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David Ascendant




  Other books by the Author

  Hollywood Worldviews: Watching Films with Wisdom

  and Discernment (Intervarsity Press)

  Word Pictures: Knowing God Through Story and Imagination (Intervarsity Press)

  Myth Became Fact: Storytelling, Imagination

  & Apologetics in the Bible

  Chronicles of the Nephilim

  Noah Primeval

  Enoch Primordial

  Gilgamesh Immortal

  Abraham Allegiant

  Joshua Valiant

  Caleb Vigilant

  David Ascendant

  Jesus Triumphant

  Jerusalem Judgment

  Chronicles of the Nephilim For Young Adults

  Enoch Primordial: Young Adult Edition

  Noah Primeval: Young Adult Edition

  Gilgamesh Immortal: Young Adult Edition

  Abraham Allegiant: Young Adult Edition

  Joshua Valiant: Young Adult Edition

  Caleb Vigilant: Young Adult Edition

  David Ascendant: Young Adult Edition

  Jesus Triumphant: Young Adult Edition

  Jerusalem Judgment: Young Adult Edition

  When Giants Were Upon the Earth:

  The Watchers, Nephilim, & the Biblical Cosmic War of the Seed

  For more information and products by the author:

  www.godawa.com

  www.ChroniclesOfTheNephilim.com

  David Ascendant

  Chronicles of the Nephilim

  Book Seven

  By Brian Godawa

  DAVID ASCENDANT

  First Edition

  Copyright © 2014 Brian Godawa

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without prior written permission, except in the case of brief quotations in critical articles and reviews.

  Embedded Pictures Publishing

  Los Angeles, CA

  310.948.0224

  brian@embeddedpictures.com

  www.embeddedpictures.com

  ISBN: 978-0-9911434-6-7 (paperback)

  ISBN: 978-0-9911434-7-4 (ebook)

  Scripture quotations taken from The Holy Bible: English Standard Version. Wheaton: Standard Bible Society, 2001.

  Dedicated to

  culture giant slayer John H. Walton,

  Whose scholarship has helped me to read Israel’s storytelling through ancient Near Eastern eyes.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Special thanks to my wife, Kimberly, who remains my muse and co-lead in the romantic comedy of my life. To Doug Van Dorn for his giant encouragement and theological input, including the Septuagint reference to the giant Dan ben Joah, and other sundry things Nephilim. And much thanks to Sarah Beach for her excellent editing. And to Michael Gavlak for his brilliant and ruthless story feedback. Faithful are the wounds of a best friend.

  Note to the Reader

  David Ascendant is seventh in the series of novels, Chronicles of the Nephilim about the Biblical Cosmic War of the Seed. Though it can be read as a standalone novel, the reader should advisedly consider reading it within the series. There are so many characters, motifs, storyline histories, artifacts, and themes that have been carried over from previous novels in the series, that the true depth and riches of the story can best be appreciated and understood within that context.

  However, if you really want to just read this story about King David, you won’t regret it. You will be shocked at the material you’ve missed from the lines of the Bible — and in between — but you won’t regret it.

  Based on the true story

  that is stranger than fiction.

  Prologue

  It was a magnificent civilization of excellence, virtue, and strength. They had managed to rule over the Greek islands and parts of the continent, from the pillars of Heracles to the pyramids of Egypt in the south and Tyrrhenia in the west. It had risen from humble beginnings to become an empire. It had a military and navy of unparalleled might; a ruling elite of philosopher kings with unapproachable wisdom; and such advanced culture that could only have come from the beneficence of the gods.

  It was Atlantis, the city of wonder and mystery on the isle of Thera within the Aegean archipelago. It was rumored that the gods had chosen this location to reveal oracles of occultic knowledge as they had done on Mount Hermon of Syria in the primeval past. This explained the advanced architecture, engineering, and technology that it produced.

  The capital city was laid out in the gulf of the island as a series of concentric circles of land separated by channeled waterways. At the center of the ring was an acropolis on a hill that housed the majestic temple of Poseidon, god of the sea.

  The city was engineered like no other before it. Buildings contained running water, a complex sewer system, as well as unprecedented technology for heating resident interiors in the winter and cooling them in the summer. Word had spread around Greece that they had also discovered how to harness energy in a form that would enable them to power mechanical devices without the aid of human slaves.

  But such engineering and technological advancement were only symptoms of a much more significant pursuit of the ruling class of Atlantis: godhood. Though some humans had been known to live as long as one hundred or so years, the average life span of most Aegeans was about forty to fifty years. Aristocrats would often reach seventy and eighty. The hygiene created by Atlantean technology and medicine had increased that expectancy. But in their collective memory, they knew their primeval ancestors had lived many centuries. Before the Great Deluge, they had heard of the oldest antediluvian reaching nine hundred and sixty nine years!

  The patrician class had concluded that if the nobles could mate with deity, the resultant demigods would not only become gibborim warrior rulers, but their hybrid flesh would return to the longevity of lives once enjoyed by the antediluvian fathers.

  They could not understand the reticence of Poseidon to partake in their plan of uniting heaven and earth with a Sacred Marriage rite between deity and humanity. He had mumbled about the Gigantomachy and the Titanomachy, and about some unknown pentapolis called Sodom and Gomorrah. But he did not explain himself beyond the simple declaration that the Deluge of water and the fire of heaven was the response to such unholy hubris.

  As the Greeks remembered the Flood story, Zeus had sent the Deluge as judgment but saved Deucalion and his wife Pyrrha by having him build a chest that brought them safely through the waters.

  But this story did not sway the Atlanteans in their quest for eternal life. They would stop at nothing to achieve godhood, and eventually, their constant pleas prompted Poseidon to give in and reinstitute the Sacred Marriage.

  The gods would once again mate with humans.

  • • • • •

  It was a warm and sunny summer day on the chain of Aegean islands when all Hades was unleashed.

  There had been an increase in frequency of earthquakes on Thera that had caused the more superstitious citizens to leave in ships for the western sea. But everyone else went about their business, having become familiar with such rumblings throughout their entire lives. All across the island, people were trading in the marketplace, farming their land, performing matrimony, and coupling together in marriage beds of love and adulterous beds of lust. There were aristocrats ruling, buyers trading, thieves stealing, liars lying, thousands living their normal lives.

  In the temple of Poseidon, the priests were engaging in their liturgy of worship when the first sinkhole opened up beneath them and swallowed them all alive. A huge crevice split the concentric isle circles, reducing the buildings instantly to rubble, and crushing a multitude of Atlanteans.

  What follow
ed next was unthinkable.

  The capital city completely disintegrated in a massive explosion of a magnitude that had never before been seen on earth. The expanding rush of debris and smoke choked all life, instantly engulfing people on the far side of the island. A pile of ash buried everything. A blast of rock and magma spewed out from the center of the caldera as the force of pressure built up over millennia finally released itself from the earth.

  The ancient volcano of Thera had awakened.

  An enormous pillar cloud of sixty cubic miles of rock, ash and pumice rose into the sky and spread out for hundreds of miles around, choking the life out of everything in its way. The uplift of the earth, created an offset of the sea that released a tsunami wave pushing its way at hundreds of miles per hour away from the explosion.

  • • • • •

  The Minoan island of Crete lay a mere hundred miles away. Its inhabitants could see the plume of smoke darkening the sky, and many sought the higher mountainous regions as safety from the oncoming wave. But most did not escape the crushing wall of water that washed over the island and wiped out every city in mere seconds. Hundreds of generations of civilization built upon the wisdom of its ancestors were completely decimated by billions of tons of seawater.

  This incapacitation of the great Minoan culture of Crete would completely cripple its defenses, making it vulnerable to conquest by the maritime forces of the Mycenaens who would follow in the wake of the tsunami.

  What happened this day would become the stuff of legends about the glorious achievements of a magical civilization mysteriously swallowed up in a day by the largest volcanic eruption in history.

  But rock, ash, and lava were not the only things vomited out from the belly of Sheol that day. Within the debris that flew miles into the air and landed in the sea was a humanoid form. It was severely burned by its encasement in magma, but alive because of its divine being.

  When he hit the ocean and was released from the hardened lava rock, the salt water burned his flesh with stinging pain. But this was nothing compared to the blazing heat of the river of magma he had been entrapped in miles beneath the surface of the earth.

  But now he was free. And he was set on revenge against the malicious Creator and his archangels who had trapped him there to await the final judgment. That wait would be delayed as he began to swim westward with strong plunging strokes of charred black arms.

  He had been incarcerated in the earth for generations. But he didn’t care. He was a god of power and storm. He would work his way back up the hierarchy of gods to claim his rightful status as the Most High god. He would get his revenge on Yahweh Elohim and his pathetic offspring of worms, the sons of Israel.

  He was the storm god, Ba’al. And he was back.

  Chapter 1

  The two naked young male warriors grappled in the atrium yard surrounded by rows of Phoenician columns. They wore nothing but loincloths protecting their genitals from their rough sparring. They were Philistines in their home city of Gath on the western coastline of the land of Canaan. They exercised their perpetual pursuit of physical perfection and dominance as new recruits in the reserves of the army.

  They were both Rephaim giants, but not yet fully matured. The elder, at eighteen years old, stood about seven feet tall. He was physically stronger than the younger one, who was seventeen and only six and a half feet tall. But he had more agility and cunning than his companion.

  Aside from their size, they also carried the additional distinguishing trait of their antediluvian Nephilim ancestors: polydactylism, an extra finger on each hand and an extra toe on each foot, for a total of twelve fingers and twelve toes. This physical peculiarity aided their skills in battle by increasing their gripping span.

  That gripping span of the older wrestler was being frustrated by the cunning trick of the younger.

  “You slippery serpent,” grunted the elder. The younger had greased himself before their contest, making it difficult to grab his body effectively. He was always a step ahead when it came to strategic planning.

  “I told you,” growled the younger, “Smarts over skill.”

  “More like knavery.” The elder fumed with anger. He deliberately elbowed his opponent’s face.

  The younger’s nose leaked blood. He tasted it and grinned. He responded with his own elbow to his elder’s chin.

  The shudder of teeth cracking together splintered through the elder’s jaw.

  It lit him up like a torch. He figured that the only place that wouldn’t be greased down on the younger’s body would be underneath his loincloth. So if his adversary was going to play dirty, then so would he. He grabbed the fabric and yanked at it, ripping it from the younger’s body.

  “Who is the knave, now?” grunted the younger, with anger to match his rival. What had started as a typical competition of egos between best of friends was turning hostile.

  The elder tried to grab his opponent’s member, but the younger caught his hand, and responded with a rain of punches to his adversary’s abdomen. The elder grunted in pain.

  The apparent weakness caught the younger off guard and he got flipped hard to the ground, stunned. He lost his breath.

  The elder took that moment to rip off his own loincloth. Then he flipped his stunned prey around to face him.

  The younger noticed that the elder was aroused. The elder slapped the younger hard in the face.

  Then again.

  The younger grabbed the elder’s hand and yanked him down.

  They met face to face. Passionate anger turned to passionate lust as the two kissed as violently as they fought.

  They rolled on the ground trying to vie for dominant position. The elder punched the younger in the face. It was enough to make him dizzy and vulnerable.

  The elder flipped him around to his face on the ground and gratified his lust unnaturally with his dazed younger opponent. It was the prize for victory in this contest of young warriors in training.

  The sound of a Philistine war horn blended into the elder’s consciousness as he reveled in his ecstasy; drool splattering on the back of his defeated partner. His physical spasm had so perfectly united with the call to war that he felt himself lifted up to the throne of Dagon in heaven.

  But the voice of his younger companion, Ishbi ben Ob, brought him back to earth.

  “Goliath! We are being called to war!”

  Chapter 2

  Goliath and Ishbi ben Ob said goodbye to Ishbi’s family, suited up in their Philistine armor. Though they were native Rephaim of Canaan, their tribe had been absorbed into the Philistine people of the coastal territory a generation earlier. Thus, they wore the traditional armor of the Philistines: sandals, brass shin greaves, battle skirt, and chest armor made from strips of metal angled like a “V” across the torso. On their heads they wore the signature feather-topped helmets that resulted in the insulting nickname, “brush heads,” from their enemies. Each soldier carried a small round shield, two javelin spears and a straight sword.

  Goliath felt restricted by the uniform. The more elite units were allowed to make individualized alterations in their armor and weaponry. But until they achieved any notoriety, Goliath would have to be content with the standard uniform of the common soldier. He did not see himself being content with that for very long. He wanted to stand out, to make a name for himself. He sensed that the gods had a special destiny of greatness for him.

  Ishbi’s father, Warati, a retired one-armed Rephaim officer, punched Ishbi and Goliath in the chest. This was the Philistine sign for male affection and greetings or farewells.

  Two other young boys, each ten-years old, stood with them. They were Lahmi, Goliath’s younger brother, a growing Rephaim about five feet tall, and his companion Ittai, who had the signature extra digits and toes of a Rephaim, but was not a giant in height.

  “We finally have our opportunity to fight,” said Goliath.

  “It is not a good sign,” countered Warati. “We have been at war with the Israelites at
Aphek. The only reason our generals would call up reserves is if they considered themselves in trouble.”

  Goliath would not give up. “Then we will be heroes to our people for turning the tide of battle.”

  Warati eyed the young upstart whom he had raised as his adopted own. “The surest way to a forgotten death is the relentless pursuit of memorable fame.”

  “Yes, father,” said Goliath with deference. “But we must get going.” All he could think of was the fame of that despicable Israelite Samson, whose mighty deed, years earlier, of bringing down the temple of Dagon would never be forgotten. Especially since his own parents died in the tragedy. It seemed evil men were rewarded with infamy that outlived heroes.

  “We want to go with you!” yelped Lahmi.

  Goliath smiled and ruffled his brother’s hair.

  Ishbi said, “You both are too young. And the runt is too small.” The derogatory nickname was a reference to Ittai’s small size.

  Ittai blurted out, “But I’m as strong as Lahmi!” It was true. He didn’t have the height, but he somehow had the growing strength of a Rephaim.

  Ishbi ignored the little fellow. “Wait a few years and keep training. You will have your day.”

  Goliath added, “Stay here and obey father. We will return with the heads of Israelites on our pikes.”

  Lahmi pouted. He admired his brother deeply. When their parents died in the collapse of Dagon’s temple, Warati, a close family friend, had adopted him and Goliath.

  Lahmi followed his older brother in everything, including his furious hatred of the Israelites. He watched Goliath become obsessed with the desire to become for the Philistines what Samson had been for the Israelites; a legend, a deliverer enshrined in greatness because of his mighty deeds as a gibborim, or warrior of renown.