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The Original Sinners: The Red Years. Tiffany ReiszЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Original Sinners: The Red Years - Tiffany  Reisz


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was it?”

      Nora exhaled slowly. “The right thing. I think. You?”

      Zach turned his head and saw an icon of the Virgin Mary holding the infant Jesus in her arms.

      “The only thing. I think. Suffice it to say Grace and I never should have been together to start with.”

      “Sounds like me and Søren. We definitely shouldn’t have been together.”

      “Why?” Maybe if he could find out why Nora left the man she loved so deeply, he could begin to understand why Grace had pulled away from him.

      “He had—” Nora paused and seemed to search for the right word “—other obligations.”

      “Is he married?”

      She raised her hand and touched her neck. He followed her eyes. She gazed at a small iron Jesus impaled on his cross.

      “Something like that.” She shook herself from her reverie and met Zach’s eyes again. “Come on. Let’s get back to the house. You can look over my new chapters.” Nora gave Zach her hand and he let her pull him up. But she didn’t stop with up. She pulled him straight to her.

      Face-to-face, their bodies were only separated by a hairbreadth. Nora looked down and back up again.

      “Oh, dear. No room for the Holy Ghost.”

      “You are incorrigible, Ms. Sutherlin.” Zach’s smile died as he noticed the dark circles under Nora’s eyes. “You look exhausted. Are you not sleeping?”

      “I’m fine. But last night I kept waking up every hour and going in to check on Wes. You know, I got an IUD so I would never have to do the ‘is junior still breathing?’ thing. This is very unfair.”

      “IUD—you are a bad Catholic, aren’t you?”

      “The birth control is the least of my worries if I ever have to answer to the pope,” she said, taking a step back. “I do as Martin Luther instructed—I sin boldly.”

      He followed her down the steps and along the rows of pews to a side entrance he hadn’t seen when he came in. Inside the door was a foyer where Nora had left her coat.

      “Do they make the sinners use the side door?” he asked.

      “We’d all have to use the side door then. ‘All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.’ Romans 3:23.”

      “A Bible-quoting erotica writer—you are quite the oxymoron,” Zach said.

      “And a Moxie Whore-On sometimes.” Nora winked at him. “If it helps, Søren used to say Catholicism was the perfect faith for someone into S&M.”

      “Why?”

      Nora opened her mouth and closed it again as if she started to say something and then thought better of it.

      “Show, don’t tell,” she said, taking his arm.

      Together they walked back into the sanctuary taking another doorway on the opposite side that opened up to a long corridor. The walls of the corridor were adorned with framed prints of biblical scenes. Scenes from the Hebrew Bible were on his right—images that he remembered from his childhood in Hebrew school; he recognized Ruth and Naomi, Jacob’s Ladder, the Crossing of the Red Sea, among others. On his left were scenes from the New Testament—images far less familiar to him. Nora brought him to the end of the hall and stopped in front of the third print from the end.

      “This one’s my favorite,” she said, still holding his arm. “Antonio Ciseri’s Ecce Homo. That’s ‘Behold the Man’ if you aren’t up on your Latin.”

      “A tad rusty. Is this from the Crucifixion?”

      “From the Passion. This is when Christ is being presented to the angry mob.”

      “Ah, yes. When we bloodthirsty Jews killed Jesus, right?”

      Nora smiled and shook her head. “You kidding? Jesus died for the sins of the world. Everyone who ever lived killed Jesus.” She paused and smiled sadly. “I killed Him.”

      Zach said nothing as he studied the painting, struck by the artist’s choice of bright colors to paint such a dark scene.

      “Søren has this impressively twisted theology of the Trinity, you know. God the Father inflicted the suffering and humiliation, God the Son submitted to it willingly and God the Holy Spirit gave Christ the grace to endure it.”

      “Your Søren sounds…interesting,” Zach said, attempting to be diplomatic.

      “He was never my Søren. That’s the one thing about being a collared submissive. I was his. He never was mine. But yes, he is interesting. The most caring sadist you could ever hope to meet.”

      “But you loved him?”

      “And I loved him,” she corrected. “Søren said Jesus was the only man who ever made him feel humble. He makes me feel humble, too.”

      “Søren or Jesus?”

      But Nora didn’t answer. Instead, she released Zach’s arm and stepped toward the print.

      “Just look at it. Look at Him. Isn’t He the most beautiful thing you’ve ever seen, Zach?” She’d said his name but from the ethereal tone of her voice, it seemed as if she were talking to herself instead. “It’s the Praetorium. Pilate was a kind of Roman overseer of Jerusalem. He was trying to keep a very fragile peace so instead of immediately sentencing Christ to die, he orders Him to be scourged. Scourging meant a near fatal beating with a whip that had glass and bone and rocks embedded in the lashes. It was a serious punishment. He hoped that would satisfy the mob’s bloodlust. But look at the painting—no wounds. The skin of his back looks perfect. But supposedly He’s just been brutally, viciously whipped. Ciseri is emphasizing Christ’s beauty, not His beating. He’s showing Christ’s feminine side. Admittedly it’s very inaccurate, I know. Almost all depictions of the crucifixion are inaccurate. That little loincloth they always show Jesus wearing? Didn’t exist. Victims of crucifixion were stripped completely naked to add to their shame and humiliation. Artists can’t bring themselves to show just how fully human Jesus was.”

      Zach said nothing, strangely spellbound by Nora’s words.

      “Just imagine what this was like for Him, Zach.” Nora shook her head as if she couldn’t imagine it herself. “We talk about the Virgin Mary, but Jesus never married. He was a virgin, too. And there He was completely naked on display for the whole world to see, and right in front of Him is Mary Magdalene, who was his best friend, and His poor mother. His mother, Zach. He must have been so embarrassed, so humiliated. See these two women here. They get it.”

      Zach glanced at the painting and then at Nora.

      “Look how Ciseri painted Jesus. See the curve of His back and shoulders. It is a classic feminine posture. His hands are tied behind His back and His robe is falling over His hips. And all the men are just pointing and staring and gawking. But the women—see them?—they can’t bear it. One’s looking down and she—” Nora pointed at a female figure who was turned completely away from the horrible scene unfolding behind her “—she can’t even look. She has to hold on to the other woman just to keep from collapsing. And of all of them, she’s the only one whose whole face we can see.”

      Nora fell into silent contemplation again and Zach watched her eyes. They were fixed on the two women in the foreground, huddled together in palpable distress. “They know what He’s feeling. The women always know. They know it isn’t just a beating or a murder they’re being forced to witness. It wasn’t even just a crucifixion. It was a sexual assault, Zach. It was a rape.”

      Nora took a deep breath and Zach felt his own breath catch in his chest. He wanted to say something but didn’t trust himself to speak yet.

      “That’s why I believe, Zach,” Nora continued. “Because of all gods, Jesus alone understands.


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