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Don Hoesel - Elishas Bones

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Don Hoesel Elishas Bones

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Every year, professor of antiquities Jack Hawthorne looks forward to the winter break as a time to hide away from his responsibilities. Even if just for a week or two. But this year, his plans are derailed when hes offered almost a blank check from a man chasing a rumor. Billionaire Gordon Reese thinks he knows where the bones of the prophet Elisha are--bones that in the Old Testament brought the dead back to life. A born skeptic, Jack doesnt think much of the assignment but he could use the money, so he takes the first step on a chase for the legendary bones that will take him to the very ends of the earth. But hes not alone. Joined with a fiery colleague, Esperanza Habilla, they soon discover clues to a shadowy organization whose long-held secrets have been protected . . . at all costs. As their lives are threatened again and again, the real race is to uncover the truth before those chasing them hunt them down.

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ELISHAS
BONES

Elishas Bones - image 1

ELISHAS
BONES

Elishas Bones - image 2

DON HOESEL

Elishas Bones - image 3

Elishas Bones Copyright 2009 Don Hoesel Cover design by John Hamilton Design - photo 4

Elishas Bones
Copyright 2009
Don Hoesel

Cover design by John Hamilton Design

Scripture quotations are from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION.
Copyright 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of
Zondervan Publishing House. All rights reserved.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any meanselectronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwisewithout the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

Published by Bethany House Publishers
11400 Hampshire Avenue South
Bloomington, Minnesota 55438

Bethany House Publishers is a division of
Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Printed in the United States of America

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Hoesel Don Elishas bones - photo 5

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Hoesel, Don.
Elishas bones / Don Hoesel.

p. cm.
ISBN 978-0-7642-0560-6 (pbk.)
1. Archaeology teachersFiction. 2. Elisha (Biblical prophet)Relics
Fiction. 3. Christian antiquitiesFiction. 4. Secret societiesFiction. I. Title.

PS3608.04765E65 2009
813'.6dc22

2008051034

For Dawn Thank you for the last seventeen years This book wouldnt have - photo 6

For Dawn
Thank you for the last seventeen years.
This book wouldnt have happened without you.

Table of Contents

ELISHAS
BONES

KV65, THE VALLEY OF THE KINGS, EGYPT, 2003

I ts an indescribable sound when a piece of ancient stone finally gives. Theres a subtle pop, like the top of an aspirin bottle coming off to reveal that annoying wad of cotton stuffed into the plastic innards. Except that, in this case, the sound is amplified by whatever magnitude is required to testify to two tons of rock wrenching away from symbiotic stone. I think what I hear is the instant equalization of air pressurea force that can either ease or enhance whatever stresses time has built into the coupling. Its the moment when the whole event can result in either expectant silence, or in a violent redistribution of forces. And it all has to be in my imagination, because its only a romantic notion to think that the mind could process the event in real time.

Several field technicians are trying to peer into the sarcophagus through the three-inch gap made available courtesy of the removal of the two-ton slab of red granite that hangs suspended on a precarious-looking pulley mechanism. I know the machine is rated for far greater than the stones weight, but even that bit of professional knowledge doesnt alleviate the fear I would have about slipping my fingers into the crack. I place my hand against the stone and press against it to stop its lazy swing. At almost four thousand pounds, even an arc of a few millimeters would put a severe dent into someones skull, and having worked with these young men and women for almost a month, Im not certain that all of them are observant enough to stay out of striking distance.

Its stifling in here; lines of sweat run down my face and soak my collar. The burial chamber is less than six and a half meters long, and there are a dozen people in it and more machinery than should be allowed at a dig, purely on principlenot to mention the five bright fluorescent lights that make casting a shadow an impossibility. I know one of the supposed benefits of these lights is that they dont give off heat, but Im not buying it, no matter what the brochure says.

I lean in, the stone stilled beneath my fingers, and I think that I can almost smell the cumin, thyme, and cinnamon that went into the preparation of the mummy, even through the probable two additional coffins encasing the reposing ancient. I glance around at the assembled junior members of the team, whom Jim has asked me to instruct as most of them pursue doctorates. Im not much of a teacherI could never hold down a professorshipyet I take pleasure in seeing the looks on the teams faces as they enjoy this unprecedented opportunity.

KV65 is one of those rare opportunities granted to someone in my professiona find that makes careers, that puts one in every serious journal in the field for the next decade. True, this is Jims baby, but he brought me in to handle the particulars, and that will yield almost as many peer accolades. Its virtually another Tutankhamen, even down to the post-Amarna dating.

Before I can call for a flashlight, at least four click on. The mingling beams push back the blackness of the sepulcher. Leaning in close, forgetting the earlier reluctance to place my body in harms way, I let my eyes grow accustomed to the alternating splotches of light and shadow against the outer coffin until I can see a deep red that I recognize as ancient cypress. A few moments pass as I ponder why this is peculiarwhy the sight of a wood thats perfectly appropriate for this region, and for the time period that saw this man interred, seems wrong. And when the answer waves its little hand, I find another of those teaching opportunities I so enjoy. I ignore it.

But one of my young acolytes will not see his education shortchanged.

Dr. Hawthorne? Brown asks. Hes twenty-four, attached to the Smithsonian, earning a doctorate at Cornell, and might be the smartest person in this room. And Im only slightly threatened by that. After all, the successful practice of archaeology involves more than knowledge; theres an equal measure of luck. And after watching Brown over the last few weeks, Im inclined to think thats a commodity he has not stockpiled.

I straighten and motion for him to take a look, taking a step back as he crosses in front of me. Im careful to avoid bumping his cast-encased arm.

Interesting, he says after a moment.

Yep. A quick glance around reveals that the other people in the room want in on the discussion, so I prompt post-grad Cornell. Can you share with the rest of the class?

The outer coffin is just wood, Brown says. Theres no linen, no gold overlay. Nothing to indicate that this is anything but the burial chamber for a minor noble.

Which is odd because?

Everything weve seen to this point would indicate this is a royal tomb. Its almost spot-on Tutankhamen.

For as much as I dislike the whole teaching aspect of this assignment, at least Ive caught on to one of the tricks practiced by genuine academics: allowing my most-qualified student to teach in my stead.

Im as intrigued as is he by the incongruity of the barren outer coffin within a sepulcherindeed an entire tombthat is patterned after those of the pharaohs. And I have no immediate answer.

I wipe my brow, aware that Im leaving a film of red dust under my hairline. Now that weve found something unexpected, Im more bothered by the fact that Jim is not here. Its worse than Wills absence. At least my brother has a concrete reason for missing an event important enough to earn the presence of two National Geographic photographers. Jim wouldnt give me a reason that carried any kind of weight; he was merely insistent that the events of the morning proceed. Not that he had to do too much arm-twisting; were he here, I would still be the one walking the Scooby Gang through their paces. Even so, theres an unspoken rule that something of this magnitude should only take place under the watchful eye of the archaeologist of record. I shake my head, consoling myself with the thought that Jims absence means the guys from

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