Chapter Thirteen: The Denouement
Word
got out as quickly as it ever did, the same way the world heard about
every other time the Angels stepped in with force. Alec arrived at
their door soon after breakfast, bringing a basket of fruit. Nick was
a few minutes behind him, then Isobel, then others from the
congregation.
Megan
stayed in her room for most of it. Erica wasn’t well known to the
congregation, but Megan was, despite her best efforts. Hugh and
Kasumi had been part of the family for centuries; and everyone was
quick to rally around them.
But
after a while, most of the well-wishers left, except for family and
close friends. The little group stayed together for most of the
night.
It
was not a unique story. Nobody was quite certain how far they could
push their luck with the New World and it’s police force. The most
common understanding was that being removed from Paradise worked the
same way as being shunned from the congregation. Forgiveness and
patience and compassion were the guiding force, but for people who
made the conscious choice to oppose or stand apart, they were not
allowed to draw others away, or inflict harm on anyone.
“I
forget sometimes what a gullible breed of sheep people are.” Hugh
commented once to Alec, who couldn’t help but agree. He himself had
lost three friends to the way things used to be.
“There’s
a new Remnant in the world.” Alec agreed. “And I can understand…
feeling left behind, and I can understand wanting the familiar, but…
Were things really so much better for those people?”
“Alec,
my shower is solar heated.” Hugh told him. “That means the water
is just as hot, but not as long lasting. Back in OS, a wealthy person
could have all the hot water they wanted. We don’t eat meat, but
back in OS, it took thousands of liters of water to make enough
cattle-feed to get one pound of hamburger, and the world starved
because of it. Being in balance with the world means that the see-saw
is now level, and for the people who were always on the ground, that
means the world is better… but for people who were happily above
them on the other end of the see-saw, suddenly coming down to even
is…”
“Undesirable.”
Alec said it for him grimly.
“All
men are created equal. For the first time in history, nobody is more
‘equal’ than any other.” Hugh said darkly. “It’s always
been understood that the world wasn’t fair, but to almost everyone
I ever met, the idea of ‘fair’ was that you got your own way. For
people who had everything they wanted, the world seemed a very fair
and equitable place.”
“And
that’s not even counting people like Erica, who have a legitimate
gripe and a perfectly understandable grudge against someone.”
Kasumi whispered. “I’ve heard rumors of brewing conflict in the
Middle Eastern Regions.”
“Again?”
“This
isn’t like OS.” Kasumi warned. “Plenty of the Returned are
demanding their old lands back. The Covenant Nations want their
Inheritance. They don’t care anything for the four thousand years
worth of changes since then, or the millions who moved in and out of
those lands since; because they 'slept' through it all. They don’t
like the fact that they’re getting assigned new places to live.”
“It’s
not like for us.” Nick put in. “Me and Hugh were raised in a
Brooklyn apartment that could have fallen down any time there was a
good strong breeze. I can’t imagine what it’s like to live a
hundred generations in the same place.”
“Or
a hundred generations fighting
for the same place. With all those hundred generations around, it
suddenly gets a lot more crowded. And back in the day, most of those
people settled their land disputes with a war. This isn’t a feud
powered by The World or The Wicked One any more. This is about
promises made on deathbeds, and vows made to our children. Promises
that change your life. Promises like ‘I will avenge you’ or ‘I
will see our homeland free again’.” Kasumi sighed. “Only that’s
not an option this time, so… I wonder if the people who make the
right choice have really let it go.”
“We
don’t read hearts, Kas.”
“I
know, but… A person can be totally sincere in their beliefs, and do
so by burying the old ones; instead of letting them go completely. I
wonder sometimes if in the back of our minds, so deep that we can’t
even tell, there’s something simmering away; waiting for a chance
to boil over again.” She sighed. “We all saw Erica and Megan
settling in, getting better… But it was still right there, right
below the surface. If she’d never found her father, would she have
lived happily ever after?”
Alec
sighed. “We have to remember: This is not the paradise God had in
mind. Not yet. Neither was Eden. Eden never got it’s chance, and
now God’s agenda for the world is just getting started. For Jehovah
God, a thousand years are as a single day. The last three hundred
years of work is basically a few hours of cleanup. We’re the
Caretaker generation. We’re the Transition team. From God's view,
the dust hasn't even settled yet, and we just got an example of that.
A thousand years from now, two thousand, ten thousand, a million…
All these painful thoughts won’t even come to mind. But we’re
still in the very early stages. The good thing is, we get to be there
to see the finished product, no matter how long it takes.”
Kasumi
rubbed her eyes. “I promised Megan that she’d never have any
reason to feel scared and alone ever again.”
“I
don’t.”
Everyone
turned, and found Megan in the doorway. She took in the room full of
people at a glance and ignored them. She came over and gave Kasumi a
hug, seeming like the little kid she was for the first time. “Third
Rule of Survival: Don’t fall for lies.” Megan said. “You didn’t
lie to me. Neither did the Angels. Neither did Erica. She did what
she did and she knew what would happen… but if she didn’t do it,
she wouldn’t be Erica any more. Right and wrong isn’t like that,
it’s just… people doing what they do to keep going.” She looked
to Hugh. “I can’t even blame her for it, because it’s just who
she was… But it’s not who I am.” She shook her head. “I
wanted to be her more than anything, but I don’t any more.”
The
little speech took everyone by surprise. Judge Simpson was the first
one to speak. “I know this won’t help so much right now, Megan;
but just so you know, you never have to feel abandoned ever again.
Back in OS, some brothers had to choose between the people they
loved, and what they knew to be the truth. It’s a terrible, painful
choice, but it was still the right thing to do. Scripture says ‘Even
if my own father and mother abandon me, Jehovah himself will take me
in’.”
“I
know.” Megan wiped her face. “In fact, I can tell you for a fact
that it’s true. Because my father and mother dropped me when I was
five years old… I wanted them, even when they told me to go away
and not come back. And God brought me back, put me in a real family.
One that still wanted me when I told them to go away and leave me
alone.” She reached a hand out to Hugh, and he took it immediately.
She held her other hand out to Kasumi, and she did the same. “Erica
left me. She was going to go, even before it happened. She was going
to leave, because she knew you guys wouldn’t. Wishing things were
different is a waste time, because the world doesn’t change for
you.”
“The
world did change, baby girl.” Kasumi said kindly. “The world
became a better place for-”
“No.
It didn’t.” Megan stopped her. No anger, just stating the facts.
“God’s not a liar. I believe that now. I never did before, but if
keeping His promises didn’t matter to him, I wouldn’t be here.
But… This is His world now, right? He sets the rules now. Erica’s
gone, and her father’s going to live forever. And I’m supposed to
love Him for that?” Megan shook her head. “No.” She looked at
Hugh and Kasumi. “I love you guys, but I can’t accept that. You
wanna kick me out for that, I’ll understand. I’ve done it
before.”
Hugh
started to say something, when he noticed Judge Simpson waving him
silent. Those in the room were looking at the girl with an aghast
sympathy. Hugh knew there’d be lots of prayers spoken for his
family that night.
Hugh
and Kasumi looked bleakly at each other and spoke. “No. We're not
sending you away.” Kasumi said. “Not even for that. You're our
daughter. That won't change.”
Megan
nodded. “I'm not going to change my mind.” She warned. “But
thank you... Mom.”
~~/*\~~
“I
should have said something.” Hugh sighed. “Erica could be right
here with us right now.”
“Erica’s
father was willing to make whatever changes he needed to make to be
acceptable to God.” Carl pointed out. “So was brother Muller at
the Convention; and don’t think I didn’t see the way you reacted
to him being on stage. Erica wasn’t willing. But Megan is in no
mood to hear anything like that at the moment, even if it is the
truth. She’s young and full of many painful emotions right now.
Anything you say will be seen as blaming Erica. And I daresay Megan
has a history with people blaming her for her problems. Megan is
young, with a full life ahead of her. Let her come around on her own,
at least for now. We have time.”
Hugh
sighed. “Yeah, I know.” He almost smiled. “This is what the
program was talking about at the Centennial. About how we face up to
the heroes and villains of our former lives. In my head I know that I
have to forgive, but… Part of me still hates the fact that Mueller
and my brother get to walk around the same planet forever. I can
empathize with Erica so much more than I can with her father.”
“You
feel like you failed her.” Carl said quietly.
Hugh
nodded. “She was eighteen. Never exactly my responsibility, but-”
“It
takes a village to raise a child. It takes a village to save one. It
stopped being about what Dexter Knowles did wrong the moment he
died.”
Hugh
rubbed his eyes. “She called me 'dad'. She called Kas 'mom'. It
should be the happiest moment we've had since getting her back.”
Carl
sighed. “You know where I was, back in OS?”
Hugh
shook his head.
“Tennessee,
back in the 1960’s. A black man going to college wasn’t unheard
of then, but I was still the first one in my family.” He rubbed his
eyes a moment. “I knew the witnesses only incidentally. Someone I
knew was studying with them, I went to two of their meetings. You
know what struck me as amazing? One of the Overseers in that
congregation was black. At a time when every church had to have two
sets of bathrooms, and sitting at the counter in a diner could get
you shot, here was a group of people that didn’t have different
sections reserved in their halls. Blacks and whites sat together.”
“So
you decided to stay?”
“Of
course not.” Carl snorted. “I was young, and full of a burning
need to change the world. I liked what the JW’s had, but I wasn’t
content to wait and let God sort it out. I wanted to fix the world I
was already in. So I joined the Freedom Riders, Civil Rights…
Pretty much everything I could find that would have me.”
“How’d
you guys do?” Hugh asked with curiosity. “I went down in flames
almost twenty years before all that.”
“Things
changed. Some of them for the better, but…” Carl shook his head.
“I got myself lynched. My friends tell me that I got clocked over
the head when the police were breaking up the march. I guess they hit
me really hard, because my next memory is waking up here.”
Hugh
snorted. “And so here you are, along with all the protesters, and
all the people who bashed their heads in, and…”
“A
hundred million people who had been slaves all their lives, along
with each and every one who held a whip.” Carl nodded. “And I
don’t just mean people like me. The Egyptian Masters and their
Hebrew Slaves are all here too, or they will be eventually. As well
as the Romans, the Babylonians... You think what people like me went
through was bad, imagine when the Assyrian Victims come back and find
their own torturers here too.”
Hugh
squeezed his eyes shut. “I had a pretty privileged life, as such
things go. I can’t imagine what it must have been like. And I
can’t… I don't feel like I have the… I don’t even know how to
say it.”
“You
feel like you don’t have the moral authority to tell people that
they have to stop hating.” Carl nodded. “It’s not a crime to be
born into a life that is easier than other people had it, any more
than it was a crime to be born in poverty. But to Jehovah, we’re
all the same size.”
Hugh
looked back at his house. “My wife is Japanese. When I first met
her, I was barely back for a day or two, and I didn’t want to know
her. Six months out of Pearl Harbor for me, and I was military. I
lost a lot of Academy buddies in that attack. Now I can’t imagine
life without loving Kasumi to bits every day.”
“See?
It can be unlearned.”
“I
know, but… I had a prejudice. I had held it for less than a year.
Erica had it her whole life. I can’t imagine what generation after
generation of hatred must feel like.”
“Back
during the marches, I felt that same rage. It fed on what was
happening to my friends all around me, more than what had happened a
century before I was born. I saw my friends getting shot, burned,
spat on and killed… For what? For things that seem so ugly and
hateful now.” He gestured up at the sky. “To God, we’re all the
same size. And if He chooses to stop some people, then I trust Him to
be fair minded and evenhanded about it a whole lot more than I
trusted a Tennessee Judge. None of this is coming from us. We work
for the one person in the universe who can’t be prejudiced, can’t
be unfair, can’t bend His own rules, and can’t be taken in by a
lie.”
Hugh
couldn't help the smile. “That’s true.”
“I’m
sorry for what happened to your daughter’s friend, Hugh.” Carl
said plainly. “But I feel perfectly safe walking home at night, and
there’s never been a time in history when all people of all kinds
could say that. If the guy who clubbed me over the head back in the
day has changed his thinking, then he has no reason to feel unsafe,
because even if I meant him harm, he’d be protected. The only
people who don’t feel that sense of safety? They can’t put the
blame for that on anyone else. And for the first time in the history
of the world, that’s a fact, not an excuse.”
“Give
it to God and go to sleep?” Hugh guessed.
“Better
than trying to carry it alone.”
Hugh
sighed. “How do I get my daughter to... Accept Jehovah’s
decision?”
“Help
her carry the burden. Which way she carries it is up to her, even at
twelve years old.”
~~/*\~~
Weeks
passed. Megan did not soften. She emerged a little from her shell,
but her decision did not waver at all. Hugh and Kasumi knew not to
push her. Megan withdrew from school, and the other students were
actually a little relieved. Megan’s demeanor was so intense that
she was starting to scare them, even the adults.
Kasumi
wanted to break through to her, but Megan just refused to engage.
Nick
came over to visit one day. “How is she?”
“She’s
polite, she’s obedient, she doesn’t run away or take any food, or
miss any meetings. She helps me in the kitchen and eats cookies and
plays with her toys and...” Kasumi said in frustration. “And
she’s sleepwalking. She’s on autopilot.”
“She’s
not unfeeling.” Nick said quietly. “Just the opposite. She’s
feeling too much, and what she’s feeling hurts. The problem is…
Everything in this world is wrapped up in either the congregation, or
Jehovah. Both those things are reminders of bad memories now.”
Kasumi
sighed. “How to we snap her out of that?”
“To
be honest, I don’t know if we have to.” Hugh observed. “She’s
not isolated, the world is a warm and loving place now. She’s the
exception, not the rule. She won’t wallow in her misery forever,
because there’s nothing for it to feed on.”
“There’s
plenty for it to feed on.” His wife countered. “It’s like
seeing the kid across the street get his finger-painting rewarded
while her own gets ignored. Every smiling face is just… Rubbing
salt in the wound.”
Hugh
thought for a while. “You’re worried that she’s going to wallow
too long; but the world is a place where ‘too long’ doesn’t
exist any more. When we first met, you pulled out that teaset and
asked me what I would do with eternity. I didn’t believe in God, or
in the Congregation, but it took my mind in interesting directions.
Can we try and… inspire that in Megan?”
Nick
nodded. “Interesting idea. But she’s twelve. Trying to get her to
think in terms of eternal life is… not going to be easy.”
“Well,
we’re pretty smart. I’m betting we can think of something.”
~~/*\~~
A
few days later, Megan came home and found a garment bag on her bed.
She unzipped it, and found a beautiful dress. The sort of thing a
princess would wear at a ball, or a glamour model on the Red Carpet.
Megan had never owned anything like it before. “Kas?” She called.
She used the word 'mom' more and more often, but not all the time
just yet. “What's this for?”
“It's
for you.” Kasumi said warmly. “We're going to a show.”
~~/*\~~
“The
De… The Den…” Megan struggled with the unfamiliar word written
on the poster.
“The
Denouement.” Hugh told her. “It means: The Reveal. Like when
you’re reading a mystery story and you get to that scene at the end
that ties up all the plot threads and explains all the things you
don’t understand.”
Megan
stared at the poster. She recognized the names Bach, Chopin,
Beethoven, Stravinsky… She’d never heard much of their music, but
she knew they were supposed to be the best in history. “They’re
all here?” She asked.
“First
time you could ever have a collection of men like this in one room.”
Kasumi nodded. “Music was a generational thing. Every generation
gets their heroes back. Hugh’s generation will get a concert put
together by Glen Miller and Vera Lynn; my sister will get Elvis and
Bob Dylan.”
“Wonder
what they would make of this place?” Megan said under her breath.
“Well
in this case Megan, it goes a little further than having some
celebrity artists.” Hugh told her. “They’ve been working on
this project for a hundred years now. The composers got their heads
together and wrote a concert, specifically for an audience this size.
They put their heads together with a bunch of famous architects and
builders and they all designed and constructed this exact concert
hall, from foundations to rafters. The hall was designed to create
the perfect acoustics for this exact concert.”
“What’s
‘acoustics’?” The girl asked.
“The
way sound fills a room.” Kasumi asked. “It’s like when you go
to a canyon and hear your voice echo back? But if you do that in a
small room it won’t happen. So, what you’re going to hear tonight
is some of the best composers practicing for a hundred years, and
designing not just their best music, but a concert hall designed
specifically for this exact music. The hall will only seat a thousand
people, and only five Concert Halls were built to this design. Only
five thousand people a year, out of billions, will ever experience
this; and you got a seat on opening night.”
“How
did we get tickets if it's that big a deal?” Megan asked, sounding
interested despite herself. It was the first time she’d shown
interest in something since Erica died.
“My
brother reserved seats over a hundred years ago; before construction
began.” Hugh explained. “They were building the Hall in our area,
and most people didn’t hear about it until months later. First
come, first served.”
“Wait,
doesn’t…” Megan looked around. “If Uncle Nick got the
tickets, where is he?”
“He
gave you his seat.” Kasumi squeezed her hand. “He said you should
get the chance to see this early.”
“He
waited a century and changed his mind?”
“Well
he’d hadn’t met his favorite niece then.” Hugh poked her side
gently. “Besides, there’s going to be another show next year.
These men worked so long on it, they could do nothing but play this
same concert over and over forever, and still sell out every night;
but they have lives of their own. So a compromise was made: A one
night show in each concert hall, once a year, and the people who get
tickets have to give up their reservations to anyone who hasn’t
heard the concert before. When new people stop coming in droves, we
will get the chance to see it again.”
“Yeah,
in thousands of years.” Megan snorted.
“Exactly.”
Kasumi said simply, and Megan let out a whimper at the ease with
which she dismissed so much time. “You can see why we wanted to
dress up for the night.”
~~/*\~~
They
followed their tickets to find their seats. The Concert Hall was
something else entirely. The seats were scattered around the Hall in
groups, all of them on inclines, so that everyone had a clear view of
the whole room. The walls and ceiling were covered in odd bulges and
designs that Megan couldn’t guess at, but the feeling of the air
changed the second she stepped into the room. It felt like she could
hear every whisper, every footstep in the large space; as though her
hearing had improved dramatically by sitting in her seat.
The
stage was in the center of the room, surrounded by more seats, though
these ones were for an Orchestra. Megan had only seen pictures of
symphonies before. The orchestra wasn’t all sitting together,
instead split into six groups, laid out in some strategic pattern
that Megan couldn’t guess at.
But
exactly on schedule, six different men came out on stage and took
their places as conductors, each of a different group, to the eager
applause of the audience.
One
of them stepped up to a microphone.
“Good
evening. My name is Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.”
Megan
sat upright. She had heard that name.
“Tonight
with me are several other people you will have heard of. In OS, some
of our more... excited fans, saw our work as proof of God's
existence. This is no small statement, even for us. In my time, the
churches painted God as exacting in discipline and ready to smite;
but I knew in my heart that He was more about beauty than judgment;
for the simple reason that we had music. In the centuries that came
before, and after me, there was no secular explanation for musical
ability at all.
“The
professional musicologists, for whom I have the greatest respect,
haven’t the ghost of an idea about what music is, or why we make it
and cannot be human without it, or even—and this is the telling
point—how the human mind makes music on its own, before it is
written down and played. The biologists are no help here, nor the
psychologists, nor the physicists, nor the philosophers, wherever
they are these days. Nobody can explain it. It is a mystery.”
(Authors
Note: That
last paragraph is a direct quotation from Dr. Lewis Thomas, who is
affiliated with the Scientists’ Institute for Public Information.
The quote is in the 3/15/1984 Watchtower, which deals with the
subject of music.)
The
audience applauded politely.
“It
was no small mystery for us, either. For all the people who
considered us experts in music, remember that we were simply
musicians when we started. And we had no small problems of our own.”
He gestured at some of the other conductors in turn. “Bach spent a
month in jail, trying to break a contract with his patron.
Tchaikovsky suffered from several mental disorders. When Ludwig van
Beethoven first conducted his Ninth Symphony, he never heard a single
note, until he came back to life in this world.” The man smiled.
“He still won't tell me if it sounded anything like he thought it
would.”
Polite
laughter.
“When
I came back a hundred and twelve years ago, my Welcoming Committee
learned quickly who I was... And you know what? They refused to let
me hear any music.” Their host declared. “I was furious! I was on
the verge of violence.” He paused. “But I am so grateful to them
now! Because the first music I ever heard from this world, was the
Musical Introduction at the start of my first International
Convention. It was a period of weeks, but that day and its Angelic
Choir was my introduction to the New World! I knew then that I had so
much left to learn in a field that I was meant to be an expert in!”
Stronger
applause. Megan was turning her head left and right, looking at the
strangely shaped ceilings. It felt like the applause was coming from
everywhere.
“Music
is the one art of Heaven that is given to the Earth. And since the
sincere adoration of his faithful ones is so pleasing to Jehovah,
it’s the one art-form that can be given back in return.” Their
host declared. “God did not make his angels, or his humans to be
robots. You were made to feel. And you were not made to be
unthinking, acting only on emotion and whim; because he put eternity
into your hearts. When your mind and heart are united in something,
you understand the nature of your soul.
“And
that is why Music is the art of Heaven, my brothers and sisters. It
touches all parts of the human brain at once, so it invokes ideas,
and feelings, and memories, and imagination and creativity at the
same time. A single song can unlock a thousand memories in man, and
we have all lived a single lifetime. Ask yourself what kind of music
can someone make after creating the universe?
“Music
is a mystery that I fear we may never fully solve... But the men who
are here with me tonight will spend eternity trying!” He smiled.
“And that is why, we have called tonight's concert: The
Denouement.”
A
round of applause rang out.
A
few moments later, the music began. It rose and swelled and rang off
the walls and ceiling, until Megan was spinning around, trying to
find the source of the music that seemed to come from the air itself.
Looking around, she could see the audience having the same reaction,
swaying with it, eyes closed; giving themselves over to the music.
It
was like listening to a chorus, a hundred instruments singing the
same song, ringing over each other. The air sang with it, and Megan
felt for a moment like she was breathing the music in. She could feel
the enthralling pulse move her heartbeat, her breathing and pulse
coming in time with a thousand people who moved in perfect
synchronicity; a century of practice coming together to be a single
voice with a hundred layers, harmonizing a song of praise, not just
for the Creator, but the Creation itself. It was music that was
calling out its gratitude for having someone listening to it. It was
a song that vowed that it would get even better with time. It was a
promise that it would wait for those listening, that one day they
would come back and dance again without leaving their seats.
Megan's
eyes flew open suddenly when she felt tears on her face. Hugh and
Kasumi had the same, holding hands as they swayed with eyes closed
and faces radiant. The musicians and their conductors had the same
expressions. They were casting a spell. They were being spellbound.
The
music moved and crashed and lifted and kept going for so long that
Megan sort of forgot she was sitting in a chair. It wasn't anything
like the Angelic Chorus that rang out for the Centennials, but if it
wasn't heaven, it was at least the highest places of the earth.
Hugh
leaned down to speak softly in his daughter's ear for a moment. “This
is opening night. Imagine what they'll come up with after another
century of work. Or three. Or ten. Or a hundred. I've already put our
names on the waiting list for the next time around.”
Megan
found she was crying again. You
would have loved this, Erica...
~~/*\~~
The
concert ended, and everyone erupted to their feet in applause. The
orchestra were crowded with people offering congratulations. Megan
watched the crowd, shaking off the music. She had been pole-axed into
her chair for almost two hours, and it had made her heart hurt. Her
heart had been hurting for weeks; but for the first time, a part of
her wanted more of the feeling.
When
Hugh and Kasumi went to speak to Alec, she slipped out of the concert
hall. Like everything else, it was surrounded by trees, running
streams in concrete creek beds and plenty of private places where
people could sit and relax around living things.
She
heard music playing. The world was a place where the sun coming up in
the morning was reason for a parade, so someone playing music wasn’t
unusual. But for some reason, she followed it. It lead her to a
quiet, out of the way spot. She could see half a dozen people
settling around some open plaza’s..
The
music was coming from a Boy her age, who was tuning an electric
guitar, with a bible balanced on one knee while he sat cross-legged
on the ground. “Why is there singing in Heaven?” He said without
so much as introducing herself.
Megan
blinked. “What?”
“Heaven
is a spirit realm.” The Boy explained. “There are no books
written on paper, and the memory of spirit creatures is flawless
anyway; so what need of bookshelves? There are no canvasses to paint,
and if you’ve painted the stars into the night sky, then what need
would you have for brushes and inks? But the music is constant; songs
of praise sung day and night for their Creator. There are very few
things that activate and stimulate the entire human brain at once.
Music is one of them. Musicians say that music can express things and
make us feel things that we don’t have words for.” He tuned his
guitar a bit. “But in heaven, there are words that human minds
would never comprehend, or have ears to hear. There’s no ‘searching
for words’ because if anyone has them all, it’s God. So what need
is there for music in Heaven? When angels gather to sing their songs
of praise and glory, why not just speak the words? Why does the
Kingdom of Heaven have any need of music?”
Megan
stared. “I don’t know.” She said finally. “I heard the chorus
at the International Convention. I think that I will never hear
anything better. Not even tonight came close.”
“Perhaps,
but to a loving parent, seeing a finger-painting done by your
children is a wonderfully uplifting thing, even if it’s not quite
the Mona Lisa just yet. Even God is a living soul; and He created
music; and he listens to His Chorus day and night for eternity, and
he gave that art to humans. Because He feels, and He thinks and He
weeps and He remembers and He imagines and He laughs and He Loves. He
wants you to draw close to Him. So if words can’t always get you
there, why not give you a language that can?”
“Because
we suck at it.” Megan said plainly. “The concert tonight was all
the best musicians in history working together for a full century,
and they were nothing compared to a few minutes before the
International.”
The
Boy grinned, readying his guitar. “Remember, the angels had a
beginning. The universe is 13 billion years old, and if the angels
spent all that time practicing, there will yet come a moment in your
eternal life when you’ve lived just as long.”
He
strummed a few chords, and the piercing tone seemed to echo off the
air, surrounding them for a moment. Megan swayed with it for a while.
The
music ticked up a bit toward the end of the melody, like moving from
sadness to light. But the music stopped abruptly. Megan knew nothing
about music, but the sudden halt felt… unfinished; like a question
gone unanswered. The boy looked at her expectantly, and she knew he
wasn’t waiting for a reaction to the music. She gave him nothing.
The
Boy tried again. “The original Psalms were songs of praise.” He
said, one hand holding open the bible, the other holding the guitar
in position. “I thought I might see what they sounded like with
more modern instruments.”
“Can’t
really picture bible verses and electric guitars together.” Megan
said lightly. The smile vanished off her face immediately. Nothing
made her smile for long. “Did you see the show?”
“I
did.” The boy nodded. “What did you think?”
“I
think it was incredible…” Megan admitted. “I just wish… I
don’t know, I wish I had it in me to enjoy things anymore.” She
glanced over. “And before you ask, I don’t want to talk about
it.” She looked down. “But I guess you already know. Everyone
seems to know everyone’s business here.”
“We
look out for each other. Not the same thing as invading privacy.”
He played a few notes, as if testing them out.
Megan
scrubbed her face with her hands. “They think I can’t handle the
truth. They don’t get that I can work the Database myself. After
they go to sleep… It’s on the news. Everyone knows it happened,
and it’s not hard to figure out what everyone thinks. They all say
the same thing. Erica made her choice. You make the choice, you live
with it.”
“They
treat you like you’re twelve years old, because you are.” The boy
guitarist said kindly. “They don’t get that you’ve been living
with hard choices for most of your life.”
“Since
the moment I left the orphanage.” Megan nodded. “I know plenty of
people who made bad calls and died by them.” Megan looked down.
“But doesn’t that make her the bad guy?”
“You
know, there’s nothing that says you can’t love her just as much,
even if she was wrong.” He said kindly. “It doesn’t make her
love for you any less either.”
“Except
I was begging her to put down the knife.” Megan growled, betrayed.
“What if it was always going to be this?”
“What
do you mean?”
Megan
looked around. Nobody but them in sight. Later, she would think that
was strange. “She thought I didn’t know, but eavesdropping was
pretty much the only vice we were allowed in the Orphanage. I heard
her talking to the Padre. I know what she did, before she met me…
And I sometimes wonder if she worked so hard to be my mom because of
guilt. She said that some people don’t deserve a second chance. I
wonder if she was talking about him, or herself. I don’t know,
maybe she never cared about me at all. She left the second she knew
Hugh and Kas were good people.”
“If
she never cared at all, she wouldn’t have cared how good they
were.” The Boy told her. “Scripture says that ‘the former
things will not even be called to mind’. But it doesn’t say how
long that will take.”
“You
really believe that?”
“Well,
look at it this way.” The boy said earnestly. “The whole point of
the world now is that nobody loves you more than God. Or so deeply.
How could they? God’s there for all those moments when nobody else
is. When you take your first step, God knows it’s coming before
your mother ever would. When something good happens, you don’t get
how good it could be. When something bad happens, God knows just how
much you can handle, and he’s already got a hundred different ways
that you can get help with the rest.”
“That’s-”
“Sounds
like a cliche? Sure. It’s also true.” The Boy smiled, plucking at
his guitar again. “Ask yourself: If someone knows you so
completely, more than you even know yourself, and yet loves you so
much that He’ll tear apart time and space and death itself to give
you another chance… how far would He go to have you be part of the
family?” He played a few chords, soft sad notes. “And then ask
yourself… If you can torment yourself with questions, worrying
about what else you could have done, how much more so would someone
who’s legitimately all-powerful?”
Megan
blinked. “Are you saying… Is God feeling the same way I am?”
“When
Hugh Alman realized that it was possible to refuse God, he said that
‘Choice is a very powerful thing’. You of all people know that,
because you chose to leave the Orphanage, you chose to follow Erica,
you chose to stay with your new family.” He plucked a few strings,
keeping the sad song going. “But Jah loved that girl, and He
remembered every moment that she protected you, He was there every
moment that she held you tight on cold nights, every time that she
made sure there was at least one person in the world who loved a tiny
little outcast girl who wanted love so desperately that she would
have settled for hate.”
Megan
felt hot tears rolling down her face, and didn’t bother to wipe
them away. “It doesn’t seem right, that she could be gone, and he
be here.”
“I
know. But Jehovah was there for all his
moment's too.” He played a few chords. “What God is going through
right now is what every good parent goes through. You create a life,
and it has a mind of it’s own. You try and teach it right, and then
they get knocked about a bit by life, and you try everything you can
to bring them home, put them back on the right track. But in the end,
they have to make their own choices, and live by them.” He caught
the strings so that the music was cut off, instantly. “Trust me on
this, He’s in mourning with you.”
She
looked over to her fast friend. “Does everyone deserve a second
chance?”
“That’s
a good question. Here’s the answer: It's not about Deserving. All
have fallen short of God's standards, simply by not being perfect.
And nobody's perfect. But out of love, everyone gets another chance
anyway.”
Megan
scowled. “Doesn't make sense. Why would...” She grit her teeth,
frustrated. “Argh!”
The
Boy smiled serenely. “Look at it this way. Imagine you are given a
gift. An incredible gift, from someone you've only known a short
time. It's so lavish and expensive and grand that you know you could
never pay it back. So lavish that you can't bring yourself to believe
you deserve it... Now imagine that all the Giver wants in return is
your appreciation.”
Megan
said nothing, but her eyes changed as it suddenly made sense.
“You're
right, we can't earn
eternal life; its a gift. Mother Theresa didn't escape death by
working so hard to be good. It's not about deserving a second chance,
it's about showing appreciation when you get one. Does everyone do
that?”
She
wiped her eyes. “I guess she didn’t.”
The
boy started playing again. “And you know, that’s not just limited
to Erica, sweet girl. Jehovah looks at you and sees something so
precious and unique and wonderful. In the whole record of everything
that has ever happened, or ever will happen; there’s only one of
you. That makes you more precious than any priceless thing. He had to
let a bad world play out a while, for reasons that would decide the
universe. You got caught in the middle of a much larger war. But
every pain and every heartache… You think He wasn’t keeping
count? Psalms 56:8 says ‘You keep track of my wandering. Do collect
my tears in your skin bottle. Are they not recorded in your book?’
For all the talk about how excited we should be, you think Jehovah
wasn’t even more excited? Every time something bad happened, He was
keeping track of how it should have been, in a world according to His
Will. At last, His people are getting what was promised to them.”
Erica
sank into herself. “And Erica’s father was promised life, as long
as he showed appreciation.”
“So
was Erica.”
Megan
looked at him, suddenly realizing. “You sure don’t talk like
you’re ten years old. Who are you?”
“Not
everyone asked for protection, you know. Hugh and Kasumi were flat
out begging God for a child. Someone they could love and nurture and
show wonderful things. And of all the unloved, lonely kids in the
history of the world, He gave them you. Did you think He just flipped
a coin? Chose someone at random?” He plucked a few strings again,
the song getting lighter and sweeter. “So when He put you with Hugh
and Kasumi, was he answering your prayer, or theirs, or Erica’s, or
even His own?”
“I
stopped praying when I was seven years old.” Megan countered. “And
I didn’t even know their names then. Any of them. Erica hadn’t
even met me yet.”
“Scripture
says: ‘We do not know what we should pray for as we need to, but
the spirit itself pleads for us.’ God has always known that there
would be some things we would never find words for.” The Boy
finished. “But He understands those things too. You know why?”
“Because
there is music in Heaven.” Megan said, suddenly getting it. “And
it's here on Earth too, because there are some things words couldn’t
say, even for Angels.”
The
Boy finished her song with a flourish. “God loved you and Erica
every bit as much as you loved each other, He proved that when He
brought her back and made sure yours was the first face she saw.
Erica was right, sweet girl. Some people don’t deserve a second
chance. But that’s up to them.”
“Megan?”
She
spun around.
Hugh
came up behind her. “Are you okay?”
She
didn’t look at him directly for a moment. “How’d you find me?
Follow the music?”
“What
music?”
Megan
turned to introduce her surrogate parent to the guitarist…
He
was gone. In his place, the guitar in its case, with her name
embossed onto it. Megan
Alman.
She looked back at Hugh in disbelief. It was the first time she had
ever seen her name with his like that.
Hugh
didn't even look surprised, just somewhat reassured. “Do not forget
hospitality, for through it some unknowingly entertained angels.”
~~/*\~~
Megan
came into the house, with her new guitar slung across her shoulders.
She went straight to Kasumi and gave her a tight hug. “I was
wrong.” She said quietly.
“What
do you mean?”
“All
this time, I was comparing God to everyone else who offered me a
better deal. But everyone who acted like they cared about me or
Erica? The first and only thing they did was try to toss us in a
place we hated, and tell us we had no choice. God put us together and
gave us all the choices.” She buried her face in her mother’s
chest. “I don't want to turn out like her.”
“You
won’t, sweetie.” Kasumi promised. “Not if you don’t want to.”
“I
know I won’t.” Megan whispered. “And just so you know, the
reason for that is you.”
Kasumi
froze for half a heartbeat, and gave her daughter a hug that never
seemed to end. “Don’t run away again tonight?”
“Not
tonight.” Megan promised. “Not ever.”
~~/*\~~
“What
scares me?” Kasumi commented later, as they got ready for bed. “Is
that it’s not going to be an isolated case. There was so much
hatred in OS. So much that it was all that got a lot of people out of
bed in the morning. God can move mountains at will, but human hearts
only by consent.”
Hugh
almost laughed bitterly. “A rock so big, that even He can’t lift
it.”
Kasumi
slid down under the covers a bit, shivering in a way that had nothing
to do with the cold. “I never appreciated what a powerful thing
Free Will could be. Imagine God, too big for the whole cosmos to
contain, and here we are, tiny specks of nothing. He knew better than
us, and He cared if we suffered. He could have easily decided it
would have been a kindness to turn us all into drones and make us
stop doing such stupid hurtful things.”
Hugh
smirked bitterly. “And yet, here we are, insignificant specks of
nothing, able to defy the Almighty at will, as though we knew
better.”
“I
wanted to tell Megan that it had less to do with us and Erica, and
more to do with Jehovah.” Kasumi whispered. “Why didn’t I say
it on the spot?”
“Because
we’re trying to wrap this girl’s head around three unimpeachable
truths. One, that she is loved. Two, that she is safe. And three,
that she is forgiven. All of those things come from God, but they all
come from us too. If she’s been struggling all this time to believe
it when we say it, then accepting her place in God’s Kingdom is a
whole other conversation.”
“You
don’t believe her story about the guitar player?”
“I
believe every word. I saw the wings my first day here, and it still
took me a few weeks. I must admit, I hadn’t thought of it quite the
same way, but I’m sure God mourns every lost lamb that doesn’t
want to come home.” Hugh kissed his wife’s cheek as they settled
in for sleep. “But our kid is going to stay in her room tonight,
and she’s accepting us as her mom and dad. She’s never thought of
a family as a good thing, and now she does; and that’s no small
miracle. If God mourns Erica like we do, He'll celebrate her calling
you 'mom' just like us.”
Kasumi
slid down into bed and turned off her lamp. “I have to admit, as
much as Megan’s wondering if it’s her fault, I’m sort of
wondering the same. I can’t imagine being so used to misery and
hurt that you simply can’t process love and kindness.”
“It’s
sad, I know, but here’s the thing: Erica could have if she wanted
to. If she was willing. She knew what was going to happen, even if
she hadn’t accepted it.”
“Are
we sure about that?”
“If
she wasn’t making an informed choice, she’d still be alive.”
Hugh nodded. “It’s a fact of life, you can’t confess to a
suicide run.”
“You
think Megan’s going to be okay?”
“I
think she’ll be fine eventually.” Hugh promised. “Kids who have
lived the kind of life she has? They get a pretty good grip on what’s
really going on. Megan and Erica had no tolerance for lies. She just
needed to know that God cared about Erica as much as she did. She
needed to think of God as being part of the loving, supportive family
that rallied around her on her bad day. Now she’s made that much of
a breakthrough. The rest is love and patience.”
Kasumi
smiled a bit. “Fortunately, for the first time in her life, she’s
in a place where both those things are easy to find.”
“It
was a hard day, but there are finite number of bad days, and an
infinite number of wonderful days to come.” Kasumi snuggled into
his side, and he was more than willing to return the embrace. “Love
you, husband.”
“Love
you, wife.”
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