petermaize

Life IS a dress rehearsal

Writing again

For the past 7 years I haven’t posted anything on this blog. During that time I was working for a non-profit organisation that served children with disabilities in China. As I return to writing, so much has changed. Hong Kong, my home for the past three decades, has been transformed from a freewheeling, open society into one where the government is obsessed with security and the people must be careful of what they say.

I am not sure whether the words I write will get me in trouble. Perhaps the thoughts I think aren’t acceptable.

I will continue to write, now that I have the time and the inclination. I believe it is my right to do so.

Isn’t This Shocking

Isn’t this shocking.

An active shooter at the mall

at the school

       down the street.

Multiple fatalities they say. Terrible

Busy day tomorrow got to remember to go by the bank

What did the TV say?

   How awful what’s for dinner?

   This has to stop so many people dying unsafe cities

It could happen here I need to remember to send that email.

Including a young girl how terrible

     What is the world coming to?

Have you seen that new reality show the one about the dating people…

One man in custody but no known motive

And the ambulances, the news is filled with them and the crying

    Mothers don’t know why

       don’t understand

And this is the second time this month

Let’s get take out tonight change the channel

Isn’t this shocking

Letting go

A friend of mine described a recent situation where his four-year-old daughter came to him in tears, clutching a broken toy. He could see what the problem was, and held out his hand to take the toy and fix it. She wouldn’t let go, but continued crying and complaining that her toy was broken.

“Give it to me, honey. I can fix it.”

The girl just cried harder, focused only on her own misery. She wouldn’t let go and allow her father to handle the problem.

I can relate–not to the parent, but to the child.

 

Sunsets, talking snowmen and the rest of the universe

When I was a boy, we would spend summers at my grandmother’s house in Maryland. She lived on a river that fed the Chesapeake Bay. There were hidden coves and winding inlets that I could explore in a motorboat, and I spent hours on the river pretending I was a pirate or a commando or an explorer.

But some afternoons I preferred to sit at my grandmother’s typewriter and work on a story that I had thought up: it was about Super Pupil, a grade school superhero whose sidekick was a dog. I sent them on humorous adventures and enjoyed tapping out little stories painstakingly on the typewriter.

My grandmother was perplexed that a 10-year-old boy would want to sit inside writing instead of being outside playing. The best explanation that I could offer was that I liked to write. My early attempts at literature featured talking snowmen and goofy storylines, so it wasn’t as if I was motivated by a need to enlighten an audience. I just liked to write.

My family didn’t view my unusual hobby as the first steps toward a literary future. When my grandmother read the typewritten pages that I proudly but shyly offered her (my first reader!), she chuckled. Success! But then her comment revealed the source of her amusement.

“These typos are precious!” she laughed.

Rejection, misunderstanding and valid criticism are inevitable components of a writer’s life. Even as a journalist I was offended by the heavy-handed and arbitrary (I thought) edits of a news director. And those were just news stories: factual and straightforward. Sure, I tried to make them interesting. But the subject of those stories came from crime scenes, political conflicts or natural disasters–not my own head, and my own heart.

These days, although I can still agree with the 10-year-old and say that I like to write, there is something else that motivates me. This is true with most writers. They have to write. It is as if there is something taking place in the universe that needs to be revealed. Usually the revelation is a small one: just a glimpse of life that other people can relate to. Sometimes it’s an insight. Only occasionally is it a profound truth. We risk disapproval, disappointment and disdain in order to publish the slimmest of stories.

But even mediocre writing (been there, done that) is a reflection of a story that is constantly unfolding and needs to be told. How many sunset pictures does the world need? There’s another one every day. Some are gorgeous; most are just “nice”. But we watch the sunset and take photos, too. We participate in the event. If the sunset is particularly memorable, we share the photos with friends.

Do we have to take pictures of a sunset? Do we have to share a moment or an insight or a small reflection of the wonder and turbulence of the universe? Yes, we do.

 

 

 

 

 

There are No Miracles

The Enlightenment contributed much to Western culture, and spurred an era of unprecedented discovery and development.

It also contributed the concept that reason alone is capable of explaining everything that happens in the world, and that a scientific reason for all phenomena can always be found. Over time, this viewpoint mutated into the idea that there is no place for God in the ‘real’ world. Science can explain everything; there is nothing other than the material world in which we live.

Back in the 19th century, and indeed through most of the 20th century, it seemed that this viewpoint was valid: science continually discovered and described the workings of the universe, both minute and cosmic. It seemed that all of the answers were being discovered, one at a time–and it would be only a matter of time before we had a perfect picture of the universe, how it started and how it works.  Then the old stories of God  creating the universe and regularly intervening in it could be relegated to the realm of myth and fantasy.

But funny things kept happening, despite this rational worldview:

  • in China, a country where atheism had been promoted  for decades and religion had been suppressed, more than 100 million people embraced Christianity in the space of 30 years; reports of miracles abounded
  • Scientists discovered that the more they examined the universe, the more it looked like it had been hand-crafted on purpose
  • Miracles kept happening, and science had no explanation for them.

Now, I’m talking about miracles where experts can’t offer logical explanations–not cases where a statue cries or the image of Jesus appears in a waffle. Below are several cases where medical experts admit there are no plausible explanations for the cures that took place. The most famous of these is probably the story of Marlene Klepees, who was treated at the prestigious Mayo Clinic for cerebral palsy. Now, there is no cure for cerebral palsy. It slowly debilitates and kills its victims. But Marlene was miraculously cured of the affliction after it had reduced her to a quadriplegic. Today she is healthy with no signs of cerebral palsy. If the Mayo Clinic disputed her story, no doubt they would have spoken out, because their reputation is on the line. But they didn’t, because the story is true. To make this story more outlandish to atheistic ears, Marlene received a vision that she would be cured.

 

These are just a few examples of miracles. They’ve been happening everyday since, well, forever. In the Bible, they are referred to as signs and wonders. The Greek word for miracles is signs. Signs point you toward something. Miracles are abundant, and to us, random. They point to the eternal intervening in the material world. And as I said, they are happening everyday.

Like in Alcoholics Anonymous meetings. Millions of people have gotten sober by following AA’s Twelve Steps. Boiled down into a sentence, you get sober by admitting you are powerless over alcohol and then asking a Higher Power to remove the obsession from your life. And God does. If you are willing, then the insurmountable urge to debilitate and drown yourself with alcohol is taken away.

Sounds too simple to be true, right? But for 80 years that’s how it’s worked. The newly-sober addicts aren’t expected to become Christians, but they are encouraged to develop and maintain “conscious contact” with their higher power.

How does this work? The scientific community has advanced many explanations, because the scientific community usually has many conflicting explanations for anything that involves the human mind. Psychiatrists, behavioral psychologists, anthropologists, and lots of other ologists weigh in on issues from love to altruism to near-death experiences, each with their own explanation. Explanations grounded in science, and conjecture.

They just won’t use the word miracle. But if you’ve ever met a hardcore atheist who is drinking himself to death and then in a matter of weeks has seen his craving for alcohol disappear, you might be forgiven for using the word.

If you start with a pre-existing belief that miracles can’t happen because they don’t match your world view, you will constantly find reasons to ignore, refute or reject evidence of miracles. But they will keep on happening without you.

 

 

 

 

“But Christians Have Done So much Bad Stuff…”

Yesterday, under the title What Kind of Atheist Are You?, I mentioned the unthinking assumption held by many atheists that somehow science has proven that Christianity is untrue. Actually, physicists and cosmologists are facing the disconcerting challenge of either admitting that the universe appears to have been designed and fine-tuned by a supernatural power, or accepting that their goal of finding a Theory of Everything is futile (because, in their refusal to accept the possibility that God exists, they must believe in multiverses).

Here’s a recent article that explains their conundrum, written by an atheist who acknowledges the astounding level of fine-tuning in the universe while lamenting the fact that “there is no hope of explaining our universe’s features in terms of fundamental causes and principles.” That is “according to the current thinking of many physicists”–all of whom, one would assume, refuse to accept the most obvious conclusion: God made the universe this way, Big Bang and all.

http://harpers.org/archive/2011/12/the-accidental-universe/6/

But people who prefer to believe that there is no God can fall back on any number of other rationales to explain their decision. One that requires the least scientific or biblical knowledge is the well-known litany of abuses, transgressions and mayhem that Christians have carried out in the name of their Lord. Some of the most vocal and popular atheists, such as Dawkins and Hitchens, love this theme.

I will pause to mention that by far the most deadly and horrific crimes against humanity took place in the 20th century in the service of two causes that rejected Christianity: Communism and Nazism (no, Hitler was not a Christian–see note below). Mao and Stalin alone killed many more people in their attempts to forge a pure form of Communism than all Christian despots did over the centuries.

There is certainly a long list of atrocities committed in the name of Christianity, from colonization to religious wars to persecutions. The important thing to remember is that these acts violated the teachings of Jesus. That’s very clear.

The fact that ambitious or misguided kings and clergy perpetrated violent and oppressive acts doesn’t negate the core doctrines of Christianity. Please re-read the Sermon on the Mount if there is any question about this. Jesus would not torture, nor condone torture. So rejecting his teachings because some of his self-professed followers committed crimes is similar to rejecting the concept of democracy because elections in Uganda are rigged, or because Vladimir Putin perpetuates a mockery of democracy in order to retain power.

No one is suggesting that we get rid of democracy because it is so often perverted, tarnished or trampled. Because we “believe” in democracy.

 

Note: The Nazi Minister for Church Affairs, explained “Positive Christianity” as not “dependent upon the Apostle’s Creed“, nor in “faith in Christ as the son of God”, upon which Christianity relied, but rather, as being represented by the Nazi Party, saying “The Fuehrer is the herald of a new revelation”: William L. Shirer (1960). The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. London: Secker & Warburg. pp. 238–39

 

 

What Kind of Atheist are You?

 

Here are some facts that challenge the conventional wisdom of our secular Western culture:

  1. The total number of Christians in the world continues to grow, and the percentage of the planet’s population that believes in God is projected to continue increasing rapidly for the foreseeable future.

2.The atheist population is declining.

According to the Pew Research Center, the startling truth is that the percentage of the world’s population that is atheist or unaffiliated with any religion is dropping, and will continue to do so. That’s an interesting thought, given the predominance of high-profile opinion leaders in the West who don’t embrace any religion.

But that’s not what this post is about. I’ll include the link to the Pew report at the end of this post, but the real question that intrigues me is: what kind of atheists are in this shrinking pool. Let me list some varieties. See if you can find yourself or someone you know in one of them

SCIENCE HAS DISPROVED CHRISTIANITY–IT’S ALL A BUNCH OF ANCIENT FICTION

You’re probably thinking of the first chapters of Genesis and the account of how the Earth and the heavens were created. It doesn’t coincide with the scientific explanation of the Big Bang and the subsequent formation of the universe as we understand it. You might want to know that many Christian theologians have treated Genesis as an allegorical picture of the cosmos, in which the truth of humankind’s problem–we don’t want to follow God’s will and would rather do what we want–is clearly set out. Augustine back in the 5th century made the argument that the creation stories are allegorical.

But of course many modern Christians insist on treating the Bible literally in every word. Atheists say this traps them into believing the unbelievable in the face of scientific fact.

Ironically, atheists increasingly find themselves trapped in the Origin debate. That’s because the more we know about the Big Bang and the evolution of our solar system, the more it becomes apparent that either a series of improbable coincidences took place, or the universe was “made this way.” For example, if the gravitational or electromagnetic or nuclear forces were even slightly different than they are, the universe could not have formed. Even minute differences would either have led to a dead universe, or one that collapsed before being able to form the building blocks of life.

Scientists recognize that there are far too many improbable coincidences and examples of “fine tuning” of the universe. So they accept the most logical explanation: that an intelligent designer ensured that the various forces and subsequent cosmic events    unfolded as they did in order to produce the universe we live in.

Right? Well, not if you are a scientist who is unable to consider the existence of God. In that case, you come up with the theory of multiverses: that there are actually an infinite number of universes in existence, and we just happen to live in one that turned out this way. The other uncountable (and unobservable) universes probably evolved differently and have very different physical properties. I say probably, because this theory is absolutely untestable. There is no way for us to know if there are other universes. But such eminent physicists as Stephen Hawking subscribe to the idea, because the alternative, which seems so obvious (i.e. all of these amazing coincidences occurred  because they were created to do so) is unacceptable to them

The general public doesn’t follow this issue too closely. Many people just assume that science has all the answers and the Biblical explanations are just ancient myths. They don’t know that the top minds in science are now willing to believe an unprovable, improbable theory for the development of the universe, simply because they are unwilling to believe in a God who can act in supernatural ways. Everything was fine until their research started to show startling evidence of a fine-tuned universe.

Talk about being trapped into believing the unbelievable in the face of scientific fact…

Coming up next…”But Christians have done so much bad stuff…”

But first, the link to that study:

http://www.pewforum.org/2015/04/02/religious-projections-2010-2050/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Multiverse: the thrilling conclusion!

Here is the final part of the novella, where we learn the fate of the universe(s).

Thanks for reading!

 

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Just before nightfall Ellen reached Capernaum, a small village made smaller by the fact that all the homes were crowded together along a few main alleyways. There were a few people about, but Ellen still stood out as a stranger. Pretending she was a young widow searching for family, Ellen took a room in the home of an old woman who lived near the synagogue. The woman remarked on Ellen’s strange accent as she led her to a tiny room.

“Oh, yes, Aramaic is not my native tongue,” Ellen said.

The woman didn’t reply as she opened the door to the dark, musty room. Inside there was only a rope cot and a bucket.

“Sleep,” she said. “It’s almost nightfall.”

Ellen got the message: stay here, out of sight, and everyone will be happier.

The next morning Ellen got up early and walked down to the shore of the Galilee. Several boats were preparing to take to the water. Ellen felt drawn to one specifically.

She walked slowly up to the men in the boat, heart pounding. Don’t be silly, she reminded herself, these men could be anybody.

The two fishermen looked up, trying to determine if they knew the young woman.

“Peace be with you, she said.”

“Peace be with you.”

The men were uncomfortable and wary. It was inappropriate for them to speak with a woman not from their family. They guessed she was a prostitute. Ellen knew this, but she was too eager to know if these were the men who would one day walk side by side with Jesus.

“Are you the sons of Zebedee?” she asked, keeping her eyes lowered and speaking softly.

Neither responded immediately. Ellen played her ruse.

“I have traveled from Sephora, where I lived with my father until his death, may God rest his soul.”

She wondered what the men thought of her strange accent.

“I am traveling to join my brothers and hope that you might carry me to Tiberias so I can make good speed. I will pay you.”

The two men looked at her, then the younger one looked down at his nets lying on the sand.

“We do not run a ferry service, young woman. May God keep you safe on your journey.”

He hoisted one end of the net and dragged it over to the boat. His companion got up without looking at Ellen and joined him. They continued to ignore her, and Ellen eventually walked away, taking the road that led to Jericho.

 

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Benton sat by Ellen’s body for several hours, unmoving. He saw the sun go down, the sky glow red, then orange, then stars appeared—so many stars. For long periods of time he didn’t even think. Sometimes he couldn’t bear to look at the bones sheathed in decaying fabric. Other times he stared at the necklace, or the withered dry skin that remained on Ellen’s shoulders. Eventually, dark, disturbing thoughts emerged from the emptiness.

She was deliberately buried at an epistle site. Someone wanted Ellen’s body to be found. How had she died? Were there any clues? His mind still numb, Benton slowly exhumed the body. As he gently tugged Ellen’s corpse from the shallow pit, Benton saw a scroll underneath the body. It wasn’t parchment and it wasn’t sheepskin, the most common materials in ancient Palestine. It was a man-made fiber, like nylon, and the ink looked like a marking pen. Benton slowly unwound the scroll.

 

“Benton,

  So sorry, but I really can’t let you leave an epistle. That would just spoil everything. Imagine if the team discovered a message from you before you even jumped, claiming I sent you to the wrong century on purpose. No dear boy, no epistles for you. But here’s the good news: you DO make it back to the 21st century. It just takes a while.

You always have my utmost respect and admiration, Benton. I’m sorry we couldn’t have been partners, but that possibility was eliminated when I was 10 years old.

  James

 

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Ellen made her way through Samaria, unwilling to take the road that ran around it. Most self-respecting Jews refused to travel through Samaria. Even merchants would often take the longer road that veered west of the region, to avoid setting foot on Samaritan soil. But Ellen needed speed, and suspected that she would be left alone while traveling through Samaria. It served her purposes to be shunned by as many people as possible at this point.

After hours walking on the dusty road, she was furiously thirsty. As she entered a large village, Ellen spotted a well not far from the road. Two women were walking away from the well, jars on their heads. Another woman was beginning to lower a jar into the well. Ellen walked over, hoping that another woman would be hospitable to her.

“Pardon me,” she said in Aramaic. “Sister, I have traveled long on the road, and I lack water. Please let me have some.”

The woman glanced up warily. She had long black hair and dark, deep-set eyes. The woman’s lips were full, but her mouth was pinched. Perhaps 30 years old, she was attractive, but seemed to have had a hard life.

“Help yourself,” she said, nodding to the pail on the well and backing away a few paces.

Ellen thanked her and reached for the pail. A rope was tied to a large stone on the ground. Apparently the rope was shared, but everyone brought their own buckets. The woman watched her.

“Where is your husband?” she asked abruptly.

“I am widowed recently. My husband died suddenly. I am returning to Jerusalem to join my brothers.”

“You’re from Jerusalem?” the woman asked suspiciously.  “I’ve never met a Judean with an accent like yours.”

‘Oh, I’m not from Jerusalem,” Ellen responded quickly, delivering a well-rehearsed line. “My family are traders from Spain. We moved to Tyre after pirates became too frequent in the West. My brothers went on to Jerusalem and I lived with my husband in Tyre until his death. Now I am joining my brothers.”

The woman at the well was unconvinced. She wanted nothing to do with Ellen.

“Take your water. I know a bit about women without husbands. I’ve had five myself. I would not stand before the altar and repeat that story of yours. So I suggest you keep your mouth shut and hurry up to Jerusalem. Maybe you’ll find some widows there who are willing to believe you.”

Ellen lowered the wooden bucket into the well, tugging at the rope to make the edge of the bucket dip into the water. The woman clucked in disdain. Ellen eventually raised a bit of water and tipped it to her lips. It was cool, but it tasted metallic. After she’d gulped down the contents of the bucket, Ellen handed it over to the woman. The woman uncrossed her arms, took it and looked away.

“Thank you for your kindness,” Ellen said. The woman said nothing. Ellen was so daunted she couldn’t speak another word. She left the village wondering if she would survive until Jerusalem.

 

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After Benton had finished burying Ellen, he rested on the hillside. His body ached and his soul was barren. The grief had abated somewhat, and even the anger had been reduced to a simmering fire—constant, never ceasing. Benton rested his weary, aching head on his knees.

Should I even bother? Must I continue on, an outcast in a dismal century, lost and alone? Must I struggle on, just to try to return to my own time? For what? To be a hero? A shocking, mutilated hero? Will they invite me on to Letterman to talk about the past and how I saved the world?

Benton started to cry. The tears soaked into his wool sleeve. Eventually he stopped. Benton raised his head and looked out over the valley. In the distance, where the storm clouds had been, he saw a rainbow. Benton watched for a long time, as the arch grew brighter, then dissolved. When it was gone, he had made his decision. He would write a message to Badri, place it in the epistle site and hope somehow he could warn him. And he would try to return to the future, to stop James.

 

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Ellen had been able to fall in with two families who were traveling to Jerusalem for the feast of Passover. They didn’t seem to believe her story either, but allowed Ellen to remain on the fringes of their group. They never spoke to her. Ellen moved when they moved and camped when they camped, always keeping to herself. Her proximity to them provided sufficient safety. The fact that she was treated as an outcast was inconsequential.

Two teenage boys in the group were constantly stealing glances at Ellen. They were no doubt convinced that she was a prostitute, and excited by the scandal and the possibility. The patriarch of the group was stern and devout. He refused to even look at Ellen. He provided tight control over the travelers, so Ellen was not concerned that anyone would try to sneak over to her blanket at night. The boys’ attention annoyed her a bit, but in her self-appointed role as assassin, all mundane items like social conventions had lost their meaning. She was a killer on a mission, and the judgement of 1st century Jews was of no importance.

The day before they arrived in Jerusalem, Ellen had to take a bath. She had not washed in days, and could not stand the smell and grime. She made sure the teenagers weren’t following her, and snuck off to a stream that was nearly a kilometer away. Ellen felt far too exposed and fearful to disrobe, so she dabbed a cloth in the water and wiped away as much of the dirt and smell as possible. Finally, after 20 minutes of careful cleansing she felt refreshed and clean. Ellen walked back to the camp, where the families were just finishing breakfast and preparing to move on. As she picked up her bag to put the cloth inside, Ellen immediately noticed that it was lighter than it should be. Frantically, she searched through the meagre contents. The gun was gone. Panicked, she glanced quickly around the campsite. Everyone was there except the two teenage boys. Ellen ignored the conventions of Jewish society and briskly walked over to the patriarch, who was packing a tent onto the families’ one donkey.

“Uncle,” she called out. The man recognized her voice and turned away. “Uncle,” she repeated. “I am sorry to disturb you, but there is an emergency. I notice that an important item has been taken from my bag. It is…”

Suddenly a gunshot rang out from the other side of the yellow hill. The old man wouldn’t know the sound of a gunshot, but Ellen recognized it immediately and instantly guessed what had happened.

“Oh my God,” she whispered, putting her hand to her mouth.

The old man turned when he heard the sound, but seeing nothing, looked back at Ellen. His eyes were not kind. He obviously resented the mere fact that he must look at this lying prostitute. On the eve of an important feast, he didn’t want to have anything to do with her. Her very presence threatened to make him ritually unclean.

“We are not thieves, sister. I doubt anyone in our company would even want to touch your bag.”

Just then one of the teenagers appeared at the crest of the hill, shouting and waving his arms frantically. The old man turned to look, and Ellen began to back away, seized with foreboding and the dread of what would happen next. The old man ignored her departure, watching instead as the other men in the family ran to the hilltop. By the time they reached the boy, Ellen was already out of sight, running up the road, then darting into the olive groves on the opposite side. When she found her way to Jerusalem it was already dark.

 

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James stepped out of the shadows into Ellen’s path. His eyes narrowed slightly, but he betrayed no sign of emotion. An elderly man in a filthy robe grumbled and sidestepped the pair as they stood facing each other in the narrow alleyway. “Khypyata,” he said. Be careful.

“Yes, we will,” James replied in English. The man hadn’t heard him. Ellen was surprised that James so nonchalantly threw English around in this circumstance. He now had a slight smile on his lips, the smile that could indicate so many things, or sometimes serve only as a mask.

“Ellen,” he said, with a casual nod.

Ellen replied in Aramaic. “Surprised to see me, James? I’m surprised to see you. You’re not supposed to be here.”

The smile disappeared and James abruptly stepped closer to Ellen.

“Oh, I certainly am,” he hissed, then reached into his tunic to partly display a semi-automatic pistol.

“We need to talk,” he said, concealing the gun again and taking her arm. Ellen considered running but chose not to. The knife in her pocket was no match for James’ weapon, but this might be the only chance she got to use it. They strode swiftly past a date salesman seeking shelter from the sun’s rays under a crumbling section of wall. A beggar whose face was little more than a massive, hideous sore groaned as they passed, his thin arm held out shakily in their path. James turned down an alley. There were no merchants. This was a residential area. Ellen wondered if he knew where he was going. But a few steps later he was rapping at a door. A young boy, maybe ten, opened the door a crack.

“We have some business to conduct,” James said gruffly in Aramaic. The boy immediately opened the door, keeping his eyes on the floor.

Oh, for God’s sake, Ellen thought. James is pretending I’m a whore. He’s got a room in here. Great. Always marked as a prostitute in this century.

James hauled her into a stuffy room and pushed the door shut, hard. Ellen saw heavy dust in the shaft of light from the one window, high up on the wall. There was a bed, with dirty, coarse blankets. A bowl and a clay pitcher rested on a wooden table. That was it.

“You wanted to talk to me, Ellen. Now we can talk. I hope you’re aware of the danger you have placed us both in.”

“The danger I’ve placed us in? It seems to me all the danger has been created by you, James.”

James shrugged.

“Never mind. I was expecting you,” he said.

“Expecting me?”

James stepped closer to her.

“Yes. Didn’t you know that I could control the future?”

He had a sly and maddeningly smug look on his face. She wanted to slap him. But his words triggered a thought process in her mind, which he had no doubt intended. James stared at her as Ellen considered the meaning behind his words. It was pretty clear what he was suggesting. She backed away.

“I get it, James. You’ve been through this event already, in another universe. You know what’s going to happen. Been there, done that. Is that what you want me to believe?”

James smiled, reaching out to pick up the small granite bowl on the table. He held it in his delicate fingers, and spoke without looking at Ellen.

“That is a possibility, isn’t it?” he said smiling, then set the bowl back on the table and looked at her. The amusement went out of his eyes very suddenly. “But there are others, Ellen. You have options.”

Ellen turned her fury on him.

“And what about your accomplices? Did they have options? What about Ken and Jeremy?”

He continued to look at her, but said nothing. The answer to that question was also implied. Ellen felt a wave of dread. She remembered what Benton Scott had told her in his tiny loony bin cell: “He’s destroying the evidence. But I’ve seen it. I’ve seen your body.”

She mustered her courage, thinking simultaneously about escape routes and weapons. James still hadn’t answered. The room was silent. Ellen turned away to give herself a moment to think, and maybe disrupt whatever scenario James had planned.

“Tell me what happened to Jeremy and Ken, James.”

“Why don’t you tell me what you think happened, Ellen.”

Ellen turned back to face him. James was holding the gun, and Ellen could see that there was a silencer screwed onto the barrel. The sight was so incongruous she almost laughed. Her adrenaline was kicking in. Ellen was thinking very clearly.

“You don’t need to kill me. I can’t alter your plans. Look what happened to Benton.”

No response. James just kept watching her.

“Or I can go to another time. Victorian England. Renaissance Florence.”

She backed toward the door, slowly, talking. “You don’t have to kill me, James. You know that.”

He smiled slightly “Yes, I know that. But…I’ve learned that I enjoy it. It’s kind of a thrill. Who would have thought, eh?”

He was gesturing with the gun as he talked, very casual and self-secure.

“You know when we used to have all those bull sessions on the grandfather clause and mulitverses and all that?”

He didn’t wait for her response.

“It became clear that the only real challenge we can pose to God is by creating our own universes—using his handiwork as a template of course—-why bother to re-invent the wheel, right?”

James thought this was quite clever, and he laughed out loud.

“Anyhow, Ellen, I am just being a scientist—attempting to prove a hypothesis. A rather significant hypothesis, with implications for all of creation, but still a scientific investigation. This is it, simply stated:

“Assuming that God could accomplish anything he chose to (e.g. creating and destroying entire worlds) and accepting that his one significant creation, humankind, has persistently chosen not to follow his rather simple dictates, we can infer that God cannot change human nature. He can deluge the planet, cause entire armies to die, destroy things as much as he chooses. But he cannot change human nature. The people—his creations—that he so dearly wants to love him and follow him—have basically refused to do so, either by denying his existence as supreme being, or by mangling his dictates to serve their own purposes.

“Hypothesis: God is unable to make us behave. Oh, he asks, demands, threatens, entreats. But I’m starting to see every time period that ever was, Ellen and it’s all the same. I’ve been to the future and God has no more presence there than he does in 15th century Spain.”

Ellen was looking for something she could use as a weapon, since reaching into her pocket for the knife was too clumsy an option. On the table was the granite bowl. That was her best chance. The table itself was probably too unwieldy to use effectively. She unfolded her arms and sat on the bed, within reach of the bowl. James followed her with the gun, but remained intent on his diatribe.

“Now, add to this hypothesis the one thing that God really has over man—the ability to know what will happen in the future. And…let mankind achieve it. Then you’re left with the simple fact that, once the universe is created, a human being who is able to travel through time is just as capable as God in controlling the destinies of mankind. And he can replicate himself in each version.  Sure, God can destroy things quicker, he could kill me right now. But he doesn’t. I, on the other hand, can change the destiny of an entire world.  Can know the future for any world. I can make the future happen. I can do what God can do!”

He laughed. “Of course, just like him, I can’t control human nature, but that’s okay. The advantage I have over God is that I don’t need humans to love me. That gives me far more freedom, and power.”

Ellen wasn’t shocked by this level of megalomania. She didn’t care to debate James. He had gone insane with his perceived power and he must be stopped. She leaned on her right arm, trying to disguise her slow movement toward the bowl as nervous shifting of her weight. He didn’t seem to notice.

He wasn’t thinking about her possible attempt to prevent her death. James wanted to see how Ellen reacted to his pronouncements. He just loved watching their faces when he told them. Ellen knew she should respond.

“And what if there’s not a God?” she asked, already knowing the answer.

“Oh come now, Ellen. Be more clever. You disappoint me. If there’s no God, then of course I win anyhow. You see, that’s why it’s more interesting for me if there IS a God.”

Ellen shook her head, trying to keep him engaged while she figured out how to get closer to the bowl. She decided to get aggressive.

“You are the worst kind of madman, you know that James?” She allowed her deep-seated anger to emerge. It came forth powerfully.

“You trot out simplistic theories to give a veneer of intelligence to your actions. But this is no hypothesis, James. You are merely bopping between universes killing people. That has no value whatsoever.”

She stood up, slightly to the right, a few inches closer to the table. What would she do when she could reach it? He could shoot her quicker than she could grab the heavy granite object and swing it.

James sighed. “I knew this is how the encounter would develop. You don’t really want to explore the possibilities, or even discuss them. You just want to save your own life, and take mine if you can. Well, although I regret the missed opportunity for insightful debate, I guess I should have known I’d have no other choice.”

He pulled the trigger. Ellen let out a cry and fell.

“Happens the same way every time,” James remarked, putting the gun in his pocket and hurrying from the room.

 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

 

James was breathing heavily. Not from the exertion of climbing the gentle grade, he knew. The import of what he was about to do compressed him tightly, straining him physically and psychically. He was about to see Jesus. In Gethsemane. The man about whom so much had been written, so many lives committed, so many lives forfeited. The man who had affected the world more than any other.

He was cold. His light linen outer garment was no match for the chill night air. James shrugged a shoulder to reposition it. An old man carrying a bulging sack on his back hobbled by, nodding a greeting. James nodded back. A small pebble became lodged in his left sandal, and James had to stop to shake it free. When he resumed walking, he heard voices coming up from behind him, young men. He turned. They appeared to be from the upper class. Their garments were clean and well-made. There were five of them, all clean-shaven, talking excitedly. He heard the name Yeshua. James picked up the pace. If these men were going to Gethsemane, they might provide him with suitable cover.

“Yes, but how do you account for all the miracles?”

“Lies, mostly, and exaggeration.”

The young men were talking animatedly as they trudged up the hill. James stayed out of sight, but their loud voices rang out clearly in the still night.

“Isaac! You have to admit that some—even many of the miracles are irrefutable. The blind man at the Sheep Pool. My grandfather knows him. He’d been giving the man money for years. And the Pharisees didn’t want to believe it, so they kept questioning the poor guy, and his parents, when they could have asked some of their own number, like my grandfather! This Nazarene made a man see!”

For a moment no one said anything as they continued walking up on the path up from the valley. In a few moments they would reach the garden that rimmed the plateau above the it. James followed at a distance. He wanted to blend in with a crowd, and he couldn’t risk being noticed as a stranger walking on his own in this place at night. Too many opportunities for awkward questions, especially when everyone heard his accent and imperfect Aramaic. Too much at stake, so James needed to slip into a crowd without being noticed. He could follow these men, perhaps, and join the mob that would gather at Gethsemane.

“Yet he has been speaking blasphemy since he entered Jerusalem, comparing himself to God, proclaiming his own authority,” another voice countered. “No prophet of God would do that. No teacher of the law would speak the words he has spoken. No good Jew would break as many of our laws as he has. He seems to delight in it! This is disgraceful. If he has power at all, then it is the power of the devil!”

Another moment of silence. James suspected these men were the sons of Pharisees, or well-to-do merchants. They would only find danger in the teachings of Jesus, danger and disruption. James wondered why men like this would be part of the crowd that arrested Jesus. He got his answer a moment later.

“Simon, I hope all goes smoothly, and quickly. Be he demon or prophet, things can go badly once he is cornered. Are you sure the soldiers are on their way?”

The man who had just spoken so angrily about Jesus replied quickly.

“Yes! And in sufficient numbers so that there will be no problem. And servants from the Council will be there, too. The Nazarene does not have his crowd of adoring imbeciles around him tonight. Perhaps a few of his close followers, but they are no threat. We should be able to see their torches any moment.”

And indeed, there were torches over the next ridge, converging from two angles. James guessed there were 40 or more people a few hundred yards ahead of him.

A third voice chimed in, so quietly that James could barely hear it.

“You are fortunate to have friends such as us. Who else would come out at this time of night to watch a blasphemer arrested? Just so you can report back to your father how the operation goes. And what next? When this Jesus appears before the Council, do we have to be there to witness the verdict?”

“One thing at a time, Joel. I promised my father I would witness the arrest, that’s all. I assume he will be imprisoned tonight, and the verdict will be issued after the Passover.”

“Then you know little about the ways and wishes of the Council,” said Isaac. They will want him dead before sundown tomorrow. This will end in death, and it will end soon.”

Those words brought a veil of silence over the five young men. James, walking carefully behind them, and on the edge of the path, could see that the two columns of torches had converged, and stopped. Although it was difficult to make out landmarks in the dark, James had been up to Gethsemane enough times to know that the crowd had stopped a few hundred yards from the garden, probably marshaling their forces and preparing to descend on the prophet and his followers.

The men had stopped talking altogether, and picked up the pace as they reached the crowd. Flame glinted off the helmets of the Roman soldiers. So few! Perhaps two dozen at the most. James didn’t know any of the other characters by sight. As he approached, the crowd moved in a mass up the hill, He hurried to keep up, knowing they would pass through the garden gates in a moment. James wanted to blend in.

All went well. The men he’d been following never noticed him, as they also hastened to join the crowd. James was able merge onto the fringes unnoticed.

But because the gate was narrow, the men could only enter several abreast. James was still in the back, peering over heads, when he heard the commotion.

A cry of pain, a few shouts. Then it was quiet again. The crowd jostled to see. James could guess what had happened. That volatile, impulsive disciple of Jesus’s, Peter, had drawn his sword suddenly, swung it wildly in defense of his master, and cut off the ear of the chief priest’s servant.

“What happened?” men in the back of the crowd were asking, jostling to see. They emerged through the gate and spread out. James could see the Romans surrounding a man. It must be Jesus, but James could not see past the glinting armor and capes of the soldiers. No one else was there except two middle-aged men, who must have been from the Council. Where was Judas? James had never seen Jesus and his disciples before. He had been busy killing Ellen and disposing of her body when Jesus made his triumphal entry into the city.

 

James jostled past a fat, smelly man. He had to get a look. It was strictly for prurient, voyeuristic reasons. James knew what would happen next, and had no intention of diverting the course of history—at this juncture. His time for mischief would come in a few weeks, after Jesus was safely tucked away in heaven.

He moved around the fat man, and his foot slipped on a stone. As James reached out to balance himself, his linen garment came unclasped. He straightened up and steadied himself, glancing up to look…straight into the eyes of Jesus.

He knew who it was without thinking. The man was surrounded by the soldiers, who were quietly binding his hands. Peter and the other disciples must have already fled. Jesus was almost completely obscured, except for the upper half of his head. James was not surprised that he had black hair. He knew with certainty that Jesus wouldn’t appear anything like the popular image of him created by Renaissance artists: a slender, delicate-featured man with light brown hair, so similar to the Northern Europeans who worshipped him.

No, this man was a Semite, dark and swarthy and tough. James could not see his mouth, but he could see his eyes. Suddenly the eyes turned in his direction, blazing and penetrating. They looked solely at James, pinning him to the spot. James froze.

The eyes held him for a period that was both interminable and ephemeral. James could not look away, but he did not want to hold that gaze.

“No,” he said, and stumbled. James reached out, caught nothing. An arm roughly shoved him aside. James still couldn’t avert his eyes, or control his actions. His clothing slipped down his shoulder as his knees buckled. He might have screamed.

“Ai!” a man grumbled at him. “What are you doing? What’s wrong with you?”

“I don’t want. I can’t.” James was speaking in English.

The men around him recoiled. “He is possessed! He speaks like a demon!”

“He is the blasphemer’s follower!” another man shouted. “Seize him!”

James panicked. He could no longer see Jesus. The soldiers were falling into formation, preparing to go down the hill.

“No,” James moaned, a reaction that he didn’t will, or control. A hand grabbed him and he jerked away savagely. “No!”

Another hand clutched his garment. And the cloth just fell away. James slipped away from the man who now held nothing except his clothing. James was naked, and running, running into the night. He couldn’t see ahead of him, but still he kept running. In time the voices behind him stopped, and the terrain became level and silent. James made his way, slowly and carefully, back to his room.

 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

 

“It’s you.”

Benton looked up at the lean, pale figure in the doorway.

“Yes, it’s me, Benton. It’s been awhile, hasn’t it?”

“Have you come to kill me?” Benton asked in a whisper.

The figure sat down in a chair by the doorway.

“No. I haven’t come to kill you. I’ve come to say I’m sorry.”

Benton couldn’t sit up. He just stared at the outline of James McPherson, sitting ten feet away. There was no mistaking him. But this James was in his 50’s, hair receding far from his brow, permeated with gray. The voice was identical. But how had he aged so much? Benton couldn’t focus his mind on the question. Fleetingly, he mourned the passing of his once superb intellect. Over the years, Benton’s brain had been pummeled and anesthetized and left to lie fallow. He could no longer grasp and solve complex problems with effortless speed. He could barely keep his thoughts on one subject for more than a few minutes.

James was wearing khaki slacks, as he always did, but he had on a pullover sweater, which had never been his style. Still, the face was the same: sharp, delicate features and drawn mouth. A few wrinkles. It was him. Benton said nothing.

And for more than a minute James said nothing. The two men, former colleagues and rival geniuses who had solved the question of time travel, just looked at each other. Benton’s breathing was heavy, as usual. No other sound disturbed the room. But eventually James spoke.

“You know, in the Bible, the story about Eve and the apple, don’t you, Benton?”

Benton nodded.

“She wasn’t motivated by evil. She just wanted it, and saw that she could take it. It was the fruit from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. She sought knowledge, Benton.

It wasn’t that her desire was filled with ill intent. Quite the contrary: Eve sought something that could benefit her. Improve her. Something of value.”

James sighed and leaned forward, resting his elbows on his knees and dropping his head so that Benton could no longer see his eyes.

“But that’s never the issue, is it? We justify our actions by stressing our positive motives. But the reality is that we do things simply because we want to. Just like Eve. We see that the apple is attractive and good to eat, so we want it. And we take it.”

He stood up slowly, as if his joints were stiff. Benton turned his eyes to gaze at the face of the man who had caused him decades of torment, who had shattered his dreams and sabotaged his life. James looked intently down at Benton, crumpled on his bed.

“And that is where the problem lies, my old colleague. God merely asks us to follow his perfect will. But we prefer to follow our own, pitifully imperfect wills. It was the desire for knowledge that snared Eve, wasn’t it, Benton?”

James, looking suddenly very old and tired, placed his hand on the doorknob.

“I didn’t even need a snake to encourage me. I reached for the apple on my own. I wanted it, so I did it. But the snake said the fruit would provide a way to become equal with God.”

He stepped through the door.

“The snake lied, Benton. I’m sorry for what I did to you. I am very, very sorry.”

Benton watched the door close, then shut his eyes. It took awhile for the tears to emerge, but once they did, he cried without stopping.

 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

 

Ken wandered down the wide, empty walkways of the university, now nearly emptied of students as the Christmas holidays released them from the bonds of scholarship. The large, ancient trees that lined the road to Holliston Hall were bare, except for a few dead brown leaves clinging to the branches. It was not cold, but the sky was overcast.

Ken felt like a disaster survivor—the only person to escape a fire, or the sole survivor of a shipwreck. Benton rotted, old and deranged, in a mental hospital. Jeremy was dead. Ellen probably dead also. James was permanently in another universe—or several. Antoine had disappeared, and Ken hoped he never resurfaced. Badri had been arrested, quietly, on some sort of federal charges. He was incommunicado, and Ken felt it unlikely that Badri would be a free man anytime soon.

For some reason, no one had come for him. Perhaps they would later. For the time being he was left alone, the last member of the Cassandra team, prowling the campus and remembering the days of success and horror. His mind jumped from scene to scene: the exuberant announcement at the pizza parlor, the thrilling first jump (or so they thought) when Benton disappeared into the past; the lies and murderous cunning of James. A fleeting thought reminded Ken that the mind could jump effortlessly in time, without restriction. He let the thought slip away.

Ken had always had a crush on Ellen, especially when it appeared that Benton was going to get her. Then during the first heady days of time travel, his interest cooled. She was too limited by her religious beliefs, he thought. At the time, Ken was appalled that Ellen could believe the ancient dogma and facile explanations of Christianity. Now he had softened in his attitude, but Ken was in no mood to look further into the religion. Not now. Maybe someday.

But he could relate to Ellen’s description of the universe. It was crazy for a scientist to even think this way, but Ken was considering the possibility that God existed, and that he did not tolerate humans messing with his prerogatives.

In a way, Ken thought, free will gives everyone the ability to ‘create new universes’. Our choices, and the choices constantly being made by billions of people, shape the world we inhabit. You choose one way, and the outcome is different than if you had selected another option. But regardless of all the choices being made, Ken decided, God’s universe moves on as he planned it. He brings it back on course constantly, continuously, irrevocably.

Ken walked, not knowing and not caring where his footsteps would lead him. Briefly another thought entered his mind. He wondered whether all of the versions of James were getting along. It would be a supreme irony if the megalomania that fueled James would lead each version of James to seek ultimate authority—that he couldn’t even work with himself. Ken decided he would never know. Suddenly, it began to rain.

 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

 

“Things not going your way?”

James recognized the voice. He spun around, and saw himself standing casually in the doorway. He experienced a very brief moment of confusion, and a tinge of fear, which surprised him. If he’d had time to analyze his reaction, James might have savored the fact that he regained his composure quite quickly, even though he was in the room with himself, unexpectedly sharing the same slice of reality. But James didn’t have time to reflect on this moment, because the figure in the corner didn’t appear to be friendly. One hand was tucked inside his robe. A gun?

James straightened, examining his doppelganger. Too bad this was such a serious occasion. The possibilities were exciting. But obviously, his twin had arrived with an agenda of his own. The man stepped into the room.

“I see you found your way into the Bible.”

This surprised James. “You were there?”

“Yes,” the figure nodded. “And maybe more of us—who knows?” He laughed. James recognized it as the delighted laugh that he employed when he was engaged in toying with someone intellectually.

“What’s your purpose in being here?” he asked cautiously.

“I’ve come to stop you.”

James was surprised, but not completely. This possibility had always existed: one of the versions might not play along, wanting all the glory for himself. This thought angered him. How short-sighted. The exercise was only beginning to get interesting

“Or more accurately, destroy your plan. I’m sort of a virus, I guess, Brother James. If I stop you, then leave misleading directions for the other versions, then it will be easy to subvert your scheme. Just takes one renegade, doesn’t it—even when you’re dealing with an operation as tightly controlled as this one, where all the participants are identical.”

He made a tut-tut noise, and shook his head.

James was seething. Without moving his eyes, he strained to determine where he might find a weapon in the room.

“But we aren’t really all the same, are we, James?” his twin said. “It’s what we’ve always known. The fact that I exist, that I’m here, that I’m you, et cetera, means nothing to you. You certainly wouldn’t be willing to die, knowing that I live…because what matters is our own consciousness, your own identity. We experience the universe individually.”

The other James stopped abruptly, and laughed loudly. “Sorry, you know all this. We know all this,” he said.

James realized he hated him.

“Anyway,” the man continued, walking around the table. “I had different experiences than you, so we’re not really the same, are we? And I’ve recognized that you need to be stopped. Now…” he tilted his head thoughtfully, looking up at the ceiling. James instantly thought of how he might take advantage of the moment and grab the gun, but the other James looked down and the moment was gone.

“…don’t get me wrong. I’m not a saint, right? We both know that. I just feel compelled to do this. Of course, it’s easier because I get to go on living.”

“Tell me about these other experiences, James,” James said mildly.

His opponent laughed immediately. “You forget you’re talking to yourself, my friend. I know you’re trying to draw me into dialogue, make me drop my guard, look for a chance to trick me.”

He looked positively euphoric as he leaned forward.

“We are good, aren’t we?”

James fought to contain his rage. He knew he had to keep a clear head, especially with this opponent. But he found it very difficult to control his emotions.

“What exactly are you trying to do?” he asked.

This question seemed to excite the man.

“I’m glad you asked. Well, as you know there are several versions of us now. Can’t be certain, but there should be four at the moment. Although who knows, a renegade could jump into a different timespace, create another universe. But let’s assume there are still just four. I’m going to eliminate the mastermind and see what happens.” The man paused and his face tensed slightly.

“You know what really bothered me—really unnerved me? Just like you, I could go to the future. And just like you, I didn’t want to, because I couldn’t control it. But something kept nagging at me, and I configured a loop to get me to around 2050. Made it to 2052, to be precise. An easy thing to do was an Info search for news of the Cassandra project, and the latest developments in time travel. Guess what I found?”

James didn’t respond. He could guess. The same fears had plagued him.

His twin knew they shared the answer, but he spoke it.

“There’s no mention of the Cassandra project. None. The research at the Electromagnetic Research Center was mentioned. Badri and all the others were named as researchers. But no results. That really got me thinking, and unlike you, I pursued that line of reasoning and realized what we have been doing is wrong, brother.”

“So what are you telling me—that you’ve been born again, that you’ve seen the light?”

“Oh, heavens, no. I imagine if I was truly born again and accepted Jesus as my lord and savior and all that, I wouldn’t be able to kill you. Although,” he said, stroking his chin theatrically, “history is filled with Christians who killed in the name of God. Hmm. Anyhow, my actions aren’t religiously motivated. At least, I think not.”

The opponent stopped, and appeared confused. “You know, I just might be. When I mentioned killing you, I felt a twinge, as if maybe I shouldn’t…”

James knew the opportunity was now or never. He tried to remember that he was dealing with himself, so he had to be careful with strategy.

“So I thought to myself, ‘what would be the right thing to do?” The man made another theatrical gesture with his right hand.

James saw his chance. He leaped straight off the bench, a chaotic move designed only to knock the other man over. Once he was down, James could wrestle the gun away.

At one point James gained the upper hand, smashing his opponent’s face viciously with his right hand. He grabbed for the deep pocket of the robe, where the gun must surely be—but wasn’t.

As James felt futilely for the gun, the man reached swiftly behind his back. James grabbed the man by the throat, trying to crush his windpipe. His twin made a hateful gargling noise, and James tried to move his body forward to pin his adversary as he choked him.

He was so intent on strangling him that James didn’t feel the knife enter his abdomen. He was aware of something pressing against him, something that restricted his movement. As he struggled to shift his weight, James felt a searing pain that travelled up from his pelvis to his sternum. He had been sliced open.

The two men rolled away from each other, one gasping for breath, the other clutching his stomach as blood seeped through the pierced fabric of his robe.

James instantly realized that he was a dead man. No 1st century surgeon was going to be able to repair this, and he wouldn’t have time to reach a loop before he bled to death. James sat up, his belly seething, and leaned back against the bench. His identical twin rose on one knee, regaining his breath, and stared at his mortally wounded reflection.

“I, I wasn’t going to do it,” he panted. “I was going to leave.”

James couldn’t respond. He pressed both his hands against his abdomen, one above the other, but the blood seeped under his palms and through his fingers. He grimaced, one leg curling up under him involuntarily. He stared at the face of his adversary: himself. At first, the man said nothing, just watched James with eyes that seemed to contain sympathy and sadness. Eventually he spoke.

“You probably noticed that our scheme wasn’t working, didn’t you, James? That the variances we expected didn’t occur—that the world looked exactly the same in the future of each version, when of course it shouldn’t have, as the dissimilarities piled up over the centuries. In essence, there was a flaw in our plan, an unforeseen variable.”

James was no longer in pain. He couldn’t feel his legs. His stomach was warm, almost hot.  He looked down dumbly at the blood seeping from his gut, the quivering bits of flesh and entrails. Then he looked back up. He saw himself smiling. It was a strange smile. It looked kind, which was a mask James had cultivated many years ago. But this smile looked real.

James looked at himself, as his vision grew dimmer.

He heard himself talking from a long way off.

“It appears that the universe is self-correcting, James. As if it does have a purpose and a plan, and that plan cannot be derailed by mortals such as ourselves, regardless of how clever we are.”   He crouched down next to James, and spontaneously took his hand.

“Intriguing, I know. We never anticipated this. Some…function is realigning every version, despite our best efforts to mess things up. Imagine that. A self-correcting universe! This certainly promotes the idea of string theory. But,” he said, straightening, “the strings are all being manipulated by the puppet master.”

He could see that James was fading quickly. He wanted to say one more thing to him before he passed away.

“Of course, I can’t be sure what the force is that causes the realignment. The thought crossed my mind that it is God. In essence, I think he has a plan for the universe—all of them. We can create as many versions as we want, but they will all end up the same way, because ultimately, James, this is his ballgame.”

The hand was growing cold, but the eyes still reflected life. James had just one more thing to say.

“It’s clear to me, just this moment, James, that this is what’s been happening. God has a plan. He always did.”

The dying man’s breathing was shallow, his skin pale and cold.

“How can you know?” he asked with difficulty. “How?”

James smiled, looking down at himself, and felt a surprising surge of love.

“I can’t for sure, my brother. Remember, so long ago, what we said. You can’t prove it. You take it on faith.”

At that moment James died.

THE END

 

 

 

 

 

The Jubilee Machine Part XI

 

For the first time James had received an epistle from himself that he didn’t know was coming. That was exciting.

It had happened in the 1920’s.  James had checked into a hotel room in Bombay. It was early February, so the weather was crisp and refreshing. James loved the colonial experience—it suited him. So he was always partial to visiting any well-run part of the British empire.

And few places were more representative of the Empire than the Raj hotel, set on the shores of the Bay of Bengal, mere meters away from the Gateway to India, which had only gone up a few years prior to James’s arrival.

When he checked in, the scrupulously attired clerk at the front desk attended to him with all the deference and civility that only a colonial subject could muster. The porter bowed when he came to collect James’s bags—a huge Sikh with a moustache that extended several inches on either side of his face, and a pure white turban held snug by a single broach of jade.

As James turned toward the elevator, the clerk spoke.

“Pardon me, Dr. McPherson, but I have a letter for you.”

“A letter?”

James was puzzled, but reached out to accept the proffered envelope, heavy bond paper sealed with red sealing wax. He turned it over and saw his own, unmistakable handwriting.

To Dr. James McPherson

To be opened upon arrival.

“Thank you,” he nodded to the clerk, who bowed and turned away.

As soon as he was alone in in his room, James tore open the letter. Standing in the waning light of an Indian sunset he read the letter from himself.

 

Dear James,

 

Welcome to Bombay! Perhaps you know that this letter has been waiting for you, but I think not. I suspect that you were surprised to receive it, and if that is the case, then we have triumphed!

I say ‘we’, because you, standing in a hotel in one universe, have received an unexpected letter from me, who by now am exploring another century in a similar, but quite separate universe. This confirms all of our conjecture about the Alternate Set. We are now free to communicate, not only across time, but across universes.

Hope to hear from you soon, dear boy.

Surprise me.

 

James’s hand dropped to his side, still clutching the letter. The emotion frothed inside him. He had achieved his objective. His dreams had come true.

But James refused to savor his accomplishment for long.

There was work to do.

 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

 

 

Benton could not forget Bartholomew’s calm resolve and unwavering faith. His worldview was inexpressibly foreign to Benton’s own era. In Benton’s world, religious fundamentalists were targets of scorn and ridicule; their self-assured adherence to outmoded beliefs was perplexing and maddening to pragmatic atheists like himself.

But much of Bartholomew’s character was recognizable in the scientists and academics that Benton lived and worked with. The same single-mindedness and unswerving dedication that linked Bartholomew to his god also was evident in scientists like Badri or Ken.

Benton wondered if the obsessed and driven lab coats really had anything over the zealots in the wool cloaks. They might be right about the physical world, but the pettiness, selfishness, compulsion and irritability of the scientists stood in sharp contrast to the gentleness, thoughtfulness, humility and happiness of the man from Sidon.

Benton had seen some awful things since he had left his own time; this epoch was filled with unspeakable brutality and callousness. Yet he had never met anyone in any realm as well-adjusted and admirable as Bartholomew and his kinsmen.

And now Bartholomew was dead at the hands of the 3rd century’s superpower.

As he sat in his tiny room, Benton’s mind wandered from Bartholomew’s death to his next task. It was time to place the epistle.

He knew that anything he left now would be dug up in the 21st century by members of Badri’s team before any of the jumps took place. The team had chosen the locations for the epistles several months before Benton’s jump. Any messages left at the sites by time travelers would have been found by then. Unless, of course, the effects of time had altered the epistle sites. Earthquake, fire, urban construction. Vandals. Any number of events could have covered over or laid bare the epistles during the ensuing centuries. Although Benton remained sure that he was the first jumper, subsequent jumpers could remove or replace epistles, especially if their motives weren’t benign.

He would have to find a good hiding place—one that only Badri would think of.

 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

 

One last time, members of the Cassandra team were present in the decelerator room. It was early Monday, before the university woke up from the weekend and security resumed its normal stringency. Badri and Ellen benefited from the lax security that would exist for just a few more hours. They fired up the decelerator and Ellen got ready. She had the last bit of the Cassandra team’s gold sewed into her robe, plus some of her own jewelry. Ellen also carried a handgun with an extra clip—20 bullets in all. She hoped she would only need one.

“You positive you want to do this?” Badri asked. He looked worn out, frayed. Ellen felt like reaching out to steady him; maybe to steady herself.

“Yes,” she replied. “I know you don’t share my belief in God, but let me tell you how I view this, and why it makes it easier to do what I have to do.”

She swallowed, suddenly emotional. Ellen paused, then continued with a steady voice.

“I believe Benton’s assertion that he found my body.”

She forged on without further emotion.

“Therefore, I believe it is God’s will that I must go to Jerusalem. If I choose not to—and I can, because of free will—I would be acting against God’s will, and playing with fate in a similar way as James. I’d be trying to control the future through my own actions.”

The viewpoint that gave Ellen the strength to carry out this mission only brought further dismay to Badri. He couldn’t believe how simplistic and misguided the girl had become. Such a far cry from the determined, no-nonsense genius he had hired. But the time for discussion had passed. Badri nodded.

“I am glad you have that sense of certainty, Ellen.” was all he said.

Ellen climbed into the decelerator. It was the first time she’d ever been inside it, and Badri had to help her find the correct position, tucked into a ball, grasping her ankles and balanced on the balls of her feet. He stood at the controls and paused before he set the sequence in motion. Badri thought now would be a good time to pray, if he believed in prayer. He assumed that’s what Ellen was doing, as she crouched inside the sphere. Badri sighed, and began the sequence.

 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

 

Benton found the epistle site just before dark. It was possible that something would already be buried there—left by one of his colleagues who had happened this way in another time, on another loop.

Benton started digging. From memory he knew that anything that had been left would be two feet under the ground, at least in this century.  In the 20th century, they’d have to dig down more than 10 feet.

He saw a tiny piece of torn fabric in the dirt. Benton put down the shovel and moved the soil aside with his hands. The fragment unraveled, but more pieces became evident as his fingers clawed away the sandy soil. He felt something hard beneath the flimsy scraps of decaying wool. It was human flesh, hard and unnatural to the touch, but definitely a human limb. He began working faster, moving the soil away in large scoops. He’d found an arm, the left arm if the body was lying face up. He was breathing heavily as he brushed away dirt and small rocks. The torso was covered by the same garment, a simple coarse robe. Benton stopped for a moment. He knew the dead person’s face was just a few inches underground. He could easily reach it now. But he dreaded the thought of touching a corpse—and whose corpse it might be.

The winter sun was barely above the horizon, and a constant chill wind blew over him. Still, Benton was sweating profusely.

He gingerly scraped dirt away, gently feeling for the skin. He felt it. Slowly, painstakingly, he moved the dirt aside, as if it would be an offense to harm the body. Suddenly he stopped.

Most of the flesh had either disappeared or withered to a yellow leather. The teeth were bared in a macabre grin, since the lips had long since decomposed. But Benton wasn’t looking at the features of the rotting corpse. His eyes had been caught by a thin chain of gold, now lying in the vicinity of the dead woman’s left ear. It was the necklace Benton had given to Ellen before he left. The entwined flowers were still attached.

Benton got to his feet with difficulty. He was crying in convulsive bursts. Turning to the west he tilted his head and wailed at the sky.

 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

 

A lone woman on a dangerous road, Ellen was constantly aware of potential threats. Everyone she passed on the Stella Maris highway displayed curiosity, contempt or antagonism toward a woman traveling alone, but initially Ellen was not impeded. On the third day of her journey, she was finally attacked.

It happened shortly after mid-day on a long, lone stretch of road. Ellen was lost in her own thoughts, ambling along robotically, making her way slowly to Capernaum. High reeds grew along the road as it ran long and straight. Ellen should have been aware that this was a likely place for attacks. Bandits could see traffic along the road for a long way in both directions. A solo traveler—especially a woman—would become a victim and no one would hear her cries.

Ellen had just reached into her satchel for one of the figs that she had been munching, when a man raced from the bushes on her right. Ellen saw the motion and turned. The man ran toward her, holding a knife in one hand, blade sharp and menacing. His head was uncovered, so Ellen could see that he had very long hair and a short, trimmed beard. He was intent as he raced toward her, but said nothing.

Ellen jumped back reflexively when she first saw him, then for a moment was frozen in panic as the man covered the few paces from the reeds to the middle of the road. He bore down on her, blade outstretched. In an instant she assessed that he didn’t intend to stab her; if he was, he’d be holding the knife differently, cocked to plunge the blade into her. He was almost on her when Ellen turned and ran. For the first time the man made a sound, a simple, guttural, “Ai!”

Ellen ran down the road, feeling for the small can of mace she kept in the satchel. She’d expected trouble, and this was an effective weapon. The man quickly caught up with her, but just as he reached for her, Ellen spun around and sent a blast of mace into his face.

The bandit screamed, a loud howl of pain and surprise. He maintained a grip on the knife, but raised his other hand to his face. As Ellen backed away, she saw two more men emerge from the reeds. They stood at the edge of the road, watching their partner writhe in pain. They did not move any closer.

“You want some, too?” Ellen bellowed in English, brandishing the spray can. The men took a step back. Ellen realized she had spoken in English. She tried to think of a suitable Aramaic phrase, but decided against it. Instead, she stepped slowly backward down the road, spray can aloft, as the blinded bandit stumbled back to his comrades. They retreated together into the reeds.

A few minutes later Ellen was on her knees, sobbing.

“God, I can’t take this. I am so scared, and so alone. I know I might die, but I feel so helpless and afraid. Give me strength. Please give me strength.”

She was under a tree. The sun shone brightly through the leaves. Ellen’s tears fell in the dust.

“Please help me make it to Jerusalem.”

 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

 

Badri sat quietly in his apartment, allowing the room to dim slowly around him.

In a few hours he would be summoned to meet with Chester Mellon. Mellon would ask him about reports that his staff had been conducting unauthorized tests with the decelerator. He’d ask what they were using it for.

Badri sighed. Even when he told Mellon the truth, the buttoned-down academic wouldn’t believe it. He was the kind of scientist who could spend years repeating the same experiments with fruit flies, checking the data, looking for slight aberrations. He couldn’t conceive of a team of researchers being so reckless, so undisciplined, as to undertake a life-threatening experiment without methodically and carefully completing the previous steps.

But as the days wore on and Mellon’s own researchers examined the decelerator, they would find proof that large masses—the size of humans—had moved through the decelerator. They would check the coordinates in the computer drives, and might even repeat some of the jumps with small, nonliving payloads. Eventually they would confirm the unthinkable: that Badri Singh’s team had traveled back in time.

And then slowly it would dawn on Mellon and his staff that most of Badri’s team was now unaccounted for. Indeed, only Badri remained on the campus. The others would never be seen again.

What would the eventual outcome be? Badri assumed he would be charged with a crime, imprisoned and kept largely incommunicado for a long time. No doubt Mellon, the university and the government would want to keep this situation very quiet. But Badri was sure that his career, dreams and life had been irrevocably shattered.

But that was not what was on Badri Singh’s mind as he sighed and got up to get himself a glass of water. It was not his future that mattered.

It was the past. Badri had lost several staff to the past, and one of his colleagues was now running amok in it, in an insane effort to become master of his own universe. Badri slowly sipped the water, standing at his kitchen sink. He shook his head sadly.

There was no longer anything that he could do to stop James. The decelerator was shut down. No one would travel in time again—certainly not anyone who knew what was happening. So James was now free to commute between universes of his own creation, performing his malicious tricks. He had achieved his goal. James had won. No one could stop him.

The Jubilee Machine Part X

 

 

Benton was enjoying being a guest at Bartholomew’s home. For the past year or so he had either been a prisoner or a slave. He slept where he was told to sleep, did what he was ordered to do, and went where he was required to go. At Bartholomew’s home he could relax, lie in bed, listen to the birds and enjoy the cool January air as it wafted in through the open window.

He would stay with Bartholomew a few more days perhaps. He didn’t want to wear out his welcome with this benevolent new friend. But more importantly, Benton felt he needed to move on, to accomplish his mission.

He rolled out of bed and stepped into the main room. Bartholomew was talking quietly with another man whom Benton had never met. When the man looked up, he reacted with surprise and perhaps a little fear to see Benton standing before him. Bartholomew calmed the man in a language that Benton didn’t know. Benton bowed his head, then walked back into his room, unsure what to do. A moment later, Bartholomew entered the room, smiling as always.

“My apologies. My friend is a little nervous these days, and anything out of the ordinary is likely to make him jump.”

“Why is he nervous?”

Bartholomew sighed and folded his arms. “Oh, the authorities are applying pressure. There are rumors about Christians again—the usual, that we kill children and eat their flesh. That sort of thing.”

“So why do the Romans hate you so much?”

“Me? I don’t know that they hate me in particular. But they think my religion is an annoying threat. They accuse us of all sorts of things: orgies, cannibalism.

“As you know,” he said, poking the fire with a stick, “the Romans have a policy of toleration for most religions in their empire. It’s a pragmatic approach that has worked well for them for many years. They allow local people to worship their own gods, as long as they don’t challenge Roman authority.”

“But you’re not challenging Roman authority.”

Bartholomew considered that for a moment

“They can rule successfully by allowing each conquered nation to worship its own gods. They believe this is very open-minded, and in a way, it is. It removes conflict. As long as the people pay their taxes and pledge fealty to Rome, who cares who they make sacrificial offerings to?

“The Jews have always frustrated them because the Jews refused to put any Roman above the Almighty God. Now the Christians come along with a religion that is open to all people—it is not based on national identity or culture. Every person in the world is loved equally by a single God. That is a dangerous creed.”

Benton smiled.

“Well, Bartholomew, I can say with confidence that some day even a Roman emperor will become a Christian, and your religion will be the official religion of the empire.”

Bartholomew laughed outright.

“I am not sure that is an outcome I would hope for. Our Lord tells us to give to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and give to God the things that are God’s. It is not wise or necessary to combine the two. If all seek God’s will, then God’s will can de done by kings and cart-drivers, with both men being equal in God’s sight.”

Benton sighed and leaned against the wall.

“Wouldn’t that be wonderful,” he said.

“Yes, Nahon, it would. God asks each of us merely to seek him. His hand is always outstretched, and his love is constantly available.”

“Sorry, my friend. Even God would not take me as I am: filled with rage, consumed with revenge, and I am alone—more alone than you can imagine.”

Bartholomew came and sat by Benton.

“There is no pain so great that God cannot take it away. But you must offer it to him. Even asking him to take a severe hurt away is not sufficient. You must willingly give it up. Then it will be gone, and it won’t trouble you again.”

He shifted and drew his cloak tighter around him.

“Yet few of us do this. We cling to the pain, the anger and the resentment. We cannot forgive someone who hurts us, or accept the fact that a loved one has died. We dwell in the pain, wishing only that circumstances could be different—never accepting that this is God’s plan and therefore that the world is the way it should be.”

Benton was looking at the floor. Bartholomew continued.

“Nahon, you will grow bitter if you think of what your enemy has done to you, and how much you have suffered. Although I am not saying that you enjoy your suffering, I am accusing you of the very human decision to hold onto the pain, refusing to lose it because it becomes something you can use. Letting it go forever doesn’t seem right. We deserve to be forever angry or offended, don’t we?”

He tried to see into Benton’s eyes, but the shadows hid them.

“Our God will bear all your burdens. He has done so before, and will gladly do it again. You need not suffer. You can be free. But you must be willing to let go of the pain. You use it to sustain yourself, but it is a bitter medicine that cannot make you well. Still, you refuse to throw it away, thinking it is medicine, so you must take it. Nahon, give it to God.”

Benton turned to Bartholomew. The shadows made his scars and battered skull more obvious and frightening.

“If I had your faith, Bartholomew, I think I could do that. Perhaps one day I will. I understand the concept you are explaining, and I agree that what you describe can be true.”

He stretched a crippled leg.

“But it also requires a level of faith that I don’t have, and may never have. Yes, it is true that I don’t have to be bitter and angry. Philosophically I understand. But I don’t have it in me, Bartholomew. I see how your faith influences your life, and I admire you and your people. Right now, though, I don’t have that faith, so I cannot let go of my pain and anger.”

Benton stood up slowly, leaning on his staff, as his legs began to ache.

“Or perhaps because of my pain and anger I cannot acquire enough faith. We shall see if that changes. Pray for me, brother.”

Bartholomew also stood up. “I will go to share the Lord’s Supper with my friends now.”

“Take me with you.”

Benton had no idea why he made that request.

Bartholomew looked at him a long time, then smiled.

“I would be very pleased to have you come with me. Let’s go now!”

Bartholomew led Benton down a narrow alleyway, then another, finally stopping before a nondescript door. He rapped on the weather-beaten wood, and the door quickly opened. A man was standing there, short and bearded and smiling.

“Bartholomew! You made it, brother!”

The men embraced in the doorway. They seemed completely at ease. Benton had assumed there would be much more cloak-and-dagger secrecy, special codes and whispers. But here the makeshift church door was opened wide and no one seemed concerned. Bartholomew introduced Benton and he stepped forward.

“I am Nahon.”

The man gave him a big hug, squeezing tightly. Benton was pinned with his arms at his sides, waiting for the man to let go. Bartholomew had already stepped across the threshold and was greeting others in the large, crowded room.

Both men and women were present, but they did not sit together. More than twenty people filled the small room. They sang several hymns, without instruments. Benton felt he was witnessing the primordial essence of religion embodied in ancient songs.

After that, the man who had welcomed Bartholomew prayed over a plate of unleavened bread and blessed the wine. Both were passed around the room, with men feeding each other bits of bread.

Benton took the piece of bread, popped it in his mouth and silently chewed. The body of Christ, indeed, he thought. He reached for the cup as it was offered to him. Just as he took hold of hit, a thunderous noise came from behind him. Benton sloshed the wine over the table, hunching his shoulders in automatic reflex. The door to the house came crashing open, and several Roman soldiers rushed in, swords drawn.

 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

 

 

Ellen and Badri walked together to the Electromagnetic Research center.

All the lights were off in the main building, where busy graduate students spent the weekday working on useless elements of time displacement, discussing theories and playing with protons.  Ellen and Badri walked around the back of the building, and in through the fire exit. Badri still had a key. As the door shut behind them, Ellen turned toward the control center. Antoine was standing there.

“Antoine!” Badri shouted, fearing the worst. “What are you doing here?”

Antoine’s face was pale

“He’s gone now, and he said he doesn’t need to come back anymore.”

Ellen took a step toward Antoine.

“You mean James?”

He nodded.

“What did he tell you, Antoine?” Badri’s voice emanated softly from behind Ellen.

“And where did you send him?”

Antoine shook his head, then lowered it.

“Jerusalem, 33 AD. And he said he’s not coming back, and that he’s pinning everything on you. Badri.”

He looked frightened. “Benton’s gone. Jeremy’s gone, and I think James killed him. And I don’t know where Ken is, I really don’t.”

Antoine was almost crying.

“So when they start checking tomorrow, you’ll be the one they ask. And you won’t be able to say what happened to all those people.”

Badri nodded. “Yes, I know what’s coming, Antoine.”

Ellen turned to Antoine. “I suggest you also disappear. Don’t come back here ever again. You just aided a murderer in his escape.”

 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Bartholomew was taken by the Romans and beaten, refusing to say the simple words “Caesar is Lord.” Benton escaped punishment, because he didn’t live in the village, and was just a traveler. When asked, Benton could say truthfully that he was not a Christian. This did not comfort him. Benton wished he could have taken a stand against the persecution. But he did not.

Bartholomew was eventually dumped back on his doorstep a few hours later. Benton gingerly carried the broken body into the house. He knew about torture.

Bartholomew smiled, as well as he could. Benton’s memory was catapulted back to his own dark days in a Persian dungeon. Cracked lips, flayed skin, broken bones. Bartholomew spoke in a hoarse whisper.

“It is God’s will Nahon. No one can divert God’s will—nor should they try. His perfect will has brought me to this point. I will accept my fate. I will die as a martyr.”

“You will not die!” Benton shouted, but he was raging against the inevitable. It was obvious that Bartholomew had internal injuries. Blood continued to trickle from his mouth. In the 3rd century, people did not recover from these things. If he had believed in God, Benton might have prayed for a miracle. But he couldn’t. And Bartholomew seemed content for his life to pass.

 

Over the next hour, Bartholomew slipped in and out of consciousness. Sometimes he murmured, eyes closed. Most of the time he was quiet, occasionally grimacing in pain. Benton gave him water when he asked for it.

Just before dawn, as Benton leaned dozing against the wall, he heard Bartholomew murmur his name.

“What is it?” Benton said, immediately rousing himself and going to his friend’s side. Bartholomew was pale, his skin clammy.

“I have thought of something, Nahon. I think the Spirit gave it to me.”

Benton didn’t reply, waiting for the dying man to say whatever he wanted to. Bartholomew coughed, then struggled to catch his breath. It was nearly a minute before he could continue.

“In the Torah, the book that the Jews use, there is the law of Jubilee. Do you know what that is?”

Benton shook his head.

“The Jews were told to let the land lie fallow every seven years, and then every 49 years there was a year of Jubilee, in which debts would be forgiven, land would be returned to its original owner and slaves would be released. This Jubilee is no longer practiced in Israel. I think it stopped at the time of the Captivity, when most of the Jews were taken away to Babylon. By the time Israel was restored, no one calculated the years of Jubilee.”

“Oh.”

Bartholomew reached out for Benton’s arm. Benton had to move closer so that Bartholomew could feebly grasp his hand.

“This idea is a good one for you. Think of this as a year of Jubilee. The time has come for you to be released, for debts to be forgiven, for old harms to pass. Let this be a year of Jubilee for you, Nahon.”

Benton didn’t know how to respond. This meant nothing to him, and it was certainly not the revelation that Bartholomew hoped it would be. But he didn’t want his friend to die disappointed.

“I will do so, Bartholomew. This will be my year of Jubilee.”

Bartholomew smiled, and closed his eyes.

“And then you can start over again, my friend. All things will be new.”

He did not speak again.

Finally, just before sunrise, he grew still. Brian knew immediately that his friend was gone.

Once again, Benton was alone in an alien world. He went to find Bartholomew’ friends at the house where they had celebrated the Lord’s Supper—the meal that led to Bartholomew’s death. The owner of the home had still not been released and his wife was stricken with fear and anguish. When she heard of Bartholomew’s death she broke into sobs and put her head in her hands. Neighbors gathered at the door. Some of the men agreed to take Bartholomew’s body and bury it. Benton helped them, saying nothing as they dug the grave, washed the body and wrapped it in linen. He said nothing as Bartholomew was lowered into the earth and dirt was thrown back into the hole. He said nothing as the men dispersed back to their homes.

Benton was thinking. And as he went back to Bartholomew’s tiny room to collect his only possession, he continued to think. By the time he stepped onto the highway for Jerusalem, he was certain.

He knew how to get back to his own time. Bartholomew had given him the clue.

 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

 

“How do you think he does it?”

“Does what?”

Badri was standing at the control panel, trying to figure out who had jumped, how many times and when. Ellen was leaning against the console, trying to keep from fidgeting, trying to remain calm and not burst apart with anger and fear.

“Communicates with himself,” she said.

Badri didn’t look up.

“You mean James. It’s not certain, of course, that there is more than one version of James, you know. We suspect that, based on the data from the jumps. There are times where his mass has left the decelerator twice but returned only once, or I guess you could say the total number of return jumps doesn’t match the number of departures.  That would lead one to believe that there is more than one version of James. But of course,” he said, looking up, “this raises theoretical issues that we have never examined.”

Ellen bowed her head. Badri remained a scientist to the end, she thought.

“Sometimes I don’t know what universe I’m in these days,” she sighed.

Badri shook his head. “As you know, quantum theory describes entanglement, but that relates to particles interacting with each other. Einstein called it ‘spooky action at a distance,’ and physicists have only experimented with subatomic particles to prove entanglement. What James is doing gives all the appearance of being entanglement on a grand scale—that he has the same properties as entangled particles, being able to interact regardless of distance. And if so, this then proves the quantum physicist’s theories that entanglement even exists between universes. It really helps provide the Grand Theory of Everything, ironically. Through his deception and evil, James is providing evidence for the solution to the ultimate puzzle. It’s hard to say how entanglement works on this level, except it seems that there really are two or more versions of James that can interact with each other. And most importantly—or most sinister, you could say—is that he is completely identical: same past experiences, same psychology. And same motivation. To be master of his own universes. Multiple universes that he controls by his actions, even if no one else knows it.

“Some of his traveling is merely part of his efforts to construct the necessary circumstances for him to perpetuate his game, I imagine. He sends himself back to the past, which creates a new version of the universe. That person then goes forward into the future of THAT universe, and takes an action. That action is designed to affect the outcome of later history. And some of the jumps would merely be to make arrangements for himself in other time periods. For example, James might go back to 12th century France and kill someone and take their money. Then he goes to 15th century France and spends it. He needs money, he needs the means to be the ruler of his own universe. I suspect that the majority of James’s jumps have been of this foundational variety.”

 

Badri had finished with the coordinates. He looked at Ellen. She was stunned, and slightly unsettled, that Badri could so dispassionately assess the actions of a man who was busy killing and playing God in any century he chose, while simultaneously framing Badri for everything.

“I think I know what James is up to, Badri,” Ellen said.

“I don’t think you do, Ellen.” Badri smiled. This angered Ellen.

“You don’t understand. He’s going to kill Jesus.”

Singh was unfazed by the assertion. He stood, arms folded, leaning against the control panel. Ellen stopped talking. Singh’s unresponsiveness shut her up for a moment. She took a deep breath. Singh spoke.

“James wouldn’t bother. Jesus is not of major significance to him”

He looked Ellen with somber eyes, waiting for a reaction. She didn’t respond.

“Seriously,” Singh continued, walking away from the panel. “A man like James is not the sort of person who cares about the Ultimate Reality or his mortal soul. He just wants to see how far he can go, regardless of the consequences.”

Badri looked at Ellen. He couldn’t tell how mentally stable she was.

“I had a conversation with James yesterday. We discussed this issue.”

Badri smiled. “You’ll be pleased to know he is not going to try to kill Jesus. He will, however, try to kill the apostles. He wants to…what did he say? Mess with God’s plan.

Just for the fun of it. Of course, murder, sabotage, and changing the future of entire universes is also involved.”

“I had a conversation with my friend, Wyatt,” Ellen said. “I asked him to come with me when I visited Benton again yesterday. I wasn’t sure who to believe, or trust. And I wanted to make sure that Benton is sane. Wyatt mentioned something that I’d completely forgotten about, Badri. He reminded me that God knows the future—he lives in the future as much as he does the present—he can know all possible outcomes and actions in any universe.

“God allows free will, which allows James to create alternate universes. But of course, those universes are not outside the effective domain of God. So God already knows what James will do, and the outcome. The unanswered question for me is whether God aligns all universes to his intent—if he is overseeing each one that James creates. James is assuming that when he creates a new version of the universe, he has control over it. He gets to act as God. For me, I want to know that God has as much control over that universe as he does the one you and I were born into.”

Badri scowled, started to speak, paused and then forged ahead.

“I hope you’ll forgive me, Ellen, if I don’t share your viewpoint that an omnipotent deity will solve our problems for us in his good time.”

Ellen clenched her jaw as Badri glared at her.

“The only way to stop him is to kill him,” Badri said. “Does it matter which version we are we killing—can he continue his agenda if multiple versions of James exist? I don’t know, but I do know that he’s run out of confederates to operate the controls. Perhaps his plans are far enough advanced that he no longer needs assistance back here. Maybe.”

Badri looked at Ellen, gauging her emotional state. She was looking into his eyes, shaking her head.

“I want to go back to Jerusalem,” she said, “find out what he’s up to. Stop him, kill him if need be.”

Badri shook his head. No.

Ellen continued to fix her gaze on him. Finally, softly, in a voice barely more than a whisper she said, “Benton told me that James has already killed me, back in the past. Benton said he saw my body. Maybe one reason I want to make the jump is to rewrite the past—to prevent that murder from happening. My own murder.”

Her face was pained, but not fearful.

Badri waited for her to continue.

“Tell me if I go back to Jerusalem that I won’t become James’ next victim. Tell me that I’m not just going on a suicide mission.”

Badri started to speak but his voice caught. He cleared his throat.

“I can’t let you go, Ellen. I can’t.”

She breathed out slowly, head down. Badri watched her. So young, so pure and untainted. Suddenly Ellen looked up, and she no longer resembled the idealized image Badri had been musing over, of the high-minded ivory tower dweller. Her eyes were burning and her face was set like granite.

“I believe that Benton finds my body. Why should I not believe it? I don’t think he’s lying about that, or mistaken. And if it’s true, then I have no right to mess with God’s plan.”

“What?” Badri was aghast. “God’s plan. What are you talking about!”

Ellen paused before responding. She had always admired Badri, and she still admired him for his intellect, his determination. But he was missing something.

“I believe in God, Badri. You know that.”

“Yes, I know that. But…”

She talked right over him.

“I can’t leave that out of the equation. I think I’ve set God aside for too long while we all pursued our selfish dreams. But God is part of this.”

“Maybe so. But you can’t predict what God will do, can you? He doesn’t reveal his plans to you, I assume, or we wouldn’t be having this conversation. So you must act based on your own assessment of the situation.”

“I believe God will guide me, if I commit myself to him” Ellen said softly.

Badri exploded.

“Guide you to your death!”

“Possibly, if that is his will.”   Ellen felt surprisingly calm. Badri was almost speechless with disbelief.

“Good God, how did we get a Jesus freak in our midst? This is ridiculous! We are scientists and we deal with reality, facts and observable phenomena. Not supernatural whims.”

Ellen said nothing, and Badri wearily hoisted his body out of the chair, his anger quickly dissipating as he walked toward her.

“Overall, it probably doesn’t matter. I’m calculating probabilities and trying to outguess James. You’re trusting in God. Either way, our results are likely to be similar, and remarkably crude: you want to go back to the first century and kill James.”

“Yep.”

Badri paused, looking at the floor for quite some time. Then he turned and strode toward the door.

“Then I guess I’d better give you my pistol. You’ll be needing it in Jerusalem.”

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