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Chapter 8
The high-velocity axial flight made Rybys Rommey deathly
ill. United Spaceways had arranged for five adjoining seats for
her, so that she could lie outstretched; even so, she was barely
able to speak. She lay on her side, a blanket up to her chin.
Somberly, as he gazed down at the woman, Elias Tate said,
"The damn legal technicalities. If we hadn't been held up --" He
grimaced.
Within Rybys's body the fetus, now six
months along, had been silent for a vast amount of time. What if the
fetus dies? Herb Asher asked himself. The death of God ... but not under
circumstances anyone ever anticipated. And no one, except himself,
Rybys and Elias Tate would ever know.
Can God die? he wondered. And with him my wife.
The marriage ceremony had been lucid and brief, a transaction by the deepspace authorities, with no religious or moral overtones. Both he and Rybys had been required to undergo extensive
physical examinations, and, of course, her pregnancy had been
discovered.
"You're the father?" the doctor asked him.
"Yes," Herb Asher said.
The doctor grinned and noted that on his chart.
"We felt we had to get married," Herb said.
"It's a good attitude." The doctor was elderly and well
groomed, and totally impersonal. "Are you aware that it's a
boy?"
"Yes," he said. He certainly was.
"There is one thing I do not understand," the doctor said.
"Was this impregnation natural? It wasn't artificial insemination,
by any chance? Because the hymen is intact."
"Really," Herb Asher said.
"It's rare but it can happen. So technically your wife is still a
virgin."
"Really," Herb Asher said.
The doctor said, "She is quite ill, you know. From the multiple sclerosis."
"I know," he answered stoically.
"There is no guarantee of a cure. You
realize that. I think it's an excellent idea to return her to Earth, and
I heartily approve of your going along with her. But it may be for
nothing. M.S. is a peculiar ailment. The myelin sheath of the nerve
fibers develops hard patches and this eventually results in permanent
paralysis. We have finally isolated two causal factors, after decades of
intensive effort. There is a microorganism, but, and this is a major
factor, a form of allergy is involved. Much of the treatment involves transforming the immune system so that
--" The doctor
continued on, and Herb Asher listened as well as he could. He
knew it all already; Rybys had told him several times, and had
shown him texts that she had obtained from M.E.D. Like her, he
had become an authority on the disease.
"Could I have some water?" Rybys murmured, lifting her
head; her face was blotched and swollen, and Herb Asher could
understand her only with difficulty.
A stewardess brought Rybys a paper cup of water; Elias and
Herb lifted her to a sitting position and she took the cup in her
hands. Her arms, her body, trembled.
"It won't be much longer," Herb Asher said.
"Christ," Rybys murmured. "I don't think I'm going to make
it. Tell the stewardess I'm going to throw up again; make her
bring back that bowl. Jesus." She sat up fully, her face stricken
with pain.
The stewardess, bending down beside her, said, "We'll be
firing the retrojets in two hours, so if you can just hold on --"
"Hold on?' Rybys said. "I can't even hold on to what I
drank, Are you sure that Coke wasn't tainted or something? I
think it made me worse. Don't you have any ginger ale? If I had
some ginger ale maybe I could keep from --" She cursed with
venom and rage. "Damn this," she said. "Damn all this. It isn't
worth it!" She stared at Herb Asher and then Elias.
Yah, Herb Asher thought. Can't you do anything? It's sadistic
to let her suffer this way.
Within his mind a voice spoke. He could not at first fathom
what it meant; he heard the words but they seemed to make no
sense. The voice said, "Take her to the Garden."
He thought, What Garden?
"Take her by the hand."
Herb Asher, reaching down, fumbling in the folds of the blanket, took his wife's hand.
"Thank you," Rybys said. Feebly, she squeezed his hand.
Now, as he sat leaning over her, he saw her eyes shine; he
saw spaces beyond her eyes, and if he were looking into something empty, containing huge stretches of space. Where are you?
he wondered. It is a universe in there, within your skull; it is a
different universe from this: not a mirror reflection but another
land. He saw stars, and clusters of stars; he saw nebulae and
great clouds of gases that glowed darkly and yet still with a white
light, not a ruddy light. He felt wind billow about him and he
heard something rustle. Leaves or branches, he thought; I hear
plants. The air felt warm. That amazed him. It seemed to be fresh
air, not the stale, recirculated air of the spaceship.
The sound of birds, and, when he looked up, blue sky. He
saw bamboo, and the rustling sound came from the wind blowing
through the canes of bamboo. He saw a fence, and there were
children. And yet at the same time he still held his wife's weak
hand. Strange, he thought. The air so dry, as if it comes sweeping
off the desert. He saw a boy with brown curly hair; the boy's hair
reminded him of Rybys's hair before she had lost it, before, from
the chemotherapy, it had fallen out and disappeared.
Where am I? he wondered, At a school?
Beside him fussy Mr. Plaudet told him pointless stories having
to do with the school's financial needs, the school's problems --
he wasn't interested in the school's problems; he was interested
in his son. His son's brain damage; he wanted to know all about
it.
"What I can't understand," Plaudet was saying, "is why they
kept you in suspension for ten years for a spleen. For heaven's
sake, a splenectomy is a normal and regular type of surgery, and
there is frequently a splenolus that can be --"
"Which hemisphere of his brain is damaged?" Herb Asher
interrupted.
"Mr. Tate has all the medical reports.
But I'll go to our computer and ask for a printout. Manny seems a little afraid of you,
but I suppose it's because he's never seen his father before."
"I'll stay out here with him," Herb said, "while you get me
the printout. I want to know as much as possible about the injury."
"Herb," Rybys said.
Startled, he realized where he was; aboard the United Space
ways XR4 axial flight from Fomalhaut to the Sol System. In two
hours the first Immigration party would board the ship and make
their preliminary inspection.
"Herb," his wife whispered, "I just saw my son."
"A school," Herb Asher said, "where he's going to go."
"I don't think I'll live to be there," Rybys said. "I have a
feeling ... He was there and you were there, and a noisy little
ratlike man who babbled on, but I wasn't anywhere around. I
looked; I kept looking. This really is going to kill me but it won't
kill my son. That's what he told me, remember? Yah told me I
would live on through my son, so I guess I will die; I mean, this
body will die, but they'll save him. Were you there when Yah
said that? I don't remember. That was a garden we were in,
wasn't it? Bamboo, I saw the wind blowing. The wind talked to
me; it was like voices."
"Yes," he said.
"They used to go out in the desert for forty days and forty
nights. Elijah and then Jesus. Elias?" She looked around. "You
ate locusts and wild honey and called on men to repent. You told
King Ahab there would be no dew nor rain these years ... thus
says the Lord. According to my word." She shut her eyes.
She is really sick, Herb Asher said to himself. But I saw her
son. Beautiful and wild and -- something more. Timid. Very
human, he thought; that was a human child. Maybe this is all in
our minds. Maybe the Clems have occluded our perceptions so
that we believe and see and experience but it is not real. I give
up, he thought. I just don't know.
Something to do with time. He seems able to transform time.
Now I am here in the ship but then I am in the Garden with the
child and the other children, her child, years from now. What is
the true time? he asked himself. Me here in the ship or back in
my dome before I met Rybys or after she is dead and Emmanuel
is in school? And I have been in cryonic suspension, for a matter
of years, It has to do or had to do or will have to do with my
spleen. Did they shoot me? he wondered. Rybys died from her
illness but how did I die? And what became or will become of
Elias?
Leaning toward him Elias said, "I want to talk to you." He
motioned Herb Asher away from Rybys and away from the other
passengers. "We are not to mention Yah. We will use the word
'Jehovah' from now on. It's a word coined in 1530; it's all right
to say it. You understand the situation. Immigration will try to
tap our minds with psychotronic listening devices, but Jehovah
will cloud our minds and they will get little or nothing. But this is
the part that is hard to say. Jehovah's power wanes from here on.
The zone of Belial begins soon."
"OK." He nodded.
"You know all this."
"And a lot more." From what Elias had told him and from
what Rybys had told him -- and Jehovah had told him much, in
his sleep, in vivid dreams. Jehovah had been teaching all of them;
they would know what to do.
Elias said, "He is with us, and can address us from her womb.
But there is always the possibility that very advanced electronic
scanning devices, monitoring devices, might pick it up. He will
converse with us sparingly." After a pause he added, "If at all."
"A strange idea," Herb Asher said. "I
wonder what the authorities would think if their intelligence- gathering circuitry
picked up the thoughts of God."
"Well," Elias said, "they wouldn't know what it was. I know
the authorities of Earth; I have dealt with them for four thousand
years, in situation after situation. Country after country. War
after war. I was with Graf Egemont in the Dutch wars of independence, the Thirty Years War; I was present the day he
was executed. I knew Beethoven ... but perhaps 'knew' is not the
word."
"You were Beethoven," Herb Asher said.
"Part of my spirit returned to Earth and to him," Elias said.
Vulgar and fiery, Herb thought. Passionately dedicated to the
cause of human freedom. Walking hand-in-hand with his friend Goethe, the
two men stirring the new life of the German Enlightenment. "Who else were you?" he said.
"Many people in history."
"Tom Paine?"
"We engineered the American Revolution,"
Elias said. "A
group of us. We were the Friends of God at one time, and the
Brothers of the Rosy Cross in 1615 ... I was Jakob Boehme, but
you wouldn't know of him. My spirit doesn't dwell alone in a
man; it is not incarnation. It is part of my spirit returning to Earth
to bond with a human whom God has selected. There are always
such humans and I am there. Martin Buber was one such man,
God rest his noble soul. That dear and gentle man. The Arabs,
too, placed flowers on his grave. Even the Arabs loved him,"
Elias fell silent. "Some of the men I sent myself to were better
men than I was. But I have the power to return. God granted it to
me to -- well, it was for Israel's sake. A hint of immortality for
the dearest people of all. You know, Herb, God offered the
Torah, it is said, to every people in the world, back in ancient
times, before he offered it to the Jews, and every nation rejected
it for one reason or another. The Torah said, 'Thou shalt not kill'
and many could not live by that; they wanted religion to be sep
arate from morality --they didn't want religion to hobble their
desires. Finally God offered it to the Jews, who accepted it."
"The Torah is the Law?" Herb said.
"It is more than the Law. The word 'Law' is inadequate.
Even though the New Testament of the Christians always uses
the word 'Law' for Torah. Torah is the totality of divine disclosure by God; it is alive; it existed before creation. It is a mystic,
almost cosmic, entity. The Torah is the Creator's instrument.
With it he created the universe and for it he created the universe.
It is the highest idea and the living soul of the world. Without it
the world could not exist and would have no right to exist. I am
quoting the great Hebrew poet Hayyim Nahman Bialik who lived
from the latter part of the nineteenth century into the mid-
twentieth century. You should read him sometime."
"Can you tell me anything else about the Torah?"
"Resh Lakish said, 'If one's intent is pure, the Torah for him
becomes a life-giving medicine, purifying him to life. But if one's
intent is not pure, it becomes a death-giving drug, purifying him
to death.'"
The two men remained silent for a time.
"I will tell you something more," Elias said.
"A man came to
the great Rabbi Hillel -- he lived in the first century, C.E. -- and
said, 'I will become a proselyte on the condition that you teach
me the entire Torah while I stand on one foot.' Hillel said, 'Whatever is hateful to you, do not do it to your neighbor. That is the
entire Torah. The rest is commentary; go and learn it.'" He
smiled at Herb Asher.
"Is the injunction actually in the Torah?" Herb Asher said.
"The first five books of the Bible?"
"Yes. Leviticus nineteen, eighteen. God says, 'You shall love
your neighbor as a man like yourself.' You did not know that, did
you? Almost two thousand years before Jesus."
"Then the Golden Rule derives from Judaism," Herb said.
"Yes, it does, and early Judaism. The Rule was presented to
man by God Himself."
"I have a lot to learn," Herb said.
"Read," Elias said, "'Cape, lege,' the two words Augustine
heard. Latin for 'Take, read.' You do that, Herb. Take the book
and read it. It is there for you. It is alive."
As their journey continued, Elias disclosed to him further
intriguing aspects of the Torah, qualities regarding the Torah that
few men knew.
"I tell you these matters," Elias said, "because I trust you.
Be careful whom you relate them to."
Four ways existed by which to read the Torah, the fourth
being a study of its hidden, innermost side. When God said, "Let
there be light," he meant the mystery that shone in the Torah.
This was the concealed primordial light of Creation itself, it being
of such nobility that it could not be debased by the use of mortals;
so God wrapped it up within the heart of the Torah. This was an
inexhaustible light, related to the divine sparks which the Gnostics had believed in, the fragments of the Godhead which were
now scattered throughout Creation, enclosed -- unfortunately --
in material shells, that of physical bodies.
Most interesting of all, some Medieval Jewish mystics held
the view that there had been 600,000 Jews who went out of Egypt
and received the Torah at Mount Sinai. Reincarnated at each
succeeding generation, these 600,000 souls continually live. Each
soul or spark is related to the Torah in a different way; thus,
600,000 separate, unique meanings of the Torah exist. The idea is
as follows: that for each of these 600,000 persons the Torah is
different, and each person has his own specific letter in the Torah,
to which his own soul is attached, So in a sense 600,000 Torahs
exist.
Also, three aeons or epochs in time exist, the first in order
being an age of grace, the second or current one being of severe
justice and limitation, and the next, yet to come, being of mercy.
A different Torah exists for each of the three ages. And yet there
is only one Torah. A primal or matrix Torah exists in which there
is no punctuation nor any spaces between the words; in fact all
the letters are jumbled together. In each of the three ages the
letters form themselves into alternative words, as events unfold.
The current age, that of severe justice and limitation, Elias
explained, is marred by the fact that in its Torah one of the letters
was defective, the consonant shin. This letter was always written
with three prongs but it should have had four. Thus the Torah
produced for this age was defective. Another view held by Medieval Jewish mystics was that a letter is actually missing in our
alphabet. Because of this our Torah contains negative laws as
well as positive. In the next aeon the missing or invisible letter
will be restored, and every negative prohibition in the Torah will
disappear. Hence this next aeon or, as it is called in Hebrew, the
next shemittah, will lack restrictions imposed on humans; freedom will replace severe justice and limitation.
Out of this notion comes the idea (Elias said) that there are
invisible portions of the Torah -- invisible to us now, but to be
visible in the Messianic Age that is to come. The cosmic cycle
will bring this age inevitably: it will be the next shemittah, very
much like the first; the Torah will again rearrange itself out of its
jumbled matrix.
Herb Asher thought, It sounds like a computer. The universe
is programmed -- and then more accurately reprogrammed. Fantastic.
***
Two hours later an official government ship clamped itself to
their ship, and, after a time, Immigration agents began to move
among them, beginning their inspection. And their interrogation.
Filled with fear, Herb Asher held Rybys against him, and he
sat as close to Elias as possible, obtaining strength from the older
man. "Tell me, Elias," Herb said quietly, "the most beautiful
thing you know about God." His heart pounded harshly within
him and he could scarcely breathe.
Elias said, "All right. Rabbi Judah said, quoting Rav:
The day consists of twelve hours. During the first three hours,
the Holy One (God), praised be He, is engaged in the study of
Torah. During the second three He sits in judgment over His
entire world. When He realizes that the world is deserving of
destruction, He rises from the Throne of Justice, to sit on the
Throne of Mercy. During the third group of three hours, He
provides sustenance for the entire world, from huge beasts to
lice. During the fourth, He sports with the Leviathan, as it is
written, "Leviathan, which you did form to sport with" (Ps.
104:26) ... During the fourth group of three hours (according
to others) He teaches schoolchildren.'"
"Thank you," Herb Asher said. Three Immigration agents
were moving toward them, now, their uniforms bright, shiny; and
they carried weapons.
Elias said, "Even God consults the Torah as the formula and
blueprint of the universe." An Immigration agent held out his
hand for Elias's identification; the old man passed the packet of
documents to him. "And even God cannot act contrary to it."
"You are Elias Tate," the senior
Immigration agent said, examining the documents. "What is your purpose in returning to
the Sol System?"
"This woman is very ill," Elias said. "She is entering the
naval hospital at --"
"I asked you your purpose, not hers." He gazed down at
Herb Asher. "Who are you?"
"I'm her husband," Herb said, He handed over his identification and permits and documentation.
"She is certified as not contagious?" the senior Immigration
agent said.
"It's multiple sclerosis," Herb said, "which is not
--"
"I didn't ask you what she has; I asked you if it is contagious."
"I'm telling you," he said. "I'm answering your question."
"Get up."
He stood.
"Come with me." The senior Immigration agent motioned
Herb Asher to follow him up the aisle, Elias started to follow but
the agent shoved him back, bodily. "Not you."
Following the Immigration agent, Herb Asher made his way
step by step up the aisle to the rear of the ship. None of the other
passengers was standing; he alone had been singled out.
In a small compartment marked CREW ONLY the senior
Immigration agent faced Herb Asher, staring at him silently; the
man's eyes bulged as if he were unable to speak, as if what he
had to say could not be said. Time passed. What the hell is he doing?
Herb Asher asked himself. Silence. The raging stare continued.
"Okay," the Immigration agent said. "I give up. What is your
purpose in returning to Earth?"
"I told you."
"Is she really sick?"
"Very. She's dying."
"Then she's too sick to travel. It makes no sense."
"Only on Earth are there facilities where
--"
"You are under Terran law now," the Immigration agent said.
"Do you want to serve time for giving false information to a
federal officer? I'm sending you back to Fomalhaut. The three of
you. I don't have any more time. Go back to where you were
sitting and remain there until you're told what to do."
A voice, a neutral, dispassionate voice, neither male nor female, a kind of perfect intelligence, spoke inside Herb Asher's
head. "At Bethesda they want to study her disease."
He started visibly. The agent regarded him.
"At Bethesda," he said, "they want to study her disease."
"Research?"
"It's a microorganism."
"You said it isn't contagious."
The neutral voice said, "Not at this stage."
"Not at this stage," he said aloud.
"Are they afraid of plague?" the Immigration agent said
abruptly.
Herb Asher nodded.
"Go back to your seat." The agent, irritably, waved him
away. "This is out of my jurisdiction. You have a pink form,
form 368? Properly filled out and signed by a doctor?"
"Yes." It was true.
"Are either you or the older man with you infected?"
The voice inside his head said, "Only Bethesda can determine
that." He had, suddenly, a vivid inner glimpse of the person
whose voice he heard; he saw in his own mind a visage, female,
a placid but strong face. A metal mask had been pushed back
from that visage, exposing wise, impassive eyes; a beautiful classic face, like Athena; he was staggered with astonishment. This
could not be Yahweh. This was a woman. But like no woman he
had ever seen. He did not know her. He did not understand who
this was. Her voice was not Yah's voice, and this could not be
Yah's visage. He did not know what to make of it. He was perplexed beyond the telling of it. Who had taken on the task of
advising him?
"Only Bethesda can determine that," he managed to say.
The Immigration agent paused uncertainly. His exterior
harshness had evaporated.
The female voice whispered again, and this time, in his mind,
he saw her lips move. "Time is of the essence."
"Time is of the essence," Herb Asher said. His voice grated
in his own ears.
"Shouldn't you be quarantined? You probably shouldn't be
with other people. Those other passengers We should have
you on a special ship. It can be arranged. It might be better ...
we could get her there faster."
"OK," he said. Reasonably.
"I'll put in a call," the Immigration agent said. "What's the
name of this microorganism? It's a virus?"
"The nerve sheathing --"
"Never mind. Go back to your seat. Look." The Immigration
agent followed after him. "I don't know whose idea it was to
send you on a commercial carrier, but I'm getting you off of it
right now. There are strict statutes that haven't been observed,
here. Bethesda is expecting you? Do you want me to put in a call
ahead, or is that all taken care of?"
"She is registered with them already." This was so. The arrangements had been made.
"This is really nuts," the Immigration agent said,
"to put you
on a public carrier. They should have known better back at Fomalhaut."
"CY30-CY30B," Herb Asher said.
"Whatever. I don't want any part of this. A mistake of this
kind --" The Immigration agent cursed. "Some dumb fool back
at Fomalhaut probably figured it'd save the taxpayers a few
bucks --Take your seat and I'll see that you're notified when
your ship is ready. It should -- Christ."
Herb Asher, shaking, returned to his seat.
Elias eyed him. Rybys lay with her eyes shut; she was oblivious to what was happening.
"Let me ask you a question," Herb said to Elias. "Have you
ever tasted Laphroaig Scotch?"
"No," Elias said, puzzled.
"It is the finest of all Scotches," Herb said. "Ten years old,
very expensive. The distillery opened in 1815. They use traditional copper stills. It requires two distillations --"
"What went on in there?" Elias said.
"Just let me finish. Laphroaig is Gaelic for 'the beautiful hollow by the broad bay.' It's distilled on Islay in the Western Isles
of Scotland. Malted barley -- they dry it in a kiln over a peat fire,
a genuine peat fire. It's the only Scotch made that way now. The
peat can only be found on the island of Islay. Maturation takes
place in oak casks. It's incredible Scotch. It's the finest liquor in
the world. It's --" He broke off.
An Immigration agent came over to them. "Your ship is here,
Mr. Asher. Come with me. Can your wife walk? You want some
help?"
"Already?" He was dumbfounded. And then he realized that
the ship had been there all this time. Immigration was routinely
prepared to deal with emergency situations. Especially of this
kind. Or rather, what they supposed this situation to be.
"Who wears a metal mask?" Herb said to Elias as he drew
the blanket from Rybys. "Pushed back up over her hair. And has
a straight nose, a very strong nose -- well, let it go. Give me a
hand." Together, he and Elias got Rybys to her feet. The Immigration agent watched sympathetically.
"I don't know," Elias said.
"There is someone else," Herb said as they moved Rybys
step by step up the aisle.
"I'm going to throw up," Rybys said weakly.
"Just hang on," Herb Asher said. "We're almost there."
***
Big Noodle notified Cardinal Fulton Statler Harms and the
Procurator Maximus, and then, to all the heads of states in the
world it printed out the following mystifying statement:
ON THE STANDARD OF FIFTY THEY SHALL WRITE: FINISHED IS
THE STAND OF THE FROWARD THROUGH THE MIGHTY ACTS
OF GOD, TOGETHER WITH THE NAMES OF THE COMMANDERS
OF THE FIFTY AND OF ITS TENS. WHEN THEY GO OUT TO
BATTLE, THEY SHALL WRITE UPON THEIR WPSOX TO FORM A
COMPLETE FRONT. THE LINE IS TO CONSIST OF A THOUSAND
MEN MEN MEN MEN MEN EACH FRONT LINE IS TO BE SEVEN
SEVEN SEVEN DEEP, ONE MAN STANDING BEHIND THE OTHER
STOP REPEAT ALL OF THEM ARE TO HOLD SHIELDS OF POLISHED BRONZE REPEAT BRONZE RESEMBLING MIRRORS THESE
SHIELDS
The statement ended there. Technicians swarmed over the
A.I. system in a matter of minutes.
Their verdict: the A.I. system would have to be shut down for
a time. Something basic had gone wrong with it. The last coherent
information it had processed was the message that the pregnant
woman Rybys Rommey-Asher, her husband, Herbert Asher, and
their companion, Elias Tate, had been cleared by Immigration at
Ring III and had been transferred from a commercial axial carrier
to a government-owned speedship, whose destination was Washington, D.C.
Standing at his no longer pulsing terminal, Cardinal Harms
thought, A mistake has been made. Immigration was supposed to
intercept them, not facilitate their flight. It doesn't make any
sense. And now we've lost our primary data-processing entity,
on which we are totally dependent.
He rang up the procurator maximus, and
was told by an underling that the procurator had gone to bed.
The son of a bitch, Harms said to himself. The idiot. We have
one more station at which to intercept them: Immigration proper,
at Washington, D.C, And if they got this far -- My good God, he
thought. The monster is using its paranormal powers!
Once more he called the procurator maximus.
"Is Galina
available?" he said, but he knew it was hopeless. Bulkowsky had
given up. Going to bed at this point amounted to that.
"Mrs. Bulkowsky?" the S.L. official said, incredulous. "Of
course not."
"Your general staff? One of your marshals?"
"The procurator will return your call," the S.L. functionary
informed him; obviously they had orders from Bulkowsky not to
disturb him.
Christ! Harms said to himself as he slammed down the phone
mechanism. The screen faded.
Something has gone wrong, Harms realized. They should not
have gotten this far and Big Noodle knew it. The A.I. system had
literally gone insane. That was not a technical breakdown, he
realized; that was a psychotic fugue. Big Noodle understood
something but could not communicate it. Or had the A.I. system
in fact communicated it? What, Harms asked himself, was that
gibberish?
He contacted the highest order of computers remaining, the
one at Cal Tech. After transmitting the puzzling material to it he
gave instructions that the material be identified.
The Cal Tech computer identified it five minutes later.
QUMRAN SCROLL "THE WAR OF THE SONS OF LIGHT AND THE
SONS OF DARKNESS." SOURCE: JEWISH ASCETIC SECT ESSENES
Strange, Harms thought. He knew of the Essenes. Many theologians had speculated that Jesus was an Essene, and certainly
there was evidence that John the Baptist was an Essene. The sect
had anticipated an early end to the world, with the Battle of
Armageddon taking place within the first century, C.E. The sect
had shown strong Zoroastrian influences.
He reflected, John the Baptist. Stipulated by Christ to have
been Elijah returned, as promised by Jehovah in Malachi:
Look, I will send you the prophet Elijah before the great and
terrible day of the Lord comes. He will reconcile fathers to
sons and sons to fathers, lest I come and put the land under a
ban to destroy it.
The final verse of the Old Testament; there the Old Testament
ended and the New Testament began.
Armageddon, he pondered. The final battle between the Sons
of Darkness and the Sons of Light. Between Jehovah and -- what
had the Essenes called the evil power? Belial. That was it. That
was their term for Satan, Belial would lead the Sons of Darkness;
Jehovah would lead the Sons of Light. This would be the seventh
battle.
There will be six battles, three of which the Sons of Light will
win and three of which the Sons of Darkness will win. Leaving
Belial in power. But then Jehovah himself takes command in
what amounts to a tie breaker.
The monster in her womb is Belial, Cardinal Harms realized.
He has returned to overthrow us. To overthrow Jehovah, whom
we serve.
The Divine Power itself is now in jeopardy, he declared; he
felt great wrath.
It seemed to the cardinal, at this point, that meditation and
prayer were called for. And a strategy by which the invaders
would be destroyed when they reached Washington, D.C.
If only Big Noodle had not broken down!
Glumly, he made his way to his private chapel.
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