Son of Thunder

Son of Thunder

by Steven M. Moore
Son of Thunder

Son of Thunder

by Steven M. Moore

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Overview

Esther Brookstone is at it again, this time obsessing about the life and times of St. John the Divine, all triggered by the discovery of a parchment hidden in the frame of a Botticelli painting that she authenticates. As in Rembrandt’s Angel, she soon gets into trouble, and her paramour, Interpol agent Bastiann van Coevorden, again comes to her aid. A race to find the saint’s tomb results, because Esther has competition. Three centuries of action involving the saint, the Renaissance artist Sandro Botticelli, and Esther and Bastiann, make this sequel a book of mystery, thrills, and suspense that will keep readers guessing.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781950586073
Publisher: Penmore Press LLC
Publication date: 09/23/2019
Series: Esther Brookstone Art Detective , #2
Pages: 364
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.81(d)

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Fifteenth Century, Florence

Sandro Botticelli kept his face deferential as Lorenzo de' Medici scowled. The patron of the arts did not seem to like Sandro's most recent painting.

"It is not obvious who those people in the painting are meant to be!" Lorenzo said.

The patron was a plain man of average height, a somewhat comical figure with his broad frame and short legs. A swarthy complexion and a squished nose seemed to belie his importance. His anger had made his already harsh voice even raspier, besides turning his face beet-red.

Now that would make a portrait, thought Sandro.

As was the lot of many artists in Florence, Sandro depended on Lorenzo's circle of friends for patronage. The banker behaved as though he owned Botticelli. In a sense, he did.

The painter studied his new creation. One figure looks like me, but he is supposed to be John. He had used that tactic before. He was always the most convenient model. I am not a bad-looking man. And who knows what John looked like? He could have done better with perspective, though. He had to give that to da Vinci — the arrogant fellow had made great leaps in perspective.

"I can title the painting so everyone will know who they are," Sandro said.

The powerful man's red face turned even darker. "Paint something else. This one does nothing for me. And it will make me appear a fool in front of my friends if I say it does. You created a scandal with that painting of Venus. Everyone knew it was Simonetta Vespucci."

"A stylized Simonetta, I assure you. The Vespuccis did not seem to mind. Amerigo rather liked it, in fact." He paused a moment, then added, "I immortalized their daughter, after all.

Lorenzo's eyebrows arched and he stared at the ceiling as if praying for divine intervention. Then he frowned at Sandro. "Throw this out with the trash. It is unfit for anyone's eyes."

Even with his patron's angry critique and all the political unrest and squabbling between city-states, Sandro knew it was a good time for the arts in Florence. Lorenzo deserved some credit for that. He even pretended to be a poet. But he also is a horse's ass.

After the great man made his exit, Sandro paced the floor in front of the painting. His problem was that he liked it, even with its imperfections and even though his most important patron did not. You cannot please him or his sycophants all the time. Maybe I can sell the painting on the sly to one of his fellow art patrons without him knowing it. Maybe to the Vespucci family?

* * *

There was a knock on the door. Did Lorenzo rethink his decision?

The artist opened to see Bishop Leonardo da Padua smiling up at him, his beady eyes shining with excitement between folds of fat. "I have great news!" He showed Sandro a rolled-up parchment. "Guess what this is!"

Sandro enjoyed Leo's company. A small man, almost as wide as he was tall, and with an effervescent personality, he kept his homilies short and often had a wink, a nod, and plenty of forgiveness for his parishioners. Sandro knew the odd little man had also sired some bastards. Warrior popes and fornicating priests, yet everyone looks the other way!

Now Leo was bouncing up and down on his toes in enthusiasm, which almost dislodged the hat he wore to hide his baldness. During mass, he cut a priestly figure, dressed in the jewels and rich satin robes of his office, complete with miter. The robes also made him appear much fatter, something many parishioners laughed about.

Sandro eyed what Leo was carrying with misgivings. The cleric was always searching for historical documents and relics. Although the painter was no expert in antiquities, most of them appeared to have a dubious provenance. The poor fool wants to make church history by discovering something of great religious significance.

"Come, my friend. Let's have some wine and fruit so you can tell me all about it. I am not good at playing guessing games. Knowing you, what you have could be a document recording a heretic's last oath as he burned at the stake."

"My good man, you are cynical today." Leo followed Sandro into the studio, a workshop in his brother's house. "What's the problem?"

Sandro gestured at the painting sitting on his easel. "Lorenzo does not like it. I have a hunch he does not like anything mythological or that's not forthrightly religious. Apparently this is not forthright enough. I have resisted the temptation to scrape everything off the panel and reuse the wood. It is good, thick poplar."

The bishop studied the painting a moment, then shook his head. "So, make the old man more obviously religious. I always like to see halos. You know the subject is religious in that case. No doubts at all." He reached up and patted Sandro on the shoulder. "And do not be despondent. He thinks he is an art connoisseur, but he is not. He throws money around and makes his allies do more of the same. I guess that is good for you and the other artists." He paused a moment, putting his index finger to his double chin as he studied the painting some more. "Maybe I will buy it from you, but let us leave that business for later. Read this."

He handed the parchment to Sandro, who unrolled it on top of a work table and read the Latin text. He then glanced from Bishop Leo to his painting. "This is an interesting and unusual coincidence, my old friend. In my painting, that's John on the right, between his brother James and the father, Zebedee."

The bishop glanced at the painting yet again. He jerked a well-manicured thumb toward the ceiling. "Stupendous! It is an omen sent from the Lord above!" Sandro groaned. "Or from the Devil below, considering that Lorenzo raised hell when he saw the painting. And not even you recognized the religious significance. Maybe I should put Latin titles over all their heads as labels. St. John, St. James — um, is Zebedee a saint? Enough." He glanced at the parchment again. "Where did you find this?" "A student from the medical school gave it to me. He said he bought it at a bazaar in Ephesus. Scholars say St. John died there, you know."

When Lorenzo had transferred the university to Pisa, he'd left the medical school intact. It became a center for science and attracted students from all over Italy, not just from the Florentine Republic. They said da Vinci had secretly dissected cadavers there. Sandro could believe it. That other Leonardo was something of a ghoul. Maybe he is more of a scientist than an artist?

Sandro shook his head. "And you think this student has made a major find? Your parchment is most likely a fake. How much did you pay him for it?" The bishop seemed embarrassed. "He did not ask for much."

Sandro figured his friend had been scammed and the parchment was not the wonderful historical discovery the priest wanted to make. He rolled up the parchment and handed it back to the bishop.

"And you think this proves St. John died there? I always heard he died in Patmos, not that I am a theological historian."

The bishop shrugged. "We do not know for sure that he did not die in Ephesus."

"Someone would have to go there to see if these directions make any sense. You are not asking me to do that, are you?"

Leo seemed crestfallen. "It did cross my mind."

"That expedition would require financing. Many florins. Lorenzo will not approve it. The bank is in trouble because Grandpa Medici treated money like it was cheap wine to give away to the rabble."

"But Lorenzo has connections. By the way, perhaps one of them would buy your painting. Maybe the Vespuccis? They are close allies of his."

"I thought of that. You know his friends as well as I do. They would not risk incurring his wrath by buying something he rejected. I tire of the painting anyway. What will you give me for it?" The bishop offered a meager sum in florins. "Va bene. It is yours. Take your painting and parchment and be gone. I have a headache from Lorenzo's visit alone, and you are not helping me recover."

The bishop finished his wine in two gulps. "I bid you farewell then and wish you a speedy recovery from both Lorenzo's wrath and your headache."

* * *

When he returned to his church, Bishop Leo could not decide where to put the painting. He stared at it for a time, noting how John resembled Sandro. He did not think the painter's self-portrait captured the essence of the man, who he knew possessed a cynical humor that led to his mocking arrogant people, including Leo. That cynicism also led to disparaging wealth and property, although Sandro favored having enough of each to be comfortable.

Both the young painter and the saint in the painting had curly auburn hair, wide eyes, and pronounced cheekbones. He only lacked a laurel wreath to appear like a Roman emperor. A haughtiness in the expression added to that effect, but not as much as in the real man. Maybe that was why Lorenzo hated the painting? But what to do with it?

He was not about to donate it to the church. He had no love for Pope Sixtus IV after the papacy had sponsored the Pazzi uprising against the Medici family's power in Florence. Sandro's first fresco of the rebellion leaders' hanging had won Lorenzo's favor, but not the pope's. Even so, Lorenzo had offered Sixtus sponsorship of several Florentine painters, including Sandro, as a peace offering; they were to paint frescoes in the new Sistine Chapel.

Leo did not move in such exalted circles of political and religious intrigue. He had no desire to do so, but he valued his friendship with Sandro. That rascal da Vinci had scoffed at his friend's landscapes before he left for Milan in 1481. Lorenzo had been both artists' patron, but Leonardo was no friend of Botticelli's. What a shame politics and personal animosities affect art. Da Vinci was such an ass. A genius in many ways, but a pompous ass.

Leo's service to God did not stop him from disparaging people or even his fellow clerics when they deserved it. Even popes were fallible, because they were only men chosen by other men — always lots of politics in that choice, too. But St. John the Divine had always seemed to be more than a man. The beloved disciple. That thought brought his mind back to the problem of what to do with the painting.

He decided to hide it in one corner of the armoire in his study with a sketch from one of Perugino's students he had recently purchased. He first folded and tucked the parchment in the back of the painting between frame and panel.

I will have to see about that expedition. Lorenzo is not mad at me. Lorenzo does not even know who I am! Only another priest among many, until I find the saint's burial place!

CHAPTER 2

First Century, Rome

"You have to flee," said Paul. "Nero has gone mad!"

"He already was mad," said John. The emperor had blamed Christians for the fire that had ravaged the city. Peter had been one of the victims of his ongoing purge. "The Church will survive."

"But maybe not the Church of Rome." Paul eyed the disciple. "To help spread his Word, you must leave, John. Peter would want that."

John nodded. Peter and he had had differences about the way forward at times, but that conflicted disciple had made great sacrifices. He had spent seven years in Antioch to stabilize the church there, and then left his family behind to come to Rome to confront the heretic Simon Magus. Now Peter had made the ultimate sacrifice.

"I would leave, but how? Nero's soldiers are all over the city."

"I have found a man who is leaving the city. A freeman who is well known to the soldiers. He is one of us and will keep you safe."

"I would be more concerned about keeping him safe. Simple folk with faith will become a solid foundation for our movement. Without them, we will be nothing."

"And so it has been since the Council of Jerusalem, when Peter, you, and others decided to embrace the Gentiles."

"Christ's message is for everyone, Jews and Gentiles. All men and women of any group who hear that message of love and embrace it are blessed. And we must temper our words of blame for his Crucifixion. He said on the cross, 'Forgive them, Father, for they do not know what they are doing.' In general, neither Romans nor Jews are to be blamed, according to His own words. It was all part of God's plan." He glanced out the open window to the quiet streets, silent now because citizens of Rome feared Nero's fury. "Where do I find this freeman?"

"Follow me, my brother. Be quick, yet stealthy. We must watch for the soldiers."

As he followed Paul, John wondered how the mad Nero's mind worked. How can you celebrate your day of birth by murdering people? he asked himself. He thought of Peter, who had inadvertently increased the Roman fondness for crucifying the Empire's enemies and common thieves in strange positions, by demanding he be crucified upside down on the inverted cross. Yes, conflicted. He had noticed that when Peter and he joined forces to preach to the Samarians.

John liked Silas when he met the old freeman and shook his hand. The handshake was still strong; John sensed his faith was too. Keep him safe, Lord, as we journey away from Rome.

* * *

John popped his head out of the straw covering him and glanced around, seeing a dusty road in front and behind and low-lying hills in the distance. "I see we have lost the Roman soldiers," he said to the hay wagon's driver.

The slight breeze from the wagon's forward motion, while slow because of the two horses' ages, cooled his skin under the late summer sun. He looked away from the large ball of fire to the intense blue heavens above, interrupted by only a few clouds playing tag before they settled to sleep upon the hills. Thank you, my Lord. I live to preach the Word yet again.

The driver, a poor man with his clothes in tatters and worn sandals, had pieces of straw jutting from his beard, as if he and John were brothers. As we are. The remainder of the man's face was weathered and wrinkled, though, not that John did not feel tired.

The driver took pity on John. "You can come sit beside me for the time being, but be ready to hide again. This road is well traveled at times." He watched the disciple climb onto the seat beside him and then made an oft-heard request: "Tell me how you met Christ."

So long ago. John glanced at the blue sky again and smiled. He knew the driver was a simple man, but this believer was willing to risk his life to carry the disciple to safety. Bless him, my Lord.

"It is a long story. My father, brother, and I were fishermen and disciples of that other John who was called the Baptist. He baptized Christ, you know." The man nodded without taking his eyes off the road.

"So ... when did you meet Him?"

John's voice deepened as he spoke, remembering. "We had heard about Him. I first met Him in a dream. A vision? My mind playing tricks on me? It does not matter. He had started a movement. We joined. I cannot remember when I actually met Him." He stared far down the road as if it led toward the future. "I see a new Heaven and a new Earth, Silas. We are creating a revolution of love — God's love that came to Earth in the form of his only Son, Jesus Christ of Nazareth."

"I am not sure about that revolution. Take the Romans, for example. There's not much love there. I do not love them, that is certain. They are as barbarous as the barbarians from the north they fear so much."

John knew Silas was a freeman who had received his freedom from a patrician. But he still worked for the same man, feeling beholden to him. Such a patrician might become one of us. We have to convert the nobles and rich merchants.

He imagined the cypresses were Christ's soldiers lined up along the road to keep them safe from both Roman soldiers and barbarians. And patricians who feared the threat of the Christians. John knew he would have to preach to all of them in the future. Why else am I here?

"It will be a struggle, but His Church will endure and shed its light upon the world."

"I will take your word for it. To think otherwise is depressing. Where are we heading?"

"First, many thanks again for helping me escape." Silas smiled but said nothing. A man of few words. He is more a listener. "Two towns down this road there's a small inn. I must meet someone there."

"The Boar's Head? That's frequented by thieves and ruffians. You must be crazy!"

"I am not meeting them, Silas. And we must pray for those who steal and fight. Our Christ was crucified with two thieves."

"I heard that, but I would be wary about trying to make converts there if I were you."

"That's not the main goal of my journey. I did not plan to make it today. The person I intend to meet might not even be there."

Although John trusted this man, the less he knew, the less he could divulge.

Silas laughed. "So they told me when they asked if you could ride with me. Fortunately, the soldiers often try to use a boulder to crack a nut."

"Meaning the Romans warned us by sending in all those soldiers, their armor and weapons clanking and sounding an alarm?"

"Precisely. It often is easy to avoid them. They are so used to employing overwhelming force in battles that they have forgotten how to be stealthy."

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Son of Thunder"
by .
Copyright © 2019 Steven M. Moore.
Excerpted by permission of Penmore Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Reviewers,
Introduction,
Cast of Characters,
Notes,
Part One,
Chapter One Fifteenth Century, Florence,
Chapter Two First Century, Rome,
Chapter Three Twenty-First Century, Scotland,
Chapter Four Twenty First century,
Chapter Five Twenty-First Century, Lyon,
Chapter Six Twenty First Century, London,
Chapter Seven First Century Crete,
Chapter Eight London,
Chapter Nine Trieste,
Chapter Ten Vienna,
Chapter Eleven Agrinio,
Chapter Twelve Vienna,
Chapter Thirteen Oxford,
Chapter Fourteen London,
Chapter Fifteen London,
Part II,
Chapter Sixteen Florence,
Chapter Seventeen Rome,
Chapter Eighteen London,
Chapter Nineteen London,
Chapter Twenty Ankara,
Chapter Twenty-One Eskehir,
Chapter Twenty-Two Eskehir to Selçuk,
Chapter Twenty-Three Rome,
Chapter Twenty-Four Ephesus,
Chapter Twenty-Five Ephesus,
Chapter Twenty-Six Syria,
Chapter Twenty-Seven Lyon,
Chapter Twenty-Eight Casablanca,
Chapter Twenty-Nine Piraeus,
Chapter Thirty Selçuk,
Part III,
Chapter Thirty-One,
Chapter Thirty-Two Dacia,
Chapter Thirty-Three Ankara,
Chapter Thirty-Four Selcuk,
Chapter Thirty-Five Selcuk,
Chapter Thirty-Six Dacia,
Chapter Thirty-Seven,
Chapter Thirty-Eight,
Chapter Thirty-Nine Selcuk,
Chapter Forty Ephesus,
Chapter Forty-One Selcuk,
Part IV,
Chapter Forty-Two,
Chapter Forty-Three Ephesus,
Chapter Forty-Four Ephesus,
Chapter Forty-Five Ephesus,
Part V,
Chapter Forty-Six London,
Chapter Forty-Seven London,
Chapter Forty-Eight Munich,
Chapter Forty-Nine London,
Chapter Fifty,
Chapter Fifty-One Lyon,
Epilogue,
Notes,
Ten Questions,
Disclaimers,
About The Author,
Advertisements,

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