Keohane, G. - Solomon's Grave

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Solomon's Grave: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Daniel G. Keohane has crafted a tense, intricate thriller that will appeal to fans of The Davinci Code.... Solomon s Grave is a creepy, intense read that will keep you on the edge of your seat. I loved it! --~ Brian Keene, author of _ The Rising and Earthworm Gods _
4-star review
A fascinating occult suspense novel, fluent to read, for all those who prefer subtle suspense and finely woven characters over bloody murders and hardcore action... --Media Mania (German Edition)
Product Description
Nathan Dinneck's new role as pastor may be shorter than he expects.
For thousands of years a secret has been hidden from the world and protected from those who covet its power. Popes and Kings have sought it. Theologians and historians have debated its very existence. In every generation since the days of Solomon, one person is chosen to keep its secret, protect it from an ageless group claiming the treasure for their own dark god. After millennia of searching, they are finally closing in on their prize.
Evil has followed Nathan home to Hillcrest, Massachusetts.
Nightmares of temples and blood sacrifice, visions of angels and cemeteries foreshadow a dark battle to come. In the balance hangs the lives and souls of those chosen to protect history's most holy relic, perhaps even the gateway to heaven itself.

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What of Hayden? Rules set down centuries ago would be no different today. Their God was like that, big on tradition . Too many corpses lined the streets of the past, men and women foolish enough to test it.

But wasn’t Peter, himself, a priest serving a much mightier deity than their silent God? When the time came, he was certain he could carry it to the feet of Molech, to the new temple which his people would finally build.

The fabled yet very real Ark of the Covenant, the ornate chest housing the stone tablets on which Yahweh Himself scrawled his Commandments to the Israelites—and at one time containing the budding staff of a man named Aaron, the Book of the Law and even some manna which had supposedly fallen from Heaven—would finally be delivered to its true owner. And, if those crackpots of yesteryear were to be believed, the very portal into Heaven would be opened. A doorway through which Peter Quinn’s dark master and his legions of damned would pass and wreak long-awaited vengeance on those who cast him out. There were some in their group who believed this latter part very much. These were the true elders of the Ammonite organization, reclusive people whom Peter hoped never to meet. Unlike his Uncle Roger. The only time the man had shown the smallest sign of humility, or fear, in front of his nephew was the one time Peter asked about these people. Of course Roger told him nothing. Why waste his breath on his own nephew?

Peter Quinn took a cleansing breath and leaned back onto his heels. There were final preparations needing attention, including some flowers to personally deliver in a week. Not to the cemetery. The flowers would be for Hayden, to greet him on his arrival at the monastery. An excuse for Peter to learn where in the complex the man was staying. After that, he and Pastor Hayden had much to talk about.

Chapter Fifteen

Nathan met and spoke to a dozen-plus parishioners Monday morning. They had stopped by the church to see how he was feeling, or used some other pretense. Always the same questions, but asked with genuine concern—at least outwardly. He’d gotten his explanation for yesterday’s collapse down to a reasonable, but condensed, rhetoric. He spoke with an easy, unconcerned smile, but inside he squirmed with embarrassment. The dread he’d felt about facing the group at Wednesday night’s Bible study and next weekend’s service slowly dissipated. Everyone seemed to understand, more so perhaps because he was already one of them, someone familiar, given a little more slack than an untested newcomer.

He’d slept soundly all last night and did not dream. Nathan felt better, but the nagging continued in the back of his mind. If he didn’t face it soon, the same thing might happen all over again.

The agenda for Monday afternoon, planned out by Hayden, was lighter than usual. He’d apparently decided to play it safe and give Nathan extra down time.

Upon returning from the Spring River nursing home in West Boylston, a warm-up of sorts for his visit to Elizabeth’s place tomorrow, Nathan had a wide break in his schedule between one and three o’clock. Hayden gave the pretense of needing to pack more items and suggested Nathan take a nap.

It had begun to rain, but this didn’t keep Nathan from taking a walk. The weather kept most people indoors, and no car passed him along Greenwood Street. He could just as easily have walked through the short patch of woodland separating the church from the cemetery, but after yesterday’s incident he didn’t want to be caught wandering in the woods alone. It wouldn’t help his already shaky image.

No sign of Tarretti’s Blazer. That was good. The fewer questions from him or anyone else, the better. The large umbrella Nathan had found in the back closet, smelling slightly of mold, and the long black slicker his parents had sent him two years ago when he was in Florida were good protection from the rain. He would likely wear the coat more often now that he was in a climate better suited to its purpose. He walked into the heart of the cemetery, along the same route they’d followed last week.

He did not stop when he saw the twin angels.

Just get this over with and move on , he told himself. The ground was soft, the damp air crisp with the smells of early leaves beginning to turn. Cold water leaked into his shoes when he stepped in a puddle. His gaze was riveted on the statues’ faces, as much as theirs seemed to be on each other. At last he stopped, looking up at their gray, lifeless expressions.

Rain dripped off stone noses and chins. Small details had worn thin by weather and time. Their wings stretched up from their backs and touched at the tips, blending into each other to become one solid piece. Nathan supposed this was deliberate, in order that one or the other did not tip too much to the side.

This was what he’d seen yesterday, and also in the dream his first night here. Was it a premonition, or could his imagination be strong enough to associate weather predictions with his plans to come here today?

As much as he tried to rationalize, no reason felt like truth. He was meant to come here, was sent here. It was the only rationale that worked. But sent by whom? God? He reflexively shook his head and examined the gravesite.

The headstone was a wide, square base supporting the stonework. Like the faces above it, the inscription was worn by seasons.

John Solomon , it read. 1852 – 1909 .

Reading the name sent an electric buzz through his body. That feeling of something missing, of a detail lodged in his brain slowly coming loose.

Solomon . The name was biblical, of course. Nathan tried to recall any Jewish families in town by that name. Of course, this was a very old grave. He looked at the angels. The association between their posture and the name on the inscription was obvious. Solomon’s temple, housing the Ark of the Covenant. Two golden cherubs standing guard atop the mercy seat, or lid, protecting the tablets of the ten commandments. The association felt more than an artistic interpretation of the deceased’s name. The missing detail, perhaps, but its significance eluded him.

Nathan wondered, not for the last time, if he was simply going mad.

He walked around the base looking for additional writing, some sort of epitaph other than a name and dates. Nothing. Concrete scraped under his shoe, partly buried beneath years of dirt and leaves. The base was massive, more so toward the front.

Not just a simple grave, then, but a crypt?

He walked around the statue one more time, rain dripping from the umbrella down his back. No sign of an entrance. Judging from the dates, if one existed, it was buried under a century of sediment.

Like Peter Quinn the previous day, he had an urge to fall to his knees and dig, uncover the entrance, expose the truth.

If he did that, he surely was insane.

He stood a moment longer, staring down, listening passively to the rain above him, then turned and walked quickly away. The water-soaked ground was soft under his feet. He had faced his dreams, but felt no closer to a resolution. Maybe he should see a doctor. He emerged onto Greenwood Street and looked around. No one coming either way. That was good.

On the walk back to the church, Nathan again tried to find an association between the elaborate headstone and everything that had happened. He’d dreamt of a temple. It wasn’t anything like Solomon’s as far as he could tell.

He sighed. It would come to him eventually.

He hoped.

Chapter Sixteen

“Systems, Art Dinneck.”

“Hi, Dad. How’s work going?”

“Nate? How are you feeling?”

“I’m fine, Dad, honest.” He reiterated what the EMTs had told him, keeping to the basics. His mother had likely covered the details with his father the night before. He’d been back from his walk only a few minutes but couldn’t relax. It seemed like as good a time as any to check in with his father, try to learn a little more about what was going on. “I’m just getting to a few bits of paperwork Pastor Hayden left for me. He says anything to do with red tape has officially been passed on to me.”

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