Chapter Fourteen: Eternal Life
Megan
found she loved horseback riding.
She
had been learning all sorts of things in the hundred years since
she’d returned. Her sights had been set very low then, focused on
the next few hours and nothing else. With eternity ahead, it had
taken her years to force herself to look further than that. She had
listened to everything people said, not to her, but to each other,
and she had watched everything they did, even when nobody thought
they were being watched.
After
a while, she had accepted the world at face value, and been baptized.
Strange as it seemed, the girl who had longed for family so
desperately now had a whole planet full of brothers and sisters.
Chogan
was a friend of hers. He had been raised in the Cree Tribe before the
Europeans had colonized North America. He had been killed in a tribal
war. It had taken him a while to accept the Christian faith, given
that he had never heard of it, but he was very laid-back, and
accepted what he saw as truth. He had been the first Blue Letter that
Megan had received; and the two remained close friends.
Isobel
had taken him on as a study once he had expressed a desire to return
to the lands he recognized, and look for family members. None had
returned yet, but Isobel discovered that he had experience as a horse
trainer; and Chogan had very quickly found a place for himself. When
he returned to the Brooklyn area as a baptized brother, he had
brought two young colts with him.
“They
were my payment for services rendered to Isobel and her caravan.”
Chogan had explained to Megan. “I would like you to take the other
one.”
Megan
had refused, as politely as she could. She still lived with her
parents, as she now thought of Hugh and Kasumi, and while she was of
age to find her own place, there were plenty of extended families
living together. There were as many combinations of families under
one roof as there were houses being built. New homes were still being
built at a dramatic rate for Returned ones, so most people with
families agreed to stay with their kin until the Returning was over.
Chogan
had accepted her refusal graciously, and accepted his own piece of
land. He had built a very small home and turned most of it into space
for his horses. Most Animals were considered community property, and
came and went as they wished, but the horses were working animals;
and that made them part of his livelihood.
After
turning down ownership of the beautiful chestnut Arabian horse, Megan
couldn’t bring herself to refuse the invitation to come and visit
him instead. She had come by fairly often; and the horse (which she
had named Kent, after the Kentucky Derby) knew her as well as he knew
Chogan; and was always happy to see her.
Once
Kent was old enough, Chogan had insisted on teaching her to ride.
Megan had been fearless at any speed since she was twelve years old,
and had accepted. Kent was very patient with her, instead of the
other way around, and the two of them had jumped the fence by the end
of the first lesson and gone galloping off into the open country for
most of the afternoon.
In
the years that followed, Megan had found it harder and harder to
leave the horse behind at Chogan’s stable at the end of the day.
Then,
one day, she just stopped coming back.
~~/*\~~
Chogan
arrived at their doorstep and knocked. Megan answered it, and
deflated a little. “I guess I should have expected that.” She
sighed.
“If
you had wanted me to stay away, you should have said something. Kent
misses you, and so do I.” Chogan reminded her. “They used to
think that animals didn’t have emotions, but-”
“They
do.” Megan accepted. “If I didn’t think so before, I do now.”
Megan slipped out and closed the door behind her. “Okay. Let’s
talk.”
She
lead him to the front yard, and they settled in the lounge-chair,
woven from a still living tree. Hugh had grafted a few of his fruit
tree limbs into it, weaving them up as a canopy. After four hundred
years, the tree was still alive, and the seat and its back had
settled and worn in comfortably.
Chogan
sat beside Megan, letting her speak first. His fingers traced the
bark under his hand. He found a carving of Hugh’s initials, with
Kasumi’s right next to them, and Megan’s close by.
“Animals
are amazing things, you know.” Megan said softly. “I remember,
back in OS, there was this stray mutt that spent rainy nights in our
Squat. He was looking to keep warm, and that was fine with us. When
the rain stopped, he stayed.”
“What
happened?”
“Same
thing that always happened back then.” Megan waved that off. “Every
single animal I ever saw in those days, everything from a cockroach
up; knew to run away from humans as fast as possible. Then I got
here, and the lambs don’t even run from lions, let alone us. I
don’t know how animals got the message. Did animals just… know?
After A-Day, did they all just know
that it was okay to seek out humans suddenly?”
“After
the Great Flood, Jehovah built a fear of man into the animals. I
don't know if he took that away immediately,
but after a single animal generation of not being hunted or abused;
there would have been no reason for them to teach their young to
avoid us. Humans and animals have always had relationships, Megan.”
Chogan told her kindly. “My culture growing up worshiped them. They
were revered, even when we hunted; because they were warmth and food
and tools and survival. They were honored as a life-source, or a life
partner. And that’s not just us. Most cultures have animals tied
closely to their civilization. Some animals in particular. When I
came back and started learning the modern world’s take on living
things, I learned how every creature had a function. You can see
Creation in them. God could have made a system that didn't need
animals, or for that matter, one that needed very few; but he put so
much diversity into it… You can tell He was just enjoying Himself.”
“And
then we come along and… what? Put them all in battery farms? Test
cosmetics on them until they turn blind? Pack them into cages and
stuff them with food until we could march them into slaughterhouses?”
“That
hasn’t happened in five hundred years. No human has slain anything
since A-Day. No animal has slain another either.” Chogan told her.
“You won’t find a single animal that has a reason to fear, any
more than we do.”
“Exactly.”
Megan said, as though that proved everything.
Chogan
stared at her. “I know you think you just won that debate, but I
have no idea what you’re talking about.”
“Five
hundred years. How long is that in animal generations? Mayflies live
a day or two. Sea turtles live for centuries. Cats and dogs live for
fifteen years or so…”
Chogan
suddenly understood. “Horses, thirty year lifespan.”
“Animals
don’t get resurrections, Chogan. No matter how much we love them.”
Megan summed up. “I don’t understand people who want pets. I
don’t understand people who want to spend years caring for living
things hand and paw like babies that never grow up, knowing that they
have to lose them.” Megan waved a hand. “All those publications
in OS, where they had hundreds of paintings and renderings of life in
the new world… They always had at least one kid playing with a pet
tiger. Look around, Chogan. Where would I even keep
a
tiger? It’s a big creature; needs more room to run around than
I’ve got available.”
Chogan
chuckled a bit at that.
Megan
shook her head. “I don’t know how you do it. We live in a world
where we never have to lose anything
any more; and what do you do? You pick ‘animal trainer’ as your
profession. You chose the one business in the world where you’re
absolutely certain
to get your heart broke every other decade.”
“My
heart’s tougher than that.” Chogan told her. “I spend thirty
years with a horse, filling my heart up big and full, and then that
horse is gone, but their colt or filly is there, needs plenty of love
too. That’s another thirty years filling up my heart. You’re
right. We are ageless, the animals aren’t. But your parents? They
knew each other, and then they knew you, and when you have kids,
they’ll know them too. All of us have to care about others in ways
that transcend generations now. When you make a lifelong friend, you
have to know that you’ll be meeting their
great-great-great-grand-kids one day.”
Megan
sighed a little. “I guess we do.”
(Author’s
Note:
Whether
or not the animals gain eternal life either is an interesting
question. The only direct reference I could find was in the
15/10/1950 Watchtower in response to a Question From Readers. The
determination is that the status of animals was unchanged after Eden,
since Animals neither rebelled, nor could they make use of the
Ransom. Hence, it stands to reason that animals have always been this
way. I suppose it’s possible God will let us keep the particular
animals we love, into eternity, just so that we won’t ever cry; but
obviously there’s no evidence of that.)
“Thirty
years loving one, then thirty years loving another, and some
heartbreak in between? Still a good deal. I grew up with that. My
heart’s so much stronger now than it was then.”
Megan
was silent a moment. “Well, mine’s not.” She said finally. “I
understand if that makes you think less of me, Chogan… But I can
see Kent slowing down, getting older… And I’d rather remember him
as the one that galloped me straight over your fence and clear across
the horizon. Put him out to stud, and don’t let me know when he’s
gone.” She rose and went back to the house before he could argue
the point.
Megan
shut the door behind herself and spotted Kasumi at the window. She
had heard the whole thing.
~~/*\~~
“The
problem is, I can’t really fault her.” Kasumi sighed as she put a
bowl of soup in front of her husband, and another across the counter
for herself. “She doesn’t want to love something that will die
one day.”
“She
loves that horse now. If she’s not there when it happens, is it
going to make her miss him any less?”
“Possibly
not, but… It’s not like I can tell her she has to be there to
watch.” Kasumi shook her head. “We are directed to live in
harmony with living things, and to care for our animals. That doesn’t
mean we have to invite them into the house, though enough people do.”
“Thing
is, Megan’s not refusing the animals because she doesn’t love
them. She’s refusing because she loves them very much… And once
you go down that road…”
Kasumi
put a higher pitch in her voice. “'No, no sweetie; your puppy
didn't die, daddy just took him out to a farm where he could run and
play with all the other dogs'... It was a cliché back in OS, and I
wonder...”
Hugh
was about to answer, when he slurped another spoonful of the soup.
“Hey, this is amazing.”
“You
like it?” Kasumi was very pleased with herself. “I was thinking
of making it part of my contribution to the Welcoming for Judy
Mallory.”
“Good
choice.” Hugh sipped again. “Since
when do you cook Italian?”
“You
were kind enough to learn how to eat Asian, I can learn to cook
European.” His wife teased. “As a matter of fact, there’s
something I want to talk to you about. Four months until our
anniversary, and I thought maybe it was time we traveled together
again. We haven’t done that for a while.”
“Italy?”
“I
met a sister who was just coming off a European trip. She’s the one
that taught me how to make tonight’s dinner. There’s a place open
to the public there. They take people in all year round, and teach
them how to cook genuine local cuisine. Including how to grow it, or
where they trade it from. The whole thing is basically a tour of the
culture. The Great Exchange made it all enjoyable, but there’s
still a lot of the original history that got lost in the shuffle.”
“At
least for now.” Megan put in as she came downstairs to join them.
She sat at the table and her mother quickly served another bowl for
her. “The ‘original history’ all gets remembered when the
people in it come back, surely?”
“That’s
the idea, but the thing is, a lot of the ways people used to amuse
themselves is obsolete, a lot of the ways they used to cook, or
dress, or travel is falling by the wayside. And that’s becoming
something of an issue with the Returnees, because…”
“Fastest
way to help people settle in somewhere new is to give them something
familiar to hold onto.” Hugh summed up.
“In
places like Italy, their religion was a huge part of their lives for
two thousand years. Take that away and then tell them they can’t
ever get it back, or their favorite foods, or their favorite music…
Folks are having trouble with that.”
Hugh
nodded. “Isobel tells me that there’s another Renaissance going
on, people from older times keeping their traditions alive.”
“I
thought we were letting all that go.” Megan commented. “And this
is really good soup.”
“Nothing
wrong with tradition, Megan. It’s our history, and wishing it away
doesn’t help anyone. There are times when traditions become
straitjackets, and other times when they are reassuring source of
identity for people who don’t understand where they are or what
century it is.”
Megan
smiled at her parents. “So, you planning to go to Italy for a
while?”
“Would
that be okay with you?” Kasumi asked. “You’ve never been to
Italy, and I’m told the people are very friendly-”
Hugh
made a growling noise, deep in his throat.
Megan
smiled brilliantly at him. “Don’t like the idea of Italian guys
being friendly with your daughter? You do realize I’m over a
century old now, right?”
Hugh
just growled again. “I don’t like that idea either.”
Megan
turned to Kasumi. “Anyway, you don’t have to take me along. In
fact, I’d like to stay with Uncle Nick for a while.”
“Nick?
Why?”
Megan
grinned. “Because Izzy told me a few things too.”
Hugh
smirked, intrigued. “Well, we’re looking for a place to have Miss
Mallory's Welcoming, why not Nick’s place?”
~~/*\~~
There
wasn’t a lot of reason to hold off on having a party. The sun
coming up in the morning was usually reason enough. Every other week,
someone in the local congregation would welcome back an old friend,
or a lost loved one, and the congregation would rally around to have
a proper welcoming party. Hugh hadn’t gotten one because he was the
first of his family to return, and his crewman Aimes hadn't known he
was coming, but he’d been part of the congregation for centuries
and had taken on some of the Ministerial Duties; so when he organized
a Welcoming, everyone knew about it.
Nick
Alman had moved house in the two centuries since Megan had become
part of the family. His new place included a much larger
workshop/laboratory, where he spent most of his time. On the top of a
hill at the edge of the community, he also had his own observatory,
the product of over three centuries of saving and ninety years of
design and construction. The telescope was something entirely new,
designed by the Expo. Nick was one of fifteen people taking a
thorough look at the universe for various projects.
But
at the edge of town, he also had plenty of room on his property, and
no immediate neighbors, which made his home the perfect place to
throw a party with a hundred guests.
Hugh
munched on some strawberries from the buffet table and knocked at the
door to the workshop. Nick called him in. Hugh came in with a light
glare. “You know, people are having fun outside.”
“I'm
coming, I just wanted to put this down while I thought of it...”
Nick was hunched over a map at his drawing board, and a large screen
full of math equations hung beside him on the wall.
Hugh’s
mind was sharper than it had ever been, and every pilot needed math
skills. Nick was trying to balance two figures. “What’s the
project of the day?”
Nick
tapped at the screen. “Trying to balance ecology with population.
The whole point of modern architecture and town planning is that
nature and civilization aren't removed from each other any more, but
with billions of people... We're looking into the feasibility of
rebuilding the cities.”
“I
went out to the old cities. Nature has retaken almost all of it.”
Hugh smiled to himself. “Grass, tearing apart concrete.”
“Nature
always wins.” Nick demurred. “But there’s breaking through
roads and then there’s needing a road a thousand years from now.
Technology is such that what we put down may not move for a half
million years, so we better design places with a million years in
mind...” Nick put his stylus down. “How are those strawberries?”
“They’re
good…” Hugh suddenly froze. “Why? What did you do to them?!”
“Oh,
One
Time! I use you as a control group in one
experiment.” Nick snorted. “Naw, the plants are fine, it’s my
new hydroponics bay. Wanna see?” Nick caught himself. “But, of
course you came over to talk to me for an entirely different reason,
didn’t you?”
“I
don’t need a reason to talk to my only brother, but since you
asked: Megan has expressed a desire to go back to school.” Hugh
said.
Nick
grinned. “I’m glad.”
“So
I’m setting up tutors for her. The Classes would teach her the
basics, but Erica covered a lot of that, and Megan doesn’t have a
whole lot of experience with workplaces, at least not yet. She may
have decided to open up to me and Kas, but that’s not the whole
world, so…”
“So
you’d like to keep her apprenticeships in the family for now.”
Nick nodded approvingly. “Good thinking.”
“You’re
qualified enough in engineering, biology, chemistry, botany… You
could teach a class in any of these things.”
“Happy
to do it.” Nick nodded. “It’s time she looked long term anyway.
She’s a skilled musician, but I think that we both know she wants
that to be a hobby more than a career.”
“Her
album sold over twenty thousand copies.”
“Over
sixty years.” Nick reminded him. “Besides, she’s never made any
effort to go on tour, or to hook up with a band. Does she even play
with other people?”
“She
started with one heck of a handicap, brother. Her childhood dream of
what to be when she grew up was ‘alive’ and nothing else. I don’t
blame her for having a hundred different interests and no career
plan. Plenty of people have woken up in the 26th century with the
same problem. Horizons keep expanding. I’ve been a pilot since the
1930’s, and I still think of it as a way to get spare change. For
all I know, my lifelong passion is for an industry that doesn’t
exist yet.”
Nick
tilted his head. “You wanna sit in on some courses too? See if
anything appeals?”
Hugh
rubbed his eyes. “I gotta admit, I was tempted to go back to school
again. There’s all sorts of classes for adults, since so many of
the people coming back never got their chance at choosing their own
jobs and such.”
Nick
looked over. “Why don’t you? I’ve noticed almost everyone I
know working on one class or another, either to lean more about an
interest, or to keep up with the times. Why don’t you go along to
the Universities?”
“I
do, but most of my classes are to keep my licenses up to date. I work
as an instructor. Your Brains Trust is working on new kinds of
aircraft every day, new kinds of power systems… I have to stay
checked out on all of them. Megan wants her Uncle Nick to teach her.
She loved your classes.”
“Flattery
will get you everywhere.” Nick grinned. “Still, I’m a little
surprised she doesn’t want to go to other schools or tutors. She’d
make all sorts of new friends…”
“That's
the reason. Have
you noticed Megan didn’t have pets growing up?”
Nick
nodded.
“It’s
because animals don’t get eternal life the way we do. Megan started
from a perspective of losing loved ones more than she gained. A cat
lives for twelve years. That’s a long weekend for people who have
lived for centuries.”
Nick
glanced back at the closed door. “Just between you and me, she
isn’t the only one having a problem with that. In fact, there are a
few people at the Expo trying to work a way around it.”
Hugh
blinked. “Around what?”
“Death.”
Hugh
stared. “We have a way. We’re living proof.”
“I
don’t mean for us, necessarily.” Nick spoke quietly. “I’m not
one of them, but… At the end of OS, there was a great many projects
trying to crack the death barrier. Cryonics, Singularity, Cloning…
They had all kinds of different names for it. But the plan was to
conquer death.”
Hugh
was honestly confused. “Why would that… I mean, why
would they be doing that now?”
Nick
shook his head. “Nick, no two experts have ever been able to agree
on how the aging process worked. All the things they could do back
then, all the things we can do now, and we still don’t know how it
went. Well, some people worked their whole lives trying to attain
immortality, and they missed A-Day, but in their time they thought
they were getting somewhere. This is a group of people who have come
back and picked up a thread they put down ages ago.”
He shook his head. “And
they won't
succeed. Death wasn't a genetic weakness to be fixed, it was a
punishment.” Nick returned to the earlier point. “Megan wants me
as her tutor because she knows me already.”
Hugh
shook it off. “Right. She’s not… closed, like she was when we
first met her, but she’s learned how to ‘travel light’. If she
can have a happy life with family and three or four close friends
instead of a thousand acquaintances, that’s fine with me. Nothing
in the third or fourth testament that says how many friends you need
to have.” He smirked. “And hey, if she makes one new friend every
century, that’s still an infinite number of future friends on the
way.”
“That’s
true, I suppose.”
“And
there’s another reason.” Hugh explained. “Kasumi and I were
going to take a tour to Europe for a while. A year at most. Megan’s
old enough, but as I said, her circle’s still small, so…”
“You
want her to stick close to the family that stays when you leave.”
“We
offered to take her with us, but…” Hugh grinned slowly. “Then
we found out you were-”
“You
heard about that already?!” Nick rolled his eyes. “Honestly, I
was going to invite everyone out, make an announcement, make an event
out of it!”
“Nick,
you can’t keep a secret any more. That’s why nobody does anything
salacious or criminal.”
“That
and one other reason.” Nick drawled.
Hugh
smiled broadly. “Congratulations, Nick! Why
didn’t you tell us right away? You’ve been trying to get a
residence at the Expo for three hundred years! I assume you told
Rachel?”
“She
was the one that told me
I was in. Obviously, she’s
thrilled too.”
“When
are you gonna marry that girl?”
“When
I get around to it.”
“She
turned you down, didn’t she?”
“Just
until the project we're working on is finished. Another year or two.
I can wait.”
“Just
like the last time she put you off.”
“We
have things to do.” Nick waved that off. “So, you knew I was
leaving and you figured the last thing I do before I pack should be
to tutor your daughter?”
“Call
it self-centered if you like, but if
we had schools like this when we
were kids…”
“You
didn’t do too badly.” Nick pointed out. “How many kids from our
old school got to become pilots?”
“Not
many.” Hugh admitted. “So. You got anywhere else to be before you
leave for the Expo?”
“Actually,
I have a few stops to make.” Nick nodded, busy with things. “I'm
part of the logistics team on Rachel's new project, and after that I
have a quick job up north. I’m installing some laser pointers.”
“Some
what?”
“You
remember a long time ago I asked about whether or not natural laws of
movement have been put on pause forever? Well, a small team is aiming
to find out for sure. You use a laser sensor, you can measure
something’s movement up to a thousandths of a millimeter. You
anchor the pointer properly, and you can keep a measurement going for
a full century.”
“What
are you searching for?
“Erosion.
They say Niagara falls will wear away to nothing in fifteen thousand
years. The continents move by two centimeters every year. What’s it
going to be like in a million years? We’ll have to redraw the
maps…”
“Once
every million years? I think we can handle that.”
“Yeah,
but my point is that when those continental plates rub together,
there’s an earthquake. Except that natural disasters have all
stopped, haven’t they? So are the plates still moving? Because if
they are, then the mountains will keep rising, and the land masses
will keep changing shapes. A million years from now, this spot where
I’m sitting might be underwater. But if they’ve stopped, then
what’s going on with the geology? Because the world is full of
magma, isn’t it? And that never stops moving. Life on the planet
depends on it, in a lot of ways…”
“These
are all good questions.” Hugh agreed. “And you know what?”
Nick
sighed, settling back in his chair. He answered by rote. “We’ll
learn these things eventually.” He gestured at his workstation. “So
why not get to work finding out?”
There
was a sudden shout from outside, and then the screaming started.
Hugh
and Nick hadn’t heard startled screams in centuries, and they went
running out to the backyard to see what had happened.
Two
of the younger children had been climbing the trees on the edge of
Nick's property, and one of them had fallen, headfirst to the ground…
The
one falling headfirst suddenly stopped, hanging in mid-air. The Wings
were visible a moment later. The other boy hit the ground and started
wailing loudly. The angel set the first boy down gently, and took the
other's hand. His crying stopped instantly, and he sat up, healed.
Those
watching applauded loudly, but the angel didn’t stop to take a bow.
He spoke briefly with the boys and faded into nothingness with a
smile.
“Why
did he only catch the one?” Nick asked quietly. “He could have
caught both easily. He saved one, let the other drop.”
“And
healed his injury right away.” Hugh countered. “What do you want
to bet that the boy he caught would have killed himself? He was
falling headfirst. God promised an end to death, but not to simple
human error.”
“I’ve
singed myself with the soldering iron once or twice.” Nick
observed. “I’ve spent centuries learning how to use my fingers,
so I don’t often cut myself shaving any more, or skin myself when
I’m peeling potatoes… But I was hiking last year, and put my foot
in a sink hole. Even a perfect person can’t see through
the ground, so I turned my ankle. It hurt.”
“But
you didn’t get an angel in front of you, telling you where to put
your feet.” Hugh nodded. “I remember, when you were born, mom
helping you learn to walk. She held your hands out to balance you.
But she let go when you tried to take a step on your own.”
Nick
got the point. “Not going to learn much if we can’t take a single
step without ‘daddy’.”
“God
promised no fear of death or illness. The kids are both fine. Even if
the boy had been resurrected, he would have died through no fault of
his own; if only for a few seconds. And that’s not what this world
is about.”
(Author’s
Note: No
specific scriptures speak on whether or not we’ll even be capable
of injury or accident. The closest thing is Psalm 93:11: “For he
will give his angels a command concerning you, To guard you in all
your ways. They will carry you on their hands, So that you may not
strike your foot against a stone.” But it is unclear if this is
metaphorical or literal. It stands to reason that a perfect person
would be less prone to accident, but there are still things that even
a perfect person can’t predict, like having the ground fall away
during a hike. ‘Death will be no more’ is fairly straightforward.
‘Pain will be no more’ is open to some interpretation. This scene
was just to demonstrate that aspect of life.)
Hugh
sent a glance over to the newly resurrected ones. They were staring,
gobsmacked. They had never seen people with wings before.
~~/*\~~
“I
never get tired of seeing that reaction.” He commented later that
day to Kasumi, once they were back home. “There was a time I had
the exact same look on my face. At any other point in history, that
kid falling twenty feet headfirst? That would have been the end of
the party, and the start of a most terrible day.”
“Mm.”
Kasumi agreed. “Every now and then, I get a reminder of how
wonderful the world can be. It’s a little like falling in love.
Every now and then, a day or two can pass without my remembering how
lucky I am. Lucky to be here, lucky to be with you, lucky to have
Megan…”
Hugh
smiled, putting his arms around her. “Never, ever let me take you
for granted, love. Never let me take any of this for granted. I don’t
know if Miracles keep coming once you stop caring about them, but I
never want to find out.”
Kasumi
hugged him back. “Me neither.”
Just
then, the door opened, and Megan came in. “Oh. If you two are
having A Moment, I can come back later.”
Kasumi
waved their daughter over. “How are the kids?”
“The
kids are okay. Neither of them were much aware that they were in
danger. The one that got his arm busted is a little leery about
climbing the tree again, but I gave him a few lessons in how to test
branches. He’s been healed like new, but the memory will make him
more cautious for a while yet. The one that got caught before he hit
has no idea he was in any danger. In fact, it took some doing to
convince him not to climb up and jump, just to do it again.”
Kasumi
snorted. “Witnesses in OS were told to avoid extreme or
blood-sports, for exactly that reason. Part of me wonders why any of
us still play professionally at all.”
“Don’t
let dad hear you say that again, he still has season tickets at
Yankee Stadium.” Megan teased. “Which I will enjoy using once you
guys head for Europe.”
“Got
a date for the games picked out yet?”
“I
thought I might ask Trev.”
“Trev?
You used to babysit that kid.”
“Yeah,
seventy years ago. I don’t know if you noticed, dad; but we're not
twelve years old any more.” Megan teased. “Oh, and there’s a
truck coming up the driveway. Looks like a cargo truck.”
Kasumi
blinked. “A delivery? I didn’t order anything.”
~~/*\~~
Hugh
met their truck driver at the door.
“I’m
here to install your Meat-Tank.” The man said. “Where do you want
it?”
Hugh
checked the invoice. Nick had sent it over as a gift. Hugh had heard
of the invention, but had never seen one personally. It was about the
size of a hot water heater, and they directed him to the kitchen. It
was easily a match for the refrigerator in size and weight.
“What
exactly is it?” Kasumi asked warily.
“It’s
a synthetic protein that grows to match the genetic material that’s
recorded in the machine itself. The proteins and genetic sequences
grow to match the original, and lo behold, it’s ready.”
“So…
It’s a synthetic animal?”
“No,
it’s synthetic meat.” Their delivery man explained. “Back in
OS, they were experimenting with growing human organs and flesh from
stem cells. For transplants, skin grafts, that sort of thing. So one
of the High IQ team at the Expo had the idea that maybe it could be
done with animals. And they succeeded. But it isn’t a living
animal, any more than a heart transplant from OS could have a pulse
on its own. You’re basically growing a copy of one piece of a
particularly well fed, particularly pampered chicken that’s most
likely still alive and pecking at the grass somewhere in California.”
“So
what’s in this tank is not alive, and never has been…” Hugh
finished. “No life-force, no blood, no harm done to any domestic
animal.”
“And
we get to eat meat again.” Kasumi couldn’t help the smile. “If
it’s… well, anything
like I remember. It’s been centuries since I ate poultry. And even
that was hospital food.”
The
deliveryman smiled while he worked. “I’ll tell you a story. Back
in OS, I worked as a personal chef for a man named ‘Hobbes’. He
was… eccentric, which is a polite way of saying he was completely
mad, but harmless. Every single night, he wanted the same thing for
dinner. Coq
au Vin.
Chicken in wine sauce. Night after night for years, and years. I got
pretty good at making it, even after I lost the will to ever eat
again. Centuries later, I somehow got into this industry. I have one
of these tanks in my own kitchen, and then I get a Blue Letter.
Hobbes came back. Missed the centuries in between completely. I met
him, and I had dinner waiting. You can probably guess what I served
him… He said it was the best I’d ever made.”
Hugh
and Kasumi laughed delightedly.
“You’ll
have an adjustment period, of course.” The man said, checking the
equipment. “As you say, it’s been a long time. But this isn’t a
butcher shop. The equipment can only put out a certain amount of meat
per day, and it’s basically enough for the two of you to have some.
There are some families with two dozen mouths to feed, and there’s
a lot of these machines on back order. And it’ll only grow poultry
at this point, but the Brains Trust is working on adding variety,
miniaturizing the equipment… This is what they call ‘proof of
concept’.”
“Good
enough to prove to the world that they can do more.” Hugh agreed.
He’d been having conversations with his brother on the subject for
a while.
~~/*\~~
“It’s
been a while since I’ve had to cook anything involving meat.”
Kasumi murmured. “And if I’m honest, I’m not sure I trust this
machine.”
“Don’t
let Nick hear you say that.” Hugh told her with a smile. “The
days of food poisoning and allergies are long past, and I don’t
know what else might go wrong. If there was something wrong about
doing this, we wouldn’t be doing it. All that’s left after that
is to handle the idea of doing something new.” He gave her a
knowing look. “You have a problem with something new?”
Kasumi
stared him down for a whole three seconds before she cracked, whining
like a little kid. “I haven’t had meat in centuries and it’s
cold and it’s slimy and I’ll have to touch
it and everything!”
Hugh
laughed at her tone, and after a moment she smiled a little, despite
herself.
“Would
you listen to me?” She chuckled. “Yesterday I was planning a
European trip for cooking classes.”
“I
don’t know why you need them. What can a class teach you that
centuries of trial and error can’t?”
“If
I’m honest, not that much. We'll be the oldest ones there by
centuries. But I miss Europe.” Kasumi admitted. “I haven’t made
a world tour in ages, and… We’ve never gone without anything we
need, but there are some things that we can’t get easily on this
side of the world. The Great Exchange means that we find it all out,
but…”
“You
miss traveling.”
Kasumi
smiled a bit. “You proposed to me on the last world tour we took
together. Maybe think of it as a second honeymoon?”
“I
figure once every two centuries is fair.” Hugh deadpanned.
~~/*\~~
Travel
was one of those things that never stopped evolving. Normally, a
leisurely ride with Isobel’s Caravan, or a flight on the Airship
Stargazer
would have been their sort of ride, but they had a schedule to meet
this time. The High-Speed rail that the Expo had created had been
built, and once the concept was proven, other countries had done the
same. The entire world was always on the move, with most brothers
wanting to know more about the world. The vast majority of the human
race had never traveled more than a few hundred miles in their
lifetime. Many of the returned ones had no idea how big the world
could even be.
Even
moving at such fantastic speeds, the inside of the train was very
relaxed. The seats had plenty of room, small spaces where people
could work, or talk with each other. Hugh and Kasumi had been served
a three course meal, and the rooms in the Sleeper Cars were small,
but as plush as any household bedroom.
“Luxury
trains were the norm back in the day.” Kasumi murmured to Hugh one
night in their sleeper car. “They were signs of status and wealth,
being able to afford a trip on something like the Orient Express.
Nowadays, I think every train is like this.”
“Trains
are bigger now too. Bigger than I remember, anyway. Built five feet
wider, and so are the tracks. Gives us a lot more room to make it
beautiful inside.”
“Wonder
who came up with that idea?”
“Who
came up with any of those ideas?” Hugh countered. “Streets in
America were spaced by using the old Roman Roads as a template. The
Romans had their roads made to the same width because of how their
armies marched and their chariots rode, side by side. But Centuries
after Rome fell, empires that hadn’t existed then used the same
width when laying roads of their own with entirely different
technology, for entirely different vehicles. If it made traffic more
or less convenient two thousand years after the Roman Roads, they
just had to live with it.”
Kasumi
snorted. “Alec told me once that back just after A-Day, when they
started getting the Rebuilding and Restoration Teams organized, one
of the directives was how wide to make the roads. It was only
different by a foot, and nobody could figure out why it was important
that roads between population centers be that width. But the Ancient
Believers had no idea why Quarantine laws were needed. They obeyed,
and they found out why after they got Resurrected. I wonder if some
of the instructions we’re being given will have some brilliant,
deeper meaning a thousand years from now.”
“I’d
be stunned if they didn’t.” Hugh agreed.
“Speaking
of Roman Roads, we’ll be there in two days.” Kasumi commented.
“We should sleep.”
“One
thing we haven’t figured out yet is jet-lag.” Hugh switched off
the light. “I’m glad we’re getting there a day early.”
~~/*\~~
“I
do love Italy.” Kasumi said approvingly.
Hugh
agreed. Practically everywhere in the world now was a mixture of the
ancient and the futuristic, but Italy had been that way long before
A-Day. Ancient buildings, and architecture that didn’t change much
over the centuries, with all the new technology included; and
cobblestone roads that had been in use since the First Century.
“I
came past here on my first trip.” Kasumi said as they walked. Most
people walked, with almost no vehicles visible on the streets. “I
wanted to see what was left of the place. Alec told me stories of
what happened in Those Days. I'm told the fighting was vicious in
Vatican City.”
“Vicious.”
Hugh agreed. “But not lengthy.”
The
two of them made their way to a country house outside town. “See
those hills?” Hugh commented. “When I was first in Europe, I was
flying over those hills. The roads had barbed wire checkpoints, but
those hills have barely changed.”
“Barely?”
“More
houses. One on each hill. It’s the land apportionment.” Hugh
pointed at the homes, some of them small, some of them lavish. “My
guess is that one estate owned ten fields in OS, but now there’s
one acre to each house. But you know something?”
“The
fields themselves haven’t changed.” Kasumi nodded. “I know, I
was here after A-Day, and those houses hadn’t been built yet, and
those fields weren’t being maintained. Things grow. They need sun,
they need rain; and for the most part the human’s job is to let
those things do their work.”
~~/*\~~
Their
tour group arrived more or less on time. There were six of them
visiting the farmhouse, two married couples, three single sisters,
one brother. They all wore a variety of clothing that suggested
different backgrounds. While a lot of the modern world had settled
into a fairly consistent style, there were always people who felt
more at home in the clothes they grew up in.
People
Watching was a talent that most experienced Witnesses had grown
proficient in, and Hugh noticed the single man and one of the women
in particular were looking at things with a kind of nervous awe. The
electronics and architecture in particular. Those two were form a far
different time, and hadn’t adjusted yet.
The
house was large, and had plenty of rooms. The kitchen and dining room
were merged together to make the biggest room in the house, with
marble counters, solid oak construction, and cast iron for the ovens
and cook-tops. There were solid pots and pans hanging from hooks, and
polished flagstones for the floors and arches. It was beautiful and
homey and the room felt like it was meant to have plenty of hungry
people in it all the time.
Their
host was a widow named ‘Tilly’ who wore a peasant blouse and a
silver whistle on a chain around her neck. She had apparently taken
over three different farms in the wake of A-Day, and had somehow
managed to hold onto them by providing homes and work for over a
hundred people who had returned. Her eyes said she was either an
early Returnee, or had actually made it herself. Hugh suspected the
latter, when he later found out that her own husband had not made it.
While
nobody looked older then 25, Tilly had accentuated her age by her
style of hair and clothing, making her seem more naturally mature
than most women. Later, when she started helping people pick foods,
and practice their culinary skills; Hugh would realize that this was
deliberate. To the newly Returned ones, Tilly was a reassuringly
maternal presence.
She
didn’t go around the room like in a classroom. She just let
everyone talk, and then quietly introduced herself to each of them as
the morning went on.
But
finally, she addressed them all. “Well, if you want to know about
food, at least in this part of the world, then you should start at
the beginning.”
~~/*\~~
They
were all brought out to the fields, where wheat was growing across
the entire hillside. There were spaces between the crops for carts
and people to walk through the fields safely, about ten feet wide.
Hugh and Kasumi worked on one side of the space, gathering wheat. A
cart would roll up and down the space between, with piles of
harvested wheat on it. The workers would toss their bundles on board
as it passed.
“I
can see at least forty people in these fields.” Hugh commented to
his wife. “When she didn’t make some big introductory speech, I
wondered if they took us on for free labor, but if they have that
many people here…”
Kasumi
was about to answer, when they suddenly noticed people carrying large
picnic tables, easily the size of dining tables. Almost a dozen of
them. While the visiting workers kept gathering wheat, some from the
house set the tables down, end to end in the paths between the crops,
and started laying tablecloths over them. Within minutes, the path
had been turned into an outdoor dining room with tables over a
hundred feet long, and benches set on either side.
Tilly
came out of the farmhouse and blew the silver whistle loud enough
that everyone on the hillside heard it. Hugh and Kasumi followed the
crowd as they gathered around the table, and took a seat.
Hugh
let out a low whistle as plates were put in front of everyone, and
huge serving platters came rolling out of the house. Dozens of them.
Enough to feed two hundred people, who were sitting along a picnic
table that wasn’t there five minutes before. It wasn’t gourmet
restaurant food, it was all… homespun. Baked vegetables, cakes,
spiced fruits, all manner of breads; rolls and rice and pastas and
gravy and soups and desserts.
Tilly
let them get a good look at it. “I want you all to help yourselves.
You earned it after helping with the harvest. But while you eat, I
want you to pay close attention to how everything tastes, how it
smells, how it feels. This is what you’re here for.”
Lunch
was a leisurely affair, though Hugh noticed some of the workers
slipping off early to return to various tasks. Tilly strode to the
head of the table and called for attention from her guests.
“So,
you’re probably wondering what all this was in aid of.” Tilly
said impishly. “You’ve seen my field. Twenty men to harvest it in
a day. But there are a dozen other fields growing the same crops
around us. So a team of twenty people could make a complete circuit
in two weeks, trading a day’s labor for their pay, and their food.
If the farms all agree on a schedule, we don’t even have to rush
things. This is what happens when a dozen farms can work together
instead of in competition. And that’s where things went wrong in
OS; at least on this topic. A tractor could harvest the whole field,
if it didn’t mind tearing up the ground and putting poisons into
the air. But those twenty people are employed every year. Ten times
that number to tend to a collection of farms that cover the entire
range.”
The
guests all nodded, but the regulars toasted that one cheerfully.
“Back
in OS, we spent thousands of years finding ways for more and more
customers to be fed by fewer and fewer workers. The result was
sucking the planet dry. We forced it to work for a while by forcing
more fish out of the ocean, forcibly breeding more and more livestock
in cages and pumping meat and greens full of chemicals to make it
last longer on a shelf… And for all that, millions upon millions of
tonnes of food got thrown away while millions of people starved to
death. So the reason you guys started with the harvest? To varying
degrees, the last five hundred years of OS had no idea where the food
on their table came from. By the time A-Day arrived, the majority of
children couldn’t identify
a
fresh vegetable. But the food you’re eating today? It all came from
within five hundred meters of where you’re sitting right now.”
After
that little speech, the last comment was enough to make Hugh applaud.
He wasn’t the only one.
“But
this class isn’t just for people from the modern era. It’s also
for everyone else. I see people here who have no idea what they’re
eating, since some of the ingredients grew in a totally different
part of the world to where they lived; and transport in their time
wasn’t such that they could try anything as exotic as an olive. I
see people who have lived their whole day on a cup of plain rice, and
have no idea how to prepare anything to eat at
all;
simply because they never had food to cook... And yes, some who lived
on ready-made meals, sealed in plastic. That kind of manufactured
foodstuff is gone, and you all need to know how to run a kitchen
without a microwave, or a larder without plastic wrapped ingredients.
So, be patient with each other, and with yourselves. I’m not going
to make you all master chefs, I’m just giving you an idea of how
food works now. In fact, how it always
truly worked. Some of you have been here for centuries, living on
recipes that you remember from OS, or have picked up from others. But
if you were missing one ingredient, or had to substitute something,
would you have any idea how?”
Kasumi
winced a little, and Hugh squeezed her hand under the table. It was
true that Kasumi had never had the chance to learn how to cook;
having spent her childhood in hospital and most of her single adult
life traveling, staying with others. She was profoundly good at
following recipes she knew, even keeping hundreds of recipes in her
head, but this was something else.
“But
believe it or not, everything you’re eating today, you’ll learn
to cook while you’re here.” Tilly told them. Hugh heard the
single brother closest to them whimper at the thought. Hugh turned
and gave him an easygoing smile, as Tilly went over to speak to the
other half of her class.
“My
name’s Jadu.” The man whispered, glancing back at Tilly, as
though worried she’d overheard.
“I’m
Hugh, and this is my wife, Kasumi.” Hugh said. He glanced over and
noted that the other married pair had already struck up conversation
with two of the single sisters, which left him and Kasumi to speak to
Jadu, and the woman who was clearly out of her time.
“Leahe,
daughter of Mirah.” The woman introduced herself when prompted.
Hugh
registered the way she introduced herself, but didn’t remark on it.
“What
did you think of our host’s speech?” Kasumi asked as everyone
served themselves.
“I
recognize the tone. She was telling us about a problem being
corrected, but I recognized only half the words.” Leahe admitted.
“I don’t even know what 'plastic' is.”
“It
was an extremely versatile, airtight material that was made from
refined petroleum. The oil ran out completely a long time ago, but
the plastics are only just breaking down now,
after five hundred years. We made it so disposable. Plastic cutlery,
because we couldn’t bother to wash a spoon, plastic wrappers
because it made things last longer, when we ate it immediately
anyway… Billions of tonnes of it just… dumped after one use. It
fills the refuse piles to this day. It took this world for people to
figure out what to do with it.”
Leahe
stared. “I know that you’re describing the worst days with the
most impossible problems, but I still can’t comprehend what your
generation was thinking.”
“Don't
fret. I was there, and I don’t know what we were thinking either.
Truth was, we just barely noticed anything beyond the end of our
noses then.” Hugh gestured at the fields. “It wasn't as big a
problem in the 40's, but we had supermarkets then. This entire
harvest? Imagine having all of it fresh on the shelf every day. And
anything you didn't use up you threw away. It was so easy to
forget... what it took to make it all grow. Easy to think there would
always be 'more'.”
“Waste
was a huge problem leading up to A-Day.” Tilly suddenly appeared at
their end of the table, putting another plate of rolls in front of
Leahe. “More than a third of the modern world’s waste was food
products. As the majority of the earth went hungry, the minority of
the earth were morbidly obese; and most couldn’t even identify a
vegetable. Most of what they ate was handed to them already chopped
peeled and ready to cook.”
“Those
of us that did cook?” Hugh put in. “We bought an ingredient to
follow one recipe, and the rest stayed, cluttering up our kitchens
until it spoiled because we had no idea what else we could
do with it.”
“That's
why I started up this course.
Let me show you something.” Tilly pulled out her screen, and showed
them a picture. “I took this picture about forty years after A-Day.
We were using up the stores back then. Waste not, want not.”
Hugh
looked. “Is that… instant cake mix?”
“Yep.”
Tilly grinned. “Add water, add eggs, stir and bake. Basically,
dehydrated cake batter. But here’s the thing? When they started
putting this instant stuff on shelves, they didn’t need to add
eggs.”
“I
heard about this one.” Hugh nodded. “They couldn’t figure out
why so few people bought it. Turned out, the women involved didn’t
feel like they were actually baking. They wanted to be involved.
Something so easy as adding water and putting it in an oven felt too
indulgent.”
“They
should have waited another twenty years. We had no problem being
self-indulgent then.” Tilly remarked dryly. “So they changed the
formula, so that you added your own eggs, and suddenly everyone’s
standards on what ‘food’ was dropped dramatically.” She looked
to Kasumi. “You’ve lived in this world almost half a millennium.
Have you ever baked a cake without a recipe?”
“No.”
Kasumi admitted. “I trade my leftovers with others for things I
recognize, but…”
“We
learn when we need to.” Tilly said forgiving. “You haven’t had
the need to; because food is plentiful; and doesn’t need much
processing. But if you don’t have something in mind, can you
improvise?”
Kasumi
winced. “Even after this long, I never really got around to
learning how.”
“Why
would she?” Hugh put in, defending his wife. “What she can make
from memory is still better than anything I’d ever eaten, for the
simple reason that food has improved so much over OS.”
“Exactly.
Believe it or not, these classes became part of my ministry.” Tilly
told them. “Whole generations of people who had no idea how to feed
themselves without a foil wrapped, ready made meal, and a microwave.”
She nudged Jadu. “Some people have to learn how to pray. Some
people have to learn how to read. Some people need to learn how to
feed themselves, in a world where hunger has been abolished, and food
is plentiful.”
Leahe
winced a bit as Tilly swept back to the other side of the table.
Kasumi sent the woman a look. “Plentiful food is something new for
you, huh?”
“I
was… I was part of the Exodus.” Leahe admitted. “I was there
when we were set free of Egypt.”
Hugh
let out a low whistle.
Leahe
smiled shyly. “That’s why I’m taking the class. Something my
mother taught me; you can learn a lot about a place by what they eat…
I spent almost all my adult life eating nothing but Manna; and there
wasn't a whole lot of culinary skills required there. The simplest
things, like how we prepare food now… I’m so completely outside
of anything I recognize.”
“Don’t
take this the wrong way, sister; but we’re all feeling like that.”
Jadu countered. “Your story at least brings you into some sort of
alignment with the people here. Even if you don’t understand the
modern world, you know God. I had never heard of Him.”
Hugh
raised an eyebrow. “Oh?”
“You
know what I did back in the day?” Jadu asked.
Hugh
shook his head.
“I
was a factory worker. Then I took care of my father when he retired.
My father wrote propaganda for The Party.”
“Political
party? Which one?”
“Doesn’t
matter. At the time there was only one.” He said with a wry grin.
“I only came into contact with the Christian nations once. I saw a
church. I remember looking up at the crucifix of Jesus, and thinking
to myself: This
is their savior? A thin, pale man, beaten to the point of death,
delirious from pain, looking like he could barely stand up under his
own weight, even if he wasn’t strung up? I remember wondering why
people would worship that.”
Hugh
snorted.
Jadu
nodded. “I
remember thinking that it almost looked like the kid of thing The
Party would put out about their enemies. I didn’t understand why a
church would make its own symbol of power seem so… powerless. When
I came back, and they told me that The Man in that image and his
Father was actually the only hope of humankind, and it stuck me that
I was right. It was propaganda. A world ruled by Evil had managed to
get the appearance of pure Good on its side and made everyone ignore
all the parts except for when he was twisted in agony. The Devil had
taken his one moment of seeming victory and made it a global,
household image that kept billions of people on their knees for two
thousand years. Speaking as someone who understands how that sort of
thing was done professionally, I’m in awe.”
Hugh
snorted. “Never thought of that before.”
“We
spent out lives in a state of siege. We were told that there were
listening devices in our homes, and that we would never find all of
them. We were told that only traitors expressed dissatisfaction, and
traitors couldn’t hide. God wasn’t even mentioned. God was our
Leader. I remember father telling me that I must never ask for more
food, or warmer clothes, because to suggest that what I had been
given wasn’t enough was treason.”
Leahe
nodded. “We went through the same thing. Show a guard a defiant
eye, and the whip would take it out of your head.”
“We
lived whole generations like that, but we never complained about it…
not even in private. Not even when we were alone.” Jadu admitted.
Hugh
realized. “I suddenly get why you’re taking a cooking class.”
“I
have never, in my life, had a choice
of what to eat. Not until I came here.” Jadu said in quiet awe.
Leahe’s
eyes were shining. “I know exactly how you felt. We were the same
way in Egypt. Same way after
Egypt
in fact. Manna, three times a day. We actually had more variety under
the whip. They fed us whatever was on the edge of spoilage.”
Hugh
bit his lip. “Can I ask a question about that? I never really
studied a bible until I arrived here, but there was one thing that I
always promised I’d ask if I ever met someone from the Tribes.”
“How
could
we change our minds.” Leahe said for him. It wasn’t even a
question. Hugh got the impression she had heard it before.
He
nodded anyway. “Manna may have been repetitive, but that came
later. Two weeks out of Egypt after four hundred years of slavery,
and you wanted to go back?”
“Some
of us did.” Leahe admitted. “It’s not an unfair question, but I
think Jadu can give you an answer just as well as I can.”
Hugh
looked the question to Jadu, who nodded easily. “Choice is scary.”
Leahe
nodded. “Four hundred years of having our work, our diet, our
clothing, our time off, our rations, our mealtimes, our lifetimes and
even the moment we die chosen for us. We were… so broken. Faith
made us walk proudly, and fear made us yearn to be away from the
masters… But once we were out there with miles of wilderness in
every direction, no water, few animals… Walls and chains do
something to you, Brother Alman. They keep you in, but after a while
they make you feel safe.”
“A
method of control that didn’t change in four thousand years. My
entire life, I never even dared to look further than what I saw out
my own window.” Jadu smiled softly. “I was served a ration of
food every day for myself. When my father became too ill to take care
of himself, I took him in, because there was no other option for the
infirm. My world was not kind to weakness, or respectful of those who
had worked too hard for too long. When my father lived with me, I
received a greater ration to share with him. When he died… I
wondered if anyone would notice. Because I knew nobody would care…”
“So
you didn’t report the death.” Leahe finished. “And you kept
accepting his ration. Yes, I know others who played that trick on our
masters once.”
“It
worked for two weeks before I was caught.” Jadu admitted. “Last
thing I remember was the police putting a bag over my head, and then
I woke up here… And my guide took me to a table full of food.
Incredible food. Fresh, wonderful food. ”
Leahe
smiled, lost in the same wonderful memory. “Me too. There were
pancakes, stacked high. Fresh crusty bread, still steaming from
whatever oven cooked it. Gallons of milk, plenty of butter and
cheese. Cream so thick that I had no idea what it was. Melons,
tomatoes, lettuce, onions, cucumbers, olives, carrots, avocados.
Strawberries in their hundreds, so red and juicy that it made my eyes
hurt. Fresh fruit, both whole and sliced. Apples, oranges, pears,
cherries. Potatoes, prepared in a dozen different ways. Peanuts and
pineapples, fresh jam and honey in clay pots. Fruit juice for every
fruit on the table…”
“Cool
and crisp or hot and filling. Things that I had never known existed.
Cakes and desserts and… and a hundred people sitting down to lunch,
barely registering what a bounty it was… Because they ate like that
every day.” Jadu bowed respectfully to Leahe. “Hugh, I had never,
not once in my life, decided what I wanted for lunch. It was just
handed to me, and I had to make sure I sounded enthusiastic when I
said thank you, or they’d take it off me on the spot.”
Leahe
nodded. “Until the Exodus, I had never chosen to take a break, or
when to get up in the morning. Then suddenly if I wanted to go left
instead of right, I could. For you, that’s an easy choice. One you
make on a whim. But for me… I had never seen anything past the
mud-pit where I made bricks. Day and night, nothing but mud, since I
was old enough to carry it up to the frames where they shaped the
clay. I had to make a choice, and I didn’t even know how to decide
my own wardrobe.”
Kasumi
nodded sagely. “A friend of ours, his name is Alec. He was a
Witness in OS, made it all the way through. He talked about how most
people then thought being a JW was too restrictive. Some of the
Returned ones think the same.”
Jadu
and Leahe laughed like that was the funniest thing they had ever
heard.
After
lunch, Tilly stood up again. “All right. So, now that you know the
sort of things we’ll be talking about here, the next step it to get
you settled in. Not just to the house, but to the community.” Tilly
gestured to the table. “So finish up. In the morning, we’ll start
work. Until then, feel free to look around the countryside. There is
a market that sells our surplus. They know me there. If you are so
inclined, examine the smells and tastes of everything on offer. If
not, the train goes all the way to the beach, which is particularly
lovely this time of year.”
~~/*\~~
“She
was right about the beaches.” Kasumi said grandly, enjoying the
sun.
“Mornings
in the fields, afternoons in the surf.” Hugh grinned. “Yeah, I
can see that as a pretty good way to spend eternity.”
Kasumi
chuckled. “Swim?”
“Why
not?”
Kasumi
hadn’t learned to swim in OS. Or in centuries that followed, but
when Megan had asked to go to the beach and swim, she’d noticed
that her mother didn’t know how. Kasumi had gone to the same
swimming lessons as Megan; and was now an accomplished swimmer. Like
any other skill, it just took time.
The
beach was long and wide, but had plenty of smaller coves, where the
waves were low. The beach-goers usually followed the sand, and those
surfing followed the big waves, so where they were was fairly quiet.
As the two of them waded into the warm waters of the Mediterranean,
it was almost like being alone in the whole world.
Kasumi
swam up close to her husband and put her arms around him. “You ever
think about it?” She teased. “We could find some tiny island, far
from the rest of the world. Eat tropical fruits all morning, swim in
the afternoons, sleep in hammocks under the stars, wake with the
sunrise… just you and me and the sunsets?”
“Sounds
tempting.” Hugh allowed. “I don’t know who gets assigned the
small tropical islands, but I hope they’re at least willing to
timeshare.”
Kasumi
was about to respond when it suddenly became clear that they weren’t
as alone as they thought. A large beak suddenly exploded up from the
water and sprayed them both playfully.
The
two humans squawked in surprise as the bottlenose dolphin chattered
playfully at them, emerging to do a backflip back into the water.
Kasumi
laughed delightedly. “Dolphins! I love dolphins!”
“Have
you ever seen one up close before?”
“No,
but then again, I didn’t see Angels for the first seventy years
either…” Kasumi took a breath and dove down under the wave, to
see the bottlenose hovering there, rotating slowly in the water, just
playing around. Kasumi tried to copy the movements, but wasn’t
nearly as graceful in the water. The dolphin didn’t seem to mind,
delighted that someone was willing to play.
When
Kasumi came up for air, Hugh ducked down under the water to take over
while she caught her breath. After half an hour of this, the dolphin
wheeled around quickly to nudge Kasumi’s legs. Kasumi wasn’t sure
what that meant, but let herself float; and the dolphin swiftly came
up to press his beak into the small of her back. Kasumi realized he
was trying to propel her somewhere and Kasumi put her feet down
again, holding out a hand to her husband.
Hugh
smiled and waved it away. “You go. I’m going to head back to
shore.”
“You
don’t want to come?” Kasumi called.
“I’d
love to come and play, but you’re the one with a dolphin in your
back.” Hugh said lightly. “And by the way, there’s a sentence I
never thought I’d say.”
Kasumi
laughed delightedly, and picked her feet up from the sand, letting
the bottlenose push her along with increasing speed. Kasumi tried to
hold position, but couldn’t keep herself upright for long. The
dolphin sped along to meet her halfway, suddenly coming up between
her legs like a horse. Kasumi tucked herself low against the
dolphin's back and rode the current, holding onto the dorsal fin for
balance.
The
dolphin powered around the edge of the cove like a motorboat, making
pretty good distance for one human breath. Kasumi was in better shape
than she had ever been, halfway to perfection, and her breath and
muscle control was excellent. She wasn’t sure how long she had been
under, but there was a terrific sense of movement.
~~/*\~~
While
Kasumi was being taken on a tour of the ocean, Hugh walked the beach
for a while. People playing games, building sandcastles… Hugh
hadn’t built a sandcastle since he was a child, but there were a
few people building a huge, elaborate one that looked like an actual
castle. Hugh watched them for a while, impressed; when he noticed up
toward the picnic area, someone else was watching them, waving him
over. A slim man in a white suit. It should have been strange on a
beach, but somehow it worked for him.
Hugh
came over and noticed the man had a chessboard set up in front of
him. “Don’t
suppose you play?”
“Now
and then.” Hugh nodded, and took a seat. “You brought a
chessboard to the beach and didn’t have someone lined up to play?”
“The
park and the office too.” The man grinned. “Tourists are my best
chance. I saw you watching those people making sandcastles. They’re
there every day. Every day they make an elaborate castle, every
evening the tide comes in.” He set up the board for a new game.
“Everyone has their fixations. You know why I picked Chess as
mine?”
“Why?”
“Each
game of chess has a number of possible outcomes. After each player
gets four
moves each,
there are 288 billion possible combinations of pieces on the board.
Four moves each. It’s said that the number of total possible
variations is 10, to the 120th power. Put 120 zeroes after a ten, and
that’s how many games of Chess there are to be played. There are
more variations on chess than there are atoms
in the observable universe. Other games have much larger variables,
and more being invented every year. Chess is proof that Humans were
made to live forever.”
Hugh
snorted. “You were a mathematician?”
“I
still am. That’s an industry that never falls by the wayside.” He
made his next move. “How long have you been back?”
A
question that has become the new ‘how’s the weather’.
Hugh
reflected. Those that had survived A-Day were now vastly outnumbered
by The Returned. “Four centuries or so.”
“Ahh,
an early returnee.” The Player smiled. “I believe that one day my
memory will be perfect, and that means I will have every game I ever
play memorized. Over thousands of years, I will be able to memorize
every game I play, and that means I will be able to play every
variation, test every response to every strategy.”
“Which
would make you effectively unbeatable.” Hugh remarked. “Thanks
for warning me not to play with you again a billion years from now.”
The
Player laughed like it was the funniest thing he’d ever heard.
Hugh
made his next move. “My brother used to think that we may become
lethargic, not at all interested in doing anything. You think you may
get bored with chess after the first trillion games or so?”
“Chess
has undergone many many changes in style and rules since it was first
invented. It wasn’t until the time of the Renaissance that we even
used pieces like ‘King’ and ‘Queen’ and ‘Rook’. Someone
from the early days wants to play a game with you, and neither of you
would recognize the board at all.”
The
Player countered. “If I ever do get bored, I could invent another
way to play.” He looked up. “By the way, that woman I saw you
with before, walking toward the coves. Is that your wife?”
“Kasumi?
Yes, she is; going on three hundred years now. Why?”
“Well,
it’s just the first time I’ve seen anyone use a live dolphin as a
surfboard.”
Hugh
looked, and his jaw dropped in disbelief as Kasumi came back into
view in the surf. Surfers were lined up to catch waves, and somehow,
Kasumi was powering along the crest of a wave, riding a dolphin.
Kasumi saw him on shore and waved, having the time of her life.
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