Eve: A Novel
3.5/5
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About this ebook
Eve is a bold, unprecedented exploration of the Creation narrative, true to the original texts and centuries of scholarship—yet with breathtaking discoveries that challenge traditional beliefs about who we are and how we’re made. Eve opens a refreshing conversation about the equality of men and women within the context of our beginnings, helping us see each other as our Creator does—complete, unique, and not constrained by cultural rules or limitations.
When a shipping container washes ashore on an island between our world and the next, John the Collector finds a young woman inside—broken, frozen, and barely alive. With the aid of Healers and Scholars, John oversees her recovery and soon discovers that her genetic code connects her to every known race. No one would guess what her survival will mean…
No one but Eve, Mother of the Living, who calls her “daughter” and invites her to witness the truth about her own story—indeed, the truth about us all.
As The Shack awakened readers to a personal, non-religious understanding of God, Eve will free us from faulty interpretations that have corrupted human relationships since the Garden of Eden.
Thoroughly researched and exquisitely written, Eve is a masterpiece that will inspire readers for generations to come.
Wm. Paul Young
William Paul Young was born in Canada and raised among a Stone Age tribe by his missionary parents in the highlands of former New Guinea. He suffered great loss as a child and young adult and now enjoys the “wastefulness of grace” with his family in the Pacific Northwest. He is the author of Lies We Believe About God and the New York Times bestsellers The Shack, Cross Roads, and Eve.
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Reviews for Eve
49 ratings10 reviews
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Eve is a garbled mess. Young takes elements of sci-fi mixed with an acutely bizarre reimagining of the creation story of Genesis. I will concede that there is a substantial point in the book: an individual has value and there is an intense level of harm in the patriarchal systems of violence in society and the lies an individual tells themselves; but, when you wrap up a good message with cliche and trite prose, rudimentary world-building, and unrealistic dialogue this book's OVERT thesis is an offensive and facile engagement with a sacred story in the Christian tradition.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Thank you to goodreads and the publisher for a free copy of Eve.
I feel like I should preface this review by saying that I've never read The Shack, nor am I a Christian. So, I'm probably not the typical audience for this book. But hey, a retelling of the Garden of Eden? It sounded intriguing.
It was intriguing, I'll give it that. It definitely says something if you can take something as well-known as Adam and Eve, use it as the basis for a story, and still keep the plot interesting enough and leave the readers guessing and where it's going next.
And the world it was set in was interesting (if confusing). The juxtaposition of things like Healers and Menders with refrigeration units and neurotoxins was unexpected. If Young had fleshed out this world a little more, it could have been an intriguing setting for a dystopian or maybe urban fantasy novel.
But this isn't a dystopian or urban fantasy novel. It's firmly Christian fiction, and heavy-handed Christian fiction, at that. The characters don't have much depth, and they often feel more like concepts than anything else. The dialogue fell flat (and don't even get me started on the mocking use of "like" which, while taking up less than a page, is one of my pet peeves. If you're going to write a book about redemption and healing for a young girl, then... maybe don't mock how we speak?).
And... I hesitate to say this, because there are unfortunately people out there who have a similar backstory to Lilly. But that whole thing just seemed gratuitous and like it came out of nowhere. It felt like it was there for shock value or to prove a point. And I wish it had been handled better/differently.
The concept and the potential for the setting are why I'm giving this two stars. Everything else just put me off. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Possible spoilers to follow. Young is an engaging writer and this is his fictional attempt to cast the blame of the Fall onto Adam and spare Eve from guilt in the fruit incident. In so going he subordinates Eve to Adam even before the Fall although I don't think he realises what he's doing. Adam and Eve are together humanity but Young portrays Adam as the one who turned and Eve as an innocent victim who later turns from God and chooses to leave the garden. In empowering Eve in this story he actually dis-empowers women. The problem with this kind of fiction is that some, including Young I suppose, will believe that the theology behind it is true. A lot of reading into Genesis is required for this story and I think Young ventures where angels would fear to tread.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Sole survivor Lilly Fields, barely alive in a shipping container, washes ashore on a mysterious island and is found by John the Collector. Overseeing her recovery, John soon discovers she is a girl of prophecy, although no one knows what her survival will mean.Eve, Mother of the Living, invites her to learn the truth; thus, Lilly witnesses the Creation, meets Adam and Eve, and witnesses the temptations by the Serpent.In a sweeping retelling of the Creation story, William Paul Young offers readers a stunning, emotional look at Creation and, while the account is based on scripture, the fictionalized story offers readers much food for thought regarding love, choices, acceptance, and trust. Highly recommended.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is yet another beautifully crafted story by Wm. Paul Young, bestselling author of "The Shack". Young provides a fresh retelling of the story of Creation through the eyes and senses of a very much broken teenage soul who has been given the role of "Witness". As any teenager would, our protagonist, Lilly, grapples with understanding self-worth, love, darkness and the possibility of having a personal relationship with God, let alone with others around her. We see Creation's story unfold through Lilly's dreams (or was she truly transported back in time to the "Beginnings" and actually observing the cataclysmic origin of earth and our species?) Through Lilly's experience we are led to understand how God sees us...yet still loves us even when we ourselves cannot. This is a thoughtful, albeit fictional, retelling of Creation's story by a most gifted author. Well done!I am grateful to Goodreads First Reads, author Wm Paul Young and Simon and Howard Books for having provided a free copy of his book. Their generosity did not, however, influence this review - the words of which are mine alone.Synopsis (from book's back cover):From the author of the 25-million copy bestseller The Shack comes a captivating new novel destined to be one of the most important and talked-about books of the decade.When a shipping container washes ashore on an island between our world and the next, John the Collector finds a young woman inside--broken, frozen, and barely alive. With the aid of Healers and Scholars, John oversees her recovery and soon discovers her genetic code connects her to every known human race. She is a girl of prophecy and no one can guess what her survival will mean...No one but Eve, Mother of the Living, who calls her daughter and invites her to witness the truth about her story--indeed, the truth about us all.Eve is a bold, unprecedented exploration of the Creation narrative, true to the original texts and centuries of scholarship, yet with breathtaking discoveries that challenge traditional misconceptions about who we are and how we're made. As The Shack awakened readers to a personal, non-religious understanding of God, Eve will free us from faulty interpretations that have corrupted human relationships since the Garden of Eden.Eve opens a refreshing conversation about the equality of men and women within the context of our beginnings, helping us see each other as our Creator does--complete, unique, and not constrained to cultural rules or limitations.Thoroughly researched and exquisitely written, Eve is a masterpiece that will inspire readers for generations to come.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5"Eve" is the third book I have read by Wm. Paul Young. He has an intriguing way of looking at people's relationships with God and how faith and belief fit into the picture. The first book of Young's I read was "The Shack" and the second was "Crossroads." I was pulled into Young's narrative in the "Shack" from the first page and wanted to read more. "Crossroads" did not captivate me as it was very dark in many places. I was not certain I wanted to read anything more by Young. Then I picked up "Eve" in my train station's bookstore. Once again, from the first page I was captivated - wondering what twists and turns would present themselves. I was not disappointed. I rejoiced with the characters and how they related to each other. I sorrowed with the characters and at the end of novel, I was uplifted in my own spirit. This book is a "must read" in this reviewer's opinion. I am anxious to read another of his books.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I was given a digital copy of Eve by Wm. Paul Young by the publisher, Simon & Schuster, via NetGalley in exchange for my honest review. Thank you.I was confused for much of the first half of this novel. I stuck with it and things definitely got better as the book progressed.For me, this book reads almost like a fantasy since it's another idea on the Earth's beginning and the creation of Adam and Eve as opposed to the Biblical teachings. God is referred to by many reverent names that I had not heard before and it took me until the middle of the book to sort them out. I had trouble with God being portrayed as just another loving human being.The protagonist, Lilly, appealed to me so I kept routing for her. There are some other interesting characters and they were developed enough to keep me wanting to continue reading.I do not highly recommend this book; however, others might get more out of it than I did.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5I was loaned this book by a friend who thought I would enjoy it. Unfortunately, I simply could not. It was quite difficult to follow at times, and went against my beliefs as a Christian and what the Scripture teaches us.Eve is about a young girl named Lilly, who is found nearly dead in a shipping container along a beach, filled with the bodies of dead young girls. We're never given a complete explanation of what happened to her, you simply assume by the hints presented that she was used in a prostitution ring.Kept in a suspended state while healing, Lilly dreams and sees visions. One is of Eve. Yes, that Eve. Only she wasn't really seeing visions, but mentally transported. Lilly becomes a "Watcher", an observer. She observes the moment of creation. Of the earth. Of Adam. And eventually of Eve.Somehow she is sent back and forth through the NOW to the THEN. Eventually she finds out the Creator calls her Lillith. Yeah, you get it. THAT Lillith.There are spins on the variation of the story that make absolutely no sense. I was bored to tears. Literally.I won't give away any more of the plot. YOU might actually enjoy it. Just know it's not the traditional Adam/Eve/Lillith story we've all heard before. This has twists and turns, mountains and caverns that can get you lost if you don't pay attention.I read the whole book, as an obligation to a friend who really enjoyed it, and thought I would as well. But unless you're into alternate creationism stories, I don't recommend it.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Title: EveAuthor: William Paul YoungPages: 320Year: 2015Publisher: Howard BooksMy rating is 5+ stars.When I started the novel, I wasn’t sure what the purpose of the novel was nor what direction the author would lead readers. The novel to me is reminiscent of C. S. Lewis’ work Chronicles of Narnia with a touch of mystery, biblical people and ending with a finish that just steals the heart of the reader!I don’t know about other people, but I read a lot of books in a year. Most of them are enjoyable to read and then I share them with a girlfriend. Eve is like a cinematic movie that calls to reader’s heart and imagination that defies description. There is a touch of science fiction along with such creativity when describing scenes or the numerous characters. I couldn’t put the novel down for long because I wanted to not just read the whole novel, but also experience the spiritual side that is a huge part of the work.Not many authors can engage the reader from page one until the end, but God certainly gifted this author to share an amazingly well-crafted novel. If you know people who don’t want to read the Bible or aren’t open to spiritual discussions, this is a novel they just might find themselves enjoying. Some of the characters in the story aren’t real, but no less captivating. I thought I even knew who the evil character was in the book, but I didn’t and towards the end of the book it became apparent there was more depth to the story than I thought.Eve brings to the forefront the undying love of God for people, all people. There is also the telling of the many choices we must make throughout our lives to draw near to God or walk away. Yet God never has ceased to call to us, woo us or open His heart to us. All we do is choose Him above all the other things we think will satisfy, but don’t even come close. At the end of our lives, we will simply leave behind a broken world and empty shell to enter into the very Presence that we’ll never want to leave, ever!Read Eve and share it with those to whom God leads you. You will probably be surprised by the reactions of anyone with whom you share the novel. Have a ball reading and entering a tale that will engage every part of your being. You won’t soon forget this book!Disclosure of Material Connection: I received one or more of the products or services mentioned above for free in the hope that I would mention it on my blog. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will be good for my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255. “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Title: EveAuthor: William Paul YoungPages: 320Year: 2015Publisher: Howard BooksMy rating is 5+ stars.When I started the novel, I wasn’t sure what the purpose of the novel was nor what direction the author would lead readers. The novel to me is reminiscent of C. S. Lewis’ work Chronicles of Narnia with a touch of mystery, biblical people and ending with a finish that just steals the heart of the reader!I don’t know about other people, but I read a lot of books in a year. Most of them are enjoyable to read and then I share them with a girlfriend. Eve is like a cinematic movie that calls to reader’s heart and imagination that defies description. There is a touch of science fiction along with such creativity when describing scenes or the numerous characters. I couldn’t put the novel down for long because I wanted to not just read the whole novel, but also experience the spiritual side that is a huge part of the work.Not many authors can engage the reader from page one until the end, but God certainly gifted this author to share an amazingly well-crafted novel. If you know people who don’t want to read the Bible or aren’t open to spiritual discussions, this is a novel they just might find themselves enjoying. Some of the characters in the story aren’t real, but no less captivating. I thought I even knew who the evil character was in the book, but I didn’t and towards the end of the book it became apparent there was more depth to the story than I thought.Eve brings to the forefront the undying love of God for people, all people. There is also the telling of the many choices we must make throughout our lives to draw near to God or walk away. Yet God never has ceased to call to us, woo us or open His heart to us. All we do is choose Him above all the other things we think will satisfy, but don’t even come close. At the end of our lives, we will simply leave behind a broken world and empty shell to enter into the very Presence that we’ll never want to leave, ever!Read Eve and share it with those to whom God leads you. You will probably be surprised by the reactions of anyone with whom you share the novel. Have a ball reading and entering a tale that will engage every part of your being. You won’t soon forget this book!Disclosure of Material Connection: I received one or more of the products or services mentioned above for free in the hope that I would mention it on my blog. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will be good for my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255. “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”
Book preview
Eve - Wm. Paul Young
One
FOUND
Caught in the tidal flows of unspoken morning prayers and simple wonder, John the Collector rested against a tree with his toes burrowed and curled into the coolness beneath the warming sand. Before him, a rippling ocean stretched out until it disappeared, merging into the clear cobalt sky.
The salty fragrance of the sea was overtaken by scents of eucalyptus, myrrh, and hagenia flowers. John smiled. These were always her first embrace! Resisting the urge to jump to his feet, he instead shifted to make room, lowered his head, and took a deep breath. It had been a while.
The tall, fine-boned, ebony-black woman accepted his silent invitation and settled next to him, her hand tousling the gray-black hair at the back of his neck with the tenderness of a mother toward her child. The playful touch sent a prickling peace through his shoulders and down his back, lifting the burden he unconsciously carried.
He could have stayed like this for some time, but there was always purpose to her visits. Even so, he held off his own rising curiosity, preferring the gentle contentment of her company.
Reluctantly, he spoke. Mother Eve?
John?
Without looking, he knew she was grinning. Ancient and powerful, this woman radiated the contagious joy of a child. With one arm she pulled him to her, kissing the top of his head.
You have been in this place . . . ,
she began.
A hundred years today,
he finished. If that is the reason for your visit, I am grateful.
It is in part,
Eve said. One hundred years anywhere is cause for celebration.
Pulling himself up, he brushed off the sand before helping Eve to her feet. She gracefully accepted his hand, though it wasn’t needed. Coarse white hair formed a woven crown around her face, lined and creased by countless years, a masterpiece of sculpted joy and sorrow. She glowed more like a child than a matriarch, her mahogany eyes lit by expectancy.
His questions threatened to tumble out in all directions, but she stopped them with a raised hand.
John, one good question is worth a thousand answers,
she teased. Choose it carefully.
It only took a moment to form. How long?
he asked somberly. How long must we wait before the end, when our healing will finally be complete?
Reaching out, he took her hand and placed it on his heart.
Much sooner, John, than when I first asked that same question.
He took in a deep breath and nodded, looking into the amber light that flecked her eyes.
But I am here about today, John. Today, my child will be born into your world.
John frowned. Your child? But Mother Eve, are we not each your daughter or your son?
Yes, you are,
she declared. But we have long known there would be three in particular who would stand and represent us all. The one to whom was given the promise of the seed, the one whose seed would crush the serpent’s head, and the one to whom the seed would be forever united. The Mother, the Daughter, the Bride. The arrival of this girl marks the beginning of the end.
So stunned, he hardly noticed Eve pick up a stone and walk toward the water’s edge. John followed, disoriented and overwhelmed. She launched the stone high into the air, and they both watched it zip down into the glassy sea with hardly a splash.
John,
Eve said, in the ocean of the universe, a single stone and ripple changes it forever.
John let the small incoming waves tickle his feet and tug at the sand beneath them. To be near Eve was always healing and always disconcerting.
A shrill voice sliced the air. You’re dawdling, John.
He turned. A breeze off the water lifted the hair at the back of his head, even as Eve’s perfumes caressed his face.
Letty had arrived, and Eve was gone. John sighed.
The Scavengers have been calling for you for longer than an hour, and since you are the only Collector within a hundred miles . . .
Turning back to the water, John selected another smooth stone and threw it high into the air so it would drift on its edge and slice into the water’s surface with a satisfying sound. Why such a tiny success always pleased him was a mystery.
What’s their hurry?
he muttered, as Letty arrived at his side. He picked up another stone.
She was a bundle of a little old woman, barely three feet tall, with a cane and shawl and mismatched socks folded over mismatched shoes. She looked like an apple that had been left in the hot sun for too long, still round but shriveled up, with piercing black eyes, a crooked nose, and an almost toothless scowl. Her walking stick could have easily passed for a wand of sorts, and it was pointing right at him.
When he saw the intensity on her face, he let the rock fall to the sand.
Letty?
Her words were measured. A large metal container was spotted floating early this morning, hauled ashore, and opened. The Scholars have already ascertained that it drifted here from Earth in real time.
That’s happened before,
suggested John.
We opened it up and found the remains of twelve human beings, all young females except one.
Jesus,
he mumbled, as much a prayer as an exclamation.
The container seems to have been used to transport people great distances, probably on a large vessel or ship. Since no flotsam drifted with it, we surmise it was purposefully jettisoned, but not before the girls inside were executed. If there is any mercy in such a tragedy . . .
Her voice hesitated as emotion found its way.
John turned and slumped onto the sand, drawing his knees up to his chin. The warmth of the day and gentle breeze now seemed a mockery. Eve’s joy had left with her.
He felt Letty’s tiny hand rest on his shoulder as he fought his rising rage and grief.
John, we cannot allow the shadow-sickness to find a place inside our hearts. In this broken cosmos we grieve. We rightly feel fury, but we must not let go of joy’s embrace, which is beyond our understanding. To feel all of this means that we are alive.
He nodded. You said the humans were female, except one?
Yes, there was also a middle-aged man. The shared initial view is that he may have been trying to protect the girls. There is a story, I’m sure, but we might have to wait a long time to hear it fully.
I don’t want to see—
Don’t worry. The bodies have been transported to the Sanctuary of Sorrows and are being prepared for tomorrow’s celebration of fire. Right now, you must do what only you can do . . . so the Scavengers can dismantle and the Artists can find ways to memorialize these precious children.
John closed his eyes and turned his face to the sky, wishing his conversation with Eve had not been so unbearably interrupted.
Go on,
Letty encouraged. The others are waiting.
• • •
THE SIZE OF THE container surprised John. At least thirty feet in length, its sheer weight had required a dozen of the Haulers’ beasts to drag it out of the water over rolling logs. Deep ruts were clearly visible behind the box on the cove’s sandy shore. Tents held tables piled high with its contents: clothing, blankets, and a few stuffed toys. It was colder here, as if the sun itself had turned its warming face away.
From a pocket he took out a small case, opened it, and slipped a ring on his finger. He then turned the edge so that the impress changed. Anything he touched with this ring would bear a date mark and later be taken to his home, the Refuge, where it would be stored for analysis and reference. From his other pocket he took a pair of thin gloves and pulled them on.
The first item that drew his attention was a three-drawer, black, locked file cabinet, which he marked. It was cold to the touch. He waved over a Crafter, a woman with skills for locks and keys, and it took her only a few seconds to open it, leaving John to the contents. It was what he had expected: files of records and information, shipments, and bills of lading, accounting, and various other reports.
The bottom drawer held folders documenting the girls’ scant personal information, including a facial photograph of each. Height, weight, age, health. The names were obviously aliases, each an earthly country beginning with sequential letters of the alphabet: Algeria, Bolivia, Canada, and down to Lebanon. He paused for a moment to stare at the images. The faces and eyes in the photos were windows into twelve stories that deserved a proper grieving.
John was about to shut the drawer and move on when a thought crossed his mind. He counted the folders. Twelve, just as Letty had said. But that was wrong. Her number had included the man. He counted again. Twelve photos, all girls, all young. It meant a girl was missing. Perhaps she had escaped or the records were inaccurate, but the discrepancy nagged at the edges of his thinking and wouldn’t let him go.
Had Eve been referring to one of these?
On a hunch he walked a few feet over to the container itself. A row of boots for the workers was lined up near the doors, protective footwear that would later be thoroughly cleaned and decontaminated. He picked a pair his size.
An Engineer greeted him, Hey, John. Terrible tragedy, all this.
He nodded as he laced up his boots. I want to go inside for just a moment and check something against these records. Anything I should know?
No, there are still odds and ends to go through, but we’ve already removed what’s most important.
John nodded sadly, acknowledging the man’s kindness.
Also, we just turned off the refrigeration unit. It’s still freezing in there. Probably got damaged and stuck in the cold cycle, which was a blessing I suppose. The bodies were almost frozen. Be careful, it’s pretty slick.
The doors opened easily, groaning on their hinges, letting the sunlight spill inward. Internal lighting flickered on, indicating some sort of closed battery system separate from the refrigeration. He realized as he stepped in that he had been holding his breath. When he let it go through gritted teeth, his exhaling vapor drifted up and around him.
The hold was about a third full of larger items—boxes, mats, plastic containers—along with litter and bits and pieces of trash, a hodgepodge he would have to go through at some point. Frozen bloodstains were scattered around the metallic tomb, the walls, the floor. Carefully, he stepped around these, every sound he made reverberating in the stillness.
At the far end he could see the refrigeration fan now silent and unmoving, a thin layer of ice already forming on the blades. A quick survey almost satisfied him that there was no place left that could hide a missing girl.
But an anomaly caught his eye. At the end of the wall near the cooling unit was a welded metallic frame jutting out about a foot and a half. He cautiously made his way back and examined it closely. Under the bottom were hinges, and when he ran his fingers along the top, he found two large clamps. John knew that if he undid them, the entire thing would open down and out. A sleeping area, like a bunk or tabletop perhaps? Maybe for a guard?
He hesitated. Then he blew on his hands and unsnapped the clasps, which released with a hollow clack. As he lowered the metal wall, the frosted steel bit into his palms and fingers through the thin gloves. It was heavy and he had to use a shoulder to let it down until chains at either end unraveled their lengths. It stopped a couple feet from the floor, level and sturdy. That is where he found her.
The teenaged girl was broken inside this space. Someone had forced it shut and she had not fit. She could have been peacefully asleep, her limbs at odd angles, her head folded down on her chest, were it not for the cuts and gashes that began to ooze with the release of pressure. One foot was almost severed. As she lay there frozen, he stood staring, stuck in time.
John turned and walked out, too sickened to avoid the blood this time. He needed to fetch those trained to deal with such things.
I found another girl!
he yelled, setting off a flurry of activity that rushed past him and into the container. Outside, he unlaced the boots and took them off, walked back to the tent where he had marked the cabinet, sat down, and leaned against it.
God, how is it that You still love us?
he whispered. He paused and glanced in the direction of the container. Please, grant to her Your peace,
he prayed.
Another explosion of activity and shouting brought him to his feet. A Hauler friend burst into the tent and hugged him.
John! That girl you found! She is still alive! Barely, but alive!
The man beamed and hugged him a second time. You’re a Finder now, John!
the Hauler yelled as he left. Who would have imagined?
John dropped his head into his hands, feeling numb. If this was Eve’s child, it was a sorrowful and wrenching birth, in blood and water. What good could come of such evil?
Two
BEGINNINGS
Everything exploded inside her. Everything hurt!
Why? Memory failed her.
Images jumbled and tumbled. Flashes of light pierced, penetrated. Harsh sounds—discordant, brash, horrifying!—stirred her panic. Her breathing came quick and loud, roaring in her ears.
Another flash burst into agonizing light, blurred movement, music . . . strings? Black woman morphing into brown-skinned man into red bow tie. Disconnected nonsense. She had to wake up. Tried. Couldn’t.
Her head howled like a hurricane at sea . . . sneaker waves drove her down, held her under. A gasp . . . a rush of water . . . she couldn’t breathe . . .
When darkness closed in, she welcomed it like a friend.
She woke to another face leaning over hers. A blurry image. A voice? Where was she? Who was she? Her eyes clamped down but couldn’t block the images. Her lungs ached. The air was heavy. Liquid. This time the shadows had an edge. They moved inward, swallowing her like a black sack. A shrinking glimmer of white light faded to a dot, then disappeared.
She screamed. What is happening to me? No sound came.
Memories or dreams or hallucinations, mixed and mumbling, twisted themselves into carnival-house terrors behind her eyes. She shrank back, tried to hide, to disappear. But where could she go? Her shouts morphed into sobs.
On her forehead—a warm cloth. A comfort. And a pungent scent she couldn’t place. It reached inside, spreading down her throat, into her belly, her limbs, her extremities. Relief was irresistible. Sounds were muffled. Stillness settled.
She slept again.
• • •
WHEN NEXT SHE WOKE it was to a conversation in the hazy hush of night.
John.
The female voice was sharp and high-pitched. This young woman is an anomaly. The Healers are trying to deduce her origins, but her genetic code is giving them fits. None of us has ever seen anything like it! It’s preposterous!
A man responded, his voice calm and kind. It seems that God’s playground is the impossible and preposterous.
The girl ordered her eyelids to open. They refused. A weight held them down, exhausting her. Why can’t I move?
They’ll need additional time to unravel this mystery,
the woman said.
It seems we’ll have plenty of time. Her recovery will not be swift.
John sighed. "I understand little, Letty, but one thing I know: this girl has become my anomaly."
Letty laughed. Listen to you, all protective and tenderhearted.
She made another effort. Wake up! Wake up! Pain claimed the space around her. Her body seemed to tilt. She tensed against the sensation of falling.
Sometimes I surprise myself.
John chuckled. Why me, do you think? Why has Eve invited my participation?
Perhaps because you were a Witness?
And what has that got to do with this girl?
The woman Letty replied by humming a happy melody. The feeling of imbalance abruptly stopped. Her body seemed to right itself. The voices faded out. She floated in a pool of peace.
Daughter. A new voice reached her ears from a distance. Daughter.
The fragrance of spice and flowers filled the air. A featherlight touch brushed the back of her hand. Warm. Soft. Stabilizing.
My child.
What child? This time when the girl willed her eyes to open, they did.
A black-skinned woman stood next to her bed. She was young and old, regal and common, tender and strong. Leaning down, she gently kissed the girl’s forehead and smiled.
The girl summoned a whisper. Who are you? It seemed that only hushed sounds were appropriate, but then she wondered, had she only thought her question?
I am your mother. You are the witness. Come and see! the lady whispered without moving her lips. The woman’s long fingers closed around her wrists and lifted her as if she weighed nothing and was not restrained.
My mother? The word mother stirred bitter emotions. Confusion set in. She didn’t want to go anywhere.
Come, my daughter. Come witness the Creation—the perfection that will heal your broken body and shattered soul!
The girl tugged against the gentle grip, tried to pry away the fingers, but they would not yield. A kiss of air against her cheeks gave her the sensation of shooting upward—and she was now clinging to that hand. The sight of what lay below stole away her breath: the body she had just vacated. Her wrecked, mangled, bandaged body. It was restrained beneath a mass of straps, tubes, and a network of wires, machinery purring in the shadows.
She froze, and for an instant all was still. She held her breath, feeling sick.
How many times can I die? she thought.
No—not death, the mother said. Life. Come watch. I promise, you won’t be disappointed.
And then the hand released her. Abandoned her.
She shut her eyes tight to lock out the rising panic. Instead of falling, she floated, weightless. A foreign warmth rushed over her, an oily thickness that simultaneously overwhelmed and embraced. But then it slipped into her mouth. The realization she was ingesting this slick sludge swept her to the brink of terror. Again, fluid filled her lungs as she gasped.
But when she didn’t suffocate, she relaxed by degrees.
Breathable liquid? Impossible! Insane!
Eyes wide open, seeing nothing, she allowed herself to drift. She resisted the urge to find an anchor, a mooring to time or place, a tether to memory. She almost felt free.
An underlying peace emerged, a sense that she would not be left alone. Someone knew she was here, if only the ebony-skinned woman who had said she was her mother. Come see, she had said. Watch. But this universe was void, vacant, and formless.
Now she resented the invitation. The bait and switch, the abandonment, was uncomfortably familiar.
She floated for perhaps a nanosecond, or maybe a million years. There was no way to perceive the difference. There was nothing to watch, nothing to see.
Then a detonation. Her whole body flinched. Her neck craned toward the burst of light. It was instant and continuous, overwhelming energy and information spreading outward, rushing toward her, overtaking. It was color. It was song. It was joy and fire, and blood and water. It was voice—singular and many, rising and thrusting, uniting with the void.
Chaos and matter collided, setting off sparks of playfulness and power, creating energy, space, and time. On the periphery, graceful spirit beings applauded the display, their elation bursting from their palms like dazzling water droplets, glimmering beads of perspiration, shimmering jewels. The effect was an overwhelming cacophony as harmony wrapped itself around a central melody.
She felt larger than a galaxy and smaller than a particle. All around her, joyous rapture tore the substance of things apart, then put it back together. A tidal surge of voices rose, engulfing her in an assembly of scents. Sweet incense became a ballad of yearning, a choreographed dance of being and belonging. Around and through it all rippled not One, not Two, but Three Voices—and yet only One. A magnificent laugh of raucous affection.
The Great Dance, a voice affirmed.
The mother’s? she wondered.
This is the grand Beginning.
The girl spun in the liquid, searching for the voice. Straining to find the woman, she hesitantly called, Mother?
• • •
AH, FINALLY AWAKE, I see, at least for longer than a few seconds. Welcome to the land of the living and the Refuge.
This voice was familiar. John’s, she supposed. It was firm and altogether ordinary, but compared to what she had just witnessed, this normal
was a little disappointing.
Great! she thought. I died again and this is hell and there is a man in it.
She tried to move her head toward him. She heard him yell, Don’t!
Too late. Intense pain gripped her neck like a vise. Fog started from the edges of her vision and congregated in the center until she gave in. The last thing she heard as darkening grays descended was that ordinary voice, now exasperated, saying, And there she goes again . . .
• • •
A BRUSH OF SOMETHING gentle swept across her face. A whisper.
What you saw was the crafting of creation’s womb. What you heard was the very first conception. Now we await the coming of the child.
In a twinkling her eyes reopened, and she saw the cosmos still unfolding, alive with joyful abandon, ceaseless commotion.
You mean . . . this is the beginning of the world?
The very first story. This voice was disembodied, around her and within