Daniel’s Sealed Vision
The air by the river was cool, carrying the scent of damp earth and distant cedar. Daniel, his bones aching with years, felt the weight of the visions not as a burden, but as a deep, resonating hum in his…
The King Who Forgot
The morning sun did not so much rise over Tyre as it was reflected by it—a harsh, glittering light thrown back from gilded rooftops, from the bronze shields hung along the battlements, from the sea itself, which seemed to bow…
City of Dust and Silence
The stone remembers warmth. It shouldn’t, not anymore, but in the late afternoon when the slanting sun catches the western wall of what was once a great house, a residual heat bleeds from the limestone. Old Hannah presses her palm…
The Thirst That Was Not For Water
The heat in Jerusalem had a weight to it that afternoon, a kind of palpable thickness that seemed to press the dust deeper into the cracks between the stones. Ezra stood in the shadow of a merchant’s awning, not to…
The Siege of Tyre
The salt wind carried the scent of cinnamon and despair. Elam, son of Asher, stood on the rooftop of his merchant house in Tyre, his knuckles white on the sun-bleached limestone parapet. Below him, the city was a symphony of…
The Merchant’s Last Ledger
The smell of burning cedar was the first thing that told Maron everything was finished. It wasn’t the smoke from cooking fires, that familiar, greasy haze that hung over the Sidonian quarter at dusk. This was a different scent—sharp, resinous,…
The Sower’s Peace
The heat in Jerusalem that summer had a weight to it, a kind of dusty, pressing silence that made even the merchants in the upper market speak in low tones. I found myself, more often than not, seeking the shaded…
The True Weights of Tekoa
The heat in Tekoa rose from the stones of the courtyard in visible shimmers. Old Mara, her back bent like an olive branch gnarled by wind, sorted lentils on a flat sieve, the *shush-shush* of her work a dry rhythm…
The Carpenter’s Blessing
The dust of Jerusalem held the heat long after the sun had dipped behind the western hills. It was a fine, gold-tinged dust that settled on the sandals of the market-goers and powdered the leaves of the olive trees in…
The Scribe’s Silent Deliverance
The heat in the lower city clung like a damp robe. Ezra the scribe felt it in the crease of his neck, in the tight space between his scrolls where the air grew still and heavy. From his small workspace,…



















