The Devils Harvest: The End Of All Flesh - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel The Devils Harvest: The End Of All Flesh Part 17 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
This defiantly wasn't CNN or Fox.
He looked back into the camera. "A body has also been recovered from the same area. As of yet no ident.i.ty, or reason for him for being there in the first place, has been established."
The camera view changed. Ambulances could be seen scattered about one area. Perched between the back open doors under another green umbrella was the young woman who had booked me in. I felt a little relieved that at least she had survived. She was a c.r.a.p receptionist, but not so bad I would wish her dead.
She looked bedraggled. Hair a mess, clothes covered in soot, eyes all red and bloodshot from the pungent smoke, with two clean lines running down her cheeks made by tears. Another reporter, from the same station, was interviewing her. Nothing interesting was being said, just filling s.p.a.ce. I felt sorry for her. She was almost falling asleep while talking; the adrenaline that had kept her going throughout the night was wearing off.
The screen returned to the studio. Also nothing interesting. Only the coverage you would expect from a tragic fire that had claimed so many lives.
They mentioned that it had been a devastating few days, what with the train crash only a few miles down the road.
Nothing was mentioned about one of last nights leading stories, referring to officer Kemp. It might have been talked about while I had fainted. Or there was simply no time left on the morning slot. Or one man paled into insignificance when compared to a train crash and hotel fire.
The news finished, stating they would be back at their normal time. No mention of the time, presuming everyone knew what there normal time was.
I sat staring at the television while adverts filled the screen. Adverts that were so random and bizarre that it wasn't until the actual product was named, or shown at the end that you even realized what they were talking about.
I reached across and flicked the switch that turned it off. Leaning back into the seat to digest what I had just seen. Closing my eyes to see the pictures once again.
I awoke with a jolt. Something had stirred me from my slumber, having evidently nodded off while thinking about all the destruction that had happened to others and me since I had met him.
I noticed the curtains were dark. Was it a thick blanket of bruise coloured clouds covering the sky, announcing another bad thunderstorm? No. I glanced up at the clock. Quarter past nine in the evening. I had slept most of the day.
Before I had chance to think further on the subject, another noise stirred me from my thoughts. The sound of a floorboard creaking upstairs.
Looking around, there coming down the stairs, was the mummified remains of the old lady, steadily placing one foot in front of the other, as if being careful to not fall, which would probably rip the dry fragile body apart.
A cigarette rested in bony jaws, the smoke filtering out the nose and ear sockets and between dry split skins; there wasn't enough bulk left to hold the smoke inside.
23.
Plagued Here we go again.
The withered dry husked remains of the old lady wobbled across the short gap. Taking surefooted steps to close the distance. The remains of the old dress she had died in hung from her skeletal frame. Bits of dirty cloth fell to the floor, accompanied by flakes of dried brown flesh.
I closed my eyes. I should have known he was going to do this, from the moment I had discovered the remains of the person in the bedroom. But I presumed the body he needed to use had to be at least warm.
The figure was stood directly in front of me. The smell wasn't too bad; all the internal organs were now nothing more than sacks of dried leather. The only smell was that of mouldy clothes and what smelt like wet sawdust.
She went to sit in the chair, muscles cracking like leather whips, bones grinding together and popping like m.u.f.fled gunshots. Small plumes of dusty skin particles accompanied each break, as the figure slowly lowered itself down.
Cigarette smoke continued to pour from hundreds of minuscule slits in the dry skin, from around the dried up eyes, crinkled ears and caved in nose, all making for a cloud of smoke rising, as if her head was slowly smouldering inside.
Once she was settled she gave a rattling noise like a sack of bones coming to rest. A few remaining plumes of skin motes floated upwards, as a few more muscles eventually gave under the pressure.
An arm slowly raised, now nothing more than dried skin clung tightly to a frail yellowish white bone. Her hand went to reach for the cigarette. The hand couldn't open because the muscles had dried like concrete. Her fingers twisted unnaturally from long years of painful arthritis. With the hand closed into a fist, she used the gap between the thumb and finger to grasp the cigarette. Her rings jingled together, rattling around on her bony fingers.
"Ahhhh," she muttered, sounding like rocks rubbing together. "I foo inwoy a wood zfoke." Her words sounding like a drunk because she no longer had lips and agile tongue with which to punctuate the letters. Her parchment like tongue sc.r.a.pped along non-existent lips. It looked like a parrots black leathery tongue.
Then after a moment she said, "Zorry abwout ffeee vire." Smoke curling out her face.
She meant the fire that he had caused. There was no point getting angry. What would it accomplish?
"Think nothing of it. I'm still here... For now." I let the last bit hang in the air, letting the words sink in. Letting him know I'm only human. I can burn; I can die like any other mortal.
"Wike I zaid, I'm orry." Dried hand replacing the cigarette. The dried up gums clamping down to keep it in place, almost cutting the cigarette in half.
"Sorry but I'm finding it difficult to understand what you're saying. Especially if you're going to be talking for a while. I think I'm going to miss half of what you say." I twisted my body in the seat, trying to get comfy.
"Ah. Wood foint." She lowered her head with a barrage of snapping and cracking sounds that echoed throughout the house. Then suddenly something started to happen hair, old and grey, started to wiggle from her dry scalp, as if a living thing. Her head was still lowered, a strange noise issuing from her dehydrated lips. Her hair was now flowing, whipping from side to side, growing longer by the second and looking like Medusa's snakes.
I crawled back into my seat as far as it would allow me.
Her head rose, no snapping noises now. Her head was rejuvenating, like a horror movie of Dracula returning from the ashes. Skin crawled like worms across her face. Red ligaments attaching back to muscles that seemed to grow from the dry bones. Lips inflated like small balloons, swelling and growing like juicy fattened worms. Gums now shining bright and covered in moisture. Eyes starting to bulge with juices and mapping veins, now rolling back down inside the sockets. Eyebrows sprouting like fast forward photography.
I rubbed my hand over my aching eyes. In front of me was the dried mummified remains of an old dead woman, but with a living face all pink and fleshly. Still wrinkled and old, possibly similar to what it looked like before she had died. But it looked freaky set upon such a dilapidated mummified carca.s.s.
"Etter?" she asked. "Ofps," she muttered with smacking gums. A mummified hand reached into the recess of what was left of her tatty, moth and fungus eaten, dress, bones cracking and dry skin rendering in the process.
Then a twisted hand appeared holding onto an old set of rotten brown false teeth. With a quick motion and the sound of smacking lips, the filthy teeth were slotted into place.
"Ahh, now that's better," she announced, giving a long, squeaking laugh. Blackened, decaying artificial dentures now swimming around on her glistening gums. But her voice was more understandable and resembling a little old grandmother's.
"Sure," I whispered.
She took the cigarette into her wet lipped mouth and drew long and hard on it. Smoke no longer issued from holes in her face, but was pulled down into what was left of her lungs. Now the blue smoke issued out of splits in her dried chest, worming its way through her hollow rib cage and the tatty cloth of the dress before spiralling upwards. In fact, I didn't think she even had lungs; they were just useless dried sacks. So I didn't want to think about how he was pulling down the smoke.
"As I said, sorry about the fire. I simply wasn't thinking."
I didn't bother to answer again; I had already given my comment on that subject. The fact he apologized like he had simply knock a vase off the side and it had broken on the floor.
Her eyes swivelled in the sockets.
"Ah yes, Moses." Long suck on the cancer stick. "Do you know he was put in a basket and left to float down a river? His mother, Jochebed simply not caring what happened to him." I knew a bit more of the story than that. Knew his mother was hiding him for his own safety. I had even seen Nicolas Poussin's famous painting of 1638, depicting the very same rescue.
"He wound up in the arms of one of Pharaoh's many daughters. Princess Bithiah kept him and raised him as if he was her own. He had all the benefits of the great house, the teachings, arts, you name it. Funny thing was, Pharaoh's daughter hired a slave to help raise him, and it turned out to be Moses' own mother Jochebed. Fancy that, eh?
"Anyway, Abraham's descendents were now nothing more than slaves. Building Pharaoh's palaces, temples and pyramids. He had promised a mighty nation to Abraham's descendents, now they were nothing more than peasants, raking sand and lifting bricks, which they had made from mud, straw and water from the mighty 'p, the Great River, or as you know it today: the Nile.
"And as you probably know, without this majestic watercourse, Egypt wouldn't exist. There would be no Pharaoh. No slavery. And no need for rescue. Herodotus, the famous Greek historian once wrote Egypt was the gift of the Nile."
She shifted what little weight she had that made up the remainder of her body, snapping sounds accompanied her movements.
"But of course G.o.d hadn't forgotten His promise. Moses was His answer to their problems.
"Moses was a little dyslexic you know. Hated speaking to crowds. Stuttered worse than that annoying man o-on the t-t-train." The simple mention of the train incident made me shiver, thinking about how he had reacted to my statement and questions. A deity having a tantrum.
"Also a killer! Funny, Cain was sent away for killing someone. Moses was made into a prophet. Go figure. He saw an Egyptian officer beating a fellow Hebrew, and struck him down, dead. Even his people knew what he had done, and even mocked him, saying, 'what if I don't do as you ask, will you strike me down also?'
"Moses fled Egypt, hiding in the desert for forty years. He ended up living among travelling wanderers. He even married the daughter of one. Hobad gave his daughter, Zipporah to Moses after he defended her at a well. Dating was much easier back then. They had a son called Gershom.
"He's also one of the characters of the bible with more than one name. His mother called him Jekuthiel. Heber by his father. His brother Aaron called him Avi Zanoah.
"But time pa.s.sed. The Hebrew nation became larger, all still toiling under Pharaoh's heavy yoke. Until one day when Moses was up in the mountains looking for a lost sheep he came across a burning rubus sanctus bush. Of course as bushes do, it spoke to him," she said the last bit with complete sarcasm. Her wrinkled face s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g up tight, in what looked like a cross between a smirk and the effects of the Spanish Inquisition.
"Moses of course didn't see anything strange about a talking piece of shrubbery. He even went and had a conversation with it. He talked with Moses for a while, telling him His plans, and what part Moses was to play in them.
"But Moses wanted no part in it, saying people wouldn't believe him, call him mad. Also commenting about his trouble talking to people. Of course Moses didn't want to go back; he was a criminal a killer after all. And he wasn't completely stupid. Up until then he had been living a carefree life. Had a wife, a child. He would rather stay hidden, than go upsetting pharaoh a G.o.d among men.
"G.o.d persisted, and gave him two signs with which to convince the Hebrews that he was being sent by their G.o.d. First he could put his hand inside the folds of his tunic and remove it covered in leprosy. Second he could toss his staff to the ground and it would become a serpent. Old trick.
"Of course the magical practicing priests of Pharaoh's nation were following my teachings, not that they realized it of course. With my power they could replicate powerful spells.
"Moses gave in; he went before Merneptah the Pharaoh, the thirteenth son of Ramesses the II, demanding his people be set free. Of course Pharaoh was the most powerful man on earth at the time and wasn't about to do what some run away adopted prince, turned killer, then cattle herder was demanding.
"Moses tossed down his staff, turning it into a large snake. Two of Pharaoh's magic practicing priest tossed down their staffs also. Of course Moses' snake swallowed theirs up; He never likes to be outdone." Another cigarette appeared between the mummified fingers, not coming from a packet but seemingly out of thin air.
"Pharaoh, stubborn and ungiving refused to allow the Hebrew nation his slaves to wander free. What would the nations around about think if Egypt couldn't even keep a handful of slaves in order? They would be at his throat like a pack of wild hyenas. In the movies about the event Merneptah is depicted as a strapping young G.o.dlike muscular figure. For example, when Yul Brynner portrayed pharaoh in the 1956 film The Ten Commandments? But in reality he was an unhealthy, potbellied sixty-three year old when he took the throne.
"So Moses returned to Pharaoh's presences the next morning, when Pharaoh was about to go down to the Nile and worship the river G.o.ddess Anuket.
"Moses humiliated the powers of the Nile G.o.ddess by turning the waters of the Nile to blood. Of course it goes without saying the G.o.ddess was something I had made up. If there is only one G.o.d, stands to reason there would be only one true religion.
"There are thousands of different religions on the face of the planet today, and only one true religion, worshipping in the proper manner. All the others are of my making, trying to draw as many people away from Him as I can. As I've already stated.
"One of the best tricks I ever played was convincing mankind I don't really exist. Most think the evil is inside them. Not an ent.i.ty but an emotion or intent. If that were true, how could I as it say's in Job chapter one and verse six enter in before Him. There's no evil inside G.o.d. So it's obvious I'm a real ent.i.ty, a fallen angel.
He returned to the point about misleading mankind through false religion.
"A person cuts down a tree. With one half they cut it up and make their home from it, or use some to cook their food. With the other half they carve it into an image of a G.o.d, bow down and worship before it. Wood can't see, can't hear. What's the difference between the part they cook their food with and the part they make into a holy image? Nothing I tell you." That terrible smile.
"Psalms one hundred and thirteen, chapter five and six states: A mouth they have but cannot speak. Eyes they have but cannot see. Ears they have but cannot hear.
"All the roads lead to Him they say. Load of s.h.i.t I tell you. Only one true G.o.d, one true religion."
I wanted to ask what the true religion was but didn't want to risk interrupting her.
"As I've already said, in the Book in Deuteronomy it states never to repeat the same prayer over and over, don't recite remembered words. Some religions parrot the same words over and over, many times a day, their whole lives.
"In the book of Exodus chapter twenty and verses four and five it states: Don't carve for yourself any graven images. Don't kneel down before them. As well as Muslims that I've already mentioned some churches you walk into are so jammed with icons and huge wooden images it's hard to even see the walls.
"For instance, the cross, do you know it existed thousands of years before Jesus even came down to the earth? I created it in Caldea, used by their G.o.d Tammuz, being in the shape of the Tau, the first initial of the name. And Bel, another Caldea G.o.d who was represented by a cross. Also from the Greek G.o.d Bacchus. A Norse G.o.d Odin. All symbolized by a cruciform devise.
"Crux Ansata was carried in the hands of the Egyptian priests and kings. A symbol of their authority as the priest of the Sun G.o.d and was called, the Sign of Life.
"Even more disturbing is the Phallus, the cross symbol that represents the p.e.n.i.s, that at one point in Israel's blacken past they drew all over the inner walls of their sacred temple.
"All these images are identical to the image His son is portrayed on when mankind killed him. An image that was around eons before His son even came to earth. One of my creations.
"If you really want to know he died on a stake, a simple limb of a tree. Why go through the trouble of hammering another piece of wood to make a cross beam, when you can simply nail their hands above their head?
"You got to remember, the Romans were killing thousands at the same time, all in the same manner. Do you think they would waste the wood, make one execution stake when they could make two from the same material? Romans weren't the only ones, Seleucids and Carthaginians were also dealing out death in the same manner, and hundreds of years before Jesus even came to earth, from as early as the sixth century BC.
"The word Crux comes from the cla.s.sical Greek word Stauros, which means upright stake or pale. The word most forms of His Book use is from the word Xylon, which means wood cut ready to use.
"I simply made such a mundane item into one of the most worshipped images known to mankind. And think about it, you all worship the very item His son died on. That's kind of morbid, don't you think?" She giggled to herself.
"The trinity was an Egyptian concept as well; their three G.o.ds were all joined at the hips and shoulders. Funny that the Trinitarian dogma is one of the central doctrines of Christendom, when neither the word trinity nor the explicit doctrine appears anywhere in the bible. Actually it wasn't put into practice until the fourth century anno domini, or AD to you. Four hundred years after the Pharisees had His son killed. It was the First Council of Nicaea in 325 AD which established the doctrine of the Trinity as orthodoxy and adopted the Nicene Creed, as it was called. If it were as important as the churches make out, wouldn't the first apostles have mentioned it? Wouldn't the world trinity appear in the bible itself?
"In fact, a Latin theologian named Tertullian was the first person credited with using the word trinity and that was almost three hundred years after Jesus died.
"As I said, I don't deny things or wish to change them, it's so much easier just adding to them." The old woman's decayed body shook with laughter. It rained dust and dried skin.
"So many things people worship, profess to be doing, when it's all clearly wrote down in His Book, and they continually refuse to take notice of it. Even devoting their lives to it, when they are doing it all wrong." Her laugh filled the room and echoed off the enclosed walls.
"Keep appearing as an angel of light, the Book says. Right in His Book it says I will try and confuse them, and they don't listen. Its made my job a lot easier." More laughter and snapping of dried skin and sinew.
"His Book is right there in front of them, accessible to all, word for word, how He had it written down eons ago, over a period of sixteen hundred years, by over forty different people from all walks of life, from fishermen, tentmakers, doctors, kings, shepherd's, tax collectors and prophets, just to name a few. The word bible, or biblica, means small library, because it's made up of sixty-six books. But people ignore His words. Ignore what the Books say and simply follow any person who has an opinion, or a loud boring gospel cable show.
"Millions died trying to get the Book translated into the common tongue, from its Latin and Greek works, so the different churches couldn't say whatever they wanted, controlling the ma.s.ses. Millions died painfully throughout the Spanish Inquisitions and crusades. And now you can buy it in over a thousand languages. Numerous versions, old and new tongues. And unbelievably it's there to be picked up by their own hands and see what it says about everything. But people misinterpret its meaning and completely ignore certain parts all together, calling some parts stories, adding extra books or paragraphs, and as I've already said, taking whole sections out.
"Truly it makes my job of confusing mankind and taking most with me when I'm eventually destroyed a h.e.l.l of a lot easier." Her face became dark, she just reminded herself about something she keeps trying to forget.
Her face became relaxed again. "Everything in its place." She carried on where she had left off, before going into her strange rambling.
"No water in Egypt went unaffected. Driven by thirst many drank from the red waters. Funny, but those who drunk from the Nile lost their bellyb.u.t.ton. Don't ask me why, it just happened." She started laughing as if that thought was in someway funny.
"It reminded me of Adam an Eve. They had no bellyb.u.t.ton either. Think about it, they were created from the earth, not born. No umbilical cord joined them to a human mother."
I was still listening, but I was also pondering on the words she had just spoken. I felt confused, if indeed he was right and he had been misleading mankind for as long as man had been walking on the earth, then why would he explain this to me, to be written down in my book, for all to read?
"Pharaoh still went on being unresponsive. Until Moses brought about the rest of the ten plagues. I went on helping Pharaoh's magicians, copying the first three, to show them they were just cheap parlor tricks. Until He brought about he next seven. Of course I could have copied them, but didn't see why I needed to." Her face was plain showing no expression, trying to convince herself that the words were true, as much as trying to convince me. But I knew he was lying, if he could have copied them he would have. But I said nothing, not wanting to anger him again.
The weird looking face continued. "Each plague was brought forth to shame and prove that Egypt's main G.o.ds were false. Each plague targeting an individual G.o.d who should have had the power to stop that particular infestation.
"For instance, the first plague that turned the Nile into blood shamed Hapi and Anuket the Nile G.o.d and G.o.ddess. The second plague was of frogs, putting, Heqt the G.o.d of frogs to shame. The third was lice, proving that, Kheper; the G.o.d of beetles and flies was a fake. He was also humiliated in the fourth plague, which were flies. The fifth killed the cattle shaming, Apis who was the Sacred Bull. The sixth was boils making, Imhotep, the physician G.o.d, and Thor the magic and healing G.o.d, look like t.w.a.ts. The seventh was hail proving, Nut the sky G.o.ddess to also be a crock of s.h.i.t. Eight was locusts that, Seth the G.o.d of crops couldn't stop. The ninth was darkness that even, Ra the sun G.o.d couldn't defeat. The tenth was the death of the firstborn. Even Pharaoh's son died.
"But obviously, if I had created the G.o.ds, then they were false. The ten plagues proved that fact.
"Pharaoh couldn't prevent the death of his first born. You have to remember that his people viewed him as a G.o.d; a G.o.d reincarnate, the earthly manifestation of Ra the Sun G.o.d, and they believed he should have been able to prevent the death of his own son. Strangely, Ra doesn't mean sun; it means creative power and creator.
"Racked with guilt and pain and angered by Moses' G.o.d, Pharaoh sent the Hebrews away. So ashamed that he done this, no mention of the exodus was ever registered in Egyptian hieroglyphs. They only ever mentioned their conquests, not failures.