Graverobber: The Resurrectionists, #1
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About this ebook
He'd raised the dead, Lazarus-style.
Josiah Crews set aside his calling when his wife died. Consumed by grief, he buried his commitment to God and any thought of the lives he might save, determined to live a mundane existence. But when the death of a man in an alley brings the power of God onto the scene, a ripple of unusual events launches him back into service.
Veronica Murray moved to a tiny apartment in the city following a troubling divorce, but her teenage daughter's behavior combined with their low income has made her life unhappy and stressful. When her neighbor reprimands her daughter, following a particularly bad outing, a friendship forms.
Except nothing is what it seems, not why people are dying, nor his reaction to it. Nor how it affects their possible future.
Book 1 in The Resurrectionists series by author, SUZANNE D. WILLIAMS.
Note: This story has a cliffhanger.
Suzanne D. Williams
Best-selling author, Suzanne D. Williams, is a native Floridian, wife, mother, and photographer. She is the author of both nonfiction and fiction books. She writes a monthly column for Steves-Digicams.com on the subject of digital photography, as well as devotionals and instructional articles for various blogs. She also does graphic design for self-publishing authors. She is co-founder of THE EDGE. To learn more about what she’s doing and check out her extensive catalogue of stories, visit http://suzanne-williams-photography.blogspot.com/ or link with her on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/suzannedwilliamsauthor.
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Graverobber - Suzanne D. Williams
SUZANNE D. WILLIAMS
© 2019 GRAVEROBBER (The Resurrectionists) Book 1
by Suzanne D. Williams
www.feelgoodromance.com
www.suzannedwilliams.com
Books in this series:
Graverobber
Shadowland
Godpleaser
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without written permission from the publisher.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any similarity to actual people, organizations, and/or events is purely coincidental.
O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory? (1Co 15:55)
This book is dedicated to the band Petra and the album Not Of This World that inspired it.
CHAPTER 1
An average man with an average job signaled for a taxi, lost in the rush of office workers, scurrying home. The sun blinded him, peeking between high rises, then winked as if it had a secret to tell and vanished.
Forsyth,
he said to the driver, a faceless man with square shoulders, who nodded, unspeaking.
Six blocks might as well have been one hundred miles for the pace set by evening traffic, though, and soon, they’d slowed to no quicker than an inchworm. Tiredness and frustration expelled from his lips with a sigh, and he reached for the door handle.
You know what? I’ll walk. Here.
He tossed a five-spot at the driver. Keep the change,
he mumbled and struck out down the sidewalk, the soles of his loafers clicking on the littered concrete. Cigarette stumps, candy wrappers, even someone’s empty soda bottle whirled aside.
At the corner, he paused for the light to change then surged across the intersection stride-for-stride with a twenty-something, his head bobbing to a tune played on his phone. Back in his day, you needed strength to hear anything that wasn’t car horns and drivers cursing. He’d had a boombox, an enormous piece of electronics weighing some five pounds, and the hammer pants to go with them.
His toe caught on the curb, and he stumbled, catching his fall with a grasp of the light post. He halted to gather his breath, and in that second, the cab he’d abandoned overtook and passed him, a new passenger in the seat.
He muffled the curse he wanted to make, opting for a Praise the Lord
he didn’t feel, and returned to his pace, his weariness growing with every step. He halted again, two blocks later, his feet aching, his little toe especially. He could take the alley and get there quicker.
Years ago, again in that same youth, his mama had told him never to take shortcuts. Why did he think of that now? Because the alley was dark?
Shadows stretched oily fingers toward him, cast from flickering yellow lights on the backdoors of several late-night businesses. The scent of garbage and decay, of urine, stung his nostrils. A cat hissed in his path, and he jumped sideways, his heartbeat hammering, and almost fell again. This time, he righted himself on a dumpster’s rolled edge.
The lights that made this place lurid caught the leg of a man sprawled face-down on the pavement. A canvas shoe, stained at the toe, the hem of a pair of blue jeans, frayed and damp. He caught his breath. All sorts of homeless in the city, though he hadn’t known this to be the haunt of any. And didn’t recognize this man.
He prodded him. Hey, fella, you might want to get up from there.
The man didn’t move. He could be drunk.
He crept closer, bending over this time, to shake the man. The stiffness of his limbs vied with the warmth of his skin, and that light struck the man again, outlining a hole carved through an overlarge t-shirt.
Dead? His stomach clenched, and his legs begged him to run in a spurt of fear that wrapped claw-like around his throat. Yet he held fast, for a reason he didn’t know and, a moment later, rolled the man face up. The cross around the man’s neck glittered, the religious symbol about two inches in length. Pasted to ebony skin, spotted with blood sputtered from the man’s lips, the irony struck him.
Again, for a reason he didn’t know, he reached for it, curling his fingers around the shaft. Giving it a tug, he removed it easily and cupped it, warm, in his palm. Too warm. Opening his hand, he released it, and it fell in slow motion, landing center of the man’s abdomen. Glowing orange, it neither cooled nor singed anything, and he bent down again, this time with purpose.
Flattening his hand over top, he spoke the words risen forceful on his tongue. Get up,
he said. In the name of the One who died for you.
The color spread outward from the cross in a ripple that gave life to the dead man. His fingers moved, his hands, his feet, and an instant later, he sat up with a gasp. Grave robber,
he said, the whites of his eyes shining in the darkness.
The office worker stared at him. You know me?
he asked.
The black man’s eyes focused, life now coursing through him. He grasped the cross, clutching it to his chest. Though he were dead, yet shall he live,
he said.
The office worker shuffled in reverse. Not anymore.
Urgency took hold to escape this place, to deny the memories, and the miracle which had taken place. Again.
Veronica Murray passed through the living room, her gaze lighting briefly on the TV screen. She frowned and bent over the back of the couch, snatching the remote from her daughter’s loosened grasp. You don’t need to watch that,
she said, switching it off.
Aleesa pounced upwards, one hand swinging. Mom! They were about to ...
I don’t care what they were about to do. You won’t watch that. No zombies or undead or whatever you call them. Go do your homework.
Aleesa collapsed on the couch, her mouth in a pout. You are so out-of-date.
Veronica had no comeback for that, and no will to make one anyway. She set the TV remote out of her daughter’s reach and continued ahead. Homework,
she repeated, exiting the room.
Fourteen going on thirty, Aleesa had already experienced enough bad things without cramming her developing mind full of horror fantasies as well. She and Shane had tried their best to shield her from negativity during their divorce, but she knew some of it had leaked through. His job at the hospital hadn’t helped. As much as she admired his profession saving lives, at times, it became a parade of death stories, and often, she’d longed for some sort of good news to counteract it.
She released a breath and stepped into the master bedroom, if you could call an eleven-by-thirteen space a master. She and Shane had had an enormous suite with a closet as big as this bedroom, not to mention the footed tub and rain-shower enclosure.
Of course, Randi had also liked their bedroom. And her husband.
Her mood diving lower than the building’s basement laundry, she shook herself and paced over to the head of the bed, lifting her Bible into her lap. It did no good to remember the affair, and she knew better. He’d apologized profusely.
Then married the girl. Didn’t that annul his apology? In her mind, it did. Yet, she needed a good relationship with him for their daughter’s sake, and that meant tolerating Randi.
It meant leaning on the Word of God for peace and strength when she wanted to claw the woman’s eyes out. Some example that’d set. Aleesa acted out often enough from the eruption in their lives without her also falling apart over it. Any screaming and crying she needed to do was best released behind closed doors.
Grasping the worn leather cover, Veronica flipped the Bible open and thumbed through for a passage in the Psalms. She paused over Psalm 91, a favorite, smoothed the wrinkled pages, and read, starting at verse one. He that dwelleth in the secret place of the Most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty.
She’d always loved the image that projected, of a protective, sheltering Savior, watching out for them. The promises listed in the verses which followed wiped away the unhappiness encircling her heart. Though it looked dark at times, God had everything in His grasp. She had only to trust Him.
Her gaze on the final verse, her thoughts drifted. The idea of a satisfying long life stretched out of reach. She trusted God with the present, but she’d also had to lay the future in His hands. This tiny low-end apartment was as far from her image of life, two years ago, as humanly possible. She’d had a handsome, successful husband, a beautiful daughter, her every need met, her days hers to fill with shopping trips or cooking classes or yoga.
The idea of bending anything on purpose now made her ache. Up the stairs. Down the stairs.