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Friday, December 10, 2021

Selenelion - a short story

Selenelion

On December 10, 2011, shortly after six in the morning, a rich and famous man named Cecil stood on the walkway of the Golden Gate Bridge. He peered out at the sunrise to the east. Behind him, on the horizon, the earth’s shadow nearly covered the eclipsing moon – an impossible event known to astronomers as a selenelion eclipse. However, Cecil was about to experience his own impossible event – a miracle.

He thought about his wife. The divorce. His two children – a boy and a girl. She took them. He was able to keep his two houses. She got to keep the other four houses including the one in Sicily. His mind raced when he thought about his exotic sports cars and the classics; and his mind soared when he thought about his three jets. But not one modern invention could take him away from the darkness of the depths of the bay which reflected his mind. He thought about his friends – most of them were so accommodating in their advice throughout the months of the divorce. But there was no depth. Yet, he was in control of most of his life – even throughout the divorce. Ironically, nothing mattered. He thought there was nothing left. He would control when he died.

Public Domain (Modified)
He faced the endless horizon of the ocean. As he leaped from the railing he was deaf to the screams behind him. Just as his body was parallel to the railing, with arms and legs in a bold spread-eagle, he froze mid-flight. Not that he froze his thoughts in regret for the finality of his decision. No. He actually froze midair. In disbelief, he could see the bay waters below him. Within a fraction of a second, he faded out of consciousness.

Suddenly awake, although shaken, he realized he was standing on top of Mount Diablo across the bay into the next valley. There were hundreds of people scattered about the summit to the lower parking lot as well as the last steep grade to the upper parking lot. He attempted to speak to a nearby woman; she did not answer. Various telescopes and scientific equipment were utilized by a group of people. He approached them but the conversation proved unsuccessful.

A janitor from the California State Park approached him. He didn’t know whether to make another attempt at communication or get out the man’s way. “Good morning Cecil,” the janitor greeted him with a kind smile.

After silent disbelief, he responded. “How do you know my name? And no one calls me that.”

“It is the name I gave you.”

“Who in the hell?” his eyes sent darts of indifference into the janitor’s eyes.

“Why did you want to die?”

“What?” Cecil exclaimed. “How in God’s name?”

“Come with me,” the janitor reached out his hand as if giving him an invitation – like it was a “bucket list” invitation, but more.

He preferred to sling a colorful metaphor at him, yet without knowing why or how, he touched his hand and the others vanished. They were alone. “Where? What?” Cecil’s grew more perplexed and tightened muscles strained his forehead.

“You need as little distraction as possible right now,” he saw Cecil’s curiosity regarding the whereabouts of the others. “They are all fine,” the janitor smiled with confidence. He paused to allow Cecil a moment to calm. As calm as anyone in his position could be. “Do you know who I am?” the janitor asked.

“I think so. But if I say it, it will mean I believe in you. I’ve never believed in –” he couldn’t bring himself to say it.

“Emmanuel. With you. But you may wish to call me Jesus.”

Cecil darted across the overlook toward the stairs and stopped. “I’m hallucinating!” He shouted at the janitor as he grabbed his temple with both hands. “Even if you are real. If you do exist. Why are you a janitor?”

“Come,” Jesus smiled and sat on the edge of the half wall.

Cecil approached but remained standing. “I still don’t believe in you. I had too much to drink last night,” he lied. He never cared for it. He preferred to remain in control of his faculties.

“I want to show you something,” Jesus gazed toward the west and pointed at the lunar eclipse which seemed motionless. “Isn’t it beautiful?” Cecil ignored him.

“I read it’s impossible,” he stopped and looked at the janitor. “This whole thing is impossible!”

“All things are possible through me.”

“Are you saying you made this happen? This?” he pointed to the eclipse. “And this?” he motioned his arms in a circular fashion to include the two of them.

“I created and have controlled the science for this beauty,” he paused, and reached his hand out to him, but Cecil backed up a step and turned away.

He looked back at Jesus and sighed.

“If you are real, then why did you bring me here?”

“Perspective. You need perspective at this time.”

“I can see just fine,” he shivered, but not from the morning cold.

“Then why do you want to die?”

Cecil hesitated. The silence was broken by an abrupt wind. In a heighten level of frustration he mocked. “Control!” he waited for a response, but Jesus just listened. “Look man. I don’t have time for this!”

Jesus smiled. “Time?”

Cecil thought for a moment and realized this fantastic experience and for a moment his facial expression betrayed his beliefs as he acknowledged the person in front of him.

“I have two choices for you,” Jesus seemed to pierce right through him.

“What the –” he stopped himself. “I already made mine!” he yelled. He huffed. He looked at the deep unwavering sincerity on Jesus’ face like a spring of water deep behind his eyes. “Okay. What?” he conceded.

“I can show you the effect of your life after today’s tragic event of your death; or its impact should you choose to live,” Jesus gazed at his eyes. Silence filled the air as the windy mountaintop eased into a gentle breeze.  

Cecil thought for a moment. Conflicted. He rarely second guessed himself. One of the reasons for his earthly success. “If you are who you say you are, you already know what I will choose,” Cecil slung a question back in frustration. “What would you choose?”

Jesus smiled again. “I choose you.”

He cursed him, but he maintained control of his circumstances. In defiance he demanded. “Take me back to the bridge!”

Tears fell from the face of Jesus, “Are you certain?”

Cecil stared, more like glared at Jesus. He breathed furiously like a bull about to charge. So heavily, he hunched over a nearby railing to catch his breath. After he regained his composure, mostly at any rate, he surrendered and said, “Alright.”

Immediately, they were no longer on top of Mt. Diablo. Instead, they stood outside a house in Aptos which overlooked a beach and crashing waves. Jesus held out his arms as an invitation. “Come with me.”

Cecil took a few steps forward. He soon realized they both were walking up to the front door of one of the beach houses. “Who lives here?” Cecil stopped at the door, but Jesus kept walking. He passed through the door and left Cecil on the doormat. Jesus peeked back outside.

“Coming?” he reached out for his hand. Cecil’s face went pale but followed along like a kid cutting in line at Disneyland. He grabbed the hand of Jesus and they both passed through the door. Inside, Cecil heard the laughter of children.

“We can’t be here!” he urged in a whisper. “We’ll be arrested.”

“We are unseen,” Jesus assured him.

“Whose house is this?” At that moment, he saw his ex-wife, but she was – old and grey, and astonishingly to Cecil her eyes were filled with happiness.

Jesus was pleased to say. “It is one of the many houses I gave you. At this point, it is your only house.”

Cecil’s state of confusion grew. “You gave?” he stopped himself. “Never mind,” he didn’t want to engage in battle over that one. They stood in the entry, about to venture into the rest of the house. It was like a ride he didn’t want to get off.

They stood on the landing as his ex-wife passed by them on her way to join the laughter of children. “Alina,” Cecil exclaimed. After seeing his two grown children and who he deduced were spouses of their own – and two, three, five, no seven children romping about – he had an unnerving revelation. But he didn’t want to admit it to himself.

“These are yours,” Jesus smiled at the children.

“Mine?” he gazed about the room.

Jesus looked upon Cecil with compassion. “The view is spectacular.”

“Yes it is. Alina and I had been looking at this house just before –” he stopped. He didn’t want to remind himself of the divorce.

“No. Your family,” just as Jesus said it, an old man shuffled down the adjacent hallway. He grabbed the wooden railing carefully as he traversed the two steps to the lower level and joined the others. A Christmas tree adorned the dominant corner of the room – center stage to a plethora of decorations.

“It’s not the same date,” Cecil remarked under his breath upon discovering a nearby Advent calendar.

The old man leaned down toward Alina and kissed her before sitting. The youngest of the children were on the floor playing games, while the others sat talking and laughing about their afternoon on the beach.

“Is that?” Cecil asked as he pointed at the old man.

“It is you,” Jesus smiled. The older Cecil reached for a book nearby and leaned back into the sofa. The smile of Jesus grew ever more.

“How is this possible?” Cecil exclaimed.

“You and Alina reconciled and remarried. She never left you. She loved you – loves you,” Jesus paused.

Cecil noticed the joy in the face of his older self. His attention was stolen by someone who he surmised could easily be his adult son with hot beverages in hand – he handed them to two other ladies similar in age, one he kissed. Cecil was mesmerized like a deer in headlights.

“Do you see?” Jesus grabbed his attention as he pointed at the older Cecil.

Cecil stood. He took a few steps closer to focus down to the lower level. “That’s impossible!” The older Cecil turned a page of the Bible. The middle-aged Cecil glared back at Jesus and back again at his older self. “He would, I would never read that book!” He turned and darted back up the steps and ran out the front door. This time he turned the knob and opened the door.

He chugged up the hill toward the abandoned RR tracks swearing and cursing. He marched back down the hill and slammed the front door behind him. A moot point since no one could hear him. “I have a brother!” he yelled at Jesus. “You paint such a too-good-to-be-true picture.” he huffed. “It’s Christmas time! Where’s that bible-thumping baby brother of mine? Why isn’t he part of this picturesque scene?”

“He is with me,” Jesus answered with pleasure.

“I don’t see him!”

“In glory,” Jesus smiled. “With my Father in Heaven.”

“‘In heaven’. Oh – that – means – he’s – dead.” Cecil responded one slow word after another. “That doesn’t mean I believe in an afterlife or heaven, or whatever you want to call it,” he gathered his thoughts, his composure. “How did he die?”

At that moment, an older woman walked through the front door with an even older woman in arm, and bellowed, “Hello? The door is open.”

Alina greeted her with similar enthusiasm. “Come on in Cherie! Kids. It’s your Aunt Cherie – and look who she brought with her, your Aunt Clara,” she gave them both a hug like a child with a favorite Christmas present in her arms.

One of the grand-daughters piped in, “It’s Aunt Claire!” as she added to the hug, “And where’s my favorite uncle?” the little girl added.

“Your uncle is parking the car down the street,” Aunt Claire chuckled as she smiled into her grand-daughter’s eyes and stroked her long blonde hair.

Aunt Cherie helped her older sister to the living room who refused the assistant like swatting a fly. The warmth of the scene drew a slight smile on Cecil’s face.

“We’re just enjoying a little snack and chatting about old times,” she smiled, “Care for a glass of wine?”

Cecil was surprised, “Clara. She was always the sound one. Probably because she was the oldest,” he turned his attention to his other sister, “Cherie. I haven’t seen –” he stopped. “— my sister in ages,” he gulped at air. “She moved to New York with some scumbag who never treated her right – had her strung out most of the time,” he studied her for a moment. “If anyone was going to – you know – the family was always afraid for her,” he looked at Jesus. “She looks good. She even looks happy.”

“You were instrumental in bringing her back to the family. She turned from her destructive path.”

“I don’t understand.” Cecil eyes widened at this line of conversation, but so the ride continued.

“You introduced her to me,” Jesus smiled.

“Will you stop –” Cecil lifted his arms to the sky and pointed at Jesus’ face. “— smiling!” he huffed again. Resigned momentarily. “What to do you mean?”

“You also introduced all your grandchildren to me.”

“How? – Oh, never mind!” he wanted to dart out again. He turned away from Jesus. Turned back. He lifted both hands to the sides of his head. “And if I had completed my jump – I suppose she never meets you. I can’t believe I’m saying that!” He released his hands from his temples as if to open a floodgate of anguish.

Jesus just smiled.

“Whatever—” Cecil paused and cursed the floor on which Jesus stood. “Whatever it is you think you know, just say it!”

“You will introduce her to me. And she will respond to my free gift.”

Your free gift?” He volleyed back to Jesus sarcastically. “Oh right!” He looked out to his family. They seemed happy. He saw his older self gently close his Bible with tears in his eyes.”

“Gramps! What’s the matter?” Asked one of his grandchildren, the youngest of girls.

“I was thinking of your Uncle Carl,” he wiped his tears. “He died years before you were born.”

The little girl hugged the legs of her Gramps.

Cecil commanded Jesus. “I’ve seen enough.”

“Perfect love casts out all fear, my friend,” Jesus softly stated.

“I’m not afraid!” Cecil denied. “I’m leaving,” Cecil stomped out the front door. Jesus pursued him. Cecil continued to brood and turned his stomp into a sand-kicking march by the time he reached the beach. Jesus followed but did not join him. They walked separately along the shoreline where the waves repeatedly greeted the sand, until they reached the pier. Cecil turned around to walk back and was greeted by another welcoming smile from Jesus. Cecil pondered the waves. “I want to know how I can prevent my brother from dying?”

“There is a greater question you need to answer.”

Cecil abruptly responded. “I don’t know!” he started to run but quickly put on the brakes and turned to face Jesus. “You said ‘all things are possible’ for you.”

“Yes. But in my love I have a plan. Like your brother, you are a part of my plan.”

“Plan? I have my own plans thank you very much!”

“Control,” Jesus reminded him.

“What?” he thought. “Yes, that.”

“Ever since you were a boy. That’s when you seized control,” the face of Jesus was filled with patience.

“What of it?” his resolve turned to resistance.

Jesus knew he was just stubborn. “You controlled your life. Friends. Education. Occupation. Wealth. Fame. But what good is it to gain the whole world yet forfeit your soul?”

Cecil did not respond aside from a grimace.

“What frightens you my friend?” Jesus admired the waves.

Cecil countered the gaze of Jesus with a grimace, “As much as my brother and I disagreed, I’m afraid of losing him.”

Jesus said nothing. He waited and looked Cecil square in the eyes and asked him. “Do you think you are afraid of losing control?”

Cecil jerked away from Jesus. But for the first time he listened, not just heard, the words. Jesus began to saunter down the beach. Cecil followed him. “But I had to rely on the only person I could trust. Me.” He argued.

“It hurt me to watch your father leave you – and your family.”

“Everyone leaves,” his voice cracked.

“I will never leave you. I will never fail you,” Jesus affirmed.

Cecil stopped. He turned to his left and sat on the beach. Jesus stopped. He sat next to Cecil. They stared at the waves. They sat for what seemed like hours. The weight of Cecil’s world crashed upon him as he sat on the shore. Unlike the ocean, he was shallow – empty.

Jesus prayed silently. Father in heaven. He who has eyes, let him see.

The truth sank in further – from Cecil’s so-called friendships to his fame, and all that he owned. He  had been fighting the waves most of his life. “Stop the fight,” he whispered. “Stop the fight!” he yelled. And yelled it again.

Jesus said. “If I am for you, who can be against you?”

“What must I do?”

“Surrender,” the voice of Jesus sounded like an invitation.

Cecil took his eyes off the waves and saw for the first time the waves of love from Jesus. Jesus stood. Cecil imitated. Jesus walked toward the water. Cecil followed. He didn’t think about his expensive suit or shoes as they both entered the water. Jesus in his janitor uniform smiled at him.

Cecil accepted the smile this time and nodded in agreement as tears fell from his face.

“A new creation is born,” at that moment Jesus plunged Cecil into the water. Cecil closed his eyes and instantly was released from the curse he had allowed to control his life. He smiled under the water. The love of Jesus fill his heart. As Jesus pulled him back out of the water Cecil laughed uncontrollably. His heart filled with joy as he continued to laugh. And laugh.

 ~

On December 10, 2011, shortly after six in the morning, a rich and famous man named Cecil stood on the walkway of the Golden Gate Bridge. He peered out at the sunrise to the east. Behind him, on the horizon, the eclipsing moon was nearly covered by the earth’s shadow – an impossible event. He looked down at the waters below and laughed – uncontrollably. People around him looked at him strangely, but he didn’t care. He enjoyed the miracle around him. The beauty of the cliffs to the north. The ocean and the eclipse to the west. The miracle in his heart.

He left behind the destruction he was about to inflict upon himself. He looked to the north at Vista Point where his Bugatti was parked. Immediately, he turned and walked south toward San Francisco. He pulled his phone from his coat pocket and hit a speed-dial. “Sell it all!” he shouted. He waited for the reaction and ignored the financial advice. “We’re going to do some good in this world for a change.” He paused but didn’t allow for a complete response. To make the decision final he hung up the phone and dialed another number. Moments later he heard the voice of his ex-wife, “Hello Alina,” he smiled. After a brief pause he asked, “will you meet me where we first met?” he smiled again at her response.

~

Decades later, Cecil sat with Alina on Christmas Eve. Among the many red and green decorations and the many lights which decorated their home in Aptos, his sisters, his daughter, his son and daughter-in-law, and all his grand-children outmatched the many gifts under the tree. Cecil closed his Bible with tears in his eyes.

“Gramps! What’s the matter?” asked one of his youngest granddaughters.

“I was thinking of your Uncle Carl,” he wiped his tears and smiled at her. “He died many years before you were born,” the little girl hugged the legs of her Gramps. He gazed at the miracle of his family.

Aunt Cherie added with empathy. “Jesus took him home.”

“Yes,” Cecil’s smile grew with remembrance, “he fulfilled the plan Jesus had for him.”

Aunt Claire smiled with a satisfaction like savoring the last bite of her favorite dessert – her husband’s hand in hers.

Alina moved to sit by her husband and held his hand. “What were you reading?”

Cecil smiled. A quiet peace overcame the room as he asked for his grandchildren to sit beside him. Another miracle he thought, as all his energetic grandchildren gathered. He paused to soak in the moment. “Many years ago –” He looked into his wife’s eyes. “—just before we remarried, I experienced an impossible event.”

“You’ve told us about the selenelion eclipse,” his 12-year old grandson struggled to pronounce. “We also learned about it in school.”

“Yes,” Cecil smiled at him as he invited him closer. “But – there was a second impossible event which occurred that morning,” he reached for his Bible and began to read:

“Jesus looked at him and said, ‘How hard is it for the rich to enter the kingdom of God! Indeed it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God.’

“Those who heard this asked, ‘Who then can be saved?’”

“Jesus replied –” His heart overflowed with joy. ‘What is impossible with man is possible with God.’



Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Space and Time - POEM of the MONTH!

 
Space and Time
 
Perception of space 
Folded within a corner
I see from the inside
You see in and outside
 
Observation of time
Outside the line
I see the short-side
You exist outside
 
Persistence of regret
In all my dark corners
Penitent from the inside
You erase it from memory

~

Inspired by Psalm 103:11-12

Also published in Synchronized Chaos, January 1, 2022

Monday, November 1, 2021

We Are as Tall as Trees - POEM of the MONTH!

We Are as Tall as Trees
 
How many would say
they are as tall as a tree?
Wittingly or otherwise,
it is a question for the ages,
and one not to be forgotten.
In truth, it depends
upon the type of tree. The Redwood
overshadows the Spruce
and the Fir; the Eucalyptus 
towers in its own brittle pride,
and to some the Bonsai 
eclipses them all in appeal.
Although trees are ancient,
they all face the sun;
all are subject to fire.
 
As lips seek out water
to quench thirst,
so do the roots of trees –
so does the soul for the eternal.
The wind whispers
the answer to each branch, but
only heard by the core of its rings.
And to the Mustard seed
which passes to the next generation
the eternal will thrive.
"Trees in the wind II, Lomond Hills"
by 
euan1234 is licensed under CC BY 2.0.
All will face seasons
of joy and grief; 
but sun, water, and wind
strengthen the roots
and provide shade to others in need.
 
The wind bends limbs to bow
and seek out the water;
For it is only then,
we are as tall as trees.

~

(If you are using a mobile device to read this post please turn your device horizontally for the best view.)


Sunday, October 31, 2021

The Devil's Shoes (All Hallows Eve Edition)

The Devil’s Shoes

When my feet fit the Devil’s shoes
Each step is filled with misery
Doors of flesh slam open
Down dead end alleys
Trapped in the darkness
Set by my own devices –
I could turn at any time
And enjoy your freedom
 
“For I do not do the good
I want to do, but the evil
I do not want to do –
this I keep doing.”
 
Instead of the opened doors
By your gentle, soft breeze
Which also opens windows
I walk passed polluted walls
And break glass stained
By the blood of my soul –
Damn! It’s as frightening as Hell
When my feet fit the Devil’s shoes
 
~



Friday, October 1, 2021

Arrow of Time - POEM of the MONTH!

Arrow of Time 
                                                                                   
Although time is a constant on planet Earth
It is relative to each of its unique inhabitants
From witnessing a kettle boil to a child’s birth
As if the arrow of Time is broken into variants

We can only remember the past, not the future
But instinctive action may come after inception
Although it seems Death punishes the violator
As if the arrow of Time provides our direction
 
Behind every effect is the cause of motion
Unlike every crime resulting in consequence
Ahead of the system breaks the correlation
As if the arrow of Time bows to influence
 
But yesterday cannot be a result of tomorrow
Aside from Grace as received from the Divine
When gone is grief, tears, and all sorrow
As the arrow of Time is temporal by Design
 
For this is the very reason the future is now
Construction for the redesigned community
Built on Love, neighbor for neighbor to endow
As the arrow of Time limits opportunity


(If using a phone, turn your phone sideways for the best view of this post.)

Saturday, September 11, 2021

The Man With a Dishonest Face - a short story (Special Edition)

    The Man with a Dishonest Face

This is a peculiar story about a man whose face no one trusted. Born in San Francisco, California, he was an only child whose parents provided for him the best they could; but they were not poor. He had friends in the neighborhood and at school, but by the time he reached his teenage years, and his face became more like a man, something strange occurred. His friends disappeared. Not literally. They just simply vanished from his life – one at a time. Sometimes it made him feel like garbage. He saw most of life through books and cinema – there was something magical about sitting in the dark. Also fortunately for him, his mother loved him dearly and nurtured his interests.

As a young, educated man he was always well-dressed. He wore slacks, usually brown to match his hair, and comfortable dress shoes and a dress shirt, never white and rarely with a tie, finished with a sport coat. It was enough to appear trustworthy without overstating the intent. He graduated with a degree in computer-science funded by a full four-year scholarship, of which he achieved by playing tennis – the only individual sport he quickly discovered that others did not need to rely upon him. Since graduation he was unable to secure employment in the field for which he studied – not anywhere. However, within a year of graduation a pandemic stretched its ugly reach across the globe. Many companies quickly adapted to allow remote employment. On the day of his interview the video conferencing software went down, therefore he and the hiring manager needed to adapt and regress to a phone call – so no one saw his face. Although he had no employment history – not even a summer job – his achievement as valedictorian impressed his new employer. He started the following week. It was a start-up technology company in Silicon Valley which recently went public. Many of his colleagues had had to adapt to work from home, but it was natural to him. And whenever there was a video conference call, he simply turned his camera off and provided an excuse whenever asked. Something was different about him, about his appearance. Throughout high-school he did his homework alone, read alone, and even though he scored high on exams no one ever snuck a peek at his answers. They simply didn’t trust him. Once, he asked a girl classmate who awkwardly revealed he had a dishonest face. In the pain of this statement, he learned to simply move on with his life – or so he thought.

Until one day he met Ruya. She lost her sight as an infant and was discarded by her parents – actually by her father, but her mother was silenced on the matter. Fortunately, a missionary couple rescued her from a dumpster and cared for her as their own. She returned with her new parents to America and, when old enough, attended a private school for the blind. One sense was replaced by a gift – the gift of mercy. Eventually, her gift developed into grace. Her classmates were naturally drawn to her. In fact, her gift was sometimes seen as a fault – the fault of being too trusting.  One day in elementary school a couple of boys in the fifth grade asked her to lay her arm out on her desk. She liked one of these boys, so compliance was easy. Once of them took an eraser to the back of her hand and slow rubbed. As first, it seemed like a harmless game. It began to hurt. Her skin hurt. She pulled away in tears and snatch her white cane and quickly left class – without alerting the teacher. She made it home, only three blocks way, and felt the walls of her house as if to hug them. She cried in her bedroom until her mother replaced the house with her own hugs – moments later revealed that her school had called. It was time to return – face the reality of the bully.

In high-school, she excelled in her studies and graduated two years prior to others her age, which resulted in a four-year scholarship. Within that time she accelerated her college career and obtained a master’s in physics, a bachelor’s in engineering and a minor in Sociology. She had a unique perspective on the interactions of matter and energy but also with respect to design, and people. Throughout her higher education she applied her knowledge vocationally. It was this application which earned her a position at a well-known space and technology firm in southern California.

In the waning months of the first wave of the pandemic her company hosted a science and technology symposium. A handful of select companies were invited. And this is where Ruya met her husband. Fortunately for him, many people were still donning the mask – no one saw his face, at least not all of it. But he didn’t need a mask when he met Ruya. She was beautiful in every way: dark olive skin and jet-black hair. Her eyes were covered by sunglasses shaped by two tear-drops, the points of which connected to make the bridge which set on her petite nose. She was petite, but she carried herself with strength. Strength of character and wit he soon discovered. It is said that a blind person has the exceptional sense of their environment including the change in air pressure on their skin, even a sensitivity to attire and color. With his permission, she felt his face on their first date. It was an endearing moment; it was a nervous moment – a mix of emotions from one sensation. She sensed something no one had before – integrity and humility. She could tell by the way he spoke, by the way he didn’t speak. By their third date she concluded he was the most trustworthy person – equal her adopted parents. They soon fell in love and were married. From day one of their honeymoon, he prayed a selfless prayer – the restoration of her sight. Even though the result would mean she would see his face, he prayed it, nonetheless.

Her position required her residential proximity near her work. The pandemic continued to come in waves of variants, but even with continuous vaccinations the CDC mandated masks. Most of society had learned to live in the Pandemic Age, but her husband’s presence was not required at his company’s office. With continued virtual attendance they were able to live in Pasadena, and he continued his career without being seen. Until one day, Ruya’s company asked him and a few of his colleagues to join them at a conference in Geneva, Switzerland. Both their skills were of interest by the scientists at the Large Hadron Collider. Some of the greatest scientific minds were expected. Aside from Ruya travelling by plane before her legal adoption, neither had been on a commercial airliner. They were both quite excited, he was more nervous. Although Ruya had not adopted the traditional clothing of her ancestral culture and religion, she had faced some prejudice throughout her childhood – especially in the first decade of the 21st century. It was the 25th anniversary of 9-11. And unbeknownst to them both, after they removed their masks to be identified, TSA at LAX had reason to stop them at the checkpoint. They were escorted to separate rooms and strip-searched, questioned, and detained until a Homeland Security agents arrived. This took time. This caused them to miss their flight. After dressing, Ruya prayed for her husband. He prayed for his wife.

The stress tightened her nerves and muscles like a tightrope stretched across two buildings. During her interrogation, Ruya experienced something she hadn’t since – she could not remember. Her sight suddenly returned. She could see the small squares in the floor as if were a net hundreds of feet below while she struggled to balance her emotions. She was in shock. She demanded, "I want to – see -- my husband,” a request she never thought would exit her lips – an urge greater than their escape from their separate yet shared horror. Fortunately, she was keen enough not to reveal the miracle. Her request was denied, but she was soon released. She was escorted to the concierge’s lounge and asked to wait. When she asked about her husband once again, she was refused an answer.

Finally, a Homeland Security agent entered the lounge. Ruya continued her charade. The agent explained in little detail that they were initially detained because her image was detected by the computers of TSA, but later they determined she was the daughter of a known terrorist and only resembled her mother. The agent apologized for the inconvenience after admitting they discovered she had been adopted as an infant; and told her she was free to go. But her husband was not.

“I am not free until my husband is,” she exclaimed. She refused to leave.

She stood as a statue – like stubborn marble. The agent determined she had an unwavering steadfast nature and allowed her to see her husband briefly. While she waited for the reunion, Ruya asked for more information which the agent supplied. Although his face had not been in the database of TSA, they all had a similar hunch of distrust; and the wait was due to an extensive background check.

He entered the room in hand-cuffs. His faced altered from distraught to illumination when he saw Ruya. He was ordered to remain on one side of the room when he attempted to approach his wife. They protested in unison. Their exchange was filled with frightened tones and every other sentence in hesitation. In the midst of their conversation he saw her perform a subtle balance correction in her standing posture when she reached out for the back of a stool directly to her left. He smiled, but his face reflected doubt in her sunglasses – she mistook the expression for continued distress. His joy fought with selfishness – a selfish fear. She closed her eyes and sighed over the ordeal, which inadvertently allowed her to sense his true feelings. She opened her eyes to observe an opportune moment to temporarily remove her sunglasses and reveal the miracle to her husband. 

He nearly wept that her sight was restored – his prayer was answered in the affirmative. But again, with increased intensity, his tears of joy fought with his fear she would now reject him. She returned her sunglasses to her face when the door opened, and another Homeland agent entered. The agent whispered to her colleague which resulted in what seemed to be a reluctant admission of wrongdoing. Her husband’s handcuffs were removed, and both were informed they were free to go. They approached each other – he not as quick as Ruya. With her cane to lead the way, she crossed the room; but heard the agents whisper derogatory names to one another as they peered at her husband – she saw their continued distrust of him. She embraced her husband with all the love accumulated over their years of marriage. She removed her sunglasses and gazed into his eyes as if they had been apart for years. She spoke softly into his ear, “I see you. I love you.”

His eyes lit up and replied, “You are my vision,” he pressed one of her hands to his heart, and with the other he stroked her long black hair.

Just before they left, something caught her eye. A copy of “To Kill a Mockingbird” sat on the edge of a desk. She picked it up and brushed off the dust. It was slightly worn with a few rough edges. She had read it in brail once before and knew of its truths. To everyone’s amazement she looked at the remaining agents and officers, and said in contradiction to their jeers, “This is my husband, who I see as the most honest man I have ever known. And I’m proud to have taken his name.”

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

Paradise Now!

    Preface

The following story is inspired by The Gospel According to the Apostle Matthew (chapter 16), the works of H.G. Wells and Gene Roddenberry, and a general love of science-fiction -- particularly time-travel -- and the music of the 1980s. Unlike stories in print, the use of technology has allowed a "soundtrack" to be interjected throughout by the use of hyperlinks. In addition, there is a link of historical reference and a few biblical references to enhance, and hopefully illuminate the reading experience. What you are about to read is a work of fiction, although the biblical Truths are accurate.

~

Paradise Now!

The floor and walls were a white blur as Dr. Herbert Mellontas focused on the dying woman before him. But he wasn’t there as her doctor. His wife had been diagnosed with stage three cancer six months prior. He had watched her fade from a vibrate and beautiful woman to a shell of flesh on bone – plugged into several machines. Each breath was a gift. She was his gift. He sat next to her bedside and held her hand. His head dropped next to her hand when she reached out to touch his face.

“My Paradise,” his pet name for her. “You are more than the world to me.”

She smiled and squeezed his hand ever so slightly. After a deep breath she hummed a single note of delight. The blur in the room grew as his tears welled up. His courage wasn’t enough to hold back to save her. She squeezed his hand tighter. The two locked eyes as if it was the day they first met. Their first date, their first kiss and their honeymoon flashed before his eyes in a mixed montage.

A loud sustained beep disrupted their moment. Nurses and a doctor rushed into the room. One of them asked Dr. Mellontas to step aside but it was too late. Suddenly, he was back home. There was no point in striking the wall with his fist. The sheetrock had suffered a few hundred dollars once before when unable to solve an equation. But no cash was found behind the wall for the repairman who had been called by his wife. His wife. She wasn’t the focus of his target. Her cancer was. But how can one hit a disease? The supporting beam, fixed like Superman to his fist. Crack! And unlike the Man of Steel, the beam displayed zero concern over a broken hand. His broken hand confirmed he was not a superhero. Nor could he solve every problem. And he wasn’t able to save her with brute force. His Paradise was gone.

Herbert abruptly woke up screaming and sweating. He reached over to the other side of the bed. She wasn’t there. He carefully touched his hand with the other. To his relief, it wasn’t broken. He clutched her pillow and wept. Sleep eluded him for the remainder of the night. He forced himself to escape the bedroom. Lost in his own home – now just a house without her – he found his way into his study. He poured a whiskey as he deflated into a nearby chair. He stared out the window but his reflection in the glass only reinforced what he needed to do – find his Paradise. 

With blood shot eyes Dr. Mellontas passed by his colleague’s classroom. The halls of Stanford University spoke volumes. The faces on the students of Professor Hoffman seemed to indicate he taught his class as if each and every book of literature ever written were open simultaneously. Dr. Mellontas resembled a statue as if frozen in time as he listened to the English professor in his thorough analysis of Milton’s Paradise Lost. But soon, he postponed the philosophical content for another day. Today, he dreamed a dream in a way a physicist imagined. He postulated and pictured all the days of the past, today and the future occurring at the same time. All the pages open. All the hours and all the minutes visible. He visited the impossible. For the time being, he preferred to call it the improbable. Could he open a page of any year or any day and begin reading? Like everyone, he could open the pages of the present moment. History provided him the yesteryear. Now, knowledge of the third aspect of time ended with inconclusive data. His calculations strung out across numerous dry-erase boards in his study which placed him in a trance. Expressly reserved neurons fired only to be extinguished and fired again. And he lost it. It was too complex to wrestle with in the current environment. He needed undisturbed focus. He grimaced. With books wrapped in the left arm of his tweed jacket, Dr. Mellontas continued his previous course down the hall. His temples pounded down rows of skin into his weathered brow. Half shaven, he scratched at his partially peppered beard with incomplete thoughts. The occasional tug at his unkept, nearly criminal and equally peppered mop provided little help. Nothing short of murder would stop him from reaching the solitude of his study – his intellectual paradise. Frustrated at the limits the human brain placed on him, he slammed the door shut and blurted a command to his computer, “Music!”

An hour later he heard a mouse in the form of a petite female student as she opened the door, “Dr. Mellontas?”

Locks – he forgot to lock the door, he cursed himself. With a grunt and a snarl he grumbled a salutation unbefitting for a tenured professor. When he turned to actually make eye-contact with the little rodent, who should be exterminated, he realized his error – not recognizing the voice of his own niece. He quickly adjusted his grizzly posture to resemble a human and cleared his throat to provide her with an improved greeting – albeit, limited to the territory of cordial.

“Uncle Herb?” her timidity was slightly lightened.

The shortened version of his name was never a favorite, but he allowed only two in his entire world to address him in this manner – the young lady in a blue jacket and holey jeans who stood before him and his deceased wife, Eleanor. He allowed his heart to harden like cracked clay since he lost her. His Paradise – she was his sole drive in his efforts to solve the problem of time-travel. His face became distraught; a tear he had reserved for the love of his life. He wished the past were attainable in order to save her. Others before him had theorized the possibility which would have resulted in an altered past, or as others had theorized: zero ripple-effect – nothing changes, or an alternate timeline – one path diverged into two. But he had already disproved the possibility mathematically. His world – the world had become uninhabitable, not entirely from a physical aspect but in all that mattered socially, politically, and culturally, and although he wasn’t religious, morally. The clash of ideologies among nations, tribes, gangs and even neighborhoods – versions of how each of these peoples thought paradise should be achieved grew to such a heightened and dangerous level the present climate invoked a stage of war of various levels or a pseudo-peace once termed as a cold war. Therefore, he resolved to leave the world in which he suffered. Contrary to his niece’s hope of a future Messiah, his blood drove him to desire paradise now. He theorized this achievement by traveling to the future where mankind would evolve beyond the need for all that leads to conflict, poverty, want and hate. He mused for a moment while Everybody Wants to Rule the World played in the background.

His niece stood bewildered in the doorway. Anna wore little make-up. Her distress was clearly painted on her face, distress for her uncle. Now was not the time to question it’s cause as she observed the myriad of equations throughout his study. As she slowly returned the door to its closed position she said, “I can come back later.”

With a confused gaze of wanting, mixed with the drive to solve his equations, he nodded in agreement. He tossed any future regret into a single point until it vanished into oblivion. Equal in force, his focus was singular – time to move forward.

~

Midnight, and he rolled up to his drive in front of his Tudor house on Cliff Road in Tiburon with a panoramic view of the San Francisco Bay – the city lights were more numerous than the stars as they reflected off the water and back onto the fog which slowly rolled through the Golden Gate. Strings of light from thousands of cars were sown into both bridges. His daughter got out of her car – she had been waiting for him. She stood next to her vehicle with a look she used to receive from her own mother – now directed at her father, “Anna called,” Grace said. 

 Her dad stopped in his tracks, “Your cousin is a smart girl.”

“Yes she is,” she paused as they stood – and stared. He had long ago nailed a ‘NO TRESPASSING’ to the exterior of his heart years ago, but hopped over the proverbial fence, “Now, are you going to invite me in, or do I have to break out my key,” she pulled out her keys from her purse, smirked at him while she took one step and another, enough to be face to face – without further thought she hugged him as if it were Christmas. His response was minimal.

As they entered she followed him into his study which was surrounded by a library of books and accolades in various forms – the two most prominently displayed were his Nobel Prizes in Physics. Grace was reminded of the day, “Mom was so proud of you,” she picked up a picture of her mom with the dates of her birth and death; the latter coincided with the year of his second Nobel Prize. Her hair was a reflection of her mother’s chestnut, but the latter was slightly greyed.

He turned toward his daughter. Memory of his love sat on the edge of his lips in the form of a word; instead, he avoided its release and targeted the door to leave but was blocked by his daughter who held the doorframe with both hands.

“Anna understands,” she said and briefly waited for a response but like a good poker-player he remained stone-cold, “Anna understands most of the equations.”

While engaged in debates in his post-graduate and doctorate days at his alma mater, he never lost. And although his theories were challenged, no one could disprove them – at least not definitively. “Yes, yes. Too smart,” an accolade of his own, but also a rebuke.

“We are—”

“Don’t say it,” he stopped her and set his briefcase down, “Don’t say you’re worried about me,” without an allowance for her to respond. He commanded his system, “Music,” it was his distraction – his wine, since he did not allow alcohol or substance to cloud the one tool which would accomplish his goal.

“Dad—”

He interrupted her again, “The one you should be worried about is your brother,” like a dagger to the heart.

“He’s your son too. He was looking for an escape after mom died,” she paused in remembrance, “And besides, he’s going to his meetings,” she assured him with inadequate confidence.

He huffed, and added further injury, “Meetings! It’s that husband of yours who should be going to meetings – in prison!” he grunted.

“That’s not fair, and you know it—” she stopped herself from regret, and continued, “it was an accident,” she stressed and began to cry but controlled the tears from falling.

“You still listen to his music? What was the name of his band – Preparing a Feast?”

Her face retreated but with a calming breath, “Close. Prepared for Eternity.”

“Eternity,” he mocked. “Oblivion for me.”

“Dad—” she began to plead.

But a cold silence came over the room when he turned his back on her. He grumbled under his breath, “But why did you have to marry the man who killed your husband?”

The heavy tear finally dropped from the gravity of heartache, and she managed to repeat something he had dismissed over and over, “Forgiveness.”

He scoffed at her with an echo of the word as if it were obscene. Silence filled the room like smoke from a fire. She made her way to the doorway for air. She forced herself to continue, “I know she was your world. You can’t bring her back – just like I can’t bring back—” she stopped with an empathetic bluntness.

“But why so early?” he shouted. He spotted the current issue of Popular Science with an image of Max Tegmark with the title above, In Memory, and diverted the conversation, “Amazing. Isn’t it?”

“What’s that dad?”

He picked up the magazine and waved it at her, “He lived to a hundred.”

She tilted her head back for the answer, and returned her concerned focus on her father, “Dad,” she regained his attention – partly, “Anna—”

“What?” he grunted, “You know little of my work.” He kept her off-balance. Besides, you know I never subscribed to his multiverse theories,” he mumbled with the magazine still in hand, “Another version of Eleanor would not replace mine. Hell! She might even be as insane as your grandmother.”

“That was unkind,” she rebuked him.

He shrugged it off and he turned toward the window as if to escape in the darkness of the bay and surrounding city-lights.

She persisted, “Anna—”

“Anna should mind her own business,” he interrupted.

“Your right. I don’t understand how your mind works, but Anna believes—”

Dr. Mellontas had a bad habit of speaking over someone else, especially family who persisted with the imposition of faith, “Belief. Don’t talk to me about your Jesus freak-show!” 

Her expressions weren't on their typical path, but he ignored the minor inclination to provide an apology. More silence. More smoke. Grace broke the awkward tension and placed a hand on her dad’s shoulder which he quickly shrugged off. She took a half-step backward but persisted with two steps forward, “Anna saw time-travel calculations – to the past,” she paused, “she said they were incomplete, but it makes us wonder—” her dark blue eyes opened wide.

A blank stare crossed his face to relay his intended silence on the subject. But underneath his cold eyes he realized his niece had only seen his old equations. Equations he discarded but allowed visible for self-pity.

“Dad. What are you planning?” she finally blurted.

Escape was not an option, “Your cousin is wrong,” he leaned back onto the corner of his desk and huffed, “I gave up on it months ago.”

“Then why—?”

“I keep it to remind me of the failure. To help me with my current theories and hopefully something new to publish,” he lied.

“That’s great!” she quickly applauded, “A third Nobel Prize?” she asked.

“Probably not,” he said.

“Well, I’ll be proud of you no matter what,” she countered.

He believed he satisfied his daughter’s curiosity, “It’s been a long week.”

Grace smiled, “Of course. You need to rest.” She approached her dad and kissed him on the cheek. As she began to leave the room in the direction of the entry she added, “Just—” concern filled her expression, but disregarded verbalizing it. After a brief silence she respectfully said, “—I’ll let myself out.”

She was gone.

He was relieved. His work never left the forefront of his mind, “Computer,” his holo-screens activated. He paced the room and dictated new calculations, corrected old ones, and danced his hands across the three-dimensional space of the holo-screens to rearrange variables and nested parentheses. Modified ideas prompted new ideas. His determination fought the need for sleep, but fatigue would be the victor. He provided commands to run variations of his latest Inversion Causality Equation; he dropped his head like a rock off a cliff and soon fell asleep. 

~

The next morning he opened his eyes to see failure. He didn’t want to admit his equations, his input was incorrect – but that the computer had failed. Coffee was the answer, and it was waiting for him in the kitchen. He tortured his brain further. He could not turn his theory into the correct equation: that effect could not only be seen before cause, but also experienced prior to it. He stared into the blackness of his coffee as he stirred in a little cream. As if in a trance, he stared. And it came to him – he could see Time as though it were no longer linear but circular – he stood outside of the cup like a god, as if standing outside of Time. With the increased charge of neurons firing he bolted to his study and shouted new commands at his computer – once again he altered one equation after another and added an entirely new one. The one which would change everything. Within minutes his theories and equations were proved correct. He tested them again, and again, and again until he was certain. He was beside himself – he even humorously pictured himself actually standing beside himself. He transferred the data to an encrypted data-disc and ran to his bedroom to pack. This information had to be delivered and downloaded into his private lab in person; he didn’t trust the Quantum Internet.

The first available flight from SFO to BOI was not until evening. Time was not on his side. With a wave of his hand he deactivated the holo-pad which had emanated from a wristband on his right arm. Driving was a possibility, but he would just arrive at the same time if he waited for the flight, “How ironic,” he chuckled in frustration, walked toward the window, and sent musings across the bay. It had been awhile since he had time to kill, as he rarely allowed himself the luxury. He found his way to an infrequent location of the house, the balcony, and activated his pad to book a flight. A quick coffee. Perhaps, the black elixir would proved the answer to the mystery. He loved coffee as much as nostalgic music which reminded him of The Mill in the City which he hadn’t visited in months – it was only a slight detour to the airport.

With his computer bag securely wrapped around his body like a bike-messenger, Dr. Mellontas entered his favorite coffee house on Divisadero in the mid-afternoon only to discover no-vacancy. Determined, he order a dirty chai latte’ and turned to see the population of the establishment had not changed, “You’re welcome to sit here young man.”

He hadn’t been called a “young man” in decades. But it was an elderly woman with long silver hair and a pleasant face who offered him a seat across from her. He politely accepted, and strategically with a quarter turn of his chair he pulled out his pad and took a sip of his tasty beverage.

“You’re Dr. Mellontas – yes?” she asked.

He hadn’t quite accepted the prominence which the media had thrusted upon him, “Yes,” he returned to his little world. After a couple focused minutes, he relented and turned toward the woman whose gaze was still fixed on him, “Pleased to meet you.”

“But I haven’t offered you my name,” she said calmly with a subtle smile, “I am Clara,” she waited for a response, “people come and go.”

“Hmm?” he supplied with minimal effort.

“Where are you going?” she asked.

He heard the question but didn’t quite listen as his attention was on a classic song, Mad World. Other than the music, most people in the coffee house were silent. Is anyone listening? Familiarity was the only cause for conversation; it was highly unusual for strangers to break with this tradition – break from their respective technology – even those with familiarity. He hoped silence would persuade the woman to find engagement elsewhere, like a good book.

“Everyone is going somewhere,” she said with the same calm smile.

He surrendered, “Yes – I suppose.”

“And where—”

He launched a stern look, at first; but there was something about the woman’s face. It was kind, thoughtful and introspective. His cynical mind briefly hung onto the words of the song being played: “Bright and early for the daily races – Going nowhere, going nowhere.” He echoed the latter two words of the stanza.

“But everyone is going—” she countered.

“Yes. Yes you said that—” he interrupted, stopped himself and turned off his pad to focus on solving the social equation before him. He turned the question back to her, “And where are you going?”

Her smile shined brighter yet with what appeared to be a sad remembrance, “No one’s ever ask me that except for my late husband.”

He provided his condolences.

“It was a few years ago. We had planned to move here but,” she paused and shifted direction, “So I was ‘going somewhere’ – for him.”

“Where did you leave?”

“Manhattan,” she took a sip of her coffee, “And you?”

Should he reveal his plan? Who would believe it anyway – other than his esoteric niece and daughter. Instead, he decided to be more philosophical, “Away from Chaos.”

“Of course you’ve read John Milton,” she stated.

“And where were you educated?” he seemed to be surprised yet pleased at the mention of the historical figure.

“Self-taught my dear.”

“Fascinating,” he took another sip of his coffee, it’s swirl confirmed his true focus.

She returned to his previous response, “But one cannot escape Chaos. It’s a matter of how we learn from the world around us – especially the tragic.”

Suddenly, his late wife came to mind; he felt like this woman could read his soul – if he believed he had one. He avoided the depths of this topic and replied with a gruff sigh as he disengaged eye-contact. And with clumsy success, altered the subject. They continued to talk but the topics faded into the trivial until they were both silent. After realizing his coffee was cold he checked the time.

“Well, it seems I must go,” he stood to leave, placed his pad in the security of his bag and gazed at the elderly woman one last time. Her faced craved for his curiosity, so he asked, “Is San Francisco your final destination?”

“Not at all,” she smiled at him with a peace he had only seen in his daughter and niece. Clara provided the answer with one word, “Paradise.”

Dr. Mellontas looked at her intently. From the look on her face, she hadn’t meant it as a metaphor. He didn’t have time for further inquiry just in case her meaning was one he preferred to avoid. Instead, he provided her a polite ending salutation and walked out of the coffee shop with a focused yet thoughtful countenance.

~

Time is relative when traveling on a plane or worse in a car – solo – even if it was AI-driven. Just before his near nonstop journey reached Marsing his view overlooked the Treasure Valley to observe an extreme imbalance between storm clouds and the ground which caused the September pre-dawn sky to light up with lightning. The incredible sight reminded him of the neurons which fired in his brain as he balanced the negative energy of his frustration with the illumination of his dream.

He reached his private 300 acre ranch among the rolling hills of Ola, Idaho – over an hour northwest of Boise – by mid-morning on a Sunday. He loved the green valley, and farm homes acres from each other, and the rolling hills which secluded his house and new barn from the Ola Highway below. The “NO TRESPASSING’ sign with the threat of prosecution added to his desire for privacy. Above the front door was a wood plank from an old barn with the word Paradise carved into it. As he entered his modest ranch house he dropped everything and voiced a command of attention, “Milton.”

“Sir. It is good to hear your voice again. It’s been 37 days since your last visit. How was your trip?” a voice nearly as close to a human’s replied, “How is Grace?” he inquired, “And how is my nameless counterpart?”

He ignored the pleasantries but the last, “Still nameless,” he respond, “All security protocols functional?”

“No one has entered the property line sir.”

Mellontas added with a heighten sense of enthusiasm, “Good news! We have work to do.”

“Shall I transfer to the Exo?”

“Of course. Did you repair the holo-emitters?” he asked as he approached an interior door, entered a code and placed his hand on a pad – the door clicked open. He took a flight of stairs down into a large basement where Milton stood in his Exo-skeleton form. A few small servers were tucked in one corner while a row of outdated flat-screens with news from around the world lined an upper wall directly above one large holo-screen. Light emitted from several locations in the corners of the ceiling to project a 3-dimensional image of a large disc-like ship – the holo-emitters allowed him to see the inner mechanisms. He walked ceremoniously around the hologram with delight and stopped at another door with the same security access. Milton followed. A long corridor led to another set of stairs which opened to a secure barn near the house. The barn was spotless – not one grain, or bale of hay; it contained one large object covered by large tarp.

“Shall I sir?” Milton asked

“Please.”

Milton uncovered an exact duplicate of the ship as seen previously by the holo-emitters but thrice the size – 22 feet in diameter and seven feet in height. It was metallic and nearly seamless with a convex ring surrounding its circumference; and two small windows were visible fore port and starboard – if a front or rear could be determined – one above the centerline and one directly below.  Several large and long cables stretched from below the craft toward the interior wall of the barn and several pieces of equipment isolated by an Oz-like curtain. Mellontas stood back in admiration, “The meta-solar array?”

“Link has been in continuous operation since your last visit. All systems powered up sir,” Milton reported.

With heightened admiration of his creation, he simply said, “Good.”

“Will we be making any modifications?” he turned his attention away from his master and toward the disc-like machine.

Dr. Mellontas was transfixed on his ship, “Huh? Oh, oh yes. Only minor. Mostly software modifications,” he paused, “in here,” he pointed at the messenger bag which held the secrets and the means by which he would travel. They both returned to the room with the holo-model where they quickly began to test his new equations. “Music!” he commanded, and the song OrdinaryWorld began to play. He was reminded of the suffering and greed in the world and how cold wars had become holy wars. He paused momentarily to think of the words, “But I won’t cry for yesterday – There’s an ordinary world – Somehow I have to find, …” though he resumed his work. He needed no reminder as to his motivation. The two – human and robot – worked in tandem as the scientist’s mind was in sync with the mathematics of the music and his equations.

Hours later and after numerous simulations and adjustments to the ship which the Exo-robot performed, the sun began to set, as displayed on one of the numerous monitors. But they were so engrossed in their work that Dr. Mellontas forgot to eat dinner let alone enjoy the beauty of a red and orange painted sky. He paused to watch one of the world new agencies report the heightened tension between two nations, the death toll of a 13-year war among three other nations. The reporter continued to relay stories of rioting at many state capitals in the U.S., and the rise in homelessness at exponential rates. The terror and trauma continued. Just then his holo-phone chimed with an Amber Alert displayed over the screen-saver – an image of his wife. He focused on the beautiful photo as the alert continued to buzz and provide information about the abduction. It buzzed again – the details of a 12-year old girl with dark hair and hazel eyes displayed on the tiny screen. Times like this were softened by his wife; she had a peace about her he never understood, but fully enjoyed. He simply said her name, “Eleanor.”

Milton interrupted, “Sir. Shall I end the simulations?”

Still in a trance, “Huh?” he rubbed his hands over his face and through his hair. He observed the time, “No. No, the future cannot wait!” he looked at Milton and laughed at the paradoxical statement but returned to his work. The next few hours were filled with road-blocks which caused him to doubt his calculations. Finally, the alarm in his internal-clock chimed and he was forced to concede to the robot’s previous suggestion of rest, “Perhaps you’re right Milton. Unlike you, I need sleep. I’m past the need for mundane tasks to stimulate my cerebral cortex,” he looked at the large holo-screen, “Continue running simulations. We need to cover every possible scenario for contingency preparedness.”

“Yes sir,” Milton obeyed.

“See you in the morning—later this morning.” He lost track on time.

~

Mellontas strolled downstairs with his usual coffee, this time sealed in a large carafe. He saw Milton standing as if filled with pride. He scanned various screens to confirm success, “Optimism Milton. Optimism is dead. But the contrary is true with my equations and your steadfastness. Your never-ending energy to produce results,” he glorified in his technology, “Now, to test it on the real thing.”

“One second sir?”

“It only takes a second.”

“What’s that sir?”

“To say good-bye,” he completed the reference to a song about how quickly the dance between nations with control of the atomic bomb can change the world.

“Yes sir,” Milton returned.

Mellontas entered his ship from the underbelly – a simple hatch slide open, Milton disconnected the cables from the ship, and it closed again without a visible seam. The interior was lined with various touch-screens along a short entry-sized space which preceded the control seat. Above the seat he could see out the small windows – one above his head and the other at his feet. He waved his hand over the front controls to engage the holo-screen. He powered up the rest of the ship which lit up the interior like a Christmas tree. He looked out a Milton who monitored their progress from another control panel. The exterior had only one light which began to slowly rotate around the ship as a mini-centrifuge. The acceleration of the single light rapidly circled the ship which gave the appearance of a single white line painted around it.

“Ready?” he asked Milton through a reliable 2-way radio – he embraced all types of technology, as long as it was still functional.

“Affirmative,” Milton responded.

“Engage the Graviton-Inversion,” soon the rotating light pulsated. Immediately, the ship wavered and fade in as quickly as it faded out. Dr. Mellontas looked out the lower window at Milton, “Results?”

“The test was successful. You travelled one second into the future within a zeptosecond.”

Unlike Milton’s expressionless face and body-language, Dr. Mellontas grinned from ear to ear as he rocked back in his non-reclining seat. He powered down the ship, disengaged from the holo-screen and made his way to the exit, “Graviton-Inversion? I’m not one to embrace laymen’s terms, that sounds too lengthy. Milton, how does ‘Time-Drive sound to you?” he stood at the base of the ship and gently applied the palm of his right hand its base as if it were a salute or a way to thank the machine – the technology which would take him to paradise, “Now.”

“Yes sir.”

“Pack the essentials and survival gear.”

“Shouldn’t we conduct more tests sir?”

Mellontas rarely allowed his enthusiasm cloud is judgment, but like the habitual silence between his daughter he felt suffocated by the current time, “Yes, yes. Of course.”

They returned to work, “Remember sir, we need to allow for topographical changes. Even this region of the continent has been known to be affected by tectonic activity.”

“And that’s why we built her,” his admiration for his achievement had been off the charts. He never wanted to replace his Eleanor, but it was the first time he referenced the ship affectionately in the feminine pronoun.

He returned inside. The two continued to test for hours as they applied as many of the previous simulations as they could, but within shorter periods of time. The robot mostly remained at the control panel while Mellontas barked orders from inside the ship. Occasionally the robot would require entry into the ship to make modifications and returned to his control panel. Upon the insistence of the Milton they stopped for lunch.

While Mellontas ate a sandwich, his robot stood next to him, “If you need a power-cycle—?” he asked as an incomplete question.

“I fully charged before your arrival,” Milton assured him.

“Of course,” he took another bite. He looked at him; he should be at work. His gazed turned into theorizing. There was something about his behavior, and it only took a bit for him to finish his bite, “We finished, didn’t we? I knew it. I was happy with the results just before lunch, but I knew you wouldn’t let me leave until—” he paused for a response, “Are you satisfied?”

Milton responded in his usual dry tone, “Affirmative.”

Mellontas stood, “You knew I’d leave without eating,” he shook his finger at the robot, “You son-of-a-bitch!” he smile with approval.

“My origin is not from a female Canis lupus familiaris. In fact, you created—”

Mellontas chuckled, “Shut up Milton.”

“Sir,” he acknowledged.

“You loaded my gear?” he marched toward the ship.

“Affirmative.”

“Checklist complete?”

“Affirmative.”

Mellontas turned to face Milton. He looked into his cold blue eyes within the polished titanium cranial unit and placed his hands on either side of his shoulders. Milton tilted his head in the way he was programmed as if to simulate inquiry. Mellontas cleared his throat, “I could always count on you – Milton. You know what to do after I’m gone.”

“Sir. Affirmative,” the simplicity of the response preceded by respect forced Mellontas to drop his head in sadness. The robot returned to his control panel.

Inside the ship the hands of Mellontas danced in their precise and measured memory as the ship followed his lead until it was time for the two to leave. He guided his hand across the holo-screen as if to wave good-bye to his century – he was reminded of turning a half-century earlier in the Spring. He could see Milton waver in and out of space and time until he disappeared altogether. Several seconds later the ships’ computer powered down. Before making a visual observation he checked the condition of the ship – everything seemed to check out. Outside the lower window, Milton was gone as was the barn and the house as he had ordered it destroyed. The laws by which he travelled forced a one-way trip, and he didn’t want anyone to discover his research or equipment, or Milton.

“Now, when am I?” he laughed at the incorrect, yet correct grammar. He turned on the monitors behind him and added audio. He wasn’t quite certain how far he travelled; he had been unable to perfect precise destinations in time, nor their locations. It was of little consequence, not quite like the distance between the continents separating the Atlantic Ocean for the explorer and his three ships eight centuries prior. Mellontas’ journey would always result in seeing land, which in this case was 3.4 centimeters greater in elevation. He waved his hand to engage the Quantum Internet for world reports. Something else had replaced it but his computer was able to establish a link, or was it the other way around? This was concerning but he ignored his anxiety only to discover the planet’s population had decreased by twenty-percent. His internet searches revealed a great war between nearly every nation which had resulted in a super-power realignment in ways which made the former Soviet Union seem like the Peace Corps. Reports from his screens provided information about whole slave nations. While he listened and watched he continued to perform specific historical searches. The sea levels had risen enough to flood Venice in eight meters of water and any other sea-level town or city. Many cities were solely utilized as Tent cities – including all major cities up and down the west coast. His house – he confirmed, the entire Bay Area was either flooded by homelessness or the ocean waters. His frustration grew and grew as he watched video and read news articles about wars on nearly every continent and entire police stations overrun by massive street violence. In the background he heard the song It’s the End of the World as We Know It.

He debated with the chorus of the song as he rubbed both hands through his hair, “And technology should’ve—” he stopped, and bowed his head in grief, “Why?” Suddenly, a proximity alarm alerted him. This particular sensor was limited, but he didn’t want to find out who or what approached his position. Nothing appeared on the three external nano-cameras. He waved his hand over the holo-screen and the surroundings around the ship quickly disappeared.

This time he allowed the ship to travel further. Soon, the blurred light-show outside his windows stopped to reveal a herd of alpaca stampede away from his ship. He deduced the show must’ve startled the animals. But these specimens appeared smaller than what he had once read. He no longer allowed the distraction; as before he engaged the monitors and the cornucopia of instruments. It appeared to be midday but soon an enormous object arose over the western ridge and soon nearly covered the valley in shadow in all directions aside from a sliver of light on the eastern and western horizons. In just the same time the object took to rise, it set in the east.

“Curious,” he said with some concern. He failed to make a connection to any type of internet. At least there were world reports from an unfamiliar source. But it seemed there was only one source, as all the screens displayed the same virtual gender-neutral face and hairless head. It was a three-dimensional avatar of a news reporter – but it wasn’t the typical broadcast. In fact, there was little of current events but instruction on how to brush your teeth, order a meal from your dispenser or how to interact with the something called the Node – which he surmised was some kind of central computer. Soon, it provided a person’s tasks for a given day followed by what sounded like propaganda positive reinforcement. The message repeated in several languages. Finally, it seemed to provide another schedule – the sun synchronous orbit of the Global Cooler – in addition to the weather forecast.

He craved more information but continued to struggle with a connection to the global internet. Eventually, he found what appeared to be a log-in page which he couldn’t decipher. A voice commanded him to utilize something similar to his holo-screen. He was hesitant and surmised future technologies may have advanced to a degree as to track his location without his consent. It was good he remembered Milton had installed a 1,600MHz GPS blocker – if satellites were still utilized for communication and information. Success came when he saw the same gender-neutral face appear in a 3-D image on his holo-screen and simply asked, “Game?”

“I need access to the internet,” he said.

“Connection established,” it said. It repeated, “Game?”

“No. I need current data on the status of the geopolitical climate.”

“Please elaborate,” it said.

He cursed and dropped his head in frustration.

“Game?” it asked again as its face changed color to a soft-mint.

Witless virtual drone.

“I am not a drone,” it said.

Mellontas leaped out of his seat, “What did you say?”

“I am not a—”

“But how?”

It seemed to examine him briefly, “You appeared to have difficulty. Therefore, the particles within your holo-screen were utilized for a neural interface. It was required to better serve you,” the face turned to lavender.

He waved both his hands at the holo-screen in an effort to disconnect – but without success. After a few seconds of panic he reached below the console and pressed a few buttons in a specific sequence. Within the same number of panicked seconds all the monitors powered down including the holo-screen. Unfortunately, he needed the holo-screen to pilot the ship, but he was apprehensive to reactivate it. A complete reboot would take some time. The latter was his only option. During the several minutes he brought his ship back to life he periodically peered out the two front windows. Just as the final sequence was complete he noticed the herd of alpaca returned and approached his position as they crested a hill to the south – this time followed by two humanlike figures covered in black clothing. He wasn’t able to distinguish their faces, but they straddled fast moving hover vehicles. Quickly, they altered course and began to head in his direction until they stopped about a hundred meters away. Their faces were still indistinguishable, but he figured they either stopped to observe or were fearful. External cameras were offline.

One of them pulled out a device and spoke into it. The other pulled out a black object with a red tip and started to point it at the ship. Mellontas couldn’t tell whether the body-language portrayed an intent to scan or to aim. He didn’t want to wait for the results – it was time to leave. The reboot was complete; he waved his hands over the holo-screen and soon the scene outside blurred and disappeared. Several seconds later he waved and rotated his hands in and out of the holo-screen until the blur of lights came to a stop.

He looked outside to see the alpaca and black figures were gone. In fact, nearly everything was gone. He managed to reengage the external cameras which revealed: no animal life and no trees. Just dirt and rock – dying grass and sage. Wind whipped dust over the surrounding hills which soon approached his position and disrupted his view. He adjusted the ship’s proximity sensor to maximum which provided negative activity. Connection to any news reports or an internet also proved negative. He continued to check for a functional satellite in order to determine the current state of the region, of the world – nothing. The bleak view began to mirror his resolve, but his stubborn nature acted like the involuntary contraction of his heart. Like muscle-memory, he followed the procedures he and Milton had developed for exploration outside the ship. He needed to establish if the air was still breathable. Sensors indicated the nitrogen and oxygen levels had dropped by 34% since his century of origin; it was now a requirement to wear a protective suit beyond the avoidance of dust. He accessed the EV-monowheel Milton had modified for extended use and rugged terrain. And he grabbed a weapon from the secured locker; he hated the idea, but it was necessary.

His boots touched the nearly dead earth. His breathing was loud, and his peripheral vision reduced inside the suit. After he secured the ship, he hiked up and over a few hills to the southwest. As he drew closer he dismounted, caution lowered his stature to a walking crouch like a gorilla, and eventually to a crawl until he reach the crest of a hill which overlooked the Ola Valley.  The desolation reached as far as the eye could see. It appeared the earth swallowed up the highway many years ago. With the assistance of a high-powered monocular interfaced with his visor, he scanned the valley in closer detail, and saw a group of a dozen or so figures dressed in various shades of grey in pursuit of two others with torn and tattered brown coats. The two prey were quickly cornered and overtaken. Among the dry and arid land he witnessed the unthinkable as they beat both their half-naked, half-burnt bodies into submission. Someone who seemed to be the leader, slaughtered the one with what appeared to be a machete. In quick chaos, they ripped what was left of his clothes and began to feast.

Mellontas gasped at the sight – mouth opened yet covered by both hands. The sadness quickly turned to fear as he recoiled from a tall figure who seemed to emerge from the ground as it approached his position. A bright glare reflected off a pair of goggles and it was dressed from head-to-toe in what appeared akin to blue denim with brown leather strips. Reluctantly, he pulled out his weapon and pointed it at the menacing figure. A second figure in similar dress emerged. The first raised his hands in a surrender-like fashion and spoke in what sounded like English, but not quite, “Harmno,” it repeated.

In his frantic state, Mellontas nervously waved his weapon at the two, “Back away!” he shouted and slowly backed up until he tripped over a rock and fell to the ground.

The stranger who spoke stepped closer toward him and repeated the same word, “Harmno,” followed by, “Yumus lee.”

Mellontas held the weapon with both hands, but anxiety delivered a shot which missed them both. They backed away slightly. Suddenly, they darted their heads about as if they heard danger. His suit had muffled the alarm, but when they both vigorously waved him off and again yelled, “Yumus lee!” It was a warning and not a threat. The threat came from two grey figures on either flank. Suddenly, a third grey figure attacked one of the blue denim people from behind. They twisted in chaotic circles. Mellontas fired the weapon toward the sky. The crack startled the predator who slightly retreated in fear. He turned the weapon toward one of the other menacing grey figures who ignored the warning and charged him. Mellontas cried out just before the hammer reached the primer; the pistol cracked its thunder, and his attacker was dead. The other two retreated down the hill as if running from a roaring bear.

Mellontas dropped his weapon as he trembled, and looked closer at the denim pair, “Oh God!”

With hands raised, the two denim people slowly approached his position. One of them reached out a hand as to help him up. So far they hadn’t shown aggression, so he accepted the offer and was quickly raised to his feet. The other was already examining his weapon. With the muzzle in hand, it was gently returned to him. Both of them removed their respective goggles which revealed one white male face covered by weather-worn skin; the other was a dark-skinned female with soft dark eyes and younger skin with experience drawn into her forehead. She spoke, “Thaku,” with her hand to her heart then opened to him.

Was that her name? But she spoke with a tone of gratitude. He gathered his composure and replied, “You’re welcome,” he turned toward the dead figure, “Why did they attack us?”

They looked at each other with curiosity as if they didn’t understand. The man said something to the woman he was unable to interpret.

Mellontas tried a simpler approach and softly pounded his chest with the palm of his hand and stated his name. He repeated the introduction until the woman seemed to understand.

She mirrored the gesture with a single hand to her chest, “Jahzara,” and pointed at her friend, “Ansel.”

He acknowledged their progress, but the complex sentences were far from understanding. And he needed answers. He looked at the dead attacker and quickly looked up; more would return in greater numbers and with more weapons. He stooped down and grabbed a handful of dirt and point at it and pointed at the surrounding area. He made a lump-like motion and flat-like motion as if to represent a mountain range and a valley.

The two looked at him quizzically, but after several attempts, Ansel’s expression changed to realization. He picked up his own handful of dirt, “Samhe a der,” he waved his hand in similar fashion and direction as did Mellontas. He seemed to have communicated the devastation had reached into other regions. With their language limitations they continued to utilize non-verbal communication. From their discourse, Mellontas gathered that the attackers were from a warrior-like faction who sought to capture Ansel and Jahzara who recently escaped their pursuers in an effort to rejoin their faction to the east. When Mellontas inquired about towns and cities, Ansel drew pictures in the dirt of tall structures and pointed as if they were far away and hadn’t been seen in years.

Suddenly, his new friends turned and motioned him to get down. He followed their lead back to the crest of the hill. Down in the valley below they saw a large vehicle hover across the land from the south. The cannibal warrior-like faction scattered but were no match for the charging mechanical predator. Ansel pointed out, “Skimmers.”

A word Mellontas immediately understood but not the significance beyond his own observation. Ansel motioned for silence. Jahzara glanced over at her protector, “Wemus lee,” she whispered. The Skimmers’ vehicle devoured the warrior faction by either capture or death if they resisted. Although it appeared the Skimmers’ vehicle was limited to flat terrain, the need to leave grew and shivered up his spine and into his extremities. If only he could use the same electrical current to start his EV-monowheel. After several attempts, he threw the one-person vehicle to the ground and cursed. He quickly crawled backward in the direction of his ship. His friends acknowledged their mutual understanding of stealth and followed. He wasn’t sure the intent of their mirrored act, but it was apparent by their urgency and accelerated pace there wasn’t enough time to encourage them to take a different path.

He noticed when they crested each hill his friends stole a keen, yet quick glance behind them. They were not followed. Soon, they arrived at his ship. Abruptly his friends stopped as if they had turned into statues. He recalled a phrase, “Yumus lee,” he speculated the phrase or word was a suggestion or command to leave. He attempted to relay gratitude and repeated the previous phrase. He pointed at himself and his ship and altered the phrase to indicate his method of departure. He took off his helmet and waved good-bye. Ansel and Jahzara slowly mimicked the salutation, but also took a few steps toward him. “No,” he held up his hands to signal stop and reached for his ship. The hatch opened and they took a few steps toward him, “No!” he shouted. He couldn’t take them with him. They seemed hesitant but stopped. He pointed to higher ground, which he guessed they understood; he boarded his ship and quickly secured the hatch.

He began the usual power-up sequence which startled his short-lived friends briefly. Jahzara turned to Ansel and pointed eastward in an upward motion, in the direction of the adjacent mountain range. He was glad to see them leave as they waved good-bye.

Before he activated the ship for time travel he attempted one more search for global information. The sky was silent. He escaped within his music just as Come Undone played. He roared, “Damnit! I need to know!” he repeated, in and out of composure, “This cannot be all of it. There must be hope somewhere on this god-forsaken ball of dirt!” he rambled on as he searched for answers. Finally, his ship detected a lone satellite in orbit.  Connection was relatively simple. The news service was either inoperable or non-existent, but he was able to connect to an odd version of the web – as long as this one didn’t try to ensnare him. With a few successful searches he found tragedy. But he evaded defeat only to discover the surrounding region was only a sample of the macro-scale of calamity. There was a limited number of cities throughout the world – a one-world government he learned hunted down groups of people who either rebelled within the cities or escaped to remote regions. Furthermore, he discovered an historical archive which revealed the worst of it all: the recent devastation and populous annihilation of over half the planet.

Sweat poured from his temples. He craved escape. The song Drive played which reminded him of Eleanor who once provided him refuge, “What have I done?”, he yelled as if she were with him. He sat. And sat. Angry and depressed.

He heard a tap. A thud. Something pounded repeatedly against the ship. Only one external camera provided him all he needed to know – he counted three brown coats, who apparently escaped the Skimmers; they launched rocks at his ship. An even louder thud gave rise to the possibility that one of them may have succeeded in reaching the top of his ship. Milton and he had prepared for this contingency. But with his brain tested to the limits, the solution eluded him, even with a manual in hand, “There’s no time!” he shouted as he threw the manual across the ship.

“What the hell!” he exclaimed, “it’s that or die,” he activated the Time-Drive and just before the horrid world around him disappeared, a lifeless body repelled away from the ship. With a huge sigh of relief he released his hands from the controls. This time, he didn’t care how long or how far he travelled. His paradise had to be somewhere in the future.

~

Without the return of his hands to the controls, the ship suddenly stopped. There was no indication of a malfunction. After a declared superlative, he double-checked underneath the control panel – again, the ship seemed operational. But suddenly, it completely powered-down. He was dead in Time. He couldn’t bring himself to say it, perhaps he reached the end of it, and defied all Laws of Physics. He dared himself to look out the two windows.

What he saw next was beyond belief. Below a clear royal blue sky, there was fertile and abundant vegetation as far as the eye could see. If was filled with a variety of animals – both predator and prey. His amazement lifted the hair on his skin but suddenly he felt as though his eyes betrayed him in the confines of a dream – until, until he saw people. People gathered in groups small and large. Those in the foreground created art and played music of indescribable magnificence. The strangest part to him, all their faces appeared to express bliss – but something more – pure joy.

At that moment, the people stopped their respective tasks and turned their attention to a singular man. It was difficult to see his manner of dress underneath the pure white glow which emanated from him. As he walked with intent, he approached the wall and his ship; Mellontas saw a kind and wise face – his brown hair drawn back. He reached the ship and stopped to look into Mellontas’ eyes, and he smiled. He walked around the ship and could not be seen as the windows limited visual observation – something he relied upon whether by actual sight, or equation, or calibrated equipment.

Mellontas turned toward the back of the ship in an effort to re-engage at least one of his instruments or a monitor as he felt his own senses had betrayed him.  All at once, the man passed through the wall of his ship and stood before him with the same glow. Mellontas covered his eyes and leaped backward and blurted, “What the –!” he began to exclaim but fear stopped him from finishing the colorful metaphor. The brightness of the man decreased; decreased to a level his face could be seen in greater detail.

“Herbert George Mellontas. Grace be with you,” the man said with authority, “I brought you here to ask the greatest cosmic question.”

Mellontas fell to the floor of the ship while he clung to a nearby rail, “How – how do you know my name?”

“It is the name I gave you,” he smiled.

“You gave? But – but” he never hesitated in his life and regained his composure in the control chair, “but, where am I and how did you get here – inside my ship?”

“You are intelligent. But that is not enough to reach Paradise.”

“How do you know these things?” Mellontas was flustered, “Who are you?”

“I am Yeshua.”

He paused for a moment, “Jesus,” he echoed in vanity and translation, “I don’t believe it!” he leaned back in exclamation and shook his head, “No, no! This is impossible.”

“You doubt your senses. Even Thomas believed after he saw,” Jesus held out his hands where Mellontas saw a sizeable scar on both sides of his wrists.

He repeated a previous question, “And what is this place?” he pointed outside the window.

“The new Earth.”

“New?” he paused and looked outside the window to double-check his senses and back again at the man who now sat down on the floor of the ship. He could not, would not admit the man before him was indeed Jesus. But there was a certain benevolence about him.

He asked of the stranger, “Do you mean to tell me, this is—?” Once again, he couldn’t bring himself to say what his daughter and niece had told him over the years – and his wife over coffee one Saturday morning when she made the only attempt to invite him to church. He recalled his Paradise with great affection; she stayed with him despite his gruff rejection of her faith.

Jesus smiled at him as if he could see right through him, “I brought you here—”

“You?” he interrupted him, “I built this ship. I traveled here – wherever here is. I proved my theories are correct!” he exclaimed.

Jesus smiled at him again.

Herbert calmed. He felt he couldn’t be angry at someone with such a genuine smile. He rubbed both hands over his face to display stubborn frustration nonetheless, “Then how? If not by some—” he didn’t want to admit with the word “miracle.”

“I can do all things,” Jesus continued, “this is your divine appointment.”

“’Divine appointment?’”

“Yes. Every person has one – whether by introduction through another person who follows me, or by creation itself,” he paused. It seemed as though he allowed Herbert to process. Jesus closed his eyes for a moment then opened them.

Herbert looked at Jesus with a shocked curiosity but said nothing.

After a brief silence as if the two were divided by a curtain and then split, Jesus asked, “Who do say I am?

Herbert straightened in his chair, “You said that – and that is the greatest cosmic question?” he huffed but observed the eyes of his guest had remained calm – at peace, “I see you. I can hear you. But—” he stopped himself; he wished for the same experience with Eleanor.

Jesus said, “I grieved with you.”

Alarmed, Herbert glared at Jesus about the question he desperately wanted to ask. He wasn’t like the strange mind-reading computer; that was threatening. The man before him was not. He finally surrendered, “Where is she?”  

“Home,” Jesus pointed out the window.

Herbert forced himself to look. It was indeed incredible – perfect in every way. He began to feel his own inadequacy in comparison, “May I see her?” he was surprised when he heard the words leave his mouth as that would mean he indirectly admitted the existence of something and someone he denied all his life.

“All in good time,” Jesus simply answered with kindness.

Herbert wasn’t satisfied with that answer and bolted toward the exit as he shoved Jesus aside. The electrical system was down so he tried to manually override the hatch, but it would not open. In his frustration he fell to the floor of the ship and sobbed. They were silent for hours.

Finally, Jesus stood and held out his hand to Herbert with the same kind face. Herbert looked up. Surprised but comforted. Like the time of his wife’s death, he felt a loss of control. Eventually, he was pulled to his feet.

“She was my—” Herbert stopped himself and stared at Jesus.

Jesus looked at him with understanding, “She was your paradise.”

“Yes!” he began to sob as he maneuvered his way toward the control chair, “But how did you know? Never mind,” he waved the question away, and leaned against a nearby panel and stared at the floor, “But I didn’t think of her that way until she was gone,” his gaze moved back toward the eyes of Jesus with wonder at why he divulged this long and sad secret to a stranger. He quickly looked out the window; he was the stranger in this strange land. Run! But he was trapped by his own device. His ranch in Idaho, his home in California and his study at the university were methods of escape, but they were imperfect versions of paradise. He turned his mused look from the window and scanned the interior of his ship as if to search for a place to hide, but it was quite futile.

Jesus waited before he asked, “What are you looking for?”

Again, he stared at Jesus and answered as if to retreat within himself, “It doesn’t matter.”

“It matters to me,” Jesus said.

“Why?” he snarked.

“You matter to me.”

Herbert appeared shocked, “People don’t matter any longer, and people don’t consider me – not really. I’ve seen.”

“All of my creation matters. And there are a few who reflect it,” Jesus replied.

“Who?”

“You encountered them recently.”

Herbert quickly replied, “No one.” Silence.

Jesus allowed the silence.

Ordinarily silence did not frustrate the scientist. He used to work and solve the problems of the universe, but now he was faced with what he thought was the unsolvable, “Who do say I am?” he mumbled under his breath; why did he matter to someone he just met. The quiet was unnerving. Finally he conceded, “I suppose Grace.”

Jesus smiled. More silence.

Herbert folded his arms as if to offer a stalemate.

“Anna. Clara. Ansel. Jahzara,” Jesus listed as if he picked the names from a flowerbed in his heart.

Herbert’s eyes widened in amazement, “Anna is my niece. But, the others were strangers,” he examined the sincere expression of Jesus. This baffled him.

“Your daughter and niece love you. The others showed you kindness – love is kind,” Jesus elaborated, “They provided you a glimpse of who I am – including Eleanor.”

Herbert was afraid to admit a thought which seemed to enter a part of him other than his mind – but his heart, “Love? You speak of love.”

“Herbert. What are you looking for?”

He started to believe that Jesus already knew his answer before he asked the question. Nonetheless, he answered with a preface, “Is this some kind of test?”

Jesus waited.

Herbert relented, “An ordinary world. A world where people don’t kill each other, don’t hate each other, don’t go hungry. A world without chaos. But the one you created has gone to hell!” he exclaimed, astonished by the admittance of creation.

“Why is that?”

“You tell me?” Herbert asked with an indignant tone.

“Herbert. Are you perfect?”

“No one is,” he answered.

“There was a time when man and woman were perfect and could be in the presence of perfection.” Jesus said.

Herbert looked out the window, “This is why I can’t go outside, isn’t it?” He couldn’t believe what he just asked.

Jesus nodded in confirmation, “You seek a paradise. This is your obsession; you’re passion,” he paused briefly, “my passion is to make you perfect. And – I am the only way.”

“The only way to paradise?” he asked.

“The place is not what you should seek,” Jesus said with kindness.

“Then what? Or—” he was afraid to say “who”, for that would mean surrender. Herbert’s heart pounded. He remembered the argument with his wife over their daughter’s name. And now, in the presence of Paradise he was face to face with the one who claimed to have created him and all that he had observed and witnessed. He began to realize that a form of paradise was his god. He had been headstrong for so long but could no longer deny his senses. Something pounded on his heart.

And it pounded more so when Jesus said, “I have placed eternity in the hearts of man,” he paused and smiled, and asked his first question again, “Who do say I am?”

Herbert struggled, but allowed cowardice to affect his answer, “I don’t know!” he sighed after the exclamation, “You say you are ‘the only way.’ The only way into this Paradise?” he pointed out the window, “But then you say it is not the ‘place’ I should seek. You make me crawl over my words!” he cried out, “If not what, then who?”

Jesus answered, “There was a time when man and woman could be in the presence of the perfect and holy God; but their actions of disobedience brought separation – sin – which resulted in death. I came to the earth to take away all the sin of man and woman, and defeated death.”

“Grace told me, but I wasn’t—” he finished in silence, “—listening.”

Your destination is God the Father, your Creator. I am the Truth and the Life. No one comes to my Father except through me.” Jesus invited.

Herbert sunk his head and deliberated in his mind with no success. But the conversation continued to pound in his heart until only one word reached his mouth, “Why?”

Jesus smiled, “Because we love you.”

Herbert felt the walls of the ship surround his heart as it pounded even more. He was trapped. Not in time, but within his own battle between pride and humility – between years of indifference and love. “I’m here now!” he exclaimed with a troubled smile, “I made it on my own,” he laughed, but was quickly saddened by his lifeless ship.

“No,” Jesus approached Herbert within the small space of the ship and placed a hand on his shoulder, “Herbert, what can anyone do in exchange for his soul?”

Herbert didn’t have an immediate answer. His own inadequacies were all could handle, “Nothing,” he whispered. It seemed like a battle waged in his heart until finally he reached out with both hands towards the face of Jesus. For the first time since he was a child, he saw the simplicity – he had nothing, Jesus has everything. Fifty years of life –

this was what it was like for his daughter when she was a little girl – the surrender of soul. He sunk to the floor of the ship with his arms wrapped around his knees and wept. Jesus patiently knelt beside Herbert. Jesus’ eyes were closed, and his lips moved but he remained silent.

Moments later, in the calm and stillness of time, Jesus caught his attention and asked, “Who do you say I am?”

His heart softened like fresh clay, and with tears on his face Herbert answered boldly, “You are the one who can save me; you are God himself. Forgive me!”

“Stand,” Jesus said as they both stood.

Herbert returned to his feet. Jesus reached out with both arms an embraced Herbert whose heart felt a peace which oddly caused him to laugh. It was a freeing laugh.  

Jesus laughed with him, “Welcome! Welcome my brother.”

“Please,” Herbert offered him to sit in the control chair; Jesus smiled and sat. Herbert smiled when he saw Jesus at the control station.

“There is someone I want you to meet,” Jesus pointed toward the window. The face of a beautiful woman with chestnut hair stood as she looked inward.

Herbert drew closer for a better look, “Eleanor?”

“Your granddaughter,” Jesus corrected.

“But – but I don’t have—” he stumbled over his words as he looked at Jesus who pointed back in the direction of the window.

The woman caught Herbert’s attention and mouthed the words, “Thank you,” she smiled, “I love you!” He looked at her with intent curiosity.

Jesus commanded, “When you return, tell her about me.”

Herbert abruptly returned his attention to face Jesus, “But how?” he struggled. “Wait! If she’s here and I left,” he pointed toward the window and placed both hands on either side of his head, “Oh! I never thought I’d face a para—” he stopped himself before finishing the word “paradox.” He believed Jesus and said, “I will,” Herbert turned back toward the window, and she was gone. He peered out further; his granddaughter joined a small group. He couldn’t distinguish their faces aside from one, but it was as if he looked at a younger version of himself, but into a cloudy mirror. “Is that me?” His next question barely left his lips, “Or, is my son—?” he faded.

Jesus remained silent. It was a heavy silence.

Herbert never felt anything like it before. He remembered his own distain, disregard, and disbelief throughout his life, “Without a response of—I don’t fully understand it all.”

“Walk with me,” Jesus stated as an answer.

“Where? When?” Herbert’s curiosity prohibited him from making a complete sentence as he pointed around the ship, which at present prohibited him to leave.

Jesus smiled. It was the kind smile which Herbert had experienced the entire time he was with him, “All in good time,” he assured him.

Herbert’s attention returned to his guest, who he was now his host, “Time! Yes time. You ask me to tell my grand-daughter about you, but—” he pointed his forefinger skyward, “Travel to the past is impossible, I disproved—” he slowly stumbled over his words one word at a time and once again reminded himself of who it was before him. Who it was who performed a miracle in his heart. Now, he didn’t want to leave. Not Paradise, but the presence of Jesus.

Delighted, Jesus looked into Herbert’s eyes and walked to the back of the ship. He raised one hand in a farewell and simply said, “Today is the day.” Suddenly he returned to the outside in the same way he entered.

Instantly, Herbert and his powerless ship were back in the barn where Milton was there to greet him upon his exit.

“Sir, I presume by your immediate return, the mission was a failure,” the robot said as in inquiry.

“Not at all. Not in the least!” he was ecstatic.

“Sir? But how did you return?”

“You wouldn’t understand,” he shook one of the robot’s shoulders, “I have work for you!” he turned toward the ship, “Dismantle it. Destroy it. In fact, destroy everything in the barn and in the lab. Then, I want you to purge all records of my research,” his glee was uncontained.

“Does that mean the research within my memory banks as well sir?” Milton was not programmed with emotions, but Herbert’s imagination caused him to think the robot was not pleased.

“Most importantly Milton,” he confirmed, “not a trace!”

“Well, I am relieved to hear you will not dismantle me.”

Herbert grabbed a few tools from the barn and a scrap of fence plank from the wood pile, and without a look back at the ship he walked to the house from the outside to breathe the fresh air. He went to the front door and pried the sign above the doorframe and cut it to bits, “No more searching for tomorrow,” he said. After careful work to size and carve several letters into the new plank of wood, he hung the new sign. He stood back and with conviction read the phrase above the front door, “Today is the day!”

~

Back at his home in Tiberon, Herbert stared at the phone receiver in disbelief; his son hung up on him – and in the middle of recounting his incredible journey. He sat in silence. He turned to his cup of coffee and sat in the emptiness of his brain – neither provided relief. At that moment, a song filled his heart more than his ears. He turned up the volume to a song he hadn’t heard before but continued to repeat; he just couldn’t get over how applicable it was to him. Where the Streets Have No Name swirled its way through the house as its meaning rooted itself further into his heart. “Thank you!” he calmly said. The opening synth and guitar’s chiming-timbre grew and grew in strength until the beat entered the scene like the call to join your partner on the dance floor. Herbert swayed and sung along.

The volume abruptly decreased in order for the chime of the doorbell. He hustled to the door to greet his daughter and niece, “Grace” he nearly sang, “Anna.” He stretched out his arms and gave them both a big bearhug. The “NO TRESPASSING” sign was gone.

“Wow!” Grace exclaimed, “When you messaged me to come over right away, I expected – well, not this—” she laughed.

“And I see a “for sale” sign. But why? After so many years,” Anna added.

“I don’t need it – not to myself. Even the ranch is on the market. But that’s not why I asked you here.”

 “But you love that place – Wait! If that’s not the good news—” Grace paused, “—a third Nobel?”

“No. A priceless prize.”

“Now, I am even more curious,” she looked deep into his eyes in order to possibly discover a clue and smiled.

Herbert welcomed them in, as if to invite them both into his life, “You messaged that you have news as well,” he directed at Grace.

Surprised at his sincerity, she replied, “Well – well yes!”

Herbert could barely contain himself. The words were on the edge of his heart. But something caused him to think of others before himself, “You first,” he said.

“Are you sure?”

“Yes. Yes, I insist,” he smiled.

“Daddy,” she started, “I’m pregnant,” her smile lines caught her tears of joy, “Nearly three months now.”

Herbert mirrored Anna’s smile, and immediately knelt in front of his daughter, touched her abdomen with the palm of his hand and said, “One day soon, I will tell you all about Jesus.”

The flow of her tears grew ever more as her eyes lit up in shock. She confirmed his sincerity with a wonderous gaze, “I – I don’t know what to say.”

Anna’s eyes widened with joy, “Uncle Herb!”

Herbert’s smile was like a Christmas present to Anna and Grace. He stood back up and looked into his daughter’s eyes with his hands wrapped around both of her shoulders, “I was lost,” he paused to enjoy the moment with her. “Now come. I’ll tell you all about it.” Herbert embraced his daughter’s hand, and accepted Anna’s with his other. They strolled together to the balcony where they were entranced by the sunrise across the bay. A reminder of a new morning, a new day. Now.

~

Music Credits