ll speak again soon.”
David tilted his head. “We will?”
“Ask Sally. I told her all about it,” Jesus said before he hugged David tightly.
David took a few steps back after Jesus released him. He wanted to do this quickly. He wasn’t one to linger at goodbyes; it just made the pain worse. “Better stand back,” David said, as he and Sally set their watches.
Tom and Jesus walked fifteen feet away and turned to watch David and Sally leave. David and Sally pushed the final buttons on their watches and a bright light began to flash all around them.
Whum, Whum, Whum, Boom!
With a flash of light, David and Sally disappeared from the past.
Tom looked at Jesus and said, “You know, if you had pulled something like that, you might have been more convincing.”
Jesus smiled. “You haven’t seen anything yet.” Jesus put his hand on Tom’s shoulder and the two headed back toward the house where Matthew and Peter were waiting in the doorway.
“You mean to tell me walking on water wasn’t enough? Feeding five thousand men wasn’t convincing? And calming that storm wasn’t eye-opening?” Jesus said.
Tom smiled. “I guess... I was just blind.”
Jesus turned away from the house and looked out toward the horizon. Three figures approached on the path—Lazarus, Martha and Mary. They were rushing forward, toward Jesus and Tom.
Tom turned and saw only Mary, her sleek black hair bouncing with every rushed footstep. Tom turned quickly to Jesus. “Tell me she lives a good life.”
“How could she not, Didymus? She will be with you.”
“My life so far hasn’t exactly been ideal.”
“All in the past,” Jesus said. “The future is yours to write.”
Good enough,
Tom thought. He sprang forward, arms extended. Clutching Mary around the waist, Tom spun her around. It was the loving embrace he’d longed for since that day in Zambia, the day that started everything.
He understood why Megan gave her life. He also knew that Mary would do the same, and he loved her all the more for it. But what stood out in his mind, more acutely than anything else, is that like Megan and Mary, he would willingly give his own life if called to do so…
He had a feeling that day might come…but not today.
—TWENTY FIVE—
A.D.
Somewhere
Sometime
As David strode up a grassy hill, he stared at the ominous sky, swirling with black clouds and energy. The flapping of his robe grew louder as he neared the peak. In one hand, he held Sally’s hand. She was blindfolded and following David carefully up the steep incline. In David’s other hand was a large umbrella and a 16oz. Wild Cherry Pepsi.
“Where are we, David? It smells like it’s going to rain. I better not get wet. I don’t want to get wet.”
“Patience, my dear. You’re going to enjoy this...even if you do get wet.”
“Great,” she said.
David stopped at the top of the hill and looked at the view, which stretched for miles. “Incredible...”
“What? David, can I take this off now?”
David untied the blindfold and pulled it away from Sally’s eyes. She blinked a few times and then gasped. “What is it?”
“Better get under if you don’t want to get wet,” David said, as he sat down on the grass and opened the umbrella.
Sally sat next to David and huddled under the umbrella. “Now tell me what this is.”
“Ever heard of Noah’s Ark?” he asked.
“As in the flood?”
David nodded.
“Is this?”
David nodded again. “It took me fifteen trips through time to figure out when the flood began, but I’m pretty sure it’s any minute now.”
Sally looked at the view again. Below them was a lush valley and at the center of the depression was an unbelievably large wooden boat, just sitting there on the ground, supported by hundreds of wooden planks on either side. On the side of the boat were a large open door and a long board, which served as a ramp. An old man and three younger men pulled the ramp into the boat and closed the hatch.
After twisting the cap off his Wild Cherry Pepsi, David took a sip and looked up at the sky, tilting the umbrella away from their heads. A drop of water hit David square in the forehead and he laughed. Sally pulled the umbrella back over them and the pitter-patter of raindrops began tapping out a song on the fabric.
“Here it comes,” David said.
The rain picked up quickly and each drop grew in size. Soon it sounded like TV static at high volume. Sally and David could hardly hear each other laughing. David reached into his robe and pulled out four flat, orange, pieces of plastic.
“What are those?” Sally shouted.
David put one of the objects to his lips and blew as hard as he could. The object expanded as David continued to blow. He pushed a clear plastic nozzle in and held the fully inflated object up. It was round with a hole in the middle. “Floaties...you know: water wings.” David said. “Just in case.”
Sally smiled and took one of the floaties from David’s hands. They blew them up and put them on together. David looked at Sally as she watched the water swiftly flooding the valley. She was so beautiful sitting there in her bright orange floaties. David knew he had to take the chance. Maybe this was God’s plan for David and Sally all along? Maybe God had more in store for them both? Sally had yet to tell David about her conversation with Jesus. He knew their adventures were just beginning. Today would be no different. David reached under his robe.
Sally caught the glimmer of what looked like just another raindrop, but upon closer inspection revealed an engagement ring. David held it in front of her eyes. His face was an expressive mix of elation and terror.
“Will you?” David shouted over the rain.
There was a pause as Sally stared at the ring in David’s hands.
“I bought it from an Egyptian merchant in 500 B.C. I don’t have a receipt but if you don’t like it, I’m sure I can—”
“David, shut up!” Sally shouted with a wide grin.
David stopped talking and looked into Sally’s eyes.
Her next words were indiscernible, but David could read the expression on her face and the shapes her soft lips were making. The answer was yes!
David jumped to his feet and tossed the umbrella into the air, which got swept up by the wind. He pulled Sally to her feet and kissed her as water poured over their bodies. Sally leaned into David’s ear and said, “You have a date in mind?”
David smiled, “Whenever you want. Time is on our side.”
###
THE FATE OF THOMAS
Thomas is believed to have carried the word of Jesus to Parthia or Persia. Thomas died in the name of Jesus, slain with a lance. He is believed to have been buried in Edessa, in Mesopotamia, where confirmed reports about relics reported to be his, exist from the Fourth Century…but the story of the events between his time with Jesus and his martyrdom has yet to be told.
###
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
JEREMY ROBINSON is the author of eleven novels including
Pulse,
Instinct
and
Threshold
, the first three books in his exciting Jack Sigler thriller series. His novels have been translated into nine languages. He is the director of New Hampshire AuthorFest, a non-profit organization promoting literacy in New Hampshire, where he lives with his wife and three children.
Connect with Robinson online:
Twitter:
www.twitter.com/jrobinsonauthor
Myspace:
www.myspace.com/sciencethriller
Facebook:
www.facebook.com/sciencethriller
Website:
www.jeremyrobinsononline.com
Don’t miss the following samples of Jeremy Robinson’s THE LAST HUNTER and ANTARKTOS RISING
—SAMPLE—
THE LAST HUNTER by JEREMY ROBINSON
Available for $2.99 on Kindle at:
http://www.amazon.com/Last-Hunter-Descent-Antarktos-ebook/dp/B004D4YNUW
DESCRIPTION:
I've been told that the entire continent of Antarctica groaned at the moment of my birth. The howl tore across glaciers, over mountains and deep into the ice. Everyone says so. Except for my father; all he heard was Mother’s sobs. Not of pain, but of joy, so he says. Other than that, the only verifiable fact about the day I was born is that an iceberg the size of Los Angeles broke free from the ice shelf a few miles off the coast. Again, some would have me believe the fracture took place as I entered the world. But all that really matters, according to my parents, is that I, Solomon Ull Vincent, the first child born on Antarctica—the first and only Antarctican—was born on September 2nd, 1974.
If only someone could have warned me that, upon my return to the continent of my birth thirteen years later, I would be kidnapped, subjected to tortures beyond comprehension and forced to fight...and kill. If only someone had hinted that I'd wind up struggling to survive in a subterranean world full of ancient warriors, strange creatures and supernatural powers.
Had I been warned I might have lived a normal life. The human race might have remained safe. And the fate of the world might not rest on my shoulders. Had I been warned....
This is my story—the tale of Solomon Ull Vincent—The Last Hunter.
EXCERPT:
12
My foot rolls on a bone as I kick away from the bodies. There’s so many of them, I can’t make out what I’m seeing. It’s like someone decided to play a game of pick-up sticks with discarded bones. I fall backwards, landing on a lumpy mass. My hands are out, bracing against injury. Rubbery flesh breaks my fall, its coarse hair tickling between my fingers. I haven’t seen the body beneath me, but I know—somehow—that it’s dead.
Long dead.
This is little comfort, however. After finding my footing, I stand bolt upright. My chest heaves with each breath. Each draw of air is deep, but the oxygen isn’t getting to my head. I try breathing through my nose, and the rotten stench of old meat and something worse twists my stomach with the violence of a tornado. I drop to one knee, fighting a dry heave.
“Slow down,” I tell myself. “Breathe.”
I breathe through my mouth. I can
taste
the foul air, but I force each breath into my lungs, hold it and then let it out slowly. Just like I learned at soccer practice. I only lasted a few practices before giving up, but at least I came away with something. Calm down. Focus. Breathe.
My body settles. I’m no longer shaking. But when I look up I wonder if I’ve done something wrong. Stars blink in the darkness, like when you stand up too fast. But they’re not floating around. They’re just tiny points of light, like actual stars, but I get the feeling they’re a lot closer. The brightest of the light points are directly behind me, and to test my theory I reach out for them. My hand strikes a solid wall.