Monday, 30 March 2026

A Short Story: Faith and the Margins














Faith and the Margins

A salt‑stained wind moved in from the Channel as the congregation filed out of St Anne’s, the little flint‑and‑cream church perched above the harbour in Trewissick. 

It was late summer in 1996 in Cornwall, the sort of Sunday when the hymn boards still smelled faintly of polish and the cassette player in the vestry wheezed its way through the final bars of “Be Thou My Vision.”

The Reverend Margaret Ellison had preached with her usual soft, earnest cadence. Near the end she had leaned forward over the pulpit, hands resting on the green felt edge, and offered the lines she had been polishing all week:

“So if you’re feeling a bit marginalised for whatever reason, or you know people who are, know that Jesus’ love reaches that far. Jesus’ love reaches infinitely far. Not only that, but we often see that Jesus has got a particular soft spot for those on the edge.”

People nodded. A few dabbed their eyes. The churchwarden whispered that it was “one of her better ones.” Margaret smiled, receiving the praise as though it were a warm shawl.

But in the porch, as the last hymn sheets were being gathered, she spotted Ruth Harding waiting for her. Ruth, once a lively lay reader, now walked with a stick after a stroke the previous winter. Her speech was slower, her right hand curled inward like a sleeping bird.

“Margaret,” Ruth said, “I wondered if I might help again with the midweek service. Even just reading the intercessions. I miss it terribly.”

Margaret’s expression tightened almost imperceptibly. She glanced at her watch, an old digital Casio whose beeps always sounded too loud in the vestry.

“Oh, Ruth… I’m so terribly busy these days. The parish council, the youth group, the new stewardship campaign. I simply can’t take on the extra burden of supporting you in ministry right now. It would be too much for me.” She touched Ruth’s arm lightly, as if that softened the words. “Perhaps it’s best if you step back for the time being.”

Ruth nodded, though her eyes clouded. She turned away slowly, the rubber tip of her stick tapping the stone floor like a metronome.

Inside, the lay reader, Peter Lacey, was folding his notes for next Sunday’s sermon. He had laid out his cassock and surplice on a chair, brushing off a few stray threads.

Margaret paused in the doorway. “Peter, I meant to say, don’t wear robes next week.”

He looked up, startled. “Not wear? But I always do when preaching.”

“Yes, well,” she said, smoothing her skirt, “I don’t believe in all that dressing up. It distracts people. Just come as you are. A jumper and trousers will do perfectly well.”

Peter hesitated, then nodded, folding the cassock away with a care that made the fabric seem suddenly fragile.

Outside, the gulls wheeled over the harbour, their cries sharp against the hum of a distant ice‑cream van playing its high-pitched, electronic chime version of “Greensleeves.” It was a first warning to children to run for their pocket money to buy Mr Whippy. Holidaymakers wandered leisurely along the promenade, unaware of the small fractures forming inside the parish that prided itself on welcome.

Margaret locked the vestry door and walked briskly toward the vicarage, her sermon notes tucked under her arm. The words she had spoken from the pulpit still rang in the air behind her, warm and expansive.

But the wind carried other truths too, quieter, more uncomfortable ones, drifting like sea mist through the narrow lanes of the Cornish seaside town, waiting for someone to notice.

Sunday, 29 March 2026

The Sadness of Palm Sunday



















A short story based on a poem I wrote many years ago.

The Sadness of Palm Sunday

The city had been restless for days, as if the very stones beneath Jerusalem sensed something approaching. Rumours moved through the streets faster than the spring wind—rumours of a teacher from Galilee, a healer, a prophet, perhaps even more. Some dismissed the talk as festival excitement. Others whispered with a trembling hope they barely dared name.

Levi, a young market seller, stood at the edge of the road leading down from the Mount of Olives. He had come early, before the crowds thickened, drawn by a strange mixture of curiosity and longing. His mother had told him stories since childhood, stories of a king who would come gentle and victorious, riding not a warhorse but a donkey. He had always imagined such a moment would blaze with certainty. Yet now, as he waited, he felt only the ache of questions.

Around him, people gathered with palm branches cut from the groves nearby. Children ran ahead, waving fronds like banners. Old men leaned on their staffs, eyes bright with memories of promises long deferred. Women murmured prayers under their breath. The air shimmered with anticipation.

Then someone shouted, “He’s coming!”

A ripple passed through the crowd. Levi craned his neck.

Down the slope came a man seated on a young donkey. Nothing about him was grand. His robe was dusty from travel. His face was lined, not with age, but with the weight of something deep and unspoken. Yet there was a gentleness in his gaze that seemed to meet each person as if he already knew them.

“Hosanna!” the people cried. “Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord!”

Palms swept the air. Cloaks were thrown onto the road to soften the donkey’s steps. Levi felt the shout rise in his own throat before he could stop it. Something in the man’s presence stirred a hope he had tried for years to bury.

But as the procession drew closer, Levi noticed something the others did not. The man’s eyes, dark, steady, searching, held a sorrow that did not belong to a triumphant king. It was the sorrow of someone who knew the cost of the path before him.

Levi stepped back as the donkey passed. For a heartbeat, the man looked directly at him. Levi felt exposed, as if the stranger saw not only his face but the whole tangle of his life: his disappointments, his fears, his longing for deliverance he could barely admit.

The man gave a small, almost imperceptible nod. Not of reassurance, but of recognition.

The crowd surged forward, singing louder, waving palms with fierce joy. “Hosanna in the highest!”

Yet Levi could not shake the feeling that their joy was balanced on the edge of a knife. They wanted a liberator who would restore their land, break Rome’s grip, make Israel strong again. But the man on the donkey carried no banner, no sword. Only a quiet resolve that seemed to lead not toward a throne, but toward something darker.

As the procession moved into the city, Levi remained where he was, the palm branch limp in his hand. The shouts faded into the distance.

He did not know what would happen next. But he knew, without fully understanding how, that the man who had passed him would indeed be crowned. And the crown would not be the one the crowd imagined.

The prophecy was unfolding. And joy and sorrow were walking into Jerusalem side by side.

Saturday, 28 March 2026

The Triumphant Champion



















Inspired by Glen Scrivener's 321 Course when he presents Jesus as "The Champion", a footballer who wins game and says to the crowd and team "That's one for you", a reflection on how Palm Sunday might be rewritten with Glen's footballer Champion instead.

Fall of The Triumphant Champion

He was the Champion on the Football pitch
Came from the backwoods to kick the ball
Despised by the elite, pompous, the rich
Who watched just waiting for him to fall

He was our Champion, on our losing team
Winning all goals, turned fortunes around
How the crowd roared. It was a dream
The goals for us and the cheering sound.

He was our Champion, but then a red card
Led away disgraced to boos of the crowd
He was scorned, reviled, forever scarred
While the team just hid away, all cowed

I remember old days, hurrahs all singing
Palms clapping, and praises ringing

Friday, 27 March 2026

A Look back at 1985: Thackeray's Club and Restaurant















Now long demolished, this was part of Jersey’s thriving night club scene.

From the Islander, September 1985
 
Thackeray's Club and Restaurant
58/59 Esplanade
St Helier

Thackeray's upstairs disco and small restaurant has been part of the St Helier scene for many years, but in July, under new management, the now completely transformed club and separate downstairs restaurant emerged from its chrysalis as Jersey's newest and certainly most spectacular venue.

What a transformation! The lovely 30s decor has been carried out with perfect taste and tremendous style, both in the spacious upstairs disco and the trendy downstairs restaurant with its cocktail bar, tiny, comfortable lounge area and spacious restaurant with lots of greenery and flowers, plus picture windows looking out on to the Esplanade.

The service is faultless — pretty girls who seem really to care — and under the watchful, expert eye of manager Antonio Mileti. The food is outstanding and although not cheap, a tremendous amount of care and expertise has been lavished on the preparation. Toni's presentation of food has always been rather special, but in this new restaurant he has created some really superb dishes. The result is the most imaginative menu I have seen in a long time —for instance, many dishes are served with wild rice (almost un-heard of on the Island), long, slim grains of rice (a mixture of light and dark shoots) giving a deliciously crisp, crunchy taste.

One of Toni's specialities is Chateaubriand du Veau Bouquetiere (a fillet of veal for two people in a sauce of Muscadet wine, cream and spring onions, garnished with sauted mushrooms). Another is a whole fillet of lamb cooked with herbs de Provence, flambeed in white wine with wild mushrooms and finished with a mint and cranberry sauce. There are lots of other dishes, equally imaginative and all guaranteed to get your taste buds jumping with delight!

As a starter I chose Poires Mascharpone (fresh pears with an Italian cheese and watercress dressing), which was superb, followed by Filet de Sole Renoise (poached fillet of sole in a Champ-agne sauce, packed with large pieces of fresh lobster) — the beau¬tifully arranged dish of fresh vegetables included mangetout, tiny carrots, broccoli, cauliflower and small potatoes in their jackets. The wines are excellent and the coffee praiseworthy, as only Italian coffee can be! Incidentally, all pasta dishes are cooked individually at the table.

The restaurant is open seven days a week — lunch is from noon to 2.30 p.m., dinner is 7.30 to 11 p.m. after which late suppers are available to disco patrons who get peckish! There are two special menus for Sunday lunches — one is excellent value at £4.50 plus 10 per cent, and the other (with fantastic choice) is at £7.50 plus 10 per cent.

This bright new venue, with its Art Nouveau decor, would seem to be especially useful for lunchtimes, situated as it is on the promenade in the heart of St Helier.

Adverts on Same page



Thursday, 26 March 2026

A Short History of Guernsey: The Constitution of Guernsey







A Short History of Guernsey: The Constitution of Guernsey

From the Channel Islands Directory, 1981. I have kept in the adverts on the pages as they are rather fun, and also added a codicil bringing the position up to date.

The Constitution of Guernsey

In Roman times a rough and ready form of Government prob-ably existed in Guernsey in the form of the Gallic tribal moot; island chieftains were probably subject to discipline by the Roman consular or pretorian legate in Constantia (the modern town of Coutanches).

In the Dark Ages and until long after the Norman colonisation of Northern France, small communities of inhabitants on the island probably had no allegiance to anyone, and were ruled over by a head man.

In pre-Norman Conquest times the Channel Islands together formed one of the seven great bailiwicks of Normandy, and each island was controlled by a warden or custodian representing the Duke or his fief-holders. Local government, such as it was, took place at small feudal courts.

At a date unknown, but between 1066 and 1216, a King's Court was established in Guernsey; a Charter of the reign of King John (circa 1213) confirms the existence of a Royal Court and Twelve Jurats in the island of Guernsey. The original Charter is lost but a 13th century copy of it exists in the records of the Tower of London. The King was represented from 1204 to 1470 by a "Warden of the Isles" responsible for both Jersey and Guernsey, but later a Captain or Governor was appointed to each island, and from those times stems the present day office of Lieut-Governor.

It was the duty of the Lieut-Governor to look after 'military affairs and all matters appertaining to the Crown', and it was the function of the Royal Court of Jurats to administer the island's civil matters. Towards the end of the 15th century the Royal Court had co-opted the services of the rectors of the ten parishes of the island together with other men called Constables drawn from the `douzaines' or parish councils, and this enlarged body thus constituted became "the states", 'les etats' (the estates) exactly on a pattern with the system operating in France before the Revolution. The three "estates" comprised 'the nobility, the clergy and the third estate.


 












The body making the laws also judged the laws; there has never entirely been a 'separation of powers' of the legislative, the executive and the judiciary under the Guernsey constitution.

In the 18th century conflict arose between the 'old guard', the members of the Royal Court, and the clergy and constables. The latter contended that the Jurats had no right to participate in the making of laws and in the government. But this opposition died down and the constables had to content themselves with the voting of money only.

Reform came at the end of the 18th century when St. Peter Port parish was given larger representation in the States.

More reforms came in 1846 resulting from recommendations of a Select Committee of the Privy Council. The Parish Constables in the States were replaced by chosen 'delegates' and six extra seats were awarded to St. Peter Port parish because that parish contributed more than two-thirds of the island's revenue.

In 1899 a further Reform Law was passed adding eighteen People's Deputies to the States, serving for a period of three years and elected by limited franchise. After the First World War the franchise was widened so that non-ratepayers as well as ratepayers had the right to vote. Women over the age of thirty also qualified to vote.

Two years after the Second World War came more agitation for reform. A Royal Commission set up to examine the constitution of Guernsey, made recommendations for drastic change. Jurats and Rectors were banished from the States. 

The office of "Conseiller" was set up; 12 wise men, indirectly elected, forming a sort of Upper House. The number of People's Deputies was increased to 33 elected on the basis of universal adult suffrage. Thus under the Reform Law of 1948 the directly elected representatives now having a majority in the States of Deliberation and Guernsey is slowly coming into line with other democratically governed countries.

Her Majesty's representative in the island, His Excellency the Lieut-Governor, has a seat in the States; he may speak but he has no vote. 'The two Crown Law Officers, Her Majesty's Procureur and HM Comptroller, speak on matters of law but do not vote. Two representatives of the island of Alderney speak and vote only on matters relating to their own island. Sark and Herm have no representatives in Guernsey's legislative assembly.









My Update to Modern Times

While the Reform (Guernsey) Law 1948 remains the "basic constitution," several "drastic changes" have evolved since the 1981 description. As of March 2026, the States of Deliberation operates with the following structure:

1. Composition of the States

The 1948 concept of "Conseillers" (the 12 indirectly elected "wise men") was abolished in 2000 to move toward a more direct democracy.

People's Deputies: The number has increased from the 33 mentioned to 38 Deputies. Since 2020, they are no longer elected by parish districts but via a fully island-wide electoral system.

Alderney Representatives: There are still two representatives from the States of Alderney. Crucially, they now have the right to speak and vote on all matters (both Bailiwick-wide and Guernsey-only), not just those relating to their own island.

Bailiff: Continues to serve as the President of the States and the island’s chief justice.

2. Governance and Executive Power

Guernsey has moved away from a purely committee-based system toward a more centralized executive: Policy & Resources Committee. Established in 2016, this is the senior committee of the government, responsible for coordinating policy, external affairs, and the Government Work Plan.
Parish Representation: The Douzaine representatives (one from each of the 10 parishes) previously had seats in the States of Deliberation but lost their seats and voting rights following further reforms in 2004 to ensure all voting members were directly elected.




Wednesday, 25 March 2026

A Short History of Guernsey





This is taken from the Channel Islands Directory, 1981. I have retained the adverts which punctuate the pages.

A Short History of Guernsey

Guernsey, the second largest of the Anglo-Norman or Channel Islands, is situated almost in the centre of the Great Bay of Avranches, that corner of the English Channel embraced by the Cherbourg and Brittany peninsulas. Only 28 miles from Cap Flamanville on the Normandy coast, Guernsey is important as the administrative and communications centre of its Bailiwick which comprises the outlying islands of Alderney, Sark, Herm, Jethou and Brechou.

Guernsey is nearly in the shape of a right angled triangle, about thirty miles around the coast, with an area of 25 square miles; it is noted for the friendliness of its inhabitants, the neatness of its dwellings and the number of its winding, twisting roads. Its population at the 1971 census was 51,351, which is only a comparatively small increase on the figure at the turn of the century.

The earliest inhabitants were men of the later Stone Age and Bronze Age and evidence of what is thought to be their settlements and religious cults are to be found in the numerous dolmens and monoliths dotted over the island, particularly on the west coast and in the low lying areas of L'Ancresse in the north. Numerous objects were unearthed in these graves by F. C. Lukis and T. D. Kendrick.


 














Almost nothing is known of Roman influence on the islands of the Guernsey Bailiwick. Some experts believe that parts of the Jerbourg "lines" were thrown up by Roman galley crews as a fortified shore-base, and Roman coins have also been dug up from the foundations of a building in St. Peter Port. Such coins were the daily currency of the Gallo Romano traders who sailed over from Normandy.

The Roman name for Guernsey was almost certainly `Lisia' (vide transactions of La Societe Guernesaise 1962); it was not Sarnia as is commonly supposed.

In the 6th century St. Sampson, a Breton saint and missionary, came to the island of Lesia, the Lisia of the Antonine Itinerary. In Lesia, it was recorded, he preached to a considerable congrega¬tion. His church was established on the northern tip of the island. A Celtic legend relates that monks who followed St. Sampson set about christianizing the numerous pagan stones-of-worship by im¬printing them with the cross.

By the first half of the 10th century several village settle-ments had been established : at Les Camps, St. Martin's, Val au Bourg, Le Bourg, Forest, Trinity, St. Peter Port, La Fontaine and Anneville in St. Sampson's, and Les Buttes, St. Saviour's. These hamlets were surrounded by corn land and from them and their natural territorial confines have developed five of the island parishes. 















These five parishes, St. Martin, Forest, St. Saviour, St. Peter Port, St. Sampson were in existence in the 9th century A.D. Their inhabitants were Celtic rather than Norman, dark haired rather than blond, short rather than tall, speaking a language akin to Gaelic. At the same time the Northmen or Normans in long ships were attacking Normandy and in 911 A.D. the King of France acceded half of that vast province to Rollo, the leader of the Vikings. Rollo was given the whole of the north shore region of Nenstria, nearest to the islands.

Twenty years later Rollo's son, William Longspear, attacked and conquered Brittany and incorporated the islands of Guernsey, Alderney and Sark into his possessions.

In the second half of the 10th century the remaining Guernsey parishes came into existence so that for administrative purposes the island was divided into ten units each with a douzaine or parish council.

In 1055 William, Duke of Normandy granted by charter to the abbey of Marmontier near Tours six of Guernsey's parish churches: "ecclesia Sancti Petri de Portu, ecclesia Sancti Andee de Patenti Pomerio, ecclesia Sancti Martini de la Berlosa, ecclesia Sancti Marie de Tortevalle, ecclesia Sancti Sampsonis Episcopi, et ecclesia Sancti Trinitatis de Foresta".


 












Probably about the time of the Norman Conquest of England Guernsey became subdivided into manorial feifs. More than one hundred such administrative enclaves are known to have existed and seventy have survived to the present day. Some of the followers of the Counts of Normandy and other influential Norman abbots were rewarded by the grants of fiefs in Guernsey from which they could levy taxes. Each fief had its own Seigneural Court at which rough justice was administered. To this day the Seigneurs of the Fiefs in Guernsey enjoy some special financial privileges so that manorial properties are much sought after by speculators and estate agents.

William the Conqueror defeated the English at Hastings in 1066, and so the Duke of Normandy became King William I of England. But it was Henry I in 1106 who was emphatically the first sovereign of these islands. He had ruled the islands as Compte du Cotentin before he acceded to the throne and he had a personal knowledge of the islands. In 1111 he made a new grant to St. Sampson's church to enlarge the building already erected in 1055. Peace and good government prevailed in Guernsey until the revolt of the Norman barons in 1204.

During the reign of King John in 1204 Guernsey possessed a small garrison. This garrison, under Peter de Preaux, gave help to John in his effort to crush the Baron's rebellion. When John had lost Normandy his Channel Islands were in the hands of a licensed free-booter named Eustace le Moine who had been com¬missioned by the King at Gillingham. This monkish adventurer was unreliable. He was replaced by Philip d'Aubigny, a worthy supporter of King John, and thus the islands were retained for the Crown, and have remained British ever since.


 













Throughout four long centuries the legal disposition of the Channel Islands was in dispute between Britain and France, both countries laying claim to them, and the French made several savage attacks on Guernsey. During the 78 years from 1295 to 1373 the island was attacked eight times. Raiders burned the town of St. Peter Port, its church and houses and standing crops. Enemy oc¬cupation lasted two years on one occasion.

In 1373 Yvan de Galles, a Welsh prince serving under Charles V of France attacked Guernsey with a mixed army of Spaniards and Welsh, landing at Vazon Bay. His army was defeated and he himself drowned while attempting to flee.

There are records of attacks on Guernsey in Henry IV's reign and again in Henry VI's reign a Guernsey naval force was much praised for its skilful attack on a French fleet in which five hundred prisoners were taken.

Two ancient Charters dated 1465 and 1468 bear testimony to the reliability of Guernseymen : "how valiantly, manfully and steadfastly the said peoples and communities of the said islands of Guernsey, Sark and Alderney have stood out for us" wrote the Royal hand at Westminster.

In 1483 a copy of the Papal Bull signed by Pope Sixtus IV was nailed to the doors of Canterbury cathedral and simultaneously affixed to the door of the Church of St. Peter Port, Guernsey. This document declared the Channel Islands neutral and threatened ex-communication on anyone who should violate them.


 












In the year 1564 Queen Elizabeth I transferred Guernsey from the bishopric of Coutances in Normandy to the bishopric of the Protestant See of Winchester and from that time the Roman Catholic Church lost its influence over the island.

Guernsey played a dual role in the Civil War, 1642-1651. Grievances against Charles I who owed a debt of £4,000 to islanders, the tyranny of the Governor, Sir Peter Osborne and the widespread teaching of French Calvinism had the combined effect of forcing the people of Guernsey into the Parliamentarian camp. The members of the States themselves were doubtful about the validity of the Parliamentarian cause. Parliament had sacked the Bailiff, set up a body of 12 commissioners to replace the Royal Court of Guernsey and sent an expedition of 500 Parliamentary soldiers to the island. The Parliamentarians, although not popular with the poorer people, remained in control of Guernsey until the Restoration of Charles II in 1660. Then the prominent men of the island speedily petitioned the King acknowledging their guilt and craving pardon.

 

Throughout the eighteenth century Guernsey was on a war footing, living constantly under fear of invasion. By the end of the century there were in the island sixteen forts of various sizes, fourteen Martello towers, and 58 batteries, but although in 1794 many islanders witnessed Admiral Lord de Saumarez's thrilling naval action off the west coast the French never again made a serious attempt at landing.

























The Victorian accession ushered in a period of calm and contentment. Guernsey, which had prospered greatly in the 18th century due to the profits of privateering, became even more prosperous. On Monday, 24th August, 1846, Her Majesty Queen Victoria and Prince Albert visited Guernsey. The Queen was welcomed by the Lieut-Governor, Major General Napier, members of the States of Guernsey, and an "assemblage of some seventy young ladies belonging to the principal families, who were mostly arrayed in white." The Royal Guernsey Militia and the regular garrison, some 2,500 soldiers were on parade. It was a grand occasion, the first time that a reigning sovereign had visited the island since the age of King John. On departure Her Majesty "expressed her entire satisfaction with the arrangements made."

During the First World War, the Royal Guernsey Militia, the island's trained band that traces its history back to the Hundred Years War, was temporarily formed into a light infantry battalion. Men whose ancestors, some claim, saw service with William the Conqueror's knights at Hastings, once again fought for king and country at Ypres, Cambrai and Passchendale.

The Nazi tyrant Adolf Hitler cast his greedy eyes on Guernsey. In June 1940 a small German airborne force captured the island without a shot being fired and for five years the peaceful inhabi¬tants endured the rigours of a hateful occupation. Memories of this nightmare still endure in the minds of those who suffered, but time has healed most of the wounds, and the only visible scars that remain are the towers of steel and concrete around our coasts, monuments to a madman's folly that will stand for a thousand years.

The End.



Monday, 23 March 2026

A Short Story: Have I to die, innocent as I am?














Here is a short story which is a retelling of a bible story of Daniel 13:43 and is also based on a poem of mine. Like my other story, the theme is justice and false witness. But while that was set in a Victorian metropolis, this is set in ancient Israel.

A Short Story: Have I to die, innocent as I am?

The garden behind Susanna’s house was a place of stillness, a place where the air itself seemed to pause in admiration of her gentleness. She walked there often in the heat of the day, seeking shade beneath the old trees whose branches arched like guardians. Her reputation for goodness was known throughout the community, and her kindness had become a kind of shelter for others. Yet it was in this very place of peace that danger crept close.

Two elders of the people, men who were trusted for their wisdom, had allowed desire to twist their hearts. They watched her secretly, each believing himself alone in his longing, until the day they discovered one another’s hidden intent. Shame might have stopped them, but instead they fed each other’s corruption. They waited for a moment when she would be alone, and when it came, they stepped from the shadows with a terrible certainty.

They told her she must lie with them. If she refused, they would accuse her of meeting a young man in secret. Their voices were calm, as if they offered a simple choice, but Susanna felt the world tilt beneath her. She knew the law. She knew the weight of testimony from men of their standing. She knew that innocence alone could not save her. She knew that the testimony of a woman counted for nothing in their society.

She cried out, not in hope of rescue but because truth demanded a voice. Servants came running, startled by her distress, and the elders immediately began their performance. They declared that they had discovered her in adultery. Their words were smooth, their faces grave. The people believed them, for who would doubt such men.

Susanna was brought before the assembly. Her husband stood helpless among the crowd, unable to shield her from the tide of accusation. The elders repeated their story, shaping each detail with the confidence of those who expect to be obeyed. The judges listened, and the verdict seemed inevitable. Susanna lifted her eyes to heaven and whispered, "Have I to die, innocent as I am?". Her voice trembled, yet it carried a strange calm, as if she had already placed her life in the hands of the One who sees all.

She was being led away when a young voice rose above the murmuring crowd. It was Daniel, not yet known as a prophet, but already filled with the Spirit. He cried out that the people were about to shed innocent blood. His certainty startled them. They halted, uneasy, and agreed to hear him.

Daniel asked that the two elders be separated. He questioned each one alone, gently but with piercing clarity. To the first he asked under which tree he had seen the supposed act. The man answered without hesitation. To the second he posed the same question, and the answer was different.

The lie cracked open like a clay pot dropped upon a rock. The crowd gasped. The elders faltered, their confidence dissolving as swiftly as mist in sunlight.

The law they had twisted now turned upon them. Their own false witness condemned them, and they were led away to face the judgment they had intended for Susanna.

Her husband embraced her, trembling with relief, and together they praised the Lord who had heard her cry. Daniel stood nearby, quiet and watchful, as if listening for the next whisper of the Spirit that had spoken through him.

And the garden, once a place of threat, became again a place of peace.