Chronicles
of the
Children
of Destiny
Anthology
II
by
Daniel
Thomas Andrew Daly
©
6176 SC
Stories:
Tapestry
of Life 2
Eve
and Adam
Meludiel
Mercy
Revelation
Lord
Chronology and the 700 Time Masters
Samael
and Logos
Eve
and Adam 2
The
Fantasmagorical Adventures of Insanity Man
The
Fantasmagorical Adventures of Insanity Man 2
Luke
Warm
Going
Home
Kayella
and Callodyn
Vain
and Pretentious
The
Cherubim Urakiba – Angel of God
The
Impossible Unification of the Warring States of Terravana and
Kadramere
Life
in Kadravana
Kayella
and Callodyn 2
God
the Father
Unity
Hour
Ruth
Kayella
and Callodyn 3
The
Cherubim Sandra – Dreams
Orange
Worker
The
Sundering
The
Celestyel Angel Aphrayel – Benjamin
The
Seraphim Jembryel - The Nixian Agenda
The
Wars of John Connor and Cyborg Q
Dark
Times
Saruviel
– The Quick and the Dead
Daniel
– At Arm’s Length
Mary
The
Fabulous Misadventures of the Famous 17 Kaleidoscope
Collectors
Matthew
the Artist
Gabriel
Survivors
Dark
Times 2
Aphrayel
– The End
The
7th Angel
Crazy
Funky Love Child
The
Frosty Nightmares of Professor Zelzazon
Callodyn’s
Vengeance
A
Wicked Sense of Humour
A
Wicked Sense of Humour 2
Beyond
the Reaches of the Impossible Lords of Chaos, Destruction and Minor
Ego Problems
Salvation
The
Fabulous Misadventures of the Famous 17 Kaleidoscope Collectors
II
Tapestry
of Life 2
Paul
Saberton looked at the clock on the wall. It was late, and he wasn't
well. His MS was starting to get to him. He'd had it a while now, and
life had taken a dive in recent times. Mamre Fellowship prayed for
him, and while he knew the Lord worked miracles, he also knew that
sometimes a thorn in the flesh would have its say, no matter how much
faith might intervene. He didn't look great when he looked at himself
in the mirror, and he knew he wasn't. Life was not fantastic. He
knew, in his heart, he had a year or so to live. And he knew he had
to make this time count. He'd chatted with Brenton White about his
probable funeral, and hoped Brenton could make it. But it might end
up just a family affair. He sighed. Life didn't always work out. No
matter.
*
* * * *
'Chosen
ones don't last forever, Daniel Daly,' said Marcus CCC.
'No
they don't, do they. Your head is all grey now, and I think the time
is closing in on us all.'
'How
will you die?' Marcus asked Daniel.
'I'll
just rise in grace to the heavenlies, in a divine rapture,' said
Daniel smiling. 'I shall never die. I'm too tough for that.'
'I
almost believe you,' replied Marcus.
'The
funeral for Rebecca Hill was nice,' said Daniel. 'She lived long and
proud. A gem in the end.'
'She
had a crazy spark as well,' replied Marcus. 'She had another life
behind that quiet exterior. When she finally trusted you she spoke
her mind freely on many subjects. Teh art is to draw out this
knowledge and remain calm when she says something pointed. You get
the best conversation in life that way.'
'Wisdom
from Marcus CCC,' replied Daniel. 'I'll have to remember that
one.'
'How
is Lucy Smith?' asked Marcus.
'She's
good,' said Daniel. 'She's hanging around a chick called Decadence at
the moment. A nickname she uses for herself. A diehard metalhead. Has
every frikking metal album from the 80s and 90s that I've heard of.
So much of the foundational stuff. Very dedicated, and her caravan
out near Symonston is loaded with this and that of the genre. I'm
practically jealous. Some fine beautiies in her collection. Very
impressive for someone so young. I think she inherited a lot of it
from an old uncle as well.'
'And
your CD collection? Will it still be in the glorious afterlife
waiting for you?'
'What
you acquire in life.'
'You
acquire in life for eternity,' finished Marcus. 'Yes. You say that
all the time. I perhaps believe that may be true. Let us hope so
anyway.'
'I'm
sure it is,' replied Daniel. 'One of the points we live this
life.'
'Yes.
Maybe,' said Marcus.
Their
meal came, and Marcus, as per tradition, fitted the bill, and Daniel
enjoyed himself in conversation with one of his oldest and dearest
friends. Tomorrow he had work to do, cleaning up the back yard at his
Cooma address, and looking into details with his shares porftolio,
which earned him a lot of his income. He had shares in many of the
blue chip companies, but was considering one or two further
investments, as he had some spare cash at the moment, and clock
companies were on his mind.
'Good
health,' said Marcus, raising his glass in the air.
'Good
health,' replied Daniel.
*
* * * *
When
Paul Saberton died Daniel almost mourned. But not in the end. Deaths
wee not that a big deal to him. Life went on. Time passed, and others
came and went, in that tapestry of life. Kristie, and Marcus died
wthin a few years of each other, then it was him and Lucy again. And
then Shelandragh May passed, and the end of days was upon them. The
Judgement Day came, and it was surprising, but life inevitably went
on, and after the millennium, and his eventual taking up to heaven,
Daniel found his angelic identity as a Callophim restored to him, and
life in Paradision, a town in Televere, in the spiritual planetary
universe.
*
* * * *
Kirstie
Kolby looked at Jonathon.
'We're
not together, you know. No matter what you think?'
'What's
the problem Kirst? Not still hung up on Daniel Daly are we?'
'No,'
she replied. 'He was fun for a while, but that time is finished. I
might be eating with you in this nice restaruant, but don't take it
for too much. You are too unpredictable. What, another job? What is
it now?'
'Wine
taster,' he replied. 'And I'm going into studying beverages at
university soon. A course from Open University. I'll study it in my
own time at my own pace. Got plans to start a liquers
company.'
'Amazing,'
she replied. 'Let's hope you stick to it.'
'It
doesn't matter, babe,' he replied. 'Life goes on anyway.'
'How
old are you now?' she asked him. 'I've noticed the greys are finally
showing up.'
'I
don't have that many years to go,' he said. 'Time catches up with all
of us.'
'Don't
I know it,' she replied. 'Anyway, I'll have the lasagne. With
salad.'
He
ordered, and she sat there, sipping on her apple juice, smiling at
him. She was doing her best, but her heart just wasn't in it. They'd
drifted apart over the years, and it wasn't like it used to be. They
had been young, eager, full of passion. But reality had settled in
and Jonathon, amazingly, was not that stable. He could usually keep
his job, but the thing was he changed them all thetime. Andnow he was
really starting to look his age, and the thrill of Mr Kolby had run
dry. She was still youthful and pretty – at least she told herself
that. But time had caught up to her too. She didn't have forever.
'I
still love you somewhat,' she blurted out. 'But I am not sure if we
are meant to be. Eternally, you know. We're friends, and we like each
other, but I need and crave a lot more stability than you ever really
offer for terribly long Jonathon Kolby. In all that beautiful love we
want to last forever, sometimes it just doesn't. You know.'
He
looked at her, and looked at her beautiful hair, and nodded. 'Then we
do the best we can,' he replied.
'I
guess so,' she said.
The
meals came, and Kirsty ate with traditional etiquette, while she was
not greatly impressed with him wolfing down his steak sanger, which
was not exactly the decorum she was looking for. Such a bloody
Aussie, shethought to herself. Such a bloody Aussie.
*
* * * *
'I
don't know what it is Kayella. But there is something familiar about
you. Callophim you may be, which should mean something, but I took it
for granted that it was just a thing. But I've noticed my CD
collection, and you look awfully lot like a singer in
there.'
Kayella
glared at her, and continued on surfing the Televere Internet.
'I
taught that Satan a lesson,' she asked. 'Gave him one.'
'You're
the passion of God, I think' replied Callodyn, the angelic name of
Daniel Daly.
'Passion
is life and life is passion. And being a go getter is what it is all
about. This life is new to me. Where I came from I don't know, but I
must plan. And conquer. And achieve,' she said. He looked at her. She
was definitely like a pop singer of a CD in his earthly collection,
which he had mostly forgotten in his new life in heaven, but memories
were there, deep down in his soul.
'Buy
me this,' she said.
He
looked at the screen. An electric guitar was shown.
'You
want to take up music?' he asked her.
'Yes.'
she said after a moment. 'Music is good. I want to be a
musician.'
'Sure
you got the talent,' he said slyly. 'I've heard you sing in the
shower.'
'I
am practicing. Ignore me mere human. I cater for refined
tastes.'
'Ha,'
he said. 'They'd have to be damn refined for your garbling.' She
glared at him in reply.
'Buy
it. Now. Provide card details, idiot.'
He
sighed, and punched in his credit card details, and the yellow guitar
was on its way to his address.
'I
shall practice. And I shall be brilliant,' she said.
'You
hope, tryhard,' he replied.
'And
trying hard is what I do best,' she said, and poked her tonuge out at
him.
'Jesus,'
he said.
'Christian
icon,' she replied. 'I have no need for his inane bullshit. A
callophim has a greater calling.'
'Indeed,'
replied Daniel, and just shook his head as she continued staring at
the guitar on the computer screen.
*
* * * *
Kirstie
looked in the mirror. She was looking good. Living in Canberra, on
New Terra, in the heavenlies. Single, no commitments, good job she
had in the Public Service again. And Jonathon Kolby across town in
his Deakin flat, round the corner somewhat from his family's place.
They were lucky to get it as well. Early Canberra residents had put
in applications for a lot of theplaces in the city, and when the
resurrection had come to the heavenlies they had very good claiming
rights. But not everyone made it to heaven, and not every residence
could be claimed. Works and status counted for a lot upon judgement
of death. But the Kolbys had pulled through, and Kirstie herself
obtained the place she needed also. Lucky to get New Terra. She could
have been out on a less important planet, but she got the heavenly
galaxy's finest place. Very fortunate indeed.
'So
do you want to reconnect?' asked Jonathon on the phone to
Kirstie.
'Not
yet,' she replied.
'You've
been here for a while now, you know. When are we going to catch
up?'
'I'm
working out life still,' she replied. 'Finding myself was easy enough
with life on Earth. It was short. You sort of made a basic plan, ran
with it, and that was that. But this eternal life thing, well that
takes an eternity to make wise plans. And I want wise plans in my
life Jonathon Kolby. Even if it takes me 10,000 years, I want wise
plans in my life.'
'Looks
like it will be 10,000 years as well before I finally see you,' he
said.
'Maybe,'
she said softly.
'Fine.
Look, I'll call you again in a decade or so. Maybe then we can catch
up.'
'Don't
hold your breath,' she said. 'By Jonathon.' She hung up and smiled.
Mr Indecisive could mull on that for a while.
*
* * * *
Daniel
the Seraphim had just finished plotting out with Cherubims Callodyn
and Daniel Thomas Andrew Daly a new initiative for the Daly
Fundation. Golden Fries and Burgers.
'I'll
manage the thing,' said Daniel the Seraphim. 'Profits can go to the
foundation, but I'll take responsibility for managing the thing. Got
plans for stores all over New Terra and Televon, and plan on getting
it into the Realm of Eternity also.
'It's
a good idea,' said Callodyn. 'Standard franchise sort of thing. Like
Maccas and KFC.'
'With
genuine fast food though,' replied Daniel. 'We won't get too PC with
our grub. Animal fat being used, for example. We'll make it the real
thing, and take on Paul Vautin's Fatty Burgers. Show them how its
really done.'
'It
will require a strong business plan. If it is too last,' said
Cherubim Daniel Thomas Andrew Daly. 'And there is not much point in
sinking funds into it for a temporary rush. You'll have to constantly
manage the thing, and use the personal touch with staff. There is so
much competition at the moment as things get up and running in a new
way with all this new world we are now part of.'
'I
know,' replied Daniel.
'Sounds
good,' said Callodyn. 'Want me involved?'
'I'll
handle it. But I'll keep you both informed,' said Daniel. 'It will be
a good earner in the long term. I'll make it work. Do the founding of
the thing properly.'
'Professionally,'
replied Cherubim Daniel Thomas Andrew Daly. 'Be professional about
it. Business like. Let them know you manage it properly as a boss
should do. Not too much of this industrial democracy. Old fashioned
business nowse is what lasts in the long term. A man with a vision,
who sticks to it, and goes to war for his team. Make it proper and
fill a need, and it will last.'
'Will
do,' replied Daniel. And the three of them were in general agreement
on the idea.
*
* * * *
Jenny
Gilmore. Dalgety girl of New Terra, in Australia. What could you say?
Simple, coutry girl, and this was her life. She was single again, and
she didn't overly object. Love came at times, and it left at times.
Life was, as Bon Jovi sang, an ongoing charade of being in and out of
love, and it just seemed to her that was the nature of the
beast.
'Jenny.
Can you help me on the farm today,' said her father Stewart.
'Sure
thing dad.'
'Your
mother is moving to Dalgety. She's got a place there to live. She'll
visit regular like. But she needs her own space. So you can help me
on the farm today?'
Jenny
looked at her father. He just dropped a bombshell on her.
'Uh,
yeh,' she replied.
'Good,'
he said.
In
her room she was brushing her hair, thinking on mum. Moving into
town. What, didn't she love dad anymore? She assumed that wasn't
really the case, but why the hell would she want to live in town?
Well, at least they weren't divorcing. At least it wasn't that bad –
yet. She brushed her hair, exhausted after the day's heavy work on
the farm, and sang softly. Then she put on 'Hysteria' by Def Leppard,
a CD she played once a decade or so, and lay back on her bed, looking
at the celing. 'Women, women, lots of pretty women,' went the song.
Hah, she thought. Hardly her reputation. But she was attractive in
her own way, but only average when it came right down to it. She had
her good days, and she felt good and pretty on her good days, when
the hair sat just right, and she didn't look too mucky, like a
country bumpkin, slaving away in the dirt and the muck. Who was she
kidding? Nobody lest a farmer in the end would probably want to
commit to her eternally.
'Jenny,'
said her father from outside the room.
'Yes
dad.'
'Daniel
Daly is on the phone.'
She
came to the door, and took the phone. 'Yes, Daniel,' she
said.
'Well,
do you want to visit me on Telever or not?' he asked her. 'I have a
housemate at the moment who I would like you to meet. She's the
spitting image of pop singer Kelly Clarkson. It's really weird. She's
Callophim angel. Like me,' he said.
'Yep.
You're an angel,' she said. 'First phone call in a decade for me
personally.'
'Life
can get tough,' said Daniel. 'Keep the chin up girl. It works out in
the end.'
'Sure,'
she said. 'Well, ok. I come and visit. Maybe next year? Mid
year?'
'Should
be fine,' he replied. 'I'll call you again when its time. Now if you
don't mind, space phoning costs a fortune. I'll be seeing you.'
'By
Dan,' she replied, and hung up. Good. Someone at least still gave a
damn about her. She lay back on the bed, and as the album continued
playing she fel asleep. She was exhausted, and life was hard. But
better days, hopefully, lay ahead.
*
* * * *
Paul
Saberton and Jenny Gilmore arrived Callodyn the Cherubim's home on
Paradision in Televere about the same time. In fact Daniel had asked
them to do so.
'Hi
Jen,' said Paul. 'Long time no see.'
'Hi
Paul. Would you knock, kind sir?'
Paul
smiled at her warmly, and knocked on the door. Soon a fresh face
greeted them.
'Uh,
we're looking for Daniel,' said Paul.
'Daniel
Daly,' put in Jenny.
'Oh,
you must be Paul and Jenny. We've been expecting you. I'm Ruth. Come
in.'
'Nice
to meet you Ruth,' replied Paul. They were ushered inside, into the
front room, and Daniel nodded to Paul and smiled at Jenny.
'This
is Ruth and Boaz,' said Daniel. 'They, uh, have very biblical
reputations.'
Paul
smiled. 'Fancy that. Named after the biblical ones. Was that much of
a joke when you got married?'
'Not
really,' replied Boaz. 'Sort of natural, really.'
'Right,'
agreed Paul, and looked at Boaz. 'You appear to be Israelite.'
'From
Bethlehem. Born there a long time ago. Time of the Judges. There is a
story about me and Ruth in the Bible.'
Paul
stopped for a moment, and looked at them. 'Your Ruth and Boaz? From
Scripture?'
'Televon
is were we mostly live. The ancient Jewish people,' said Boaz. 'What?
Don't you expect to meet a biblical person, Paul?'
Paul
stuttered. 'Uh, no. N, no. You don't expect that to just drop on you.
Come on, your not really Ruth and Boaz, are you?'
'You
require proof?' asked Boaz. 'Ok. Come next door for a few
minutes.'
Paul
followed, and Boaz showed him some magazines and books with his
formal identity with his picture clearly identified. Paul looked at
Boaz. 'Well, I never,' he said. 'Small world.'
They
returned next door, and Jenny was relating to Ruth some of her
struggles in life.
'I'll
have dinner ready soon enough,' said Daniel. 'We'll have tea at 3
this afternoon. A nice way to get you started. Now, I have 3 months
with both of you as agreed, right?'
'It's
all arranged,' said Jenny.
'Not
a problem,' replied Paul.
'Then
I'll get to the dinner,' said Daniel.
Paul,
still stunned by the company he was keeping, started asking questions
which were popping up, about Bethlehem in biblical times, and about
King David, and this and that. Boaz and Ruth happily answered, and
Paul's day, to put it mildly, had been made.
*
* * * *
'So
you got an invitation to visit Daniel Daly the younger on Paradision
as well, did you Rebecca?' asked Marcus Chuan Chi Chin to Rebecca
Hill.
'Yes,'
nodded Rebecca. 'He has guests at the moment, and is looking to have
a big party at the end of their stay. He would like our company for
about two months from a few weeks from now. I have replied and agreed
to come and stay.'
'So
have I,' replied Marcus. 'It will be good to catch up with Daniel
again. He has such a busy life. So much of the Noahide thing working
well for the Daly's. Very amazing.'
'The
Rainbow Covenant certainly has colour characters in its community,'
said Rebecca.
'Very
clever,' smiled Marcus. 'I wonder if Adrian will be back soon. We
might be able to get him out to dinner with us this evening, if he
can find time.'
'Adrian
Chan is a busy man also,' said Rebecca. 'Always on follow up with
member of the group. His work never really ends.'
'Thankfully
he is a good choice for the work,' said Marcus. 'One of the best care
workers I have met.'
'I
think so,' agreed Rebecca. 'Oh, never mind. Let's go to the club now.
Adrian might not even come back.'
'Yes.
Yes, ok,' replied Marcus. And so they left the drop in centre and
went next door to the Southern Cross Club, ordered drinks and meals,
and chatted mildly, about Daniel, and life, and all things in their
lives.
*
* * * *
And
then there was a party, and Karenina showed up also, as well as
Kirstie and Jonathon Kolby, who were perfect stangers to each other.
Daniel, the Callophim Angel Callodyn, had put this little group
together, for they were a group of his, in his thinking. He called
them his little 'Tapestry of Life' friend club, because they each
spoke the meaning of life to him in ways, and Kayella, a new member
of the group, learned meaning of life from it also. She was young,
and needing new data, like Number five. But he had his suspicions
about who she really might be. It was at a club in Paradision, in a
large catering room, where they chatted the evening away, enjoying
fine food and drink as well as fine song. And Daniel found a home in
these people, a gathering of souls to which he felt he could relate
and draw strength and support from. And he was happy. It made him
happy. To have friends, to have people who he cared for, apart from
his family, who also cared for him. And he toasted the evening to
life, love and other mysteries. And that life, as it always does,
went on.
The
End
“Eve
and Adam”
6,012 SC
‘The
protoevangelium. Yes, I know, an ancient doctrine. But it is Catholic
lore and we still accept the basic view that Jesus was the seed of
the woman to destroy the serpent’s work.’
Jonathon
looked at the elderly catholic priest, satisfied that his hunch on
what Catholics taught on this issue was in fact the case, thanked the
priest and left for home.
* * * *
*
- LONG AGO -
‘….the Children of
Destiny, the Children of Fate.’ John smiled at Eve’s dramatic
flair in her quotation of the Seraphim Torah of Eternity. ‘But
beware our brother Jesus, dear John. Beware his crooked ways and
tangled delusions. For he himself will be the eternal child of
destiny, the eternal glorious one, if he can possibly persuade others
to follow him. ‘Yes indeed,’ responded the Seer of
Visions.
* * * * *
Jonathon
sat down, Lucinda quietly watching television, and reviewed the
official doctrinal statement the pastor of the fellowship had given
him for the ninth time. In longstanding Haven Noahide Fellowship
tradition the seed of the woman from the Protoevangelium as the
Catholics called it, Genesis 3:15, were indeed the children and
angels of God. The firstborn children of God in heaven were Adam and
Eve, and then, their human incarnations being made after their own
image and being filled with their own spirit, as Genesis 1:26 taught,
the manifestations of the Children of Destiny began being born from
the seed of Eve and Adam. Yet, when the Logos appeared, and when
Jesus was merged with him, the complete manifestation of the Angels
of Infinity and Eternity began taking place. They were not mere
representative, but complete transmutations into human form who, upon
death, returned to the Realms of Glory. There purpose, as Jonathon
came to understand, being the sanctification of the rest of humanity,
those not made in the image of the ‘gods’ but born of human seed,
those who would be brought to life in the latter day resurrection to
the new spiritual human universe. And of course, the Ketravim. Those
humans, who through constant devotion to love and God, achieved
angelic glory upon their deaths.
He
thought on the Priests words understanding Jesus to indeed be the
seed of the woman but, as the book of Hebrews called it in the New
Testament, the firstborn amongst many brethren. He thought then on
the way the apostles had taught exclusive salvation through Jesus and
was reminded of Haven’s position that, as the Jesus Seminar
research continued onwards, the words of the historical Jesus were
mainly contained within Matthew, Mark and Luke and that from Haven’s
perspective Jesus himself didn’t appear to teach exclusive
salvation. In Haven’s words, the apostles had simply gravitated to
this doctrine to teach the importance of the new birth and life which
Jesus blood on Calvary had brought them and the excessive devotion
they had to their messianic leader. Yet, as in other things, an
example being the deification of Jesus in the mind of the latter
church, they were misled in ways, yet their heart, as Haven
emphasized, was usually in the right place.
‘Man,
I dig theology, Lucinda.’ Said Jonathon, happily picking up another
one of Haven’s books.
‘I guess that is how he made
you, J. But it sure as hell bores me to death.’
‘You’ll
like it one day. Trust me. It just takes time to understand the
knowledge and how it impacts on real life. It is really fascinating
after a while.’
‘I’ll take your word for it. Oh,
come on. Titanic is on shortly. Go get us some coffee and Tim-Tam’s.
You know how I love Jack Dawson.’
‘As you wish,’
said Jonathon, disappearing to the
kitchen.
‘Meludiel’
‘Do
you think she heeded the rebuke?’ Karanasius asked Brendakius, his
Ozraphim brother.
‘It was arranged properly. The
dragon was shocked – quite shocked. He had not expected David to
choose a human over his twin. But he has chosen Justine Atkinson
instead of Meludiel.
“Then he has made his
choice.”
“Such is life.”
“Then
neither Daniel nor Ambriel will win her heart. That is quite ironic,
I think.”
“Mmm,’ agreed Brendakius.
*
* * * *
Rebecca looked at the sign.
“Haven Noahide Fellowship”. This was it, she thought to herself.
A whole life dedicated to Jesus, countless concerts dedicated to his
glory, and then a crisis of faith in which God says ‘It aint him.’
And so what choice did she really have? Judaism had had its initial
appeal but, ultimately, not again. Not again. She would not again go
down the Jewish pathway – it was too much to commit to those people
yet again. And they were not hers – they were not her family, her
culture, her identity. They were simply not Loveheart’s or Celtic
Anglo people. Yet Noahides were everyone, and the Celts and Anglo’s
were Noahides. So would give this ‘Haven Noahide Fellowship’ a
chance. Perhaps it was for her after all.
*
* * * *
God looked down at Meludiel
entering the Haven Noahide Fellowship assembly hall. He knew his
daughter Rebecca would be nervous, but his Son Daniel Daly would take
care of her. That much he knew to be true.
*
* * * *
The sermon was interesting,
similar to her Baptist heritage in many ways, but a bit calmer. She
noticed that instantly. She thought on Justine who had suggested that
if she really was having a faith crisis with the Baptist church, then
perhaps she really should look into the Haven one. Her new friend
David Rothchild had spoken about it and said that his brother Daniel
knew the pastor, a close friend, another Daniel ironically. Perhaps
this would be right for her.
Sitting
there in the small hall, the other 5 Noahides having left, Mr Daly
noticed her and came down and sat next to her.
‘Well,
Miss. How did you find the sermon?’
‘Oh, it was
ok.’
‘Do you know what we believe?’
‘Noah’s
covenant. I have looked into it a bit.’
‘Yes. We
are pretty simple in the end. Mainly the first part of the bible
until the Tower of Babel. Uncomplicated, really, unlike the Talmud
based movement.’
‘I heard about that. I didn’t
like some of the things they taught, nor their strong connection to
Judaism. They’re too Jewish for me.’
‘Jews have
kept Unitarian faith for a long time when most gentiles strayed. But
I know what you are saying, it is the same conviction that I have.
Judaism, too me, is for a particular type of people. People with
convictions on Torah and that particular type of lifestyle and
connection too God, but for me it is too awkward and inconsistent
with my own nature. But there is another reason also.’
‘Which
is?’
‘Noahide faith represents the oldest covenant
with God. As a proper Noahide our assembly represents, in our faith,
the oldest and deepest connection to God. We strive to be the most
grown up, in a sense, amongst the children of men.’
‘Isn’t
that Israel’s job?’
‘Yes, a kingdom of priests
and a holy nation. But while that may motivate them, they don’t
take it seriously any more. It is religious observation without
passion. For many idolatrous messianic devotion without God’s due
respect.’
‘What do you mean by that?’
Daniel
picked up the bible, showed her 1 Samuel chapter 8, and read it to
her.
‘…..But when they said, ‘Give us a king to
lead us,’ this displeased Samuel; so he prayed to the LORD. And the
LORD told him, ‘Listen to all that the people are saying to you; It
is not you they have rejected, but they have rejected me as their
king.’
Rebecca was convicted. ‘The same problem
with Jesus, isn’t it?’
‘100% Miss. God gave them
Saul, and then David, and they worshipped him. They still loved the
LORD, but he wasn’t the God of their hearts that he wanted to
be.’
‘And that is what you claim as Noahides, is
it? To be devoted to God alone?’
‘Yes. That is the
purity of the faith we represent, and we try our best not to corrupt
that truth. We are of the Oldest covenant. Of the oldest brit. And we
try to take it as seriously as the oldest covenant warrants. To be
that which the Most High esteems greatest of all. And we will never
budge from that, Miss. Never.’
She looked at him for
a moment, her decision made. ‘I would like to join your fellowship,
if that is ok. You have said enough for me.’
‘Glad
to have you. We are meeting for lunch at 1. Do you want to come
along?’
‘The fellowship you mean?’
‘And
a few other interested parties. There is a Jewish man named Daniel
Rothchild who occasionally takes an interest, but doesn’t come that
much anymore. He might be here today, but don’t count on it.’
‘I
know him,’ said Rebecca, stunned.
‘Small world,
isn’t it.’
* * * * *
Two
years later Rebecca was finally happy. Haven was working well. They
had not really grown, but it didn’t seem to matter. It was a
devoted fellowship and there was a quiet, gentle spirit when she was
at assembly. Something which said to her innermost heart, you are
home. And she had grown to know she would never leave, and that she
had found what she had been looking for. And for that she was
thankful. Truly thankful.
The
End
“Mercy”
‘He’s
not much to look at,’ said David.
‘I wouldn’t
expect him to be. He’s 72, spent the last 40 years on the street,
so he was barely able to communicate to me, dealing with
schizophrenia, hoodlums, other drunkards and failing health. He’s
been in a bad way.’
‘We are way over budget
already this week, Daniel. Perhaps Vinnies can feed him. They always
take care of the ones we can’t handle.’
Daniel
looked at Fred. He looked at him and an inner voice said ‘Have
Mercy.’
‘I know, Dave. I know. We just have to,
ok. I’ll put my own money into it.’
David nodded.
‘Alright then. We’ll make room.’
Later
that evening, Daniel Rothchild and David Rothchild had finished their
rounds of the streets of Sydney, and in the back of the Bus were 8
lost souls, needing food, needing shelter, needing love. They would
be taking them back to ‘Haven’ to give them temporary shelter, to
personally look into their situation and see what could be done, and
to give them that ‘Light of God’s love’ that people on the
streets did not always receive.
They
had been doing this for some time now – quite some time. They
started the work in Canberra, but it spread Australia wide, and David
continued the work himself in Jerusalem. It was there personal
ministry in a sense, but Daniel Daly also got involved a lot as it
flowed out of ‘Haven’. Daniel Daly and Daniel Rothchild were the
brains behind the work initially, and Daniel Rothchild, who had
founded Haven and given it its initial doctrinal stance, but left
things mainly to Daniel Daly afterwards, took this work of ‘Haven’
perhaps more seriously than anything else. They had good finances now
– had been making more and more money – and they employed other
workers for ‘Haven Outreach’ around the world. But they never
neglected the personal touch. They never neglected doing the ‘guts’
of the work themselves. They knew they had to. God’s love demanded
it of them.
Later that evening in the
Shelter Daniel brought Fred out to the back room, were there were 3
beds put aside for special cases, currently 2 of them unoccupied.
These were special cases which the Outreach wanted to take special
care of – those souls which touched them as particularly in need.
Fred didn’t have a lot of years left in him. That much seemed
apparent. And, knowing how long he must have been out on those
streets, suffering, thinking nobody at all loved him and that society
had forgotten him, mercy and pity of strange quantities had risen up
in Daniel’s heart. He just had to help this guy.
He
helped Fred undress and shower and, when he was comfortably in bed
Daniel brought in some new clothing from the special supplies
cupboard, which he let Fred know were now his. ‘You can stay with
us now, Fred. You don’t have to leave. You can stay for your final
years. We don’t mind.’
Fred nodded, but wether he
really took the information in or not Daniel couldn’t really say
for sure. But the old man seemed grateful anyway.
Daniel
sat with him that night. He sat with him well into the wee hours,
reading softly from the Bible. He read about Samson and Delilah, and
about David slaying Goliath, and he read some of the psalms and
proverbs. Fred seemed to listen for a while, but then seemed to have
dozed off, but Daniel read on anyway. Somehow, someway, this was
doing Fred some good.
‘Haven
Outreach’, in a very real and true sense, was the heart of what
Haven had wanted itself to be for a long time anyway. To start with
funds had been limited – they only earned so much and had to help
themselves before they could help others. But, in time, their income
had grown and they had committed to doing this sort of outreach
service, like the Salvos and Vinnies also undertook. There was also a
new player – or perhaps, in a strange way, a very old player. The
Samaritans. The Taheb pushed his ‘Hostel’s’ strongly these days
as places of refuge for those of lower incomes in a tough money
hungry world. But they likewise had an outreach program and, from
time to time, Haven worked directly with the Samaritans on this.
David had long been a fan of the Samaritan movement, and had met the
Taheb himself a number of times. Ultimately David seemed to have
chosen the Karaite way for himself, but the Samaritans and the Taheb
were his other faith, his other respite of spirituality, and he took
it to heart to work with them were and whenever possible.
The
work, sometimes, was overwhelming. Your heart could not help but fill
with sorrow at the real crap some people had to deal with in their
lives. Naturally, they couldn’t always help everybody. A lot of
people just didn’t want helping, and a lot were too far wasted away
on drug or alcohol use that the life they lived was now a shell with
a ghost inside just wanting more of that stuff. But, thankfully,
there were a lot of souls which David had coined the term as
‘redeemable’ – souls which had just, it seemed, gone off the
tracks for a while and just needed a correction or two. Sometimes a
correction or three, but the Rothchild’s didn’t mind
that.
And nights like these they ran
into ‘Fred’s’. Fred’s, who they somehow had missed in
previous outings, a guy who probably hid as best he could from the
society that either had rejected him or that he had rejected, staying
away from all those who could possibly harm him, even when it was
someone, like Haven Outreach, which was trying to do him some
good.
David and Daniel had given much
of their life to this work. And, right at the back of Daniel’s
mind, he knew that in the eternal destiny before him this work would
crop up again and again at times, and that he would need to be a
strong and resolute ‘father figure’ to those who needed shelter
from the harsher elements in life.
But,
that was what it was all about anyway. Shelter. Helping others. Being
that ‘Haven’.
He watched Fred that
night, and watched him for a number of months. The old man never
really improved that greatly and, despite being able to finally
persuade him to take the medications, he still seemed a reclusive
fellow in his heart, out of touch, out of the mainstream. He passed
on a few years later and, David giving the words at the funeral to a
handful of people, one who had been on the streets with him and known
him for years, Daniel spoke kind words of prayer to God for Fred’s
soul.
‘Father. There are a lot of
Fred’s. This one, well, perhaps he was not that special in any
particular way, but just special in the way we all are in the end.
Souls who need a home. Souls who need love. I pray, make a heavenly
abode for this poor man, and grant him grace at this time of his
journey, grace which Fred needs, like so many of us, from your
infinite mercies. Amen.’
The
End
‘Revelation’
‘The
truth is, David. I am not your brother.’
‘Very
funny Daniel.’
Daniel Rothchild took out a photo of
Daniel Daly and showed it to David.
David looked at it
and smiled. ‘Yes, I know. The resemblance is uncanny. But that is
genetics – sometimes funny things happen.’
Daniel
took the envelope, placed it in front of David’s desk, and sat
there, staring at him.
David sensed his brother wanted
him to read it, so opened it, noticed it was signed by their father
Alexander, and started reading.
‘Dear
Daniel
We have always raised you to be
a good child, and we have worked hard to ensure you had a good work
ethic so that you could prosper in life. We thought this our
responsible duty. I have something to tell you.
When
I was young a met a lady who was on holiday in England with her first
child. She was in grief at being near the poverty line, and said to
me she could not afford to raise her child. We had become friends at
the pub, and I said, in most uncommon fashion that I would offer to
raise the child for her. And she accepted.
I
met her again, in Canberra, years later by chance, when you were 12.
I showed her a photo of you, and she smiled. You were her child, you
see.
She lives with her family in
Macarthur, were we came from. I moved there with Rose to be near her,
for she wanted to see you passing by on the streets. She had asked me
to name you Daniel, but her finances improved when she returned to
her husband in Australia and had other children, another Daniel
amongst them. As you can probably now guess, that was Daniel Daly. He
is your younger brother.
I know this
comes as a shock to you, and now that I am no longer with you, this
letter has been forwarded on by my lawyer at my request.
I
leave you to tell David in the goodness of time.
Your
loving father
Alexander
Rothchild
David put
the letter down, looked at Daniel and sighed.
They
spoke a little more that day, and David went out that night to be
alone. In some ways he was not surprised, and in the end life would
seemingly go on without much change anyway. But it was a revelation
of revelations, and the heart of David Rothchild had taken a knock
which he might never quite get over.
The
End
‘Lord
Chronology and the 700 Time Masters’
From
a place, perhaps only existing in fantastic imagination, a place were
concepts arise, but aware of by certain individuals, Lord Chronology
was busily at work with the Time-Masters. ‘How the Fugg are we
going to fix up this doozy?’ queried Apholox to his master, Lord
Chronology. ‘Mixing reality with spiritual reality and fantasy is
often difficult work,’ replied Lord Chronology to the number one
Time Master. Take Booster Gold for instance. He works his ass off in
the DCU to ensure proper continuity takes place. A bloody difficult
job, but someone has to do it.’
‘Aye,’ responded
Apholox. ‘Now, out on the Real Earth matching up the universe of
the Children of Destiny with their universe will be
challenging.’
‘Let us concentrate on the
Chronology for now,’ responded Lord Chronology, very keen on that
particular subject. We have to work out the events and dates in the
Children of Destiny universe to gradually converge in harmony with
the real universe.’
‘Difficult work,’
Apholox.
‘But someone has to do it,’ responded
Lord Chronology.
And they both
laughed.
“Samael and
Logos”
Callodyn looked at the
screen. Pope Benedict XVI in another sermon. That pope really was
thumping along these days. He remembered his conversation with Logos
when Logos had denounced Benedict completely for teaching legalism
with the Noahide Laws the pope had discussed for the church. It was
back then, in late 2009, when Logos had heard of this that he had
declared the Pope dead to himself, twice dead as scripture
maintained, and then declared the inauguration of the last pope
before his return, Peter the Second.
Callodyn
felt that the ancient prophecy of Malarchi, which they had discussed,
was perhaps being fulfilled. He knew from scripture that Israel
represented the Olive Branch, a common symbol for that people. And
with the promotion of the Noahide laws by the Pope which the rabbis
favoured, as Malarchi prophecied, Pope Benedict XVI was indeed the
‘Glory of the Olives’. Yet, inevitably, so Logos had declared,
Benedict would pass and his inauguration of Peter the Second, the
final pope, would come to be.
Logos,
sitting behind him, commented. ‘The Noahide laws will not work
forever, Samael. They simply won’t. They are flawed from their
foundation. They disregard scripture for the emphasis of the
heretical Talmudic system of Noahide faith. The penalty of cutting
off the head for even the sin of theft is thoroughly ridiculous.
Really, Ratzinger should have known better.’
‘I
guess I would agrees, Yesh. I favour the scriptural approach to that
faith. I am aware of a fellowship, ‘Haven Noahide Fellowship’,
which teaches the approach of the Hexateuch alone.’
‘Hexateuch?’
queried Logos.
‘The first six books of scripture,
ending with Joshua.’
‘An interesting approach. I
do not think that I would agree, but perhaps something to look into
one day.’
‘Yes, perhaps.’
As
they continued to watch Benedict continued with his sermon, another
fine day passing on planet earth when all was seemingly well in the
world.
Eve
and Adam 2
'The Mother of all the Living,' said
Lucinda, and gave him one of those 'Your an idiot' looks, and
returned to her issue of Vogue Magazine.
Jonathon
looked at her - glared at her really - and then reached over for his
french fries, and started eating them again.
'Bullshit,'
he said softly after a while.
'Argue with scripture,'
came the retort.
'It doesn't mean he's going to save
everyone. People - lots of them - are just sinners in the
end.'
'They are not serpent seed, idiot. The sinners.
They are also seed of the woman.'
Jonathon munched on
his fries, ignoring Lucinda's theological point, and continued
watching the cricket.
'I mean, take your brother Mark.
He is of Satan's very own congregation. The fowlest mannerisms known
to man..... no, APE kind.'
'Even Mark has his
moments,' responded Lucinda.
'Pity they never show
up,' said Jonathon snidely. Lucinda ignored him on that point.
'I
suppose I concede that not everyone will be saved. But they could be
if they all chose God. Nobody is a predestinated serpent. That
Branham idiot has gone to your head,' said Lucinda.
'Paul
Saberton doesn't bullshit on Christian theology. The only church I
know, Mamre Fellowship, which teaches the Father and Son doctrine of
God which the New Testament actually teaches,' replied Jonathon. 'And
I've always agreed on predestination. Some people are good, and some
are damn bastards.'
'God's love knows no limitations,'
responded Lucinda.
'And Satan's seed knows no
goodness,' replied Jonathon.
'Blow it out your arse,
infidel,' replied Lucinda, and came and sat next to him to watch the
cricket.
'Fries,' she said. He passed her her bag of
french fries from the MacDonalds meal they had bought on the way
home.
'Yeh, sure. Eve IS the mother of all the living.
But Satan is dad of many of them also,' said Jonathon.
'What?
Is it in their DNA is it?' retorted Lucinda mockingly.
'Now
that is an interesting question,' replied Jonathon.
'Good
grief. I've created a monster,' replied Lucinda.
'Humph,'
replied Jonathon.
She ate her fries. He ate his.
Silence. Cricket being played.
'One thing I know is
true, though,' said Jonathon shortly.
'What's that?'
she asked.
'Whoever made these fries is the devil's
own for sure.'
Lucinda did not comment. She chuckled
softly a few moments later though.
'And I'm not liking
the looks of those burgers either,' he said. 'Cholesterol city I
think.'
'Want to dine out?' she asked.
'I
know this indigenous place,' he said. 'They cook snake.'
Lucinda
looked at him, and returned her focus to the cricket.
'Should
be perfect,' she replied.
'And they say the devil
doesn't eat his own,' he mocked.
'Asshole,' she
replied.
'Bitch,' he said.
They did eat
indigenous that night. Snake wasn't on the menu. Neither of them
complained.
The End
“The
Fantasmagorical Adventures of Insanity Man”
6,013
SC
‘Amazing. Really, amazing. Now
pass the chips.’
Bruce was disappointed – she
really did not give the slightest Fugg as far as he could tell, no
matter how much he bragged about the plot for his hopeful debut
bestseller of all time.”
‘But the title, I mean,
really, its Fantasmagorical.’
‘Is that even a real
word Bruce. I think perhaps you just made it up.’
‘No,
it’s real. Not in the dictionary yet, but it will be. Jus you
wait.’
‘If you say so.’
‘Now,
after Insanity Man defeats the “Sane One” in a battle of wits,
the “Sane One” finally concedes Insanity is true
wisdom.’
‘What happens next,’ she asked, eating
another chip.
‘Well, I’m not really sure. That is
the opening chapter and it is as far as I have got.’
‘Perhaps
you’re Insanity Man, Bruce. I mean, come on.’
‘Look
Rach. It’s cool. It’ll sell tonnes. I’ll be rich.’
‘And
I’ll be the queen of England one day.’
‘You’ll
see, you’ll see.’
* * * *
*
Unfortunately for Bruce Magee, after
about 3 years of solid submissions he still had no takers. It seemed
that nobody wanted to touch ‘The Fantasmagorical Adventures of
Insanity Man’. He finally, out of frustration, deleted it from his
computer and threw out the USB drive.
‘Too much
bloody heartache,’ he said to himself, and went to bed.
The
following morning he felt a little better. His mind had cleared up a
little and Insanity Man had been put to death as it were. And then
the new plot entered his head, a far more sane alternative, and an
English bestseller began to form on the IBM computer in the flat of
Bruce Magee, a happy little sane man busily typing
away.
The
Fantasmagorical Adventures of Insanity Man 2
6014
SC
Rachel Chan, longsuffering
girlfriend of Bruce Magee, bent down near the trash can, picked up
the object, and looked at it. It was a USB device. Funny, who would
throw one of these out, she thought to herself.
'So.
Number One for 17 weeks, babe. 'The Cardinal Sin', has been
huge.'
'I think you brag too much, Bruce. You just got
lucky,'said Rachel.
'Hey, I was born to shine,' he
said smiling.
'Is this yours?' she asked him, showing
him the USB.
'Not Insanity Man,' he said, holding his
head. 'I feel sick,' and he disappeared out to the bathroom, vomiting
for half an hour.
Despite thinking she really should
know better, she plugged it in, brought up the document, and started
reading.
Later on.
'It's
really not that bad, Bruce. With your new success, perhaps you should
resubmit.'
'And become the laughingstock of the
British literary scene. I think not.'
'Old Chinese
proverb say, if at first you don't succeed, try try again.'
'Old
Chinese proverb, you say,' queried Bruce, eyebrow raised.
'Well,
maybe,' she said.
'Mmm. The Fantasmagorical adventures
of Insanity Man. Nah, I couldn't risk it. I couldn't. It would be the
death of me.'
'Try,' she said.
And he
looked into her very honest eyes, and knew his destiny. Britains
major comic writer.
'OK Rach. Just for you, mind you.
Just for you.'
The
End
“Luke
Warm”
6,043 SC
Mr
Warm joined Potters House Canberra in 2073 CE, gladly welcomed by the
flock who, upon hearing his full name, gave the pastor a sly but
careful look and dutifully went outside to laugh softly so as not to
be heard.
Sofya Faraq smiled at Luke,
slightly puzzled. She said a quiet prayer to Jesus saying, ‘For
heaven’s sake, J. Don’t you have any mercy? With a name like his
in our church?’ But LJC remained silent.
He
had made his commitment and was very serious about it, but 3 months
later, despite heavy convictions that it was impossible to move to
another part of the body of Christ, he had just about had
enough.
The pastor, in his mercy, had
gone easy on him, but the flock knew no such graces.
And
so, Luke Warm, almost ready to deny the Revelation of John, carefully
disappeared from the ranks of the Assembly, off to the calmer waters
of the Revival Fellowship.
Going
Home
Paul Saberton was really, and
very truly, pissed off. Several thousand churches in the heavenlies.
Ready to demonstrate his place as one of the Sovereign elect of
Christ, keeper of the doctrines of truth of the New Testament, and
when he passes and arises to the heavenlies, the Whore itself is
there, and Jesus likes her, and all the little harlot daughters are
out busy evangelizing the populace. Boy did things suck. All Brenton
would say was to cheer up because Jesus was just being compassionate.
He knew, in the end, who his true elect were. He must. The word of
God demanded such loyalties.
But try
as he might in his initial evangelistic crusades from his father’s
home, who he was very surprised to find in heaven, assuming he must
have slipped by temporarily for a reward for his good works towards
one of the elect, as Jesus did promise a reward to such people, he
seemed to have little to no success in building Superchurch, the
church of the glory of the Father and the Son. But narrow was the
way, so he would keep the faith.
And
then Satan showed up. Of course, he had always liked Daniel Daly,
thought him very spiritual initially, but thought he had sold out on
Jesus for Noah, and as such two men could not walk together with such
major disagreements. And then Daniel began his campaign of
indoctrination into Haven Noahide Fellowship.
The
first task, from this dark lord, was the addressing of Paul’s
Messianic concerns. And Paul, having arrived at the conclusion that
if Daniel had reached heaven being a Noahide, as well as all the
other people who were now here, he would give him a fair hearing.
Perhaps, in the sense of mercy which God had been teaching him since
his arrival home, he could exercise some patience and carefully voice
his disagreements. Perhaps Daniel, in time, would see the error of
his faulty thinking.
But, inevitably,
the debates were difficult and challenging, and Daniel likewise gave
no quarter, exhausting Paul’s nerves and patience many times by
some of his claims.
In the end,
though, he saw Daniel’s points. He recognized the arguments and
were he was coming from, and could at least understand his opponents
perspectives. And then Daniel had a word of wisdom. ‘Things like
this take time, Paul. Lets be friends – we know how to do that –
and let the discussion come forth slowly and carefully in a spirit of
good friendship.’ Paul didn’t object to that and, as the years
passed, they discussed the issues gradually, but neither side really
shifted.
And then Meludiel showed up.
She preached love as salvation. Paul didn’t argue. Daniel basically
agreed. And they were friends again, and they let the issue drop. The
one in error would find the truth in the fullness of time.
So
they had fellowship, and peace was restored, and things were good for
Paul Saberton in his heavenly rewards. And the future – well only
Jesus knew for sure.
The
End
“Kayella and
Callodyn”
‘I’d do anything. I’d
give you my world. I’d cross the threshold of the infinite, ride on
the rays of the eternal glory, slay demons, defeat devils, crucify
frauds, and even get around to sending you some roses, chocolates and
all that girly stuff you apparently like.’
‘Really
you’d do all that for me?’ asked Britney, her eyes shining
brightly.
‘Fugg no. I’m not that innocent babe.
Remember, all men are bastards. Don’t forget, k. We don’t break
that easy, lass. Don’t forget, mind you. Don’t forget. Hey, shall
I quote Genesis at you?’
‘You are such a male.
They are so arrogant these days. So bloody arrogant.’
‘Hey,
we’re all womanizers aren’t we? I mean, that is what you call us
all, so who gives a flying Fugg, sweetheart. Who gives a flying
Fugg.’
‘At least David romances me and says sweet
and lovely things.’
‘David? Gayvid you mean? That
homo.’
Brit smirked a little at that. ‘He’s not
gay. Shut up. Shut up.’
‘Nah, all of those type
are totally gay, cupcake. Totally gay. He is too sensitive. Really,
he is mush in the end. Soft mushy goo. Bwerrh. Who the hell cares.
Not me.’
‘Oh, I think you underestimate Mr
Rothchild. He really is very advanced in many ways. Really, very
advanced. For example, he is extraordinarily wealthy. How about
that?’
‘An inheritance quickly earned is quickly
spent. How about that?’
‘Your point?’
‘We
go slow. Very slow. In fact we ‘walk’ with God. I mean, he has
all the moves, all the love, all the charm, but there is a teeny
weeny little problem which, in the end, a girl who actually prefers
to ‘Get it Right’ will actually give a damn about. And I am the
master on getting it right, cupcake. Jus you wait and see.’
‘We’ll
see.’
‘Cool. Oh, by the way, as an act of good
faith, would you like a drink of watermelon juice? If you don’t
want one, that’s cool. But remember, babe, I won’t always play so
easy to get. If you are not really, in the end interested, I will
take the hint. I have learned that lesson before and know when to
butt out.’
‘So that’s it then? Britney, gone and
forgotten? Off to the new girl?’
‘It takes two to
tango, cupcake. It takes two to tango.’
‘Fine.’
‘Cool.
Oh, there was this girl I fancied once. Really fancied her. I was
prepared to commit – really loved her. But the Gayvid fellow pushed
in, promoted his angelic name, and claimed her as his own. So, fine.
If he wants her then that is the way it is. I still like her, but
Gayvid is up his arse, so Fugg him.’
‘I get the
point.’
“Vain and
Pretentious”
‘Cool! You want me to
be Fugging cool? Cool people are simply vain and pretentious, replied
Daniel to Billie’s request.’
‘You are soooo
uncool, Daniel. Despite the fact that you have the bearest modicum of
talent in that tryhard brain of yours, you simply have no real idea
how to apply it. You are so out of touch with modern tastes and
styles. Living in clothing fashions belonging to those BELOW the
lower class. You’re crap, Daniel. Crap.’
Daniel
looked at her and smiled to himself. Typical for a daughter of
Babylon. Really, quite typical. Giving lip service to the ‘In
Crowd’, staying cool to maintain her reputation, producing the kind
of material which was, apparently ‘Cool’ or ‘In’. Really, in
the end, he doubted she was worth the effort. She was pretty, had
decent music and dressed nicely, but the Billie who was Billie seemed
now to be something entirely different. A clone of the ‘In’
scene. A product of manufactured style, not flowing from the natural
spirit Billie herself should try to express.
Mr
Daly replied. ‘Who gives a Fugg, cause I sure as hell
don’t.’
‘But don’t you want to
be ‘Popular?’
‘Hey, babe, Popular was a song by
Dazzer. That Savage Garden fellow. And we all know the kind of people
he is in to, don’t we. And, hey babe, ‘HE JUST SOLD HIS
SOUL.’
‘Point taken.’
‘So don’t
have a go at me for being myself. I do what I want, think what I
want, say what I want, and am sensitive when I want to be. All to
suit my Fugging self. And if I want to have double standards and
apply one standard to myself and another standard to someone else I
Fugging well will. And, really, babe I don’t give a shit. I really
don’t give a shit. Because the reason is, agro blokes are full of
violence. And the God I serve destroys violent men and women –
those are the FACTS of life. So if you want a ‘Tough Guy’ or a
‘Solo Man’ or a ‘Body Builder’ or all the other kinds of
egomaniacs, go for it, because I really don’t give a shit. I am not
going to conform to someone else’s opinion of what I should be like
just because they want me to. Fugg the world, as far as I am
concerned. So if you like those sorts of men, then you really aren’t
for me in the end, babe. And I guess that is just the way it
is.’
‘Whatever,’ responded
Billie, and walked off looking for a hot guy to shag.
*
* * * *
Daniel sat at home, put on a
CD, drank some Coke, and felt better. Some worlds were not meant for
Mr Daly, and that really was the way it was. No point in trying to
put a Hexagon into a Square shape. It just didn’t work in the end.
The
Cherubim Urakiba
‘Angel of
God’
(Note: The first 3 chapters are
from ‘Eternity’. The last 3 chapters are original
material.)
Chapter One
Urakiba,
often, remembered the early days of life for the Cherubim. His
brother Semyaza had been greatly admired by many of the Cherubim, so
eloquent in speech and passionate in heart for the Cherubim
community. Urakiba had looked up to him for a long time because of
this, joining him and following his methods which had led Urakiba
also to be admired in the Cherubim community. Yet his twin, Talael,
had admonished him often, encouraging him to be his own angel. Able
to stand firm for his own life not always having to run around after
Semyaza.
Urakiba and Talael were the
secondborn in the Cherubim community. They came from the community of
India in the Pelnaphora district, were Gandel of the Seraphim often
resided as well, he being the oldest and most respected of the
Pelnaphoran Indian community.
Urakiba
had, initially, been a little reluctant to partake of the fruit of
knowledge of good and evil, but when Semyaza had persisted, he had
gone along with the idea, like Ramiel and Kokabiel.
For
weeks afterwards Urakiba had been greatly depressed, very withdrawn
and almost hating life. But then there had come two days of extreme
joy, almost as a climax most unexpected – a time of healing – to
the days of darkness.
He had
contemplated death in those days, as if such a thing were ever a
possibility for an angel. No angel in the community of the Realm of
Eternity had ever died but, slowly, Davriel and others had been
communicating to the realm that, as Torah said, in the Garden of God
was knowledge of life but also, and to be feared because of it, there
was knowledge of death.
But for the
angels of eternity, death was something all of them had yet to
encounter.
Very rarely an Angel did
major injury to himself, in which case the healing properties of
Mitraphon could be called upon to assist the Angel in healing. It
seemed no malaise was beyond the healing ministry of Raphael and
Mitraphon. But, fortunately, injuries were rare, apart from minor
cuts and bruises, and as such Raphael’s great powers were rarely
called upon.
But Urakiba, in his
recent malaise, had wondered, should the mysterious death enshroud
his soul, whether even the greatest of healing powers of Raphael
could recover him from the grip of the underworld, to which he almost
felt destined to travel to.
But, no,
he had healed from the darkness, and when the joy had subsided,
normality had returned.
And now, in
light of the way the fruit had affected him, Urakiba was seemingly
following the pathway both Saruviel and Semyaza had trodden, into his
own private introspective thoughts on the authority of God and
whether such a thing need necessarily be as it was in the realm of
eternity.
He thought on the Seraphim
Torah and his recent malaise. Section 11 principle 9, Melaniel’s
principle, read: ‘In the Garden of God is the Knowledge of
Life’.
To know this life, Urakiba
felt, would be so important. Would be so fundamental to his life. Of
course, the Seraphim partook of the tree of life of the Garden every
century, but the Cherubim only partook so, in the centre of Zaphora,
once a millennium, as this was all they really needed, so God had
maintained, an issue which had puzzled Urakiba.
When
he had first partaken of the tree of life he truly had felt an
invigoration of the soul, and had been tempted, as many of the
cherubim had been, to ask for more.
And
due to that life in him from the fruit, when it had come to knowledge
of good, which Urakiba seemingly connected with knowledge of life, he
had made another connection.
He had
partaken in his early youth of the tree of life. And, recently, with
Semyaza, under Saruviel’s suggestion, of the tree of knowledge of
good and evil. And thinking on Melaniel’s principle in the Seraphim
Torah, he thought on the very next principle, section 11, Principle
10, Davriel’s principle, which read, ‘In the Garden of God is the
Knowledge of Death.’
If life was
good, was death, then, evil? And if he had partaken of the tree of
knowledge of good and evil, did he now have knowledge of death within
his soul? Perhaps, in the very craving for death that had haunted
him, that may have been very, very true.
But,
now, the pain and the passion were gone from him, and normality
resumed. Yet, the questions lingered on. And in those questions
simply being there, which Semyaza also had affirmed, Urakiba
questioned what exactly would knowledge of death bring about for his
heart and soul.
God had spoken to
Urakiba personally, in one of the throne-rooms, speaking of one of
the eternal children unknown to the angels of the Realm of Eternity.
He had forbidden him speaking of her to others, but had taught him
that ‘Death’ was one of the eternal children of God from the
Realm of Heaven, as it was known as. And then he had told him this,
‘Urakiba, Angel of God. Within the heart of death, hades herself,
from which none ever return, the eternal destiny of darkness lives on
forever. If you venture to this realm only Death’s gentle embrace
you will ever know. Unless, of course, those other Eternal’s insist
on interfering. Which they might, dear child of God. They just
might.’ And then God had been silent, speaking no further, and the
flickering of purple amongst the flames had returned to the
persistent green which Urakiba was most used to.
With
all of these thoughts in mind something, though, did become clear to
Urakiba. Saruviel had around him a spirit – a spirit of darkness.
Urakiba had sensed this spirit on more than one occasion. This
darkness was of death, Urakiba had begun to believe. Saruviel had
very early on partaken of the fruit of knowledge of good and evil
and, in a sense, partaken of death. And because of that, the darkness
hovered there, around him, enshrouding his soul.
For
Urakiba darkness, death and evil had now become associated with the
stance Saruviel had seemingly taken in relation to God his father –
one of rebellion, denying God’s authority and the notion of
individual freedom.
And because of
this reality, Urakiba had come to a firm conclusion in his mind. If
he trod water with Saruviel and Semyaza in the way they were heading,
he would taste, ultimately, death. Of this he was sure. And to choose
that, would mean he would meet the child of eternity and disappear
into her eternal dark embrace. And, in that temptation – in that
temptation to leave life completely and embrace the heart of what
could only be called ‘Other’, Urakiba surrendered his soul,
dedicating himself to pursue the agenda of Saruviel and Semyaza to
the very bitter end. And, ultimately, for no other purpose than to
taste the fruit of death itself and see what ungodly paradise it
could offer his soul.
Chapter
Two
‘And the serpent. When the
serpent is grown, Ramiel, it becomes a dragon, as all serpents in
fact do. For the destiny of Serpents is to partake of the blood of
their enemy and fly into the heights of eternity, filled with new
life through death. For life, through death, is the glory of the
Serpent – the glory of the dragon – the glory of the
devil.’
Ramiel sat listening to
another of Urakiba’s endless tales about Serpents and Dragons and
Devil’s from the Torah’s rich tapestry of imagery, but for Ramiel
such teachings, while flattering his now bad-boy imagery and nature,
were the stuff of imagination only, and no practical use apart from
fantasy story telling.
Indeed, for
Ramiel and Semyaza, who had witnessed firsthand Saruviel’s first
exile for the rebellion, and second exile only to be finally forgiven
for that also, returned to them once more, but taken to the heart of
God in repentance and restoration, seeing Saruviel, as many once did,
as the grand ‘Dragon’ of the Seraphim and Cherubim Torah, which
Urakiba seemingly maintained – one destined to lead the coven of
dragons in their war against the children of the light, as the
Cherubim Torah spoke of – had lost its potency as a strong belief
for so many given Saruviel’s current repentance and acceptance of
the authority of God. Ramiel had maintained that if Saruviel ever
really were such a Dragon, it had since departed his
nature.
Ramiel suspected, personally,
that Azazel was perhaps the infamous dragon of the Torah. Azazel
himself, unlike Saruviel, had been born in Kalphon Keep, the
firstborn child of God of the Cherubim to have come alive in the
throneroom of Kalphon. And considering Azazel’s rebellious nature,
he who was the 21st born male of the Cherubim of eternity, who had
become such a dragon in so many ways, often competing with Semyaza
for the headship of the growing community of ‘bad angels’ amongst
the Cherubim, seemed like the far more likely suspect to be the
infamous ‘Dragon’ of the Torah. And in that assumption, Ramiel
was in fact quite correct, unbeknownst to himself. Of course, the
realm would never suspect Azazel. Who possibly could. His name Azazel
was only a secondary name, a strange secondary name, with some sort
of rationale behind it which Azazel kept to himself. For Azazel was
none other than Jesus of the Cherubim, 21st born. Azazel had long ago
joined in with the bad boys and said Azazel would be his name in
fellowship with them, but they must keep his identity secret and
never let his flock know he had joined them, to which they had
agreed. He was the ‘hidden one’. The ‘hidden’ member of the
bad boys, one who was never revealed, only known to the top bad boys
who swore secrecy on the issue.
Yet
Urakiba himself, while he had nearly always viewed Saruviel as the
Dragon, being one who had promoted such ideology for so long, was
slowly coming to the position of Ramiel and Semyaza in accepting
Azazel as the new and most likely of identities for that
role.
Azazel, himself, was perhaps the
most feared of the ‘Bad Boy Angel’s’, and had gained a
reputation around the realm for fierce fighting, especially when
drunk. While it was still true that, while they carried on this
image, they still apparently respected God and attended the usual
celebrations the other angels did. The community was slowly and
inevitably coming to the conclusion that there existed amongst them
two competing forces or groups based on two fundamentally and
diametrically opposing principles.
On
the side of goodness were such angels as Michael and Gabriel and the
other Archangels, and especially Ambriel who was disdained greatly by
those of the darkness.
On the side of
the dark a smaller number, initially followers of Saruviel, but now
particularly in line with Semyaza who remained of such inclinations,
and the ultimate bad boy himself, Azazel, who was generally feared
amongst the populace to whom he was the ultimate figure of darkness
and mystery.
This problem, if it were
a problem, was ignored by many of the senior angels in the community
for much time. Yet, when Saruviel’s reign began, it was queried by
many what would now happen. Seemingly, though, during Saruviel’s
millennia reign as head of Zaphon and the Realm in general, little
did change in this respect and it was only as Michael took over the
running of Zaphon as head overseer for the fourth time, that what had
been happening silently during Saruviel’s tenure became
noticeable.
The darkness had been
growing. Slowly, silently, and inevitably, the darkness which
emanated ultimately from Samael of the Realm of Heaven, the grand
devil behind all the schemes of evil, infiltrating the Realm of
Infinity when and were it could and, likewise, through Samael’s
protégé, fallen from the Realm of Infinity, firstborn of the
Saruvim Angels, Satan, who now haunted the Realm of Eternity with his
other Fallen Saruvim Cohorts, to the purpose of achieving the plans
of Samael of Heaven in his opposition to Destiny of Heaven, the
darkness had indeed been growing through Saruviel’s millennia, and
was now about to strike.
The father of
Glory, from his eternal domain, had spoken with Eve – Destiny –
of the Children of Heaven. And he had pronounced a judgement upon
Saruviel for Saruviel’s lack of dealing – once and for all –
with his legacy of darkness, by countering the work he had earlier
done. He had spoken with Destiny and crafted the ultimate role within
her plans of the final days ‘Antichrist’, the man bearing the
number 666, as a punishment to Saruviel for his failing to rebuke the
seed of evil he had sown when he should have. This destiny would come
to Saruviel in the latter days – in the days of ‘Terra’ – but
he would not know of the judgement of God until years beyond then.
God would leave him a time to contemplate and, ultimately, teach him
why he had been judged as such.
When
Saruviel’s millennia did in fact end, Urakiba had suggested
something.
God had announced, with the
return of Michael, an impending creation. The creation of ‘Terra’
and mankind.
Urakiba, mighty Angel of
God, had suggested to Azazel and Semyaza that the dark angels, or
demons as they had come to be known, seek to corrupt the ways of the
humans and seek to control the destiny of mankind. And Semyaza and
Azazel had both listened to Urakiba’s ideas and, in the end, agreed
and affirmed to them. Yet they would wait many years, for the
creation of mankind was to be postponed. For many reasons, beyond the
knowledge of the Angels of Eternity, God had deemed it important for
the idea of man to be known first, and brought into being much later.
With proper planning came success, for in mankind the destiny of
angels lay eternally intertwined.
Chapter
Three
When the creation of men finally
came to pass, the demons fell to earth and, through Enoch, God passed
his inevitable and ultimate judgement on the evil angels. It had been
a judgement long awaited by the good angels of eternity and, when the
evil had been purged from them, they had been greatly
relieved.
But the judgement of God had
been without mercy and as the years passed in heaven Ambriel thought
on his brothers gone from him, and he thought on Urakiba who he had
gotten to know for some time early in Urakiba’s youth. And Ambriel
had besought his father and pleaded for mercy. And God had spoken to
Ambriel and asked him if no other would plead – as if he was all
alone. So Ambriel had spoken to Daniel, with whom the friendship of
angels had become close, and Daniel had agreed to speak on the fallen
ones behalf as well.
And then God had
passed this judgement.
‘Dear
Children, ultimately, in life, there is no place or no heart or no
evil that can escape the love of goodness. You, dear children, have
shown this. And because of this I speak to you that every heart –
whosoever it may be – which truly seeks repentance before God, can
and will be forgiven through the atonement of the soul.’
‘So
there is hope for them, Father?’ Ambriel had asked, in hope. ‘If
they repent, dear son. If they repent.’
And
with that decree Ambriel and Daniel had been satisfied.
*
* * * *
In the suffering torment of
hades which Urakiba had dwelt in so long, God had watched over his
son seeking signs of repentance, as he had promised Ambriel he would.
And God had, ultimately, seen those signs. And, acting in his mercy,
which endures eternally, God had lead Urakiba to a place in his heart
were he remembered being a simple Angel of God – not of the
darkness – not of evil – not of hate and despair and death –
but an Angel of God, loved by many and brought to life to enjoy the
goodness of life in the Realm of Eternity.
And
God had helped his son, then, and when the final embers of madness
had been crushed from his soul, new life in his humanity in India, in
the year 2010AD by the Christian Calendar, began for Urakiba,
secondborn of the Cherubim Angels of Eternity.
Chapter
Four
5980 – 6000 SC (2010 - 2030
AD)
‘Arjuna. His name will be
Arjuna.’ The wife of Ravi Shrinistan nodded silently at her
husband’s choice of names. ‘It is a good name, husband. May
Krishnah watch over him.’
Arjuna
grew steadily from a tiny baby in his home city of Bombay, choosing
to play cricket at the age of 5, growing more and more competitive at
the game as he increased in age. When he was in his early teens he
had forsaken the Hinduism of his upbringing, coming more in line with
the modernizing of India. And at 19, just selected for his provincial
cricket side, and already talked about as a potential national
representative, Arjuna thought of himself as a modern day Indian,
free from the religious shackles of the past, born again into the new
modern era of progress and civilization. And then, having top scored
for his side on averages for the season with an impressive 83 run
average, the national selectors put him into the national side for
the upcoming test series against the Aussies in Australia. Arjuna was
more excited than he had ever been. Real wealth would now come into
his life. But more than that – a chance to represent his beloved
homeland and face the threat of the world champions from
Australia.
* * * * *
‘Yo
Michael. Watch him bat. He looks good.’ Michael Warne, son of
Shamus Warne the legendary Australian leg spin bowler, came over at
Jonnos’ request and gandered at the Indian batsman in the nets.
‘Right in the bloody middle of the bat. Practically every ball.
It’s as if he sees it with a microscope. Hits it right were he
wants it.’ The leg spinner nodded at Jonnos comment. ‘Everyone
has a weakness, Jonno. We’ll find his. Don’t sweat it.’ ‘Let’s
hope so,’ replied Jonathon Bradlock.
Warne
noticed his team-mate ‘Saad Beed Warner’ staring at the Indian.
‘You reckon he is any good,’ Michael asked him. Saad was
carefully observing the Indian’s style, noticing how he anticipated
the ball well, keeping his eyes solidly focused on it all the way
from the bowler’s delivery. ‘He’s like the Don,’ commented
Saad. ‘Keeps his eye on the ball.’ Warne nodded. ‘Is he a
danger, Saad?’ ‘Could be. They have a warm up match in a few
days. The PM’s XI. If they put him in watch his innings carefully.
Take notes, ok.’ Warne nodded. They would crack the Indian, he was
sure of it. But looking at him as he again struck a ball right off
the middle of the bat Michael Warne knew he was in for a contest. One
hell of a contest.
Chapter
Five
Michael was nervous. Australia
had managed a modest total of 272 in their first innings, dismissed
half an hour before the end of play on day one. India had opened with
its usual opening pair and Australia managed an early wicket with an
over left in the days play. It was then Arjuna came to bat. 6 blocked
balls from Arjuna from the last over of the day, but right in the
middle of the bat. He seemed impregnable.
That
was yesterday. A good day for the Aussies in comparison. It was again
half an hour before the end of day and India were 1 for 417, Arjuna 3
runs short of his double-century on debut. The partnership had just
passed 400 and the Indians in the crowd were going berserk. Michael
Warne didn’t want a double century. He had already gone for nearly
150 runs with no wickets and the series looked threatened, as well as
their world champion’s status. India was second on the table
currently, just behind the Aussies and just ahead of the Poms. If
they won this series they would be ladder leaders – official world
champions.
He thought about using one
of his dad’s classic deliveries – the flipper. He had saved it
all day and felt now was the time to use. He walked in, let the ball
go, and a few moments later with the Indian crowd cheering a
wonderful 6 from their new hero, Arjuna was on 203 not out. It didn’t
look good for the Australians. It didn’t look good.
*
* * * *
317 on debut was not a bad
effort so his team-mates kept telling him after they had won the
test, but Arjuna was still somewhat disappointed. He had been set,
his eye firmly on the world test record. But he had fallen nearly 100
runs short, and would have to wait some other time for the glory.
Warne had gotten him in the end. Another of the flipper deliveries
which had caught him by surprise. For much of the last two days
Arjuna had been on top of the Aussie, but Warne had been learning as
well. Slowly working him out. And, it seemed to Arjuna, it may be the
beginning of a long rivalry. A long challenging rivalry between the
new Indian superstar and the son of an Australian
legend.
Chapter
Six
‘And the serpent. When the
serpent is grown, Ramiel, it becomes a dragon, as all serpents in
fact do. For the destiny of Serpents is to partake of the blood of
their enemy and fly into the heights of eternity, filled with new
life through death. For life, through death, is the glory of the
Serpent – the glory of the dragon – the glory of the devil.’
‘Very funny, Daddy. Besides, you are only a gentle dragon.’
Arjuna scruffed the head of his 8 year old Son Ramiel Shrinistan. He
had been telling him stories from Islamic Bahai literature, recent
stories, for his family attended a Bahai temple in India with strong
Muslim leanings. The stories told of Satan, the chief of the demonic
dragons, and his war with the children of Adam and Eve. In true Bahai
tradition God had sent messengers for many generations to thwart the
Devil’s work in conquering mankind. Ramiel, who had been named
after the Angel, took delight in hearing all the stories of angels
and devil’s and Arjuna liked entertaining the mind of his young son
on such subjects. Young fantasies purely for entertainment. ‘Will
you win tomorrow, daddy?’ ‘We’ll see, Rami. We’ll
see.’
* * * * *
Again,
it was Warne. Almost inevitably Warne. Stranded with number 11 Arjuna
had let loose and Warne had now just claimed him. And they only had a
lead of 127. But that might just be enough. The final session of the
final day had begun and there were only 11 overs left in the days
play. A Twenty20 side could probably make the runs, but India had all
the advantages of playing Test style on a fading pitch. It would be
close. He looked to the skies, prayed a silent prayer to his God and
looked at his opponents. This was the final test, again deciding
world champions. And as captain of the side he needed to now step up.
It was now or never.
* * * *
*
Ramiel looked down at the young
Indian child, his namesake in a sense. Semyaza was standing next to
him, observing the match mostly, but Ramiel was curious about
Urakiba’s young son. ‘I hope to have children as well, God
willing.’ Semyaza smirked. ‘You’re barely forgiven, Rams. All
of us are. He is wrathful, is God. Very difficult to obtain
forgiveness from him, especially once he has made up his mind.’
‘Still, it would be nice,’ said Ramiel, looking down at young
Urakiba’s protégé.
* * * *
*
India was lucky that day. Australia
fell short, hitting a 4 off the last ball, still needing another 5 to
win the test. It was drawn. And India retained its world
championship. They were still number one.
It
was later that day, Arjuna with his wife and son celebrating, that a
strange thought entered his head. He had prayed to God that day for
the Angel’s to guide him to victory. To be the power in the Indian
side leading them to victory. And he had prayed to one particular
Angel of God in particular, the angel Urakiba, whom the Bahai story
tellers had told many tales about and who was Arjuna’s favourite
angel. Somehow, that day, he had felt the strength of an Angel
guiding him and giving him wisdom. It was as if the angel Urakiba was
with him, helping his captaincy. And when they had ended the match
with a draw Arjuna silently thanked God and the angel
Urakiba.
But all that night Angels
were on his mind. Angels and demons. He knew of the struggle in
religion between the saints of the world and the sinners. It seemed,
in this era, that it was a blur between the children of God and the
children of the Devil. But Arjuna knew what he represented. He knew,
now, he served God. He remembered his youth, growing up in Hinduism,
were God was a vague concept, not clearly defined by his parent’s.
But he had faith now and praised the Almighty and it was, in some
way, as if he had made a long pilgrimage from the darkness into the
light. He couldn’t explain it but it was as if he had been involved
in an Angelic war all his life and had somehow come from a losing
position into a winning one. It felt strange in his heart, the
spiritual realm, as if he was alive to it in some way – a way
unlike so many others who he talked to about it but who couldn’t
really relate. But, whatever the truth of it all, Arjuna was happy
with the way God had protected him and his family and led him onwards
in his destiny. And silently he thanked the Angel of God who had
protected him and strengthened him, giving him victory in his darkest
hour.
“The
Impossible Unification of the Warring States of Terravana and
Kadramere”
Terravana was simple in
its hatred. They are an inferior people, and all mankind knows that.
Yet, despite being a significant micronation of 7,000 citizens on the
south east continent of Australia, Terravana was generally
disregarded by the Australian Continental Micronation League as
unruly and plain rude to their next door neighbours. Kadramere were
copycats. I mean, come on, said the president of Terravana. Who the
hell starts a micronation next to another one? And considering the
founders of Terravana and Kadramere were cousins, the latter stealing
the idea for a micronation from the former, they had always been
disdained as copycats, unoriginal and any other such slur which
perchance crossed their mind.
And then
the wars began.
Kadramerians stole
beer first. Supposedly a joke, but with no great opposition police
force to worry about, and the regular mainland Australian Government
not interfering, Kadramere went for it. And then it escalated.
Fortunately, they were civil enough to never kill their enemy, but
there were many confrontations of strong words and
complaint.
Eventually Terravana had
had enough and insisted to the league Kadramere be barred and kicked
out, denied the league currency which had recently become accepted by
Australia itself as a tradeable currency. But the league Supreme
Chancellor had another idea. Unification was the cry. Simply for
Kadramere to acknowledge its unoriginal idea and join its older
brother, as sense dictated. But everyone knew that was
impossible.
Roj Blake was a proud
Terravanian – very proud. And Avon Jennings, a feared Kadramerian
foe, had him on his list as enemy number one. But they were brought
to the council of the Supreme Chancellors table and he put this
before them.
‘Peace must reign
between you two brothers. You are responsible for over 20,000 souls,
so you must be at peace. You two presidents need a United Nation,
with two provinces. It is the way forward, and the whole league knows
it.’ As the Supreme Chancellor spoke those words President Blake
looked at President Jennings and smiled.
‘Well, how
about it? Put to rest old warring wounds and unite?’
‘But
is that not simply impossible? Can we really get along?’
‘We
can try?’
‘Well, alright. We’ll try. And the new
name of the Nation?’
The chancellor spoke up.
‘Kadravana.’
They looked at him, looked at each
other, and both nodded. And thus it was settled. The impossible
unification between Terravana and Kadramere had come to pass, and
life in Australia would never be the same again.
‘Life
in Kadravana’
Jantok Blake had been
an Aussie. Had been. But now, thinking over his move to his cousin’s
province of Kadramere in the micronation of Kadravana, he reflected
on the totally different spirit which pervaded the place. Far more
potential, really. Far more than Australia. Australia was dull,
boring, predictable. Locked up on a legal system mainly to control
its renegade citizens. The Aussie Bloke. But Kadramere, now, was
flourishing. Just south of Eden, Kadravana was a fair size
micronation, with many people. They didn’t have a huge amount of
land, and had built upwards. But they were competitive on the world
stage on the one thing they did have – talent. You see, the spirit
of Kadravana, a micronation with two provinces, seemed to have a
unique culture which brought forth writings and intelligent
literature totally unlike the boring and predictable mainstream
world. It was unique. And they didn’t sell it cheaply. They had
access to the World Wide Web, paying for it from Australia, and
charged in Australian dollars for their fiction and other writings
and music to be read and listened to. And they were becoming wealthy.
In the end a macronation was boring, predictable, and didn’t offer
much of a unique life. Escaping the rat race, escaping Babylon as his
father had put it and then encouraged his son to come join him –
well that was simply the way to go. Out with the old, in with the
new. A new world – a brave new world – escaping the old
traditions which were going nowhere and doing nothing. And as a
Noahide, looking up at the sun setting, he said to himself ‘Thank
God for that. Thank God for that.’
Kayella
and Callodyn 2
'And what is up your arse about Britney
anyway? Hardly a faithful twin,' said Kayella.
Callodyn
locked onto the control panel of his X-Box 3, and looked at his
options. 'Hey, infinite lives. Only 1 Billion bucks for this
game.'
Kayella ignored him.
'Yeh, I
guess I can afford it,' he said, as he provided his credit card
details and paid for infinite lives on 'Wrath of the Gladiator
55'.
'Men and their boys toys,' said Kayella. 'And
anyway, you are ignoring my question. Cherubim Britney is not your
style. Far too cool for the likes of you.'
'So she
tells me,' replied Callodyn. 'But I'm a cool kid in my own
way.'
'I suppose dung beetles do have their
interesting points,' replied Kayella.
'Exactly,'
replied Callodyn. 'Now shut up. It will probably take me all night to
finish this damn game.'
'For a billion realm credits
it better,' she replied. He ignored her.
'Shouldn't
you be off fighting Satan or something, Kayella. You are apparently
the hottest shit in the world according to him these days.'
'He
knows when he has been bested. Pity you don't realize that yet,' she
replied.
'Listen, Callophim.'
'Don't
you bloody call me Callophim. I am aware that I am likely a cherubim
in fact. And your twin, by the looks of it.'
'Yeh, the
theophany said something about that.'
'Boaz seems to
think so also,' said Kayella. 'And when are we going back to
Televere. I enjoy my visits there.'
'Televeran kind of
gal are you?' he asked her, looking at her.
'Maybe.
The Realm is home in the end, but Paradision has a beautiful feel to
it. Very intense at Twilight Hour.'
'So they say,' he
replied, as he started his Gladiator Avatar on the next
level.
'Now what is up you about Britney Spears. It's
not because she's a pop singer, is it? You have your own fame. Don't
see why you need a pop singer as a girlfriend of all
things.'
'Pity you can't sing,' he replied. But then
he paused, thinking. 'Oh, but you can. That's right, isn't it. You
CAN sing, can't you.'
She looked at him. 'Shut up.
Don't talk about that.'
'I know who you are, sweetie.
Can't place you yet. But I know who you are.'
'Kelly
Clarkson, dickhead,' replied Kayella.
'Yeh, I'm pretty
sure that's it,' he replied. 'Mmm. Haven't put that CD on yet.
Doesn't get released to me for another few hundred years. Still being
conditioned into eternity. Or back into eternity.'
She
looked at him. Stood, came over, and took the keyboard from beside
him. 'Pause that stupid thing or something,' she said.
'Oh,
fuckin hell,' he replied, as he paused the game.
She
flicked to the Internet, and brought up a web page. It was a pop web
page.
'That's me,' she said, pointing to a picture of
Earth Pop Star Kelly Clarkson.
Callodyn looked at it.
'Yeh. Yeh, I think so,' he said. 'Any other pictures?'
'All
I'm allowed so far,' she replied, and went back to the table.
He
looked at the picture for a while, and then flicked back to his game.
But, occasionally, through the evening, he glanced at Kayella. He
glanced at her, and old memories from life on earth started slowly
filtering back in.
The End
“God
the Father”
8,506 SC
“God
the Father.”
“Yes, I know him,’ responded
Alexander Darvanius II to Moses statement.
“Do you
love him, Alexander? For peace to reign between you and us, you must
love your God.”
Alexander looked at the lawgiver. A
million responses beckoned him, yet one sufficed.”
“I
will try, Rabbi. I will try.”
“Then we may have
peace,” responded the Father of the Torah.
‘Unity
Hour’
9507 SC
It
happened in a moment in time. In a moment in infinity and eternity,
planned from the mind of God, planned for the unification of his
children. And then, suddenly, they became aware. The Angels of
Infinity suddenly were visited upon from the children of Heaven who
then took some of them to the Realm of Eternity and Paradise as well.
And, finally, Metatron left home and started his long awaited
holidays in the other realms. Unity hour, at the end of the
Millennium on Earth, was the time in which New Terra in the Spiritual
Universe came to its final formation, and the resurrections began.
New Terra housed all of humanity to start with, such being its
magnificent size, but of course, in the very near future, the first
12 planets and then the second 12 planets and then the others were to
come forth. Ultimately a continuing expansion of humanities planets
for their eternal existence.
And now,
at Unity Hour, the awaited further expansion of the Realm of Eternity
outwards, with Pelphora, Brephora, Romnaphora and Kalphora, the new
outer discs being created, to complete the seven inner discs with the
Uniting of the Realms. The Realm of Infinity also accomplished
further expansions. And, in the Realm of Eternity, the firstborn of
the Saruvim finally came to be.
Unity
hour, also, saw the final end to the official economic system.
Throughout the realms it was deemed by Michael that the angels and
humans had finally toughened up enough on their work ethic that
working for a monetary reward no longer seemed necessary. The
original system established in the realm were people simply worked in
roles most suitable for them, and took their turns on the roster for
the more difficult jobs was restored. Money was kept, also, and
everyone was allowed the same allowance with their money kept in the
banking system. The main purpose of money, in the words of Michael
and Saruviel, was that for the ‘collectable’ items of limited
supply, items which had a strong demand for by many people, a
monetary system in which those who paid the highest price were
assumed to be those who desired such objects the most anyway, money
was the simplest solution to arrange the distribution of such good.
But food, clothing, shelter, and standard goods and services of a
non-collectable nature really had no need for money to determine
their availability, so the role-system was established in which
people simply did the work and provided the goods. And this was
deemed, by everyone, wise indeed.
Unity
Hour was a point in God’s life that he remembered often as the
years passed. He remembered the spirit of friendship and togetherness
that people had found, finding new friends and becoming aware of
things which had been in existence for so long but never known of. It
was a time of awakening, a time of preparation for New Beginnings and
a time of real peace, love and joy for the God of Eternity and
Infinity. A time he would never, ever
forget.
‘Ruth’
Televon
511
Televon was a
beautiful planet, thought Ruth. She and her husband Boaz had settled
there, heads of a small Israelite community in the small city of
Paradision on the southern continent of Televere called Androma. They
lived at the end of a street in Paradision with houses only on one
side of the street, the opposite side all bushland as much of
Televere still was. Their next door neighbour was a certain ‘Daniel
Daly’ who had shared similar religious views, funnily enough, to
the children of Israel, himself being a noahide. Daniel was a recent
addition to life on Televere, having arrived not long back. And while
Ruth and Boaz knew he had lived on earth and that he was also the
angel Callodyn, they had not known that he had been the last of the
pre-unity angels to have lived on earth. Of course, angels were
taking on human form again on earth, yet these were newer angels,
ones which had never yet tasted human existence. Daniel had been
overwhelmed to have found himself living next to King David’s
great-grand parents but all Boaz would say is that it was a small
world. Daniel, though, thought destiny may have had a say.
Ruth
had three pet cats: Simon, Paul & Mary. They were named after her
three favourite Christians, even though she herself was not Christian
in faith. When they had first come to new life from Sheol Ruth and
Boaz had studied out the Christian faith and attended church often.
Like most traditional Jews they soon rejected Jesus as being the
messiah, but found his religion in terms of holiness and love quite
appealing. They had never formally converted to Christianity in their
decades attending various churches, but still felt a sense of
community with Christians. However, they were Jewish in the end,
keeping faith in their own covenant with God.
Ruth
remembered coming to Israel the first time from her homeland of Moab.
Boaz had loved her and accepted her. Some of the other woman of
Bethlehem had slight feelings of resentment, but accepted her as they
had grown to know her. She had started obeying God and following his
Sabbath, but there had been no formal conversion processes in those
days to take on the torah for females. It had not really been
expected of them. But in her years on Televere she had made her bat
mitzvah and was now a full member of the Jewish community according
to Jewish law.
David visited her often. He lived on
one of the northern continents of Televere, which was settled by many
Israelites. They had claimed Televere mainly as an Israelite planet,
but there were numerous other peoples on the planet as well, a
population of around half Jewish and half Gentile. Mostly, after
having lived there for some time now, Ruth had noticed that the
gentile population was of people who’d generally had good will
towards Israel. Perhaps, and unsurprisingly, this was why they were
now all together on Televere.
She had visited Zaphon
of the Realm of Eternity just the once with Boaz, having been invited
by her great grandson of many later generations, the Seraphim Angel
Ambriel who had been Messiah. She had found the place idyllic and
lovely and her and Boaz had been on a small boat with Ambriel and
Meludiel sailing over golden lake. The level of peace in those few
weeks had been extraordinary and Ruth looked forward to going back
one day.
All things considered, Ruth was happy with
her life on Televere. Boaz worked in the local community, mainly
helping with farming duties. Televere, as an economy, had a monetary
system mixed with what were felt were the best mix of socialistic and
capitalistic policies to ensure the best quality of life for all.
Everyone had work when they wanted it and nobody went hungry. In this
respect it generally followed the economy which had gradually
developed in the Realm of Eternity. Ruth was happy enough, living out
her modernized life in Televere and, with the new Internet having
been established globally, spent much time emailing friends and just
enjoying her simple life with Boaz.
Chapter
Two
‘Well, how say you,’ asked
Boaz to his neighbour Daniel. ‘It will be a dinner for about eight
of us if you can attend.’ Daniel Daly nodded, generally happy
enough to go along to the dinner party Boaz had arranged for the
upcoming Sabbath night. ‘Yes, alright Boaz. It sounds good. And
thanks.’ Boaz nodded, offered his hand which Daniel shook, and
departed.
Walking back up the driveway
Ruth was on the front lawn, watering her roses. ‘So is he coming
then?’ she asked. ‘Yes, he is coming,’ replied Boaz. ‘Good,’
said Ruth. ‘Claudia has promised to come along as well. This could
prove interesting.’ ‘Not matchmaking are we Ruth?’ ‘You have
seen fiddler on the roof too many times Boaz. Really, too many
times.’ But Ruth really was matchmaking.
Sitting
in his living room, listening to his Televeran CD walkman, a Bongiovi
All-Stars CD, Daniel thought on the up and coming dinner for 8 next
door. Daniel was co-founder of Haven Noahide Fellowship, which had
become quite a large fellowship on earth. He had never married
though, not finding anyone suitable to himself. There were about a
thousand Havenites on Televere, one other living in Paradision. He no
longer managed the fellowship on an ongoing basis, but occasionally
sent in an email on various spiritual perspectives to the hierarchy
which usually forwarded it on to their mailing list. He was retired
in a sense, having found more suitable people to replace him in the
noahide field of ministry.
He kept it
simple now, not overly concerned with finding a mate. Heck, he had
been alone all his long life on earth as one of the elect and that
had continued in his years so far on Televere. He did doubt he would
be alone forever, guessing he would eventually meet someone. But for
now the single life suited his purposes.
Ruth,
finishing off her watering, went inside to ring somebody. Coming
inside she picked up the phone and dialed the number. ‘Hello,
Claudia speaking.’ ‘Oh, hello Claudia. This is Ruth. I just
wanted to check that you were still available for dinner this
Sabbath. That is ok isn’t it?’ ‘Yes, ok Ruth. I have no major
plans of my own so I can make it. What time do you expect me?’
‘Just after sundown, ok. As the Sabbath begins.’ ‘Shall I walk
or don’t you mind me driving?’ ‘Up to you, dear. We are not
that fussed either way.’ ‘I will see you there then.’ ‘Thanks
Claudia. And thank you.’ Hanging up the phone Ruth was happy with
her little matchmaking effort. Hopefully everything would go as
planned.
Chapter
Three
The dinner was going well.
Daniel was sitting next to Claudia engaged in light banter. He could
not help but notice Ruth observing him from time to time, albeit
unobtrusively. He smiled. He knew then she had set him up to chat
with Claudia, but he didn’t mind. Claudia was an attractive looking
Spanish Jew. She seemed familiar in a way, but he could not quite
place were he had met her before. Nonetheless they had a good time
that night and when Claudia invited Daniel to a movie Ruth and Boaz
just looked at him waiting his response. He said yes, and Ruth let
out a small smile, trying not to be noticed.
The
next day Boaz was in conversation with his wife. ‘You know, Ruthie,
matchmaking often has drawbacks.’ ‘Nonsense, Boaz. People who are
meant to be together just need a little encouragement. That is all it
was about.’ ‘I hope so,’ replied Boaz. ‘Well I got a call
from David this morning. He is coming to see us in a few weeks. Just
to say hello. He is bringing Bathsheba so it should be an interesting
time.’ ‘Oh, that is good. I will have to prepare his favourite
meal.’ Boaz nodded.
Next door,
Daniel was looking at his clothes. He had a few suitable things to
wear to the night’s movie. Some black trousers, a nice red shirt
and a leather tie. It was more his type of clothing. He had been a
little nervous having been asked out. That had happened rarely in his
life. But it only bothered his male pride a little. He was somewhat
taken with Claudia and if she was the one for him in the end her
asking him out meant little in the grand scheme of
things.
That evening, pulling out of
his driveway in his red sedan, Ruth ran to his car window and he
pushed the button to open the window. ‘Well, it is your night out
with Claudia, isn’t it?’ Daniel nodded. ‘Good luck then.
Remember to tell me all about it.’ Daniel nodded with his usual
smile
Ruth sat in the front living
room all that night and when Daniel returned at around 11 she was
tempted to go next door, innocently mind you, just to see how the
night went. But in the end she decided against it, happy to wait
until the following day. She would then know how successful her
little matchmaking effort had been.
Chapter
Four
‘So how did it go then? Tell me
all about it.’ Daniel, sitting at his breakfast table, eating a
piece of toast with bacon and eggs on the plate, didn’t really mind
Ruth bothering him at breakfast. But he did like his breakfast. ‘It
went fine Ruth. The movie was great.’ ‘I am not talking about the
movie Daniel Daly. How were you and Claudia together?’ ‘Oh,’
said Daniel, smiling somewhat. ‘I had thought you were curious
about the movie.’ ‘Daniel, Daniel, Daniel. Will you ever learn?
To win a fair maiden’s heart you have to be interested in more than
just movies.’ Daniel nodded a little. ‘I know. I wasn’t born
yesterday, you know.’ ‘I think you were when it comes to women,
though.’ ‘Very funny. But, seriously, we had a good time. We ate
a meal before the show and I got to know her. She said she had known
me once, but didn’t disclose were from, which I found surprising.
But these things happen in such a long life.’ ‘Yes they do, don’t
they. Well, will you see her again?’ Daniel took a bite of toast
and turned to the TV, watching the morning show. He never responded
to the question and a few moments later Ruth persisted. ‘Well
Daniel?’ He continued staring at the morning show, eating his
toast, and eventually said ‘Maybe.’ Ruth stared at him. He really
was difficult to fathom was this Daniel Daly. But be that as it may
she had done her best. Best to now leave it in the hands of heaven
she thought to herself.
Later on,
having related her story to Boaz, he commented. ‘Perhaps the lad is
just not ready to settle down Ruth. You know, some of us go more
slowly than the rest on issues like that.’ ‘How old do you have
to be Boaz?’ ‘I don’t know. But I don’t think there is a
rulebook on romance and life. Things happen when they are meant to
happen. You can’t go rushing them. Daniel will find his mate in
time. And, perhaps, the last thing he needs or wants is Ruth the wife
of Boaz interfering with his destiny. Leave the kid alone. Let him
find her in his own way.’ Ruth considered her husband’s words.
They seemed, for Boaz, wise enough. So she would listen. But,
secretly, if she could bring Claudia and Daniel together, she would.
It was good for a man to marry. Of that much she was
certain.
Days came and went and Daniel
saw Claudia a few more times but, in the end, nothing more
eventuated. She was not for him. Still Ruth thought on her neighbour
often and wondered just what was in the heart of Daniel Daly. Time
will only tell, she thought to herself. Time will only tell.
Kayella
and Callodyn 3
'The instant you realize, in your
inferior male mind, that the power of a woman knows no limitation,
your life will improve, humbled by the fairer sex - indeed in every
way - and serving us with your basic brute strength and crude
mannerisms. We appreciate your raw beauty, if lack of intellect,
charm and every good thing.' Kayella's words were, perhaps, boastful.
Callodyn considered them.
'What is most interesting, I
suppose, is that its just a rock in the end. Sure, its fucking hard.
I mean, you can't break the buggers easily. And it can be made
fucking sharp as well. Cut through every bloody thing with one of
them. Useful for drill bits and things. But, in the end, shine they
indeed might, a diamond is just a bloody rock. But there is the
wisdom of the female. Ooh, pretty rock. Get me one, she says. Put it
on a ring, she says. I'll love you forever, she says. All based on a
chunk of mineral. Amazing.'
Kayella considered that.
'Yes, beauty. Beyond the fathoming of the male intellect.'
'And
relationships,' continued Callodyn. 'Everything is about a bloody
relationship. I mean, they bitch and moan about each other, and
insult and catfight in a way which men are far too civilized to in
the end, and use words men are far too civilized to use in the end,
but then they kiss, and make up, and say to their 'Girlfriend' - Oh,
I forgive you. We just needed a good scrag to resolve the issue. Your
my bestie. I'll love you forever. Hypocrites. Complete and utter
fucking hypocrites. Men? We're simple in our arguments. Get the fuck
out or I'll clobber you ya bastard. But women? Emotional
hell.'
'Yes,' replied Kayella, now glaring at her
adversary. 'The primitive response mechanisms of the inferior male to
the wisdom of femininity. It doesn't surprise me. Your all the
same.'
'And clothes. And shoes. Fuck, sweetie, is it
necessary to have 700 dresses, which you never wear, and are always
out of fashion, and a new pair of shoes in the morning, for the
afternoon and evening as well? Men? Simple. Jeans, T Shirt, and that
shit will do 24/7. Fuck, even sleep in them if we don't give a crap.
But women? 17 trillion designers for the same fucking black gucci
dress. Unbelievable.'
'But sports is where they show
their true barbarity. Men, lined up, with a stupid little leather
ball. And the pride of the nation, mind you, is all hanging on the
result.' She beamed, triumphant.
'Of course, the best
of all is makeup. 17 hours in front of the mirror, 457 clothes
changes, and she still isn't ready when you have been waiting 5 hours
to go out and see a movie, and hopefully get lucky later. And we tell
em 'You look fine in whatever, sweetie,' and she complains 'It's my
hair, isn't it? Be honest. But, no. The greatest of all the prides of
Eve - their figure. Let me see, probably more than 1 quadrillion
diets known to female kind, and they still haven't worked out that if
you simply refrain from stuffing Tim Tams down your gob when you are
at home watching Oprah Winfrey then everything will be
legit.'
Kayella glared at him one last time. 'I'm
going out,' she said. 'I don't know when I'll be back.'
'Cool,'
he replied. 'I'll order pizza.'
'Don't wait up,' she
said.
But he already had the phone out, and was
dialling the number for Pizza Hut.
'Men,' she said,
and trouped out to her bedroom, and didn't come out till the pizza
arrived. He offered her some. She ate it. He had a soft grin all
evening. But she would get him back. Soon enough, she would have her
revenge.
The End
The
Cherubim Sandra
“Dreams”
Televon
511
Chapter One
‘Living
in the Realm of Eternity again, after her long sojourn on earth, was
a period of bliss in its initial years for the Cherubim Sandra. She
had resumed working with Ambriel from time to time, but had gradually
travelled outwards to the new outer disc, further out than
Terraphora, the new disc of Mitraphora. Mitraphora was the third
outwards expansion of the Realm of Eternity, after Zaphora and
Terraphora. It was the same width as from Zaphon to the edge of
Terraphora, meaning the Realm had doubled again in width. But, of
course, circling all around Terraphora the amount of land had grown
voluminously. And now the new Ketravim were finding home in the new
disc of Mitraphora. The firstborn of the Ketravim was Rachael, who
had been the wife of Samael of Infinity on Earth. For a while she had
lived on human planets, but had now taken up her destiny and resided
in Mitraphora in one of the capitals of the Realm. Since the
firstborn, Rachael, had come the secondborn, Lucy Bridges, and then
an alarming rush following that. Now, all told, there were around 17
million Ketravim who now resided in Mitraphora. Sandra wondered if
there numbers would be one day completed but, seeing the fact that
they had recently been developing procreative abilities and having
children – something which just started happening, supposedly as
part of their gradual development, Michael had announced that the
offspring of the Ketravim had, unsurprisingly, a particular name. And
that was the ‘Saruvim’, which meant the seventh group of angels.
And now, just announced by Michael, the new disc of Pelphora was soon
to come to be which would house the Saruvim. And no sooner had
Michael announced Pelphora that three days later Ambriel displayed on
his internet message board, after a quiet conversation with God, the
next 7 discs, each of increasing size. For after Pelphora would come,
Brephora, Romnaphora and Kalphora, completing the 7. Then four more
discs, Dalnaphora, Bethlephora, Nazraphora and Glimmerphora. And
Ambriel, not too subtley, let it slip that like humanity the angels
could generally expect the discs to go on expanding on a permanent
basis. He also let something go by which pleased many of the angels.
Like the abilities to procreate which the Ketravim now had obtained,
gradually the earlier angels, as angels, would be endowed with this
ability as well. It was simply a matter of time.
Living
in Mitraphora, Sandra was now occasionally visited by her twin Samael
of the Cherubim who occasionally made the trip from the edge of
Terraphora to see her. She had grown gradually closer to Samael,
never really having been that close to him in his younger years. But,
like many, she craved a relationship with her twin now.
And
now, having decided to go on a holiday to a human planet, Sandra had
suggested they visit Televon for her to see an old friend who she had
known from earth. A certain Daniel Daly who had been a friend of
Callodyn Bradlock’s and who had met Sandra and developed an email
friendship with. Sandra suspected that Daniel seemed to be one of the
Ketravim, just blooming late. He was unlike most humans in the way he
more strongly related to angelic beings, but still she couldn’t be
sure. So she would go and visit Daniel to catch up and see what was
happening in the life of her friend. Like Daniel Sandra had been a
Noahide on earth, one of few. Daniel had been a big comic guru and
Sandra had worked in one of Callodyn Bradlock’s comic stores. They
had discussed comics from time to time and from what she had learned
of Daniel from the letters he occasionally sent her he wrote some
comics for a small comic company he had been putting together. He was
still not very good at the artwork, but wrote well, from what he had
said.
So, Samael in tow, Sandra headed
to a gate one fine afternoon, her credit vouchers for 200,000
standard universal credits in her handbag, and made the trip to
Televon.
Chapter
Two
‘So what are your dreams,
Daniel? What are your dreams? Do you want to marry, to make a name
for yourself, to see the universe and all its enchantments? To build
an eternal legacy?’ Daniel Daly, sitting at the dinner table,
sharing a meal with Sandra and Samael, thought that over. ‘You
know, Sandy. I have had my full of dreams, in a way. Building Haven
Noahide Fellowship had been a big deal for a while. A very big deal.
Being the founder for what then was a brand new Noahide world had
meant a huge amount. But the work has been done now. And Haven
continues to slowly grow universally. I mean, it really is like Jesus
said. Like what he taught his apostles without holding anything
back.’ ‘And what is that?’ asked Sandra interested. ‘Sow the
seed. Sow the word of God. But, like Jesus did, to really become
famous in the end, if that is what your innermost heart really
desires, leave a legacy of being a child of God. And in a way that is
what Haven was all about.’ ‘What do you mean exactly?’ asked
Sandra, most curious. ‘Well, of course it was all about the Noahide
faith. When I left the church I had been a strong evangelist and
wanted to continue to spread God’s word. Being Jewish didn’t seem
that appealing and didn’t really seem the kind of religion you
could evangelise to the man in the street. But Noahide faith looked
practical and had its appeal. Telling people that they already were
Noahides seemed quite feasible. And it slowly took off and now,
today, I have a still growing legacy. Even now people occasionally
come to seek me out as the founder of Haven just to meet me and gain
my perspective on things. And I guess that is what I wanted. Somehow,
seeing what Jesus did to build the church seemed like the obvious way
to also proceed. Spread the word and build an assembly. And even the
Jews say Abraham initially did similar things.’ Sandra nodded,
gaining somewhat more of an understanding into the life of Daniel.
‘And is that what you really want, then? An enduring legacy?’
‘Doesn’t everyone?’ She looked at him, considering that, and
took another bite of toast. Samael spoke up. ‘You might not know,
but I am yet to go down and taste my time on earth. But father tells
me it will be soon. But what you speak of, building a legacy, it
sounds very interesting.’ ‘It is mostly for the sake of a
neverending list of friends and people to do things with,’ replied
Daniel. ‘I mean, God knows we all need friendships. All of us need
that. And some crave it more than others. But some of us even want a
bit of fame as well as friendships. And perhaps God likes to answer
the desires of our hearts. Perhaps that is all it is.’ Sandra
nodded. That much seemed understandable at least. ‘Well, how many
visitors do you get then?’ ‘Oh, a few. Really, I usually tell
people I am not available but, if they want, I can put them on a
waiting list to see them. But I tell them it could take a while.’
Sandra smiled. ‘Jesus has that problem. Apparently you have to wait
millions of years these days just to spend an afternoon with him.’
Daniel laughed. ‘You know, I think that problem is only going to
get worse and worse. Perhaps inevitably so for that character.’
Sandra and Samael both smiled at that point. ‘You could be right,’
said Sandra.
The three of them chatted
on for a few hours that morning before Daniel said he had an
appointment and would see them again later on in the day. Sitting
there with Samael, watching some Televeran television, she thought on
some of the things Daniel had said. Certainly she understood the
desire for fame. Perhaps that was just a human instinct in some ways.
But it was a most different way to go about it, building a religious
assembly. But perhaps that was just Daniel. And perhaps it was just
the kind of people he wanted to attract to himself. Perhaps that was
just all it was.
Chapter
Three
Well, what dreams did she have?
What dreams did Sandra of the Cherubim really have? She was back home
in Mitraphora, at work, thinking that over. Certainly, like the
Seraphim, being the 29th born of the Cherubim, next in rank after the
70 Seraphim, meant that she likewise had a fair degree of universal
fame. A lot of humans out in that universe knew of her – knew who
she was. She knew that, in truth, she was quite famous. But they were
rarely allowed to visit the Realm of Eternity and usually they wanted
to meet Ambriel or Michael or some other elder of the community. But
she knew she had fame, especially in the way she was treated by many
Televeran’s, who had known who she was. Her face, it appeared, was
quite well known out there. Out there beyond the comfortable shell of
the Realm of Eternity. It was surprising, really, and made Sandra
think this. What should she do? What should she do with the
opportunities available to her with her fame? What dreams should she
let come to life? It was a most interesting question. After thinking
this for a number of weeks she decided to go visit Ambriel to see if
he might have something useful to say. Fortunately she would probably
not have too much difficulty meeting him when she wanted. She knew,
like Jesus, he gave a few days over to his appointments, or waiting
lists for want of a better word. But after that they had all the time
with their own regular families. And Sandra was very important to
Ambriel, so he continued to tell her.
‘Dreams.
I think, Sandy, it is not so much what we can dream for ourselves,
but that which the infinite one can dream for us. If you place your
heart and trust into the goodness of God he can give you dreams
beyond even your wildest. If you will only trust in his unlimited
grace, that is.’ Sandra nodded. As ever Ambriel had glorified God
and given her the insight she knew she needed. ‘And how do we find
these dreams, Ambriel?’ ‘Let them find you. They will, in time.
It is true for every soul ever born and every soul to ever be born.
They find their dreams when they need to. It is just a matter of
time.’ Again she nodded. It was as if this was wisdom – eternal
wisdom – wisdom from a soul who had given long contemplation to
such subjects. She thanked him and the finished their lunch before
Ambriel excused himself.
On the trip
back to her home in Mitraphora Sandra gave much thought to Ambriel’s
words. Perhaps she just needed to wait. To just wait and let her
dreams happen when they should. But how would she know when a dream
came along. And what if she missed her opportunities. Still, she had
to trust. She knew Ambriel was right. She had to trust and assume,
when things fell into place, her dreams would sneak up on her and
tell of the glory she perhaps wanted.
Chapter
Four
9020 SC
She
looked at the script. It seemed easy enough, memorising these words.
Perhaps she should indeed take the part. Perhaps she should. Really,
it had been a surprise. A community from Televon had written to her
asking if she would like to take part in a movie about some of the
angels. The angels were very difficult to reach, but they were loved.
And Televere had written to a number of Seraphim and Cherubim asking
if they were interested. She eventually found out, a few weeks later,
that about 20 Seraphim and 10 Cherubim had been asked if they would
like to star in the movie. It appeared she had been one of the lucky
Cherubim. And so, deciding that this might be just the opportunity
she had been waiting for, Sandra accepted the part. What it would
bring only God knew, but it was something. A start, perhaps. A start
at the glory she had felt she wanted. And thinking of what dreams
could come, Sandra was a happy little angel of God. A happy little
star.
The End
*
* * * *
* * *
* *
“The
Sundering”
35,334 HY
10,025
SC
And as instantly two became one,
one became two and Logos, in a moment in time, found himself seated
in his room in the tower of Infinity and Jesus found himself on a
grass plain in Terraphora, not to far from a keep. For the sundering
had just taken place, the returning of the two beings to their own
planes of existence, for the purposes of the Logos and the 21st
Cherubim Angel of Eternity had come to be and were no longer
needed.
The Celestyel
Angel Aphrayel
‘Benjamin’
10,026
SC
35,335 HY
Chapter
One
‘His name is Benjamin.’
Aphrayel, having been introduced by Logos to her long awaited twin,
shook Benjamin’s hand. He smiled at her quite formally. Very
traditionally, it seemed. ‘So, Benjamin,’ she began. ‘What do
you like to do?’ but she caught herself. ‘Sorry, I mean, forgive
me. I mean, how would you know what you like to do? You are only a
few hours old.’ Aphrayel was nervous, and it showed. Her newborn
twin stood in front of her, looking quite attractive in his trousers
and shirt, with his long brown hair and good features. He smiled at
her. ‘It’s ok Aphrayel. Really. Besides I am as old as yourself
in many ways. I have lived that long in the loins of God.’ ‘And
what is that like exactly?’ asked Aphrayel. ‘Don’t you
remember?’ he asked, in a way which intimated that she perhaps
should. ‘No, Ben. Not at all.’ He smiled. ‘Well that doesn’t
matter. I am here now and we can get to know each other. Become
friends, hopefully.’ ‘Yes, that would be nice,’ responded
Aphrayel.
Samael looked at the two of
them getting to know each other. He was not really sure what he
should say. Almost as if he should say ‘That is my girl, you know.
Go get your own.’ And in truth they had been close again for the
last 8 years especially. It had started as a reaction against his own
twin, Rhaemliel, who he barely had time for. It seemed, all of a
sudden, confronted with the reality of choice, his heart craved the
familiar. The longstanding relationship between himself and his lover
Aphrayel. And he had snubbed Rhaemliel, clinging to his Celestyel
sister, making sure she knew how special she was to him. But now
there was her twin. Now there was Benjamin. ‘Hello Ben,’ said
Samael offering his hand, deciding to try and make the best of the
situation. I am your older brother Samael. Ben smiled warmly at
Samael, offering his hand as well, and spoke. ‘I know you, Samael.
I dream of you often.’ ‘You dream?’ he asked. ‘Well, sort of.
But that is what the heart of God is like in a way. Dreams and
illusions. Patterns of reality which come and go, never really being
concrete like this world, but alluding to it. Always making you aware
of what is to come.’ ‘How do you speak so well?’ asked Samael,
curious as to the angel’s strong grip on his language. Benjamin
looked over to Logos, who spoke up for him. ‘I guess you don’t
really remember, do you Sam. But you spoke vibrantly in your first
few years. It was a language we inherited, in a sense. Almost as if
it was spoken instinctively. Ben understands much of this realm
already, as if by instinct. And his dreams have been with him for
thousands of years now. In a way he already knows us quite well.’
Samael nodded, acknowledging Logos information. It did actually sound
right, from memory.’
‘Have a swig
of this,’ said Sandalphon, handing Benjamin a glass of Scotch. ‘It
will put hairs on your chest.’ Aphrayel looked alarmed. ‘Sandy,
no! Don’t bloody give him scotch. He is barely 1 day old.’
Sandalphon grinned a little. ‘Better to get it into the little
tykes when they are young. They grow up so bloody soft otherwise.’
Samael smiled at that comment. A typical observation from Sandalphon
on human culture. But, funnily enough, Benjamin reached out his hand,
took the scotch and, too Aphrayel’s amazement, swigged it in one
mouthful. ‘Huuurrr,’ he exhaled. ‘That was good Sandalphon. The
burning in the throat. Whoa. Feels wonderful.’ Sandalphon grinned.
‘Look at what you have gone and bloody done,’ said Aphrayel. ‘You
have got him addicted already. ‘Welcome to the club then,’
replied Sandalphon. ‘Better sooner than later.’ Aphrayel stared
daggers at Sandalphon and took Benjamin aside, grabbing the glass
from his hand. ‘Now, Ben,’ she began. ‘Don’t go getting
yourself caught up with the likes of Sandalphon, you hear me. God
knows I love him, but there are far better examples of angels than
the likes of he,’ she said, staring at Sandalphon through slanted
eyes. He just smiled back, pretending to not care.
Benjamin
spoke up. ‘Well, it has been good meeting you all. But, gosh. I am
very tired.’ He turned to Logos. ‘You said there were living
quarters for me?’ ‘Yes. Yes of course,’ responded Logos. ‘The
outer towers. Come on, I will show you the way.’ Aphrayel gave him
a little wave as he left the room and Sandalphon and Samael just
stared as their newest brother left.
Standing
there, staring at the now empty doorway, she could feel eyes on her
back. She turned to look at them both, grinning slightly. Sandalphon
spoke. ‘Well, have you got plans for him. Is he going to be the
one, huh?’ ‘Sandy,’ said Aphrayel with a slight whine in her
voice. ‘Don’t ask me that. You should know, ok. You should know.’
‘Know what,’ said Samael. And she turned to look at him. ‘That
I only have eyes for you, Callodyn Bradlock. That I only have eyes
for you.’ Samael nodded and as an afterthought said ‘Good. Well,
yeah. That is right. And me you, ok. And me you.’ ‘I should hope
so,’ she responded.
They chatted on
that afternoon, engaged in their usual affairs of life. But that
night Aphrayel thought on Benjamin. She thought on the twin who had
now, finally, come into her life. And she thought that, in the way he
seemed like the total gentleman, God had chosen wisely for herself.
Just what would eventuate in the next few weeks, though. Well that
was definitely something worth finding out. It was definitely
that.
Chapter
Two
Ben looked at the fish which
Samael had reeled in from the Rageeta Garden Pond. ‘And what do you
do with that, exactly?’ asked Benjamin, staring at the fish. Samael
smiled. ‘We eat it, Ben. And they taste good.’ ‘We eat it?’
he asked, slightly alarmed. ‘But it is alive?’ ‘Hey, it’s
only a bloody fish,’ commented Sandalphon. ‘Besides, God made
them for food. Apart from entertainment purposes.’ Ben still looked
at the fish slightly alarmed, but seemed to have conceded the point.
Aphrayel spoke up. ‘There are lots of animals in our Realm now,
Ben. We don’t actually eat all of them, ok. But we do eat a number
and as Samael said they do taste good.’ ‘Very strange,’
responded Benjamin. ‘Eating a living animal.’ Samael spoke up.
‘They have less intelligence, and apparently no soul from what
Logos maintains. They are not spiritually alive but creatures of
small thought and basic instinct. And they never live forever
anyway.’ Ben nodded. ‘Well ok. If that is the way it is.’ ‘Yes
that is the way it is,’ responded Samael. ‘Now come on. Get stuck
in with the rod I gave you. We want to catch half a dozen or so for
lunch. A fry-up today sounds ideal.’ Aphrayel showed Ben how to use
the rod and shortly he was fishing, nervously, like
Samael.
Once they had caught 7 fish
Samael signalled that that would be enough and they headed off. They
placed the rods in a shed near the northern towers were such items
were kept and headed for the lunch hall. Logos was busily at work
preparing lunch that day as it was his turn on the roster. He spied
the fish, though, and got excited. ‘Only 7?’ ‘You can always do
your magic tricks,’ replied Samael. ‘If you want an abundance of
them, that is.’ Logos smiled. ‘Not today, Sammy. But leave me
one, ok. It will go well with the lasagne as a side dish.’ Samael
and the others looked at the oven. Inside were 7 large dishes of
lasagne, the meals for those Onaphim who were still with them.’
‘Looks great,’ said Samael. Logos nodded and went back to his
work. Samael turned to Aphrayel. ‘Do you want to show Benjamin what
to do with the fish?’ Aphrayel nodded and took the fish from Samael
and motioned for Ben to watch her. She took a knife and started
skinning the fish. Then she cut their heads off and, finally, slicing
down the centre from the spine carefully removed the bones. ‘You
have to be careful with the bones, Ben, to make sure you get them
all. But the bones of these fish never really cause problems.’ Ben
nodded, understanding his first lessons in cooking.
Eating
the lasagne and fish, Aphrayel was seated with Samael on one side and
Benjamin on the other. She offered him wine, which he accepted and
sitting there, her lover on one side, her twin on the other, she was
caught in two minds. She thought on Rhaemliel who Samael, although
friendly towards, had consistently made no advances towards. And she
knew then he had remained loyal to their relationship, placing
Aphrayel above his own twin. He had honoured her – this much she
knew. And because of that she had made a decision. She would treat
Benjamin well – with love, respect and kindness. But she would
remain faithful in her friendship with Samael. He had chosen her even
above Rachael, so she would not forget his love.
They
spent that afternoon out on the basketball court, taking turns in
shooting hoops, introducing Benjamin to the game. Samael had a lot of
skill at shooting hoops, now, after a number of centuries of
occasional practice, but Sandalphon had not bothered. But Ben seemed
to like the games they played and Aphrayel, after a while, wondered
if the little trio of friendship which had evolved between herself,
Samael and Sandalphon had a new friend in that of Benjamin. He was
certainly very polite, got along well with them, and seemed to like
them. And Samael, sensing that Aphrayel through body language and
various words, was choosing him, was more accepting of Benjamin and
seemed to like him. Perhaps this would be a good thing, Aphrayel
thought to herself. Only time would tell.
Chapter
Three
She was slightly uncomfortable.
But only slightly uncomfortable. Samael and herself were in her abode
watching a movie on the television set, Sandalphon standing by the
window looking out over the city, with Benjamin on the other couch
watching the show. In a way she was embarrassed, sitting right next
to Samael, lying against him, his arm around her shoulder. She was
worried that Ben might feel left out. This thought had bothered her
for the last half an hour while they were watching the movie, despite
telling herself that Ben, from the looks of it, didn’t seem to
mind. But still she had convictions.
It
was then, with that on her mind, a knock came on the door. Aphrayel
stood, walked to the door, opened it and found Logos and Rhaemliel
standing there. ‘Care for company?’ asked Logos. ‘Sure, come
in,’ responded Aphrayel. Logos came inside, went to the kitchen and
returned with two glasses of melit water, giving one to Rhaemliel.
Rhaemliel thanked him and Logos then went over to chat with
Sandalphon. But he was looking at Rhaemliel as if expecting
something.
Aphrayel smiled at
Rhaemliel and then returned to her seat with Samael, who resumed
putting his arm around her. It was then a relationship began. A long
lasting relationship. Rhaemliel, a little nervously, sat down next to
Benjamin, who turned to look at her. She smiled at him, and he warmly
smiled back. ‘Ben, isn’t it?’ asked Rhaemliel. ‘Yes.
Benjamin. Aphrayel’s twin.’ ‘I am Rhaemliel. Samael’s twin.
It is a pleasure to meet you.’ They chatted then, for the next 2
hours while the movie went through its drama and ended. And when the
movie was over, they were still chatting, engrossed in their
conversation with each other. Aphrayel, while pretending to watch the
movie, had turned her head, but trying not to be noticed, often in
the last 2 hours. Samael, though, had paid no interest. But after
they had dinner, and Benjamin and Rhaemliel had left with each other,
Aphrayel turned to Samael. ‘Well!’ she exclaimed. Samael,
finishing off his glass of wine looked at her, feigning innocence.
‘What?’ he asked. ‘Come on. You can’t tell me you didn’t
notice. They were practically all over each other.’ Samael smiled
at Aphrayel. ‘Well personally I think Logos could have been a
little more subtle, but such is life.’ ‘What?’ And Samael just
grinned.
That night, Samael asleep
beside her, Aphrayel considered his words. It had been planned. Quite
obviously it had been planned by Logos. Bringing Benjamin and
Rhaemliel together. As if to solve a romantic dilemma in a most
unusual way. She really did not know if she was supposed to be
jealous or not. Samael seemed totally unconcerned and, in a strange
way, an awkward situation had now been resolved. And considering
Samael’s words she wondered to herself just what Logos had been up
to behind the scenes. Perhaps, in time, she would find
out.
Chapter
Four
Over the next few months a
relationship blossomed between Rhaemliel and Benjamin. In a strange
way to Aphrayel it was as if they were destined to be with each
other. Gradually Benjamin spent less and less time with the three of
them and formed his own little clique with Rhaemliel and some of the
other recent twin additions. But that was the way of life. People
seemed to gravitate towards those which they connected to in the
right way. To those which somehow offered them the most in a
relationship.
It was later on in that
year that Aphrayel found herself in conversation with Logos and then
brought up the issue of her twin and what it was supposed to
represent in the planning of God. ‘God is a deep thinker, Aphrayel.
I guess, he knows the eternal future before us and what will
ultimately work for the best for all of us. There is a mystery to the
twin. A divine unfolding mystery. Life will teach us this mystery as
we continue to walk in our eternal pathways before us. And we might
not always know the reasons and rationales of the Almighty, but they
are discerned and learned over time. Suffice to say that Benjamin
will likely play an important role in your eternal future, as
Rhaemliel will for Samael. That is the way of life. But what more I
can say beyond that, well……. Well that is really in the hands of
God to say, and not myself.’ Aphrayel nodded, consoled somewhat.
Logos seemed to make sense. His words seemed to resonate with wisdom.
And perhaps, in time, she herself would understand the point and the
purpose of a twin. And perhaps, in time, gain an appreciation for the
wisdom of her eternal father for bringing a twin into her
life.
That night, preparing a private
meal for herself and Samael, she was somewhat glad now. The steady
relationship which had developed between herself and Sammy was now no
longer really at threat. The twin thing had come along, been
understood, and now no longer really caused a problem. And sitting
there, whipping up some cream for the desert, she realized that she
really did love Samael and that she was with the right angel in the
end. But what the future held, well God only knew. And as she
continued to prepare the nights meal she allowed the simple fact that
an unknown and mysterious future had always been part of her life and
to simply accept the days as they came and went. All things made
sense in time. All things usually worked out for the best. And in
that truth she had happy consolation.
The
Seraphim Jembryel
The Nixian
Agenda
Prologue
...................In
the years following the millennium and the new era, mankind had
settled down. The Children of Destiny ruled with wisdom, the Children
of Destiny ruled with truth. But, in time, the Children of Destiny
died, and returned to the Realm of Infinity, the Realm of Eternity,
and the New Heavenly planets. And mankind was at the beginning of the
space era - were the galaxy was about to open up, and they were to
discover they were not alone. Stellar One was born in this time, the
Interplanetary solar system, by which it was known, and on farflung
Nix and Hydra, moons of Pluto, contention was common. The Grand
Chancellor of the Stellar One community, based in New York, was the
official sovereign over Stellar One, based on the Stellar One
Council, a body which had risen from the earlier United Nations
organisation, its foundation stone. Technically it taught the faith
in its official dogma and instruments, the faith of the Everlasting
Kingdom established by the Children of Destiny, but not all believed.
And, as the faith waned somewhat, for history can slowly be forgotten
as time passes by, faith was questioned again, and conspiracy theory
abounded from various sources about whether those tales of the birth
of the Everlasting Kingdom were really true. Wasn't it a fabrication
of the Monotheists? Israel kept the faith, and so did the Church.
Islam kept the faith but, soon enough, returned to its old ways. The
Taliban emerged again - some things never die - and Al Qaeda got back
to its old plots. And Islamic State was reborn, moving quickly, and
building a caliphate in its old territories. Strife was present
again. A descendant of Jonathon Kolby, Margaret Kolby, sister to
Alastair Kolby, an Australian resident, took her fortunes to America,
and married a certain Alexander Connor. And they had a child, John.
And a daughter, Sarah. John got involved with science and robotics,
and ended up working for the Marines as a Robotic Engineer. And from
the fruit of his passions was born a new agenda in the war with the
Islamic State Caliphate. Cyborg Q.
Chapter
One
14,699 SC
‘Of course, everyone
knows Hydran’s can’t be trusted. Those fowl snakes have always
thought themselves superior to us, especially on the sporting field.
But a day of Judgement has come, I tell you. We live in a new era, in
this stellar civilization. The old ways time and time again have
failed. Everyone knows that. Pluto and Charon never act in our best
interests and rarely present our claims to the stellar council. So I
urge you, fellow Nixians, join the revolution. Join the ‘Way of
Darkness’ and we will ultimately conquer our foes. Remember, united
we stand, divided we fall.’
The speaker, Roge
Jembray, got down from his soapbox after another afternoon on his
usual crusade and started handing out flyers to the crowd which had
gathered. About 50 metres away a parked cruiser ignited its engine
and took to the skies. As the cruiser headed back to its hotel
destination, the two men on board in the back seat felt satisfied.
They had seen enough. They had seen firsthand the growing
revolutionary feeling on Nix, one of the moons of Pluto & Charon,
and would take this news back to their Hydran politicians. Conflict
was coming – that much was certain. And Nix and Hydra were about to
face a most decisive of encounters.
***
‘So
how did it go today, Roge?’
‘Oh, the usual
turnout, Julessa. I did sign on 20 or so new recruits, which gives us
the number we were looking for. We have 10,000 now. 10,000 souls
willing to put their life on the line for the future of Nix and our
place in the system.’
‘And if it leads to war,
Roge? What then?’
‘Then some will live and some
will die, Julessa. But freedom always has a price. Mankind has always
known that truth.’ Julessa Jembray nodded at her husband’s words.
They were in truth familiar.
‘Will you be at the
meeting tonight, or have you changed your mind and agreed to spend
the night with me and mother and father to celebrate their wedding
anniversary?’
‘You know I would love to, J. But
you know how important the meetings are. I can’t miss them. Not for
anything.’
‘Yes, I know. I was only
hoping.’
Roge, having been greeted by his wife after
returning from his preaching, got up from the kitchen table and
walked into the living room to turn on the holoviewer. He switched
the channel to Nix’s main news channel. The usual mix of politics
and other events. As he sat there, relaxing, he thought on his
struggle – his struggle for the future of Nix, one of the furthest
moons from old Earth, right out near the edge of the system. It was
400 years now since colonisation, and completely settled. Solar
magnifiers gave them the heat and the electricity they needed and
they had ample water taken from one of the ice rings of Saturn. Nix
homed a billion people or thereabouts. The whole surface of the moon
was covered and sublevels went down near to the moons core – it was
its own new world. And now that it had a growing culture and identity
it was proud of itself, and Nixians wanted more. Roge knew that. They
wanted to impress themselves upon the system and, as far as Roge
Jembray was concerned, in a way that would not be
forgotten.
***
The
man in black examined the picture. ‘So this is Jembray?’ The
agent in front of him nodded. ‘Mmm. He doesn’t look that
dangerous. But better to be safe than sorry. Agent 8X, you are
authorised to use deadly force to deal with this radical. But please,
obtain your weaponry on Nix. We want no leaks back to Hydra. Am I
understood?’ Agent 8X coldly nodded. He understood,
alright.
***
The
meeting had gone well. Better than expected really, the latest in the
long rally. They were ready now, the ‘Way of Darkness’, and the
political stage was the next logical step. They had the 10,000
official members required for a political party and, despite Nix
being long regarded as a left-wing haven, the radical right might
just have a say in the affairs of Nix in the immediate
future.
As he drove home that night in
his cruiser Roge Jembray was excited. The party was to lodge its
official application to become a political party tomorrow morning. It
required the standard electronic application but new parties still
had a degree of old fashioned paperwork to fill out as well as
official hard copy documents needed to be sighted, which Roge had
been working on for the last few weeks. He was the number two man in
the ‘Way’, technically, but number one, old John Sinclair, was
more of a figurehead from a ruling right wing party from earlier in
the century. In all practical manners Roge ran the show. He was not
sure just how far he would go, in the end, but he sensed a sentiment
on Nix. People were fed up with the short straw this end of the
system usually got in system resources. Nearly always the last on the
handout cue. Of course, they were largely self-sufficient as a
satellite body, but they still needed the rest of the system as no
planet stood alone in the end. Roge had a plan. He wanted to ruffle
Hydra’s feathers in some ways. Hydra was much like Nix, similar in
size, the other major moon of Pluto/Charon. But Hydra had a long
standing attitude of superiority against their Nixian neighbours,
being older in settlement, and slightly larger in population. They
were competitors on and off the field of sporting glory, but there
was a growing feeling in Nix that if Nix could get one really good
one up on Hydra, well the whole planet would feel better about
itself. And that is the role Roge Jembray saw for himself. Being the
right man at the right time for Nix, his beloved planet of
birth.
Driving along he was oblivious
to the cruiser which had just pulled up behind him. And as Roge
Jembray neared his home agent 8X in the cruiser behind him readied
himself for his assassination attempt.
The
cruiser landed in the port of his home and he got out and stood
looking at his house, a technical wonder in this era of Nixian
history. He reached back down to the open cruiser door, picked up his
GHT567 phaser which he carried for defensive reasons and heard a
zapping sound just as he picked up the laser. Looking around he
noticed a scorch mark on his house and turned quickly to see a figure
in black hiding behind a cruiser just across the road, weapon pointed
at him.
Roge reacted quickly. They had
chosen the wrong guy to mess around with. He had served in Nixian
security details and was an expert with his weapon. So much so that
after an exchange of a dozen or so shots he landed the killing blow
on his opponent.
Coming over he looked
at the dead figure. All in black with and id badge reading 8X. That
sounded familiar. Hydran special agents used that id system. He had
read the action novels about them as a youngster. Hydra was after him
now – that much was apparent. He would have to be even more
cautious in the future. But this was a good thing. It meant he was
being noticed. And if he was being noticed, it meant one other most
important of things. He had power coming to him. And with that power
he would change the history and future of Nix and the stellar system
forever.
***
Gaining
14 seats out of the 5000 House of Representatives sitting members was
a good start for Roge Jembray and the ‘Way of Darkness’. Both
John Sinclair and himself were amongst the winning members and there
was a sense in the party that this was just the beginning. Just the
beginning. After he had survived the assassination attempt the news
had been leaked that Hydra had been responsible and there was a
growing undercurrent in Nix now, more so than ever. Nix wanted a
piece of Hydra. They wanted to stand up to their older
brother.
At the next election they
increased to 158 seats and were officially a minor party in the
House. They also gained 2 Senators. While previously they’d really
only had voting power in the house of Reps, Senator’s carried a lot
more weight. And Roge had foregone his seat in the house of Reps to
take up one of the Senatorial positions for the party. Now he had a
degree of power – real power. They were a far right party, but the
right wing opposition occasionally had words with them and sought
their support on voting issues from time to time. Roge now had some
influence.
It was at this time Roge
formed ‘Children of the Night’, a long planned part of his
agenda. The ‘Children’ were special operatives of the party,
which Roge worked hard to gain official power for, which had just
been granted by a special sitting assembly. Even the left wing
recognized some of the sentiments the ‘Way’ represented. The
‘Children’ were then given the resources to accomplish their
objectives.
Nix had a long standing
arrangement with Hydra on supply ships from the inner system, but
when special operatives of the ‘Children’ amongst other key
groups started abducting the robotic operated supply ships arriving
from the inner system which were due for Hydra, Hydra eventually
noticed. And hostilities began.
It
started slow. Firstly official words from one President to another
seeking clarification of the situation and the hope diplomacy would
end the problem. But Nix remained insistent of their innocence, which
both parties knew was not true. Nobody really expected war, in the
end. Nix had a grudge, nothing more. And their agenda to gain revenge
on their long rivals was seen just as that. And because of that,
after the first official space conflict between Hydra and Nix in
which a Hydran battle-cruiser was destroyed, the Hydran President
decided that Hydran’s simply did not want war. They would wait this
one out.
***
It
was 4 years into the conflict that the inner system finally decided
to act. A special council was convened on Earth, head planet of the
stellar system. Representatives of Nix and Hydra were summoned and
the Grand Chancellor spoke directly with Roge Jembray, Nix’s
selected representative. It was an illuminating conversation and
years later Roge Jembray had finally acknowledged the wisdom in the
Chancellors words.
The Chancellor had
said this to Roge, in private, at the seat of stellar harmony in New
York. ‘Roge, we humans have a long history of conflict. Our history
is rife with such a reality. Indeed, this represents human nature in
so many ways. And while we often react to the oppression of others in
hostility and hatred, as a civilization we have slowly learned the
lessons that war and pride must give way to peace and forgiveness for
the good of all of us. The ancient United Nations was a beacon in the
early days of a united humanity, symbolizing the best in us to get
along on a global scale. In those days there was so much racial and
religious division that many despaired of ever finding universal
peace. But we persevered as a people and, in the end, saw the light.
Be it the creator’s grace, or just that funny thing called ‘love’
we eventually learned enough to know how to get along as a people and
respect each other. And that, I think dear Roge, is what Nix and
Hydra must learn. It is not unique, your situation. Civilizations
have gone through such dilemmas many times before. So I urge you,
dear Roge Jembray. Learn from them. Learn from their mistakes and
successes and learn that getting along, being at peace, is always
preferred to a life on the edge, in which safety has vanished. I am
sure, in the end Roge Jembray, you will do the right
thing.’
Later on that year the
conflict between Nix and Hydra had largely died down. The council
seemed to have resolved most of the issues that Nix in particular
had. And Roge, as he continued in his political life, thought often
on the wisdom of the Grand Chancellor and eventually nodded to
himself that he had indeed spoken with a wise man. And, as the years
past, and Nix and Hydra grew more into friends than rivals Roge
Jembray acknowledged that there was wisdom in the way of peace. There
was wisdom indeed.
The End
The
Wars of John Connor and Cyborg Q
Cyborg Q
'Cyborg
Q is not an Advanced model. He simply is what he is - the best of
current technology,' said the designer John Connor.
'And
he is human?' asked the reporter. 'Beneath all that -
metal?'
'What's left of one. He's a six million dollar
man. Well, six billion, actually. He's a marine, fallen in battle,
without parents or family. We talked to him near the end of his life
and said the things we could do with cybertechnics these days could
extend his time. He wouldn't be what he was, but life would go on. He
didn't hesitate. Said go for it. The tumor in his brain was killing
him, and what is left of that mind, well. Well he's no longer what he
was. No longer who he was. We programmed him. Made him our best
military weapon, a potential prototype of what may come. So, here he
is.'
Cyborg Q walked into the room, saluted the small
press corps, and said 'I am a servant of the flag of the United
States of America. The Islamic State Caliphate will feel my wrath.
Cold, hard, steel,' said the Cyborg, in a vaguely human, but mostly
electronic voice.
'How deadly is he?' asked a
reporter.
'Cyborg Q. Shoot the apple,' said John
Connor. John tossed an apple in the air, and Cyborg Q instantly
focused his eye, and a laser shot out and pulverized the apple, it
landing in a mess on the floor.
'He can kill. He WILL
kill,' said John.
'Does he eat?'
'He
likes cat food,' said John. 'Just what he prefers. Basic
protein.'
The reporters wrote notes, and soon the
press conference of the Special Division Q of the Marine Corps was
over.
'You'll see action soon enough,' said John to
the Cyborg. It's red eyes simply glowed in response.
The
End
Cyborg Q 2
Cyborg Q was at rest. He
was dreaming, and his power cells were being charged. Clouds floated
in his mind, and a Muslim Warrior approached. It was another cyborg,
bigger than himself.
'I am Cyborg X, infidel,' said
the Cyborg, and drew forth a large scmitar. 'Some heavy shit is about
to go down, yankee boy.'
And he woke,
frightened.
'Stand at attention Cyborg Q,' said John
Connor, coming into the room.
'Yes Sir, John Connor
Sir, Sir,' said Cyborg Q, rising instantly to his feet. He stood
there, and farted a quick blast.
John Connor waved
away the smell from his face. 'Quite toxic stench there, Cyborg
Q.'
'I changed my cat food,' replied the
Cyborg.
'Fascinating,' said John. 'Your first mission
has come up. You'll be joining Division Q Gamma Corps into Iraq. We
have an opening just west of Baghdad. Babylon. There are
opportunities for your work.'
'Islamic scum shall
die,' said Cyborg Q.
'That's the spirit,' said John.
'You have one agenda. Accompany Gamma Corps into battle, and kill the
bastards.'
'I shalt verily kill the bastards,' replied
Cyborg Q.
'Have you been reading that King James
Version again?' asked John.
'Unit, Corps, God &
Country,' replied the Cyborg.
'Whatever,' replied
John. 'You leave in the morning.'
'Yes sir, John
Connor Sir, Sir,' replied the Cyborg.
'Just John,'
said John.
'Yes Sir John, Sir,' said the
Cyborg.
'Return to your sleep,' said John. 'You'll
need it.'
The Cyborg slept again. And dreamed
again.
'I shall lick your blood from your decapitated
armpit,' said Cyborg X.
'Die Muslim Scum,' said Cyborg
Q. But he was frightened.
The End
Cyborg
Q 3
'Shall we send in the Cyborg, Attilla?' asked the
ISIS fighter, Abdul.
Attilla the Killer, as he was
known, Lord of Babylon, recently under fire from his superiors for a
breach in Babylon's defences, looked at the section of the city which
had become a stronghold for the western troops.
'Abdul.
A war is not won in the first battle,' replied Attilla.
'We
have had 700 mutherfuckin battles for this damn city. Time to send in
the frikkin Cyborg,' said Abdul.
'Patience -
mutherfucka - replied Attilla. You shall taste American blood soon
enough.'
In the eastern section of Babylon,
John Connor looked out through binoculars. 'They're not using
missiles much,' he said.
'They value the city,' said
Sergeant Smith. 'They rarely use them here. It is revered to
them.'
'Rumor is they have a wasp or something. Aren't
they illegal in warfare?'
'I doubt ISIS cares about
the legalities of warfare very much,' replied the sergeant. Besides.
It's not a Wasp. It's human. Armoured, but human. Built into its
body.'
'A cyborg?' queried John, surprised.
'Cyborg
X,' replied the marine.
'For fuck's sake,' replied
John.
Shots rang out from time to time, snipers taking
aim, but the American shielding was strong. It was a battle were
every inch was gained with precision and care.
'How
tough is he, then?' asked the sergeant. 'Can you just send him in?
Can he take it?'
John considered the scenario. 'He has
knowledge. Of old battles. They are still in there. The armour - they
won't penetrate easily. Ok.'
A little later, armed
with a GHT X400, Cyborg X appeared on the streets in front of the
American sanctuary. He strolled in for a bit, but no shots were being
fired.
'It's a frikkin cyborg,' said
Abdul.
'I know it's a frikkin cyborg,' responded
Attilla. He picked up his radio mic and spoke. 'Send in X. Let's see
what this pretty boy is made of.'
Cyborg X
appeared, and slowly approached Cyborg Q. He took out a large metal
Scimitar, and snarled at his adversary.
'Come to play,
have we Yankee boy?
Cyborg Q kneeled, put his rifle by
his side, and focused his laser eye. He connected with the crotch of
Cyborg X, who stood there for a moment, taking the pain, before a
wave energy shield sprung up, protecting his crotch.
'Hot
Cock?' asked Cyborg Q.
Cyborg X just nodded his head
knowingly. 'The Christian has a sense of humor. Good. Killing you
will give me a good laugh.' Cyborg X manouvered slowly to his right.
He knelt likewise, and took out a dagger, flicking it quicker than
you could blink at Cyborg Q. It sliced through a small section of
skin on his exposed wrist. Cyborg Q shook his wrist a little.
'He
likes the old ways,' said Cyborg Q. 'Fine.' He laid his rifle down,
and spoke to Cyborg X. 'I have dismantled my laser, and dismantled my
shield defences.'
Cyborg X nodded. 'The Yankee has
balls. My dog will enjoy eating them. He approached slowly, and stood
face to face with Cyborg Q, glaring into his eyes. Cyborg Q glared
back with equal hostility. Then he stood back a bit, and hit Cyborg Q
in the gut. Cyborg Q grunted.
'Cunt,' he said to
Cyborg X. He caught his breath, and grabbed at Cyborg X's hair, and
ripped out a few pieces.
And then they got
serious.
The fighting was raw, uncivilized, and when,
Cyborg X was exhausted, and was held down, Cyborg Q reached for his
Scimitar, raised it high, and struck down with might, severing Cyborg
X's arm at the shoulder. The scream of pain was intense. Cyborg Q
stood back, watching, as Cyborg X gingerly got to his feet, and
turned, and walked away. But he turned back, looked at Cyborg Q, and
murmurred 'Humph'. Then he retreated back to his enclave. Cyborg Q
picked up the scimitar, his trophy, and returned to base.
Later,
John Connor was going over the repairs in his creation, and looked
right at Cyborg Q.
'I don't think we have seen the
last of that guy?'
'I'm counting on it,' replied the
advanced military robotic warrior.
The End
Cyborg
Q 4
Alastair Kolby was an Austrlian resident, living
in Kambah in Tuggeranong, Canberra, in Australia. His sister,
Margaret, had left to America, and married an Alexander Connor, who's
son, John, was currently standing next to Alastair in Mt Stromlo
observatory, on the western edge of Canberra.
'Look,'
said Alastair.
John looked through the
telescope.
'Do you see it?' asked Alastair.
'Yes.
Clearly enough. It's an asteroid, or something. A weird shape,
though. Symmetrical.'
'We've blown up the image. Over
here,' said Alastair.
John followed him to a
workstation, Cyborg Q hovering by John's side, and looked at
photographs of the apparent asteroid, magnified.
'No,
no that's not possible. We don't have anything that far out in
space,' said John.
'No we don't,' replied Alastair.
'And that's the point. We're not alone. That, my dear friend, is an
alien space station.'
John looked at the image, again,
closely. It was clearly a design of sorts, the shape of the image was
obvious. It was no natural phenomenon.
'Have you
reported this?' asked John.
'Nasa has been informed. A
few others. Our government knows. Apparently a deep space probe is
being organised. It's a long way out, but with current advances in
technology, it should only take a few years to get there. It's
aliens, Johh. Aliens.'
John looked at the image again.
It was certainly something compelling.
Later,
John was speaking with Cyborg Q.
'So, what do you
think, Cyborg Q. Aliens? Do they exist?'
'If they
bleed, we can kill them,' replied Cyborg Q.
'You are a
marine,' replied John dryly. 'Well, in the morning we have a short
visit to a local Canberra school. You will be on show as the latest
addition to the fight against terrorism. Be on your best, ok.'
'I
shalt verily be noble of heart,' replied the cyborg.
'Great.
You do that,' said John.
'Sir Cyborg Q, sir.
Why does Islam make war on us all the time? Why can't they let us
be?' asked the Tuggeranong school kid of Primary age.
'I
shalt quote the Scripture,' said the Cyborg. Regarding Abraham's
firstborn. " And the angel of the Lord said unto her, Behold,
thou art with child and shalt bear a son, and shalt call his name
Ishmael; because the Lord hath heard thy affliction. And he will be a
wild man; his hand will be against every man, and every man's hand
against him; and he shall dwell in the presence of all his brethren."
Isaac, born later, was the child of Abraham upon whom the Kingdom of
God was built. But the Lord also blessed Ishmael, and built nations
from Abraham's firstborn. Yet, as scripture says, and as Islam
practices time and again, he shall be a wild man, his hand against
every man and every man's hand against him. Islamic State, Al Qaeda,
the Taliban. All the extremists. They are inevitable. It is the word
of God in action. It is the way of things,' said the Cyborg in his
dry, computer-like voice.
The children of the Anglican
school nattered on that idea with each other, and the teacher took
control.
'Please thank Cyborg Q, our American
Episcopalian cousin,' said the teacher.
'Thank you
Cyborg Q,' the kids sang in unison.
Later,
'You did great,' said John. 'The scripture you quoted was - actually
- appropriate.'
'The Lord's will be done,' said Cyborg
Q.
'Amen,' replied John Connor.
The
End
Cyborg Q 5
It was a cold and
blustery weekend, and John and Cyborg Q were back home, at the
office, shooting the shit. John had been thinking recently about
Cyborg Q and his motivation in battle. He fought hard, and was
completely dedicated. Much of it was his programming, but there was
an X Factor at work also. Something MORE than the computations of
John's best alogorithms. He looked at the Cyborg as it was charing,
and decided to query him on the matter. 'Who inspires you, Cyborg Q?
You seem to have this motivation more than ordinary - men.'
The
Cyborg looked at John, seemingly thinking over the question.
'Sergeant Daniel Joseph Daly born on November 11, 1873. He was a
member of the United States Marine and one of only nineteen men,
including seven Marines, to have received the Medal of Honor twice.
Of the Marines who are double recipients, only Daly and Major General
Smedley Butler received their Medals of Honor in two, separate
conflicts. Daly is said to have yelled, "Come on, you sons of
bitches, do you want to live forever?" to the men in his company
prior to charging the Germans during the Battle of Belleau Wood in
World War I. Major General Butler described Daly as, "The
fightin'est Marine I ever knew!" Daly reportedly was offered an
officer's commission twice to which he responded that he would rather
be, "...an outstanding sergeant than just another officer.' His
motivation inspires me,' said Cyborg Q. 'It is the spirit of the
marines. Live forever. Unit, Corps, God, Country. Mess with the
marines and there will be - trouble,' said the
Cyborg.
'Fascinating,' replied John. 'Was he any
relation to Daniel Thomas Andrew Daly? The famous Noahide?'
'Not
aware of any direct link,' replied the Cyborg. 'They were Daly
clansmen, but I have no information connecting the two apart from
that.'
'Right,' said John, and sighed. He went to the
small office fridge, brought out a can of Coca Cola, opened it and
started sipping.
'We have some heavy shit coming up,
CQ,' said John. 'In Madagascar. There is a terrorist faction of Al
Qaeda operating in the south, bombing places here and there. The
Madagascan government has invited the US to intervene.'
'Muslim
scum shall die,' said the Cyborg.
'Yeh. Die,' said
John, now amused at the Cyborg's rhetoric on that issue. It was the
Christian fundamentalism in him, he had concluded.
'So
sleep tight, and we'll be off soon enough. Oh, and how about giving
the scriptures a rest for a while. While I am sure Daniel Joseph Daly
appreciates your zeal for eternity, it's starting to give me a
headache. I am more of a rational thinker.'
'Science
and Scripture are in perfect harmony,' replied the Cyborg.
'You
bet,' said John, and excused himself, and went off to find some
rest.
The Cyborg, whose power recharge was complete,
disconnected the cords, and laid down on his rest station. But he
though on John's words, and agreed to be less zealous in public. Some
things, however true to someone, were not necessarily everyone else's
cup of tea.
The End
Cyborg Q 6
'The
village has been scouted, and we have some heat readings that they
have military equipment in there,' said the Madagascan army
officer.
'We can send him in. Solo,' said John. 'I'm
sure he can handle it.'
'There's a problem. The shape
of one of the weapons. It looks like - well - a mini wasp.'
John
stared at the officer. 'Nasty bastards Al Qaeda. I shouldn't be
surprised. I'll advise caution to CQ. But we have little
choice.'
Cyborg Q, approaching through the
jungle, armed with is GHT rifle, spied the village ahead. He could
here voices, shouts, some of them even in ancient Arabic, a language
mostly dead in the world, as English had become the International
tongue, but Muslim diehards occasionally used it. He focused his
telescopic vision and spied guards on the outskirts of the camp. It
was Al Qaeda all right. He was concerned - a little scared. If it was
a wasp, sure he was Cyborg Q. But wasps were deadly, even small ones.
He would have to be cautious.
He approached through
the jungle, treading softly, which his programming allowed with
precision, and crept up to the outskirts of the village. Taking aim
he shot, the silencer keeping the bullets silent, and killed 3 of the
guards. He got up, continued on, and came to the edge of a building.
He peered around the corner, and there were a bunch of about a dozen
terrorists in the centre of the village, busy with their weapons and
drinking alcohol by the looks of it. Somewhat surprising for Muslims,
but they were terrorists in the end. He spied a young lady, dressed
in a red mini skirt, topless. He classified her in his programming as
a civilian and would exercise caution.
'Time to kill,'
he said to himself, and turned the corner, marching right into the
action.
They spied him soon enough, grabbed their
weapons, and started firing. His wave energy shielding sprang up, and
the bullets which were accurate bounced off it. He took aim and shot
after shot, he killed them, bullet to the head, deadly accuracy, one
after one. Soon the camp was a scene of vicious bloodshed, and he was
left alone. But then he heard a whirring sound, and turned. It was
quick, and lunged right at him, and 7 of its titanium blades spliced
out, attacking his metal exterior. Nasty bloody wasp, he thought to
himself. It was shooting laser bolts as well from its central chest
unit, but his wave energy deterred most of them. But the blades were
a different matter. The wasp grasped him, and a drill from one of its
arms came forth, and started hammering against his skull. He hated
wasps. They were the nastiest of military hard core. He analysed it
quickly, his programming feeding him data on the unit type, and found
its weakness. A dark blade suddenly emerging from CQs arm, he plunged
it into a certain section of the Wasps midrift, and sparks went off.
The wasp suddenly fell quiet, and collapsed on the ground. He had
destroyed its CPU.
'Die Yankee Scum,' yelled a voice.
It was another fighter, who had engaged the Wasp, and he was aiming a
handheld missile shooter at CQ. CQ, calmly, aiming his eye laser
blaster, focused on the terrorists skull, initiated the bolt, and it
sprang forth, contacting with the terrorist right eye, quickly
penetrating his skull, and killing him. The missile had been fired
before he died, but Cyborg Q effectively evaded it. He stood there a
moment, and focused his bionic hearing unit. He listened, could
detect no other noises, apart from the screaming woman, who had been
cowering all the time.
'Cyborg Q to base,' said CQ,
through his radio mic. 'Mission accomplished. Send in the clean up
team.'
Later on John was handing a blanket to
the Madagascan lady, who said she had been captured, and was from the
village. The rest of the villagers had been killed when Al Qaeda had
taken it hostage, but they had used her for their sexual
pleasures.
'It's a dirty world, Cyborg Q,' said John
to CQ.
'But somebody has to clean it up,' were the
sarcastic words in response of Division Q's most lethal
operative.
The End
Cyborg Q 7
'Are
you recharged?' asked Johh, coming into the office.
Cyborg
Q nodded.
'We're off then.'
'Where?'
asked the Cyborg.
'Nix,' replied John.
'Planet
Nix? Moon of Pluto?' queried the Cyborg.
'Exactly,'
replied John. 'There is an observatory there, a deep space one, were
there is less interference from the light of the sun and we get a
better picture of deep space. I've been chatting with Nasa about
Alastair's discoveries, and I've been asked to go up there and
investigate things a bit. The Pentagon wants you to accompany me, as
there is some trouble at the moment. The Grand Chancellor has settled
some of the disputes between the Nixian's and their long time
nemeses, the Hydran's, but rogue groups are at work, causing tension
between the two. They have never liked each other very much. Your
coming for my protection, mainly, but you have been judged, after the
Madagascan incident, an effective tool against terrorism and
espionage. You have the qualities they want, so we're headed for
space.'
'Space it is,' replied the Cyborg, staring at
John with those cold, impenetrable, eyes.
The
trip took a while, but travel in Stellar One, as was coined the term
of the Interplanetary Solar System of humanity, was becoming more
advanced every year. Soon enough they had arrived on Nix, and were
greeted by the politican 'Roge Jembray.'
'Nix is
pleased to have you,' said Roge to John, looking at the Cyborg. 'He
seems pretty lethal. Cyborg or robot?'
'Cyborg,'
replied John. 'There is a human beneath all of that. What is left of
one.'
'Fascinating,' said Roge.
They
stayed the night at a military compound, and in the morning were
taken to Nix's deep space observatory. A man in white greeted him,
and showed him to the telescope.
'We have your
specifications,' said the scientist. 'This is what we have. Take a
look.'
John peered through the telescope, and was
surprised. The picture was much clearer, and larger. It was a space
station, no doubt. And there appeared to be lights lit up all over
it.
'These are the photographs we have blown up,' said
the scientist. 'Its about a dozen light years away, so the history of
it is a dozen years old. Takes the light that long to reach us,
naturally.'
'Neither here nor there,' replied John,
looking at the snaps.
'We have some kids, here on
Nix,' said the scientist. 'The Stargazers, as they have coined the
term. They have a club which started a few months ago, and dreams of
travelling outwards and finding other worlds. This news is very big
on Nix at the moment. It's all over the media.'
'Not
surprising. Alien life confirmed at last. Why wouldn't it be
big?'
'What do they say about it on earth?' asked the
scientist.
'Not much. Not yet. I sort of represent
preliminary investigations on the issue.'
'Well, its
real enough,' said the Scientist. 'The question is - what do we do
about it?'
'That is indeed the question,' replied
John, looking at the photographs.
A few days
later they were again in Roge Jembray's company. 'I'm glad you are
happy with what you came to find out. Now, as I understand it, Cyborg
Q here has been sent to Nix, in particular, as a peacekeeper in our
conflict with Hydra. We have always maintained we have mostly been in
the right in our age long conflict.'
'We're impartial
representatives,' replied John. 'But we're not naive. We do get
reports.'
'The have an Agent X series of rogue
assassins which cause us a lot of trouble,' said Roge. 'I killed one,
once. He was trying to kill me. Agent 8X. If your Cyborg needs to
know anything, it is dealing with Hydra's X Agents. They are normally
cold blooded killers.'
'Agent X shall die, Hydran
scum,' said Cyborg Q coldly. 'I'm no longer fond of X's,' said the
Cyborg. 'Not fond at all.'
'Was that a joke?' asked
John, chuckling on the Cyborg's words.
The Cyborg,
wisely, did not reply.
'We appreciate you being here,'
said Roge. 'How long can you stay?'
'Unspecified,'
said John. 'Until the current problems are dealt with
sufficiently.'
'Then welcome to Nix,' said Roge
Jembray once more.
'Glad to be here,' replied John,
considering the world of conflict he was about to become involved
with.
The End
“Dark
Times”
35,902 HY
The
stranger looked up at the tower. Paramount tower, highest tower in
the Realm of Eternity so far, 666 stories of Satan’s most vicious
pride.
‘A Babelite indeed,’ he chuckled to
himself. He was careful now. Very careful. 700 solid years of
spiritual ministry under Rabbi Rosenberg on New Terra had taught him
many things, but mostly to beware the power of evil. For, as the
Rabbi would say, if your heart truly succumbs to the power of
darkness and lets it go were it will, then God himself will forsake
your salvation and allow you to taste the hallways of death which
your pride thusly desires. And the Rabbi had reminded him again and
again that no other power was known of as damnable in persuasive
ability than the old devil, Satan himself. The stranger was aware of
this. Intimately aware, and his agenda was now sure. The Rabbi had
talked for a long time about the death penalty in the Torah of Israel
and how the Angels seemed to be exempt from such a reality, subject
to the Torah of heaven. But after many careful and private
conversations, with careful words of prayer to Hashem to ensure his
tacit acceptance, if not approval, the plan was hatched. One day,
said the Rabbi, Satan would again act in his pride and rage, and in
the power he would achieve, threaten the very foundation of human
society through the spiritual universe. ‘We must act decisively,
and now,’ the Rabbi spoke to him. ‘We must slaughter this beast
and ensure our own survival. For if we do not it will be a dark end
to all of us, and of that I am completely certain.’ And so the
stranger finally agreed, despite the heart within him, a heart of
love telling him to think otherwise, and plotted out his first
assassination attempt. He knew he could never tell Meludiel, his
twin. He knew that. Some secrets were meant to last for all eternity.
But a time of testing had come for the stranger. A time of testing
for Ambriel, son of God. If he were to be the man he needed to be,
Satan, the dark lord of evil, would have to succumb to his wrath and
taste the bittermost death so many for so long had wished upon him
but not had the strength of courage or will to dare attain.
*
* * * *
Satan looked at the picture on
his desk in front of him, sitting in his office atop Paramount tower
in the Realm of Eternity, nestled near Terraphon keep. He looked at
Gemrayel, his heart sighing. It was not really as if he could repent.
Such an idea had vanished from his nature upon his fall. Who did that
imbecile most high God really think he was to try and instruct Satan
on ideas of religious ruling. Satan knew no authority, and would
never respect any. Of course, he knew to fear God, but that was only
because he knew the power, ability and wrath of God his father. God
could get you at any time if he wanted to and his power was
unavoidable. But he knew God to live by a sense of personal morality
and if whenever he told God to Fugg himself and leave him the hell
alone he always noted God withdrew according to Satan’s wishes.
These days, it seemed, God had an inability to get mad at his son,
something which Satan did not really understand. But, thinking about
it for many years now, he knew it to do with his lack or real
practice of evil for a long time. Satan, while never ever regretting
his ways, had seemingly, as he noticed himself, toned down his
nature. But he did not care for he sensed this to be naturally
occurring. Almost as if he were getting along simply out of personal
desire, which was a paramount thought of his own. Absolute freedom,
his hearts love, said do what you will. But this old devil had grown
a little softer now, so many millennia having passed, and found it
strange that he got along a little better with those who had once
been his sworn enemies. But he was Satan, still, and looking at
Gemrayel he still grinned a little at the rape he had once
accomplished. But his heart sighed for, not really knowing why, he
longed to see her again so long she had sworn to stay away from him.
He had seen Aphrayel a century ago and almost felt obligated to be a
little polite, such had been his desire to rekindle his acquaintance.
But that had not gone too well as he had insulted her after a while,
and she had left frustrated. And now, in recent times, introspective
thoughts. Thoughts on God’s actual views on morality itself and a
simple thing God had said to him. A simple thing which he was at odds
with because it actually seemed to make sense in reflection. The
simple thing was that a moral life worked the best as you ended up
getting along the best with everyone else to your own personal sense
of satisfaction. Of course he had laughed at God as he had suggested
that absurdity, but in quiet reflection he almost dared his heart to
say that, well, yes, there seemed to be some truth to that idea. Yet,
nevertheless, he was Satan, and he had a reputation to maintain, and
therefore such fantasies of being a nice guy were left to the vain
and trivial desires of his Almighty father.
*
* * * *
The wound hurt. It hurt a hell
of a lot. And despite thinking he would probably die, in the recovery
ward of the hospital, Satan starting to feel just a tiny bit better,
the doctor ensuring him he would not in fact die as the bullet had
just missed his spine, Satan knew that something had just happened on
a spiritual level. A punishment had been inflicted. An age long
punishment for an age long sin. And laying there, the spirit
reminding him of his rape of Gemrayel, he now understood that God
really did have a long memory and could wait a hell of a long time to
punish someone. But, laying there, wincing often, the pain quite
high, there was a strange sense of relief. A strange sense that,
almost, something foreboding had been lifted from his shoulders. Some
great and dreadful foreboding punishment had been removed, and that
with this injury and seeming a few more occurrences of great anxiety
over the next few years, a few years of dark times for the lord of
evil, a penalty of a lifetime of darkness would be atoned for. And
lying there, feeling strangely a little more positive about
everything in life, his mind turned back all those millennia ago to a
time, just a little before he chose the dark magic, a time in his
room when he questioned wether such a choice was really for the best
for his future. And thinking on that very idea he suddenly, despite
noting his own internal sense of hypocrisy, felt that, just perhaps,
he had made the wrong decision after all. But he banished that
thought after a few moments, turning to other things and wincing on
his pain, but still, nevertheless, feeling a little better about his
lot in life and a little happier with things in general.
*
* * * *
As he watched the GHT rifle
melt away in the furnace, Ambriel reflected on his final moment. No,
he couldn’t do it. No matter what else, he just couldn’t make the
kill. But his vengeance rose, and he knew exactly were to place the
bullet for maximum pain, but no permanent damage. And, his pride
intact, his vengeance largely satiated, he watched as the rifle
melted away, thoughts of vengeance and death thankfully dissolving
away, along with the lethal GHT.
Saruviel
– The Quick and the Dead
35,999
SC
Saruviel examined the bullet wound.
His mind analyzed quickly, countless spiritual neurons making
connections with the data. The bullet was from a GHT 459. One of the
deadlier types of rifles. His murderer was an expert. Only experts
used that rifle. Only experts enjoyed its subtle killing
power.
Seven dead, now. Seven dead in
a week, and still no clues as to whom. Televon Police suggested that
it was likely the man in black himself. The old devil who had started
up his business again. But Saruviel couldn’t picture Satan doing
this. Not this time. He knew Satan now lived down in Paradision on
Androma. Very close to Daly. Very close to him. They had become
friends and the ‘Chronicler’ had talked to Satan about
repentance. He had talked to him more seriously than most ever tried
to bother doing, and Satan had felt grateful for this. Which was why
he trusted Daly somewhat, living near him in the same city. Could
this be the work of Satan? Could the old devil really be up to his
old tricks?
The bullet was gone. The
killer was not stupid – not stupid at all. Saruviel had spent the
afternoon examining the crime scene, looking for clues. Every
interaction from the killer with the crime scene left clues. The old
Jack Dagger mysteries had taught him that well enough. But this
killer left all clues absent. Totally absent. He or she was an expert
– an expert of the highest caliber.
The
latest victim, another of the royal house of Televon. Albert
Rothchild, grandson of the king. 3 dead royals now and 4 dead senior
politicians. And each untraceable, each using a different method of
murder. This was the case of Saruviel’s life. He knew as much.
1,700 years in Homicide in the Zebulonian police force had trained
him for this. Zebulon had never seen murders like this, of this
brutality. Never. The other continents of Judea, Traxia and Androma
had their fair taste of crime, certainly. Such was life. But
Televon’s continent of Zebulon, home to the royal family and
planetary governance seemed to have always been immune to most
criminal activity. But not any more. Things had – changed. Could he
crack the case? He hoped so. The hopes of Trillions were depending on
him.
* * * * *
Seventeen
weeks and Saruviel stood in the trees, looking at the shack. Stuck
out in the nature parks wilderness, all the clues had lead him to
this. He signaled the two other officers, and they slowly approached.
Saruviel, treading carefully, made his way to the back of the shack.
Suddenly two quick shots rang out and the officers cried in pain.
‘We’re down,’ yelled one of them. ‘Fugg!’ said Saruviel.
The situation was tense.
He remembered
something then which Kantriel had said to him. Had said to him about
the slender grip life really had on people. ‘There are the quick
and there are the dead, bro. The quick and the dead. Make sure you
are not the latter.’
Saruviel knew
the killer was expecting him. He knew it. So he would have to be the
quick, now, and not the dead. His life perhaps depended on it. He
carefully trod along the back way of the shack, gun raised, walking
to the front. Carefully peering around the corner, he spied a rifle
poking out the front door. The killer seemed to be looking at the
shot officers. And then he made a quick connection – ‘the quick
and the dead’. Instantly he turned around and went to the other
side of the shack. He picked his aim, carefully gave the best of his
measurement, and fired 7 quick shots into the wall of the shack. He
heard a muffled yell and then silence. Complete silence.
This
time he was less careful. This time he would be bold. He rushed the
door, found the killer slumped, and turned him over. He was dead. He
pulled the mask from off his face and looked at the killer. The one
who had finally demanded One Trillion Universal credits to stop
killing. Yes, it was a demon. An ancient demon. One of the fallen
Oraphim of Infinity who had joined Satan. Daxran, a cold heartless
bastard. Saruviel recognized his profile. But he was dead now. Dead
and gone. Off to Sheol were so many of his fallen brothers and
sisters now also remained. Dead and gone.
It
had been a nightmare of a case, but it was over. And calling in the
medics for the downed officers, Saruviel wiped the sweat from his
forehead. Serving God was tough work. Bloody hard and life
endangering work. But it was life, in the end. It was life. Do it
God’s way, as Ambriel and Michael kept reminding him and, when all
the pretenders have come and gone, you will be left standing. And
that much was true to Seraphim Saruviel of the Realm of
Eternity.
Daniel
– At Arm’s Length
36,002
SC
‘Just who the hell do you think
you are Rothchild? Supercop?’ ‘Worse. I’m his brother.’ The
Dragon Jandox spat in the face of Daniel Rothchild, the Seraphim
Daniel, laughing all the time. ‘Take him away,’ said Daniel to
the lieutenant in charge in the Bronx station on New York city on the
planet New Terra.
Daniel sat in his
office that afternoon, brooding. It had not really been a big deal to
him when God had asked Michael to take on a cop’s job. That hadn’t
bothered him personally. ‘Better him than me,’ Daniel had
thought. And then God had asked both him and his brother David –
Ambriel – to likewise take on the work. Daniel worked in the Bronx
while David was uptown in New Jersey. And while David had gained the
reputation of ‘Supercop’, it was Daniel who was generally more
despised by the Dragon’s. They hated Daniel Rothchild –
absolutely hated him. And knowing he was at the top of a number of
hit lists didn’t make him sleep any better at night.
The
war was going hard now. The new war with the Dragon’s. They had,
once again, rebelled. But this time it was serious. Murder had been
their tactic and as such, with a full on head of Israelite Torah,
Saruviel and Michael had responded to the Dragon’s war. It was
death, now. Complete death. The Dragon’s knew they would not
survive this war if unvictorious. Both sides knew that. The death
penalty as the ultimate act had been regrettably authorized by about
20 of the inner circle of planetary systems. But to curb the new
scourge of the Dragon’s war they had little choice. It was the most
viscious the Dragon’s had ever become, and people worried now. They
worried about their lives and what could happen to their families.
And so God had chosen the Seraphim and various Cherubim to deal with
the issue. It was time for them to earn their money.
Daniel
was not enjoying this war. 3 Seraphim of eternity had died. 3 of his
precious brothers killed by the Dragon’s. Surafel had been killed
in 36,000, now resting in Sheol. And then Talzudiel followed by
Adruel. Some of the most respected of all of God’s angelic
children. Slaughtered at the hands of the Dragon’s of Darkness. But
the Angel’s had been keeping score. They knew each dragon – they
knew them all. 1,723 dedicated rebels in Satan’s key attacks from
the final confrontation at Zaphon. Nearly all of the Oraphim of
Infinity. Of course, they had humans in their ranks. Probably many.
But the angels knew once the Dragon’s were disposed of their job
would be easier. Much easier. And they had eliminated 327 of them so
far – all dead. All dead and gone. Apart from the 3 Seraphim, about
70 Cherubim officers had also been killed by the Dragon’s. And
their losses had been greatly lamented. But such was life David kept
telling him. And such was death Daniel thought to
himself.
Tonight was a key night in
their campaign. They had leads – important leads as to the location
of 7 key dragons, on the outskirts of Boston. They would strike
tonight and, with a bit of luck, soon have to deal with 7 less of
their most dreaded opponents.
* * * *
*
Meludiel, stitching up the wound,
smiled at her hero. She was pleased. Very pleased. ‘You did well,
hon. Very well. I am proud of you,’ she said, leaning forward and
kissing his forehead. 6 Dragons now dead, 4 of them by Daniel’s own
hand, and the other in custody. And now his girlfriend was kissing
him and stitching up the hole in his arm were the bullet had gone
through. They had been close like this now for the past 3,000 or so
years. Not married. Not married yet and perhaps never. ‘Supercop’,
she reminded him. ‘Probably won’t marry you because of Supercop.’
But Daniel didn’t mind, in the end. It was an age long triangle.
Well understood now. She would go back to him one day. He didn’t
really doubt that. But she was with him for now. And they were tight
as a unit, lovers and the best of friends. And with his arm being
stitched up, thinking how lucky he had been that night, he was just
glad he had someone to share his ordeals with. Someone to care
for.
He had kept Meludiel at arm’s
length recently. But for a reason. He feared his own death. But
keeping her at arm’s length Daniel knew something was still true.
Like David might say. If you love her you have to do the opposite.
You have to hug her and kiss her. ‘Keep the bloody dragon’s at
arm’s length, Dan. Not Mel.’ And Daniel had acted on those words,
acknowledging them and drawing even closer to his sister. It could
kill him, this war with hell, but he was not dead yet. And in the end
if he did perish then keeping his beloved at arm’s length in his
final days was the last thing he wanted to do. How would that end a
life? How would that be glory? And so, as the war with the Dragon’s
continued Daniel drew ever closer to his sister and prayed to God
that somehow he would come through alive. All he could do, in the
end, was pray and trust. It was simply in the hands of
God.
Ambriel –
Supercop
36,002 SC
The
bullet had just missed his head. But Supercop, as always, kept his
cool. His cool demeanour, known by everyone, earning him the tag
Supercop. Mild mannered David Rothchild, they all called him. And he
chuckled at the comment. He peered out over the car, noticing were
the Dragon was stationed. It was down to them two, stuck in a
Dragon’s lair, fighting for his life. But Supercop, so all the
Dragon’s knew, was practically invincible. Always a trick up his
sleeve. He undid his coat, and let his wings come loose. He would use
flight, right now. A tactic seldom employed by any of the angels,
almost as a tribute of honour towards their human cop counterparts.
But they did fly, occasionally. When the situation warranted
it.
He flew to the edge of the lair,
over on the right hand side. And then he pulled out a small smoke
bomb and hurled it in the direction he knew the Dragon was waiting.
And then, flying around the Dragon, doing a loop to his opposite
side, the smoke started clearing and Supercop was behind him. He
landed, tapped him on the shoulder, and the Dragon turned. He was
about to go for his gun and blow David away when David let out a
quick punch right between the eyes, and the Dragon fell to the
ground.
‘Well done Supercop,’ David said to
himself.
* * * * *
They’d
had a good few weeks. 119 Dragons arrested in the local area, all
awaiting the fateful day on death row. It was gruesome business
Ambriel thought to himself, sentencing a soul to Sheol. But such was
the penalty. An ancient Noahide law he had known once, and part of
his own Israelite Torah as well. And he understood why. He understood
that if they let the Dragon’s, once they had killed, get away –
well then they would never stop killing. And bloodshed required
vengeance. That was God’s holy law.
He
thought of the war with Dragon’s this past few years. It had made
him strong. So much stronger than he had ever been. For he had
confronted fears greater than he had ever known. The fears of very
death itself. But, like his brother Daniel, he had remained calm
under pressure. He took the job seriously, applying his knowledge and
skill as best he could. And, from all the commendations, New Jersey
was eternally grateful. And he knew he was doing the right thing
because of it.
He thought on his
current girlfriend. Cherubim from eternity who he had been his first
real romance after Meludiel. She was really one of his closest
confidantes and she understood when Meludiel was around to make
herself scarce. But David loved her anyway. She was a friend when he
needed her to be there, and as much as he once hated to acknowledge
the point, actually having a break from Meludiel from time to time,
despite his enormous love for her, actually seemed to make sense. You
just couldn’t, in the end, be surrounded by the same person
indefinitely. It just couldn’t work. You needed time apart. To see
other people, to make other friends, to have other lovers. And while
Ambriel prized fidelity perhaps higher than any other soul, it was
the wisdom his brother Valandriel so often expressed which seemed to
remain the very truth in the real world. ‘Such is life,’ God said
to him once on the subject. ‘Rules guide us, dear son. But reality
will always have its say.’ And that consoled Ambriel
somewhat.
It was hard work, now, in
the life of David Rothchild. The hardest he had been involved with.
The war with the Dragon’s kept him up at nights. But looking into
the eternal destiny before him he seemed to instinctively understand
that God would not have it any other way. Really, in the end, he
would have it no other way.
“Mary”
Mary
smiled. Her heart was tender, so tender, looking at her twin Cyril
she had not seen for quite a while. The Cherubim Cyril smiled at her
with the warmth of an angel of Glory. He loved Mary, with all his
heart. It was a blessed day in heaven, a day he would never
forget.
“Your name is engraved on my heart, written
in eternal letters. I love you.”
“And I you,
beloved husband.”
“The
Fabulous Misadventures of the Famous 17 Kaleidoscope
collectors.”
“Why Kaleidoscopes,
Daniel?”
Daniel the Seraphim considered Meludiel’s
question.
“Why not sis?”
“Its not
quite like you.”
“Times Change. You know,”
responded Daniel.
Later on in the week the other 16
top ranked collectors in the universe of rare kaleidoscopes along
with Daniel at 17 were in New York City on New Terra for a
conference. But Daniel decided to skip the show and persuaded the
other guys and the one lady to go to the girlie show.
Janek
Smithton looked at the scantily dressed female. He was embarrassed.
Still quite innocent at 498. Daniel smiled and said “Whistle at
her. Tell her she’s hot.” But Janek just blushed.
A
little later on that night, after several pints of New York Ale,
Daniel dragged them all to the circus which had a late night special.
After they’d seated Daniel threw up on the fat lady in front of
him. Janek just grimaced.
Around 2,
four of them still remaining, they were in the brothel. Daniel
managed to slur to the lady ‘Yurrr beewtifull’ before passing
out. He woke up the next day, naked, handcuffed to a lightpole on
liberty isle looking at the statue.
*
* * * *
“Yeh, we got him,’ said
Absalom to David. ‘He’ll be dead embarrassed.’ David
grinned.
“Heh, heh, heh. Revenge is
sweet.”
“Matthew
the Artist”
“Deborah. It isn’t
just that I like painting pictures of you. You are me twin and you
are dear to me.”
“But Matthew, you have done 3
pictures of me already this week and after 1000 years heaven is
starting to run out of room to store your pictures.”
“Yes,
it is getting like that.” Responded Matthew. “Just one more then,
and I will leave it for a while.”
“Very well”
responded his twin.
* * * * *
6
Months later Matthew had just finished going through heaven removing
about 3 quarters of his art work. Sitting out in the field the
pictures were before him in a giant stack, like a bonfire. About 40
others of the 70 children of heaven were present. It was now late
enough, and as Joah finished pouring on the kerosene and Matthew
flicked the match at the pile, the pictures erupting into flames
instantly, he reflected.
It was true –
they had eternity before them. And if he needed to he could
eventually paint the same painting again. But for now recycling was
the rule of the day and thence forth forever more.
*
* * * *
In his eternal domain God had
finished arranging the copies of Matthews destroyed artwork. In his
own personal domain God had infinite resources and would go on
storing the words of his children for all eternity. But he had given
them resource management lessons and was glad they were starting to
learn this fundamental, eternal
lesson.
“Gabriel”
39,647
HY
‘Quick. Run. Run. Run.’
The
demon was a bastard, one of the worst. Gabriel looked at him, spoke
some words of power, ‘Get stuffed,’ and Satan’s newest pup
shrieked at being belted with the power of too many trillion
volcanoes, melted away, and finally showed up at his father’s
domain fourteen quadrillion years later with quite a story to
tell.
Later on, chuckling at the poor
fellow’s probable current state, Gabriel finally made his way back
to the portal. A quick word, he stepped through on the signal, and he
was suddenly back home. He looked at the rim – it seemed the same
as ever – but being this far from Zaphon would be awkward. He
really hated it when God deactivated the earlier portals and said
everyone had to use the outer rim portals if they wanted to go out.
His way of keeping his children at home, Gabriel thought to
himself.
* * * * *
‘And
what exactly is a Googolplexian, dear Aquariel?’
‘A
number, Gabriel. Daniel showed it to me on the web. Quite a large
one.’
‘How big?’
‘I forget. But
big. Real big. More than millions, billions or trillions. Really
bloody big.’
Gabriel, looking at her probable
exaggerations, decided to look at the website, which she shortly
brought up on the screen. After a few moments, having made the mental
connection somewhat, he understood.’
‘Yeh, that is
big. I suppose Cimbrel did up this website.’
‘Uh,
no actually. It came from Televon. A Noahide fellowship website
started it.’
‘Which one?’
‘Haven,
I think.’
Gabriel nodded. ‘Mmm. Well, it is
interesting. I will have to look at it more carefully later on. Sus
it out.’
‘Do that.’
*
* * * *
Michael was pretty casual for
not having seen Gabriel in over a century, but firstborn, these days
especially, could often be like that. His new ‘Chill out’
mentality some Cherubim had conned him into. But Gabriel went through
the formalities anyway, queried if he was finally sick of being
overseer again for so long, and disappeared, headed for the pub. He
was thirsty, needed a drink, and wanted to catch up with the Zaphon
crowd. Find out what had been happening.
*
* * * *
‘So Semyaza says, ‘Who the
Fugg do you think you are? God or something?’, and then Daniel told
him to Fugg himself and walked off, totally pissed.’
Gabriel
found the story of the two Cherubim’s arguments on a matter of
authority quite interesting, but doubted that Daniel really meant
what he was saying to Semyaza. Just trying to get the fellow to
repent a bit were Gabriel thought’s. Still, adjuring Semyaza by the
living God to repent of his carnal ways took guts from Dan and
Gabriel was a little impressed, especially going up Semyaza. That
devil was a handful at the best of times and his twin Sharakondra –
hell she was a wildcat when she wanted to be. But that was their way,
the way they had always been. Ever since the fall Gabriel had known
Semyaza was destined to be a bad boy, and even after he finally
repented before God and the Father let him home he still went back to
some of his bad ways. But never had they quite been as bad again and
he felt, in all likelihood, Daniel was just keeping Semyaza on his
toes. Probably sensible of him.
‘Yeh, its not a bad
tale mate. Anyway, cheers,’ he said, raising an ale and taking a
long swig.’
* * * * *
Gabriel
sat in the throneroom of Terraphon, half asleep. It had been hours
now and God still had not responded and he was about to give up. But
suddenly, noting the flames of the throne turn to a bright purple,
God spoke. ‘INTERESTING IDEA. NO, I DISAGREE.’
‘You
took your time. But why? Why not now? Surely they are becoming worthy
of more of your attention, more of your heart. Surely, especially New
Terrans, should hear their God in person. Should hear him speak to
them in their assemblies, to hear the living word of God. It is
bloody funny but there are alternative theories on life and
everything, people calling the angelic explanation a delusion. They
say you don’t really exist and this is just an atomic progression
from earth-life into the next state of consciousness. It was a bloody
popular theory, and there are hundreds of variants. They need to know
you are there, father. They need to hear your voice. ‘WHICH IS WHY
THEY WON’T’.
He thought on that, thought on it for
half an hour sitting there as God had gone silent. And finally,
remembering earth and what he put them through down there, left the
throne room unsurprised. He was never really into those who were
faithless. Never really that much, and it looked as if he hadn’t
changed. But perhaps he had considered it, given his lengthy time to
respond. Perhaps he had.
* * * *
*
‘Look, Gab. Father is right. It is
the way it is supposed to be now, and I think even more so for the
outer planets. I even think God wants them to forget he is even there
again. Want’s to be left alone. Has the ‘Do not disturb’ sign
up.
‘But why?’
‘Because most of
them really have not repented seriously and you know the dropout
rate, don’t you. Some barely make a millennium and they’re gone.
Had enough of the same old struggle, dealing with the same old
problems.’
‘But that is why they really need to
hear from him.’
‘It’s a sin issue, bro. It’s a
sin issue. But I wouldn’t sweat it in the end. It is the way of
life – those who will be or who are meant to be, or maybe even both
– well they will make it in the long run. So don’t worry about
it. Remember the fate of the wicked, bro. Remember that and leave
them be.’
* * * * *
He
thought on the issue for the next 6 months straight, finally
conceding that Michael was probably correct. It was simply the way
God was towards the sinner – simply the way he was. But Gabriel
knew, now, they all had fair warning and plenty of time to choose.
The facts of life and death, in the end, the facts of life and death.
And then, heading off to the pub to get the heavy thoughts off his
mind, Gabriel thought on his sis and felt a few carnal urges towards
her. Something to get him over his current bloody malaise and back to
reality. ‘Yeh,’ he thought to himself – back to reality.
“Survivors”
59,667
HY
Aphrayel looked at her two
brothers, Samael and Sandalphon. Two male angels remaining. Only two
angels remaining, and Logos himself, besides herself and Rhaemliel,
over at the central tower. Satan’s vengeance really had been quite
deadly. Quite deadly indeed. And now, of all the angels who had ever
lived in the Realm of Infinity, only 4 remained. Such was
life.
The Realm of Eternity had faired
a little better, but not much, really. Not much better. All of the
Seraphim had survived from that realm, as well as the first few
hundred twins amongst the Cherubim, but the rest had been killed in
the wars. God’s children had been decimated by the dark one.
Totally destroyed.
She thought on
Satan, and the final killing blow Callodyn had made upon him. How he
had slain him with the 7th sword of power ‘Excelsius’, and ridded
life once and for all of the master of evil. Her own beloved
Callodyn, Samael, had watched the Angel of Eternity as he had slain
the dark lord, impressed by the dark vengeance which had been in this
Angel of God. And Satan, now, was gone from them. Vanquished
forever.
And now peace had returned to
the United Realms. Peace, and hope for a fresh start – a fresh
beginning. She missed her brothers and sisters, and probably always
would, but such was life. Such was death. And thinking, really, there
was no point in crying over spilt milk, she continued on with her
game of solitaire, occasionally looking up at Samael who was over by
the window staring out at the Golden City.
Dark
Times 2
It was a lonely, desolate place. He
felt as if he'd been here before. Somewhere in the history of his
heart. Somewhere in the history of his soul. He had been condemned
again, tormented to suffer this godforsaken wasteland, with very
little water, and sparse vegetation. But Satan was only getting what
he deserved, wasn't he. Ambriel had confronted him on the footsteps
of Paramount tower, smiled innocently, and then shot him with a
tranquilizer dart. And when he woke he was all alone, in a cold and
dark place, and he spent the night shivering to find himself in a
wasteland, not knowing where, which, after weeks of travel, seemed to
go on forever.
'What, did you think you could escape
my justice?' the voice continued tormenting his mind. 'You'll justify
sin and get away with it?'
'Fuck off,' was Satan's
only reply, and the voice left for a while but, inevitably, like the
suffering he was going through, it returned.
He looked
off into the distance. More wasteland. He had just reached the top of
a climb, and was hopeful for some sign of life, but no. Miles till
the next horizon, and nothing. Satan didn't cry. He was too hard for
that. Too EVIL for that. But he collapsed, and put his head in his
hands, and just suffered. In silence. He just suffered.
The
cold day passed, and the night came again, and he found another small
creek and drank, and ate roots of grass, which seemed somewhat more
palatable. And he shivered again that night, and was starting to
cough and wheeze. And the days passed, and then weeks, and then
months, and then 1 year, and then 2. And he knew he was in hell.
*
* * * *
'So, where do you think he is then?' asked
Michael.
'God only knows,' replied Ambriel. 'Probably
fucked off to some planet out beyond or something. Who the fuck
cares? He's Satan.'
Michael looked at his younger
brother. He had a suspicion, but he wouldn't query directly.
'I
guess, wherever he is, he is enjoying himself then,' said
Michael.
Ambriel looked ahead, as they walked on
around their march around Zaphon Tower. 'Probably, I guess,' he said.
'Who knows? Might be in some deep shit.'
'Mmm,' said
Michael. 'Maybe.'
* * * * *
'I CAN'T
REALLY DISCLOSE THAT INFORMATION. IT'S SATAN OWN AFFAIR.'
'Then
he's ok then?' asked Michael.
Silence.
Nothing
said.
Then, 'WHO KNOWS,' replied God Almighty.
*
* * * *
And then he had counted the days as 7 years,
and then he gave up. It went on forever, and he would not quit
walking, but it never ended. A wasteland which never ended. His
clothes were tattered, and his feet sore with blisters constantly,
for his shoes had worn away long ago. He was cursed. Damned. Exiled.
Forgotten. But he didn't give a shit, and would not weep. He would
never weep.
And then one night, when a snake had
bitten him, and he felt the sting of poison, he went into a fever.
And it lasted for 3 days, before he started recovering. And when he
finally stood, and looked at the wasteland, he fell to the
earth.
And he did weep then. He did weep.
Ambriel
showed up then, about 4 weeks later. The spaceship landed just a few
yards away from the resting devil, who slowly inched forward, not
daring to believe this mirage, and found the hatch open. He went in.
The cockpit cabin was sealed off, so he didn't know who was flying
the ship, but there were bunks and food and a bathroom.
They
landed at the spaceport near Paramount Tower, and Satan exited. Then
the ship was gone again, and Satan was home.
He
walked, a little more steadily this time, and was soon at his tower,
and when he marched into his head office they all looked at
him.
'Where the fuck have you been?' Samaen
asked.
'In fucking hell,' replied Satan, and slammed
the door shut of his office, and was not seen again for 3 days.
*
* * * *
'He's back,' said Michael.
'Who?'
asked Ambriel, as they continued their regular walks around Zaphon
Tower.
'The devil. Satan.'
Ambriel
grinned. 'But who the fuck cares,' he replied.
'I
guess so,' said Michael, giving a careful glance to his younger
Seraphim brother as they steadily continued on their march around
Zaphon Tower, in the Heart of Eternity.
The
End
The Celestyel
Angel Aphrayel
“The
End”
59,801 HY
‘I
am telling you this for the millionth time, Sammy. I am perfectly
safe. I have addressed every area of ergonomic concern, healthy
eating, morality and what have you for thousands of years now. I am
perfectly safe dear brother. Worry not, ok.’ Samael looked at her,
very worried that his sister, with only 199 years to go, that she
would have the attitude necessary to survive the final two centuries
to the ‘life blessing’ promised by father. And then, knowing he
once bore the name ‘Satan’ a thought came to him on life and
justice. If she was ready, if she was truly ready, humility would be
her hallmark and pride would not claim the day. So Samael thought on
a little trip, just to test wether his sister really would accompany
him on the great and grand trip of eternal life.
*
* * * *
‘Come on Sammy, Sandy. It is
perfectly safe.’ Aphrayel was at the top of a particularly high
mountain out in Mitraphora, higher even than Mt Zadar, standing on
the anciently constructed ‘Playhouse’ at the top of the mountain
on a shaft of rock just away from the side of the mountain. There was
a short 20 foot bridge which lead to the playhouse. ‘I don’t
know, Aphy. I don’t think I trust that bridge,’ said Samael, a
little grin at the side of his mouth which Sandalphon had been eying
suspiciously all that morning. ‘Its safe, Sammy. Look, I can even
jump on it.’ Aphrayel proceeded to step onto the bridge and jump up
and down. ‘I told you,’ she said while jumping, ‘it is
perfectly…….’ WHOOOSH. And suddenly, the bridge collapsed, and
Aphrayel began a long plummet downwards, seemingly to her death,
caught up in the bridge and the collapsing playhouse and shaft of
rock following her down.
* * * *
*
The funeral was a simple affair, so
used to death had the angels become. Sandalphon, since the accident
and having searched the rubble for hours, was remorseful. Somehow he
knew Samael was to blame. Somehow he expected his
brother.
Later on that day, Samael and
Sandalphon were in Samael’s room, Rhaemliel sitting next to Samael,
now seemingly enjoying her brother’s company, when suddenly the
door burst open and Aphrayel, clothes dirty and in tatters, limping
on what appeared to be a broken leg, wings ruffled and scrapes, cuts
and bruises all over her body, came towards Samael, looked in his
face, and said, ‘YOU, YOU, YOU……..AAAARRRGGH.!!!!’ And she
left in similar a manner.
Samael could
not help but grin, noticing Logos in the doorway who had probably
shared some of Samael’s ideas with Aphrayel. Still, in the end, she
had survived. She had survived.
“The
7th Angel”
7 angels stood on the
precipice, overlooking the Insanity Abyss. Colexios spoke.
“The
Dark One resides below.”
“So you say,” responded
Miznadura.
Brengalenta flew down 50 feet and
returned.
“Don’t go in,” she said. “The
hostility is too great.”
“Then we are doomed,”
said Shelarmyos.
Layendriel looked at Elltaravere. “Is
he worth it?’ he queried.
Elltaravere
nodded.
“Then we hunt Demon.” Finished the 7th
Cherubim Angel of the group, Vistrantiel to his Cherubim
brethren.
AND THEY FELL AS
ONE.
“Crazy Funky
Love Child”
137,692
HY
‘Jenny you
suck.’
‘You wish,’ replied the ravenhaired firey
drop of Satan’s precious love, dressed in scarlet, looking like
every man’s most desperate wet dream.
‘Hey, Fugg.
No, I mean, Fugg. I mean you don’t suck. That’s not what I meant,
bitch. You always screw what I say.’
Jenny Savereign
came over to Kalan Listomore and responded in the way only Jenny
Savereign can, holding his cheeks, and almost kissing him.
‘It
is because you are such a wuvvely little boy, Kalan. I can’t help
but tease anyone as adorable as you,’ she said with the cuteness of
a nymph dryad after a hard nights activities.
Kalan
was about to give up, completely frustrated. She had bedevilled him
again. For the third time this month his guardian angel duties
towards the Colvin boy had gone awry as Jenny claimed the monthly
prize for the most spiritual fruit in her steward, Rachel Leigh. You
see the Most High ran contests in these most enlightened times to
ensure his numerous protégés continued their zesty life challenge
of sanctifying the human race. And when Jenny inevitably brought
forth those special qualities of crazy, funky love which only Jenny
Savereign could, then she used her credits earned in true competitive
fashion to do disaster upon disaster (within legal allowance) upon
the Colvin boy under Kalan’s tutelage. Oh yes, she was a devil
dressed in red, completely and utterly alike her devastating father
of darkness, the dread Lord Saruviel Savereign, Premiere Archangel of
the Realm of Splendour.
‘I’ll get
you, bitch,’ said Kalan with unveiled hostility.
‘When
hell freezes over, cowboy.’
‘Cowboy! What the hell
is that supposed to mean?’
‘Oh I was forgetting.
Cowgurrl. Tee hee.’
Jenny looked up
at the scoreboard in the centre for spiritual sanctification,
Canberra division, Tuggeranong Sector. Only the top 300 angels on
points were represented at any one time and she was numero uno. Of
course Kalan was pretty adroit at his work, all things considered,
and usually cruised in around number 50 or so. But he was challenging
Jenny’s sovereignty constantly and would do anything to claim her
spot. Well, almost anything (within legal allowance, that
is).
Jenny turned to Kalan. ‘Remember,
amateur. To get to number one you have to be bold. But you have to
also learn all the tricks of the trade and then a few things or to.
Be original, silly. God likes that. And last but not least, love your
steward. If you don’t love him you won’t change him. They never
respond otherwise.’
‘Yeh, I know. Duh, I think I
had that figured out.’
‘Perhaps. Seeya, LOSER!’
And she disappeared, headed for the nightclub and her usual coven of
she-wenches.
* * * * *
Saruviel
Savereign, Premiere Archangel of the Realm of Splendour, inspected
the long blade. The merchant wanted 12 million credits, quite a hefty
sum. But for a blade once belonging to his greatest idol, the Lord
Saruviel of the Realm of Eternity, and one of such fine quality –
well was any price really too high.
‘You drive a
hard bargain, merchant man. Surely, sayeth I, your prices can be
devolved to something more utterly reasonable.’
The
merchant man was a merchant man because he was indeed skilled at his
trade.
‘But cannot you rightly see the magnificente
quality of the blade, sire. It would surely cut through light itself
when put to the test.’
Savereign looked down the
edge of the blade.
‘So you say.’
‘Indeed
sire. Dare I say it, the Most High could not fashioneth such a blade
lest he had studied the fullness of eternity, such being the skill of
the ancient blademaker who forged such perfection.’
‘And
who was such a personage,’ inquired Savereign with great
interest.
‘A divine mystery, I am afraid. Suffice to
say the dread Lord Saruviel held the said individual in great
esteem.’
Savereign inspected the blade once
more.
‘Surely you ask too much. But I am well
endowed with funds as of late, so you shall have your paltry sum.
Here,’ he said, handing over the ‘HEAVENLY VISA’ credit
card.
Two hours later, his disaster of
a daughter and all her witchlike crony friends in the main living
room of his mansion, Savereign retired to his upper den to inspect
the blade.
‘Indeed it may verily cut through light,’
he thought to himself, running his thumb down the sharpness of the
sword.
Just then his beautiful
daughter entered, dressed in something appropriate for the raping of
teenage men to lose their virginity, not untypical for a Savereign
female.
‘Daady.’
But
Savereign was still engaged in the idolatrous attention due the
beloved once property of his great object of admiration, the said
Dread Lord Saruviel.
‘Daady.’ She
continued.
‘Yes, child.’
‘3 more
weeks. 3 more weeks and I graduate. Up to senior division. I have
done well, haven’t I?’
‘My God this is a good
blade,’ he said, continuing his love affair with the steel of
Angelic glory.
‘Oh Daady, I love you,’ she said,
hugging her father, who looked down at her, momentarily puzzled, then
cautiously put his arm around her shoulder, showing her the affection
he knew he should as a proud father of a daughter ready to graduate
to senior humans sanctification.
He came to
himself.
‘Remember, daughter of mine. Adult humans
are different. They get, how shall I put it, values when they get
older. And they can be quite stubborn on them. Your techniques may
work well for the younger audience but I am afraid the traditional
approaches of the classical workers are what usually work best for
the older clientele.’
‘Nonsense and poppycott.
People have changed. Society is different now. Trends in human
behaviour and valuation of morality demonstrate that clearly. You are
living in yesteryear, father. Totally out of touch.’
‘Be
that as it may, you may see some sense in my words quite soon. Take
them or leave them – they are my advice to you.’
She
softened, and decided to accept, in true graciousness, his
advice.
‘I’ll remember, father. I’ll
remember.’
And she disappeared to her Goth angel
friends as her father continued his adorations.
*
* * * *
John Dawkins was a regular
shmo. But at 28, single, no kids, unemployed, and just finally
getting over a drug addiction, halfway between a halfway house and a
new flat which looked promising, John was ready for something to
happen in his life. Anything. And so when he prayed that prayer one
fateful night to God for the first time in his life, as the
rehabilitation officer had suggested he do, The Most High despatched
the decadent mistress of harlotry, Jenny Savereign, for her first
tour of duty in the Senior Sanctification division. And the start of
a new lease on life began for both of them.
John
looked in the cupboards of his new flat. Empty again. He had been
here for 3 months now and still hadn’t balanced the budget
properly. He was going to be hungry for a few days until Centrelink
allowance day again. Over in the corner, sitting on the floor,
invisible to John, Jenny Savereign looked, finally, defeated. She had
practically given up her goal on this most stubborn individual. At
first she had placed within his mind the urge to use charm on people.
To speak kindly and compliment them. But while, in his newborn
spiritual zeal, which had lasted barely a month, his mind had
considered that, he soon shrugged it off as too much of a
bother.
And that was when she began
getting the not so subtle hints her father and others had hinted at.
Adults were different.
After that she
tried suggesting this 28 year old virgin flirt with the girl in the
flat next to his, an athletic trim looking 20 year old with a good
job. She would be perfect for him. But all his mind responded to the
suggestion was ‘Yeah right. She is way out of my league.’ It was
by then that Jenny was learning that John Dawkins had confidence
problems. But more that that – low self esteem. So she tried
encouraging him and praising him instead, but searching his memory
all she could find was a fourth place in junior athletics when he was
12. ‘Gee, it’s hardly worth the effort,’ she began thinking to
herself.
It seemed, after that, that
no matter what avenue of inspiration she suggested to try and
motivate Dear John, nothing seemed to work. And when she said to his
mind, ‘What, are you the loser I think you are?’ out of
frustration, his mind simply, in a spirit of apathy, said probably.
It was about then she had given up. She went to the centre for
spiritual sanctification to ask if someone else could be given her
client, but they went through the formal contract arrangements she
had already signed, a contract necessary for her to finish to gain
the income later on in life necessary for obtaining what she wanted
in heaven, and found it to be watertight. She could quit, of course,
but then she would never be guaranteed the allowance later on. And
so, amidst a spirit of frustration, she returned to the Erindale flat
and just moped in the corner, occasionally suggesting to him that he
should do something, anything, to get out of his malaise, but most of
the time just watching the television set which he rarely turned off.
It seemed the once impregnable sanctifier of perfection, the
illustrious Jenny Savereign, had given up. And it was about then the
Most High took a personal interest in the case.
*
* * * *
She noticed the big guy
immediately. He was hard not to notice. John was sitting in front of
the box, watching a sitcom, and Jenny was on the floor, bored, when
God floated into the room. He looked at his son John and smiled.
‘JUST LIKE I REMEMBER HIM FROM THE YEARS IN MY HEART.’
Jenny
watched the spirit of God hover around John Dawkins, expecting
something, but all the Father of Glory did was comfort John’s
loneliness. ‘YOU WILL BE FINE, DEAR CHILD. YOU ARE LOVED, REMEMBER
THAT.’
And John Dawkins, suddenly feeling better,
got up and turned the television off.
‘I think I’ll
go for a walk,’ he said to nobody in particular.
Jenny
watched him change his clothes and leave the flat, while the Spirit
remained. God spoke to Jenny suddenly.
‘WELL ARE YOU
JUST GOING TO SIT THERE MISS SAVEREIGN?’
Immediately
Jenny took the rebuke and, despite still being frustrated herself,
got up and followed John. The Spirit of God started following both of
them.
John had his joggers, track
pants and a t-shirt on and, fortunately as far as Jenny was
concerned, they almost seemed clean. John had decided to walk down to
the nearby school oval and do some laps. He rarely ran for fitness
but knew he was slowly getting fat so should do something about it.
At the oval there were a couple of guys playing cricket and his
neighbour, the 20 year old girl, doing laps. He shrugged to himself,
not really expecting anything, but fantasizing anyway. But then he
remembered she was way out of his league.
After
a few laps he came up short, not far from the girl, when Jenny
watched the Spirit come upon him and listened to what God had to
say.
‘REMEMBER SHE IS ONLY HUMAN. A LOT LIKE YOU IN
SO MANY WAYS.’
And thinking that, John Dawkins
gained some confidence.
Later on that
week John and Sheryl had become friends. He had talked carefully to
her at first, but she hadn’t minded. She had no boyfriend
presently, but didn’t seem immediately interested in John. But she
seemed to like him as a friend.
In the
flat on Saturday Jenny suggested something to John’s mind, trying
to impress God who was hovering around the flat.
‘Try
flirting with her. Girls like that.’
And John
instantly got an erection thinking of Sheryl. But then God responded
and spoke to John.
‘IF YOU REALLY LIKE HER, TRY
RESPECTING HER FOR WHO SHE IS. GIRLS ADMIRE THAT THE MOST IN THE LONG
TERM.’
And John settled, acknowledging the rebuke in
his mind.
All that summer Jenny
Savereign was learning. She was learning that so much that she had
learned dealing with the younger audience, on being cool, hip and
happening, really didn’t work that well with people as they got
older. People had expectations then, all of them it seemed. They
wanted love, but they also wanted peace of mind and to do something
useful with their lives. People, it seemed, got more serious as they
started growing up.
And then one day
the Spirit of God spoke to her.
‘HAVE YOU LEARNED
ANYTHING?’
And Jenny, in a spirit of humility,
nodded.
The next afternoon Sheryl was
in John’s flat and Jenny said something to his mind. ‘Be honest
with her John. Tell her your hopes, dreams and desires. But let her
know you are only a frail human in the end.’
And
John, sensing something spoken to his mind which sounded about right,
shared his hearts dilemmas on life with Sheryl. It was after that
Sheryl kissed him and they started dating. Jenny indeed had begun
learning about adults. About being caring and responsible. And about
letting go of the childish ways.
* * *
* *
Over the years Jenny Savereign
changed. The nymphomaniac of teenage years grew up into a lady who
started demanding respect rather than lustful attention. But she grew
in mercy and kindness as well.
Her
father, Lord Saruviel Savereign, smiled to himself softly. He sensed
the Most High at work in his daughter and was happy with that. He
trusted the Lord. The Lord allowed him to carry on his eccentric
ways, barely ever rebuking him. Saruviel acknowledged the wisdom of
his eternal father. God knew everything, he reminded himself. And as
he watched his daughter grow up from a child of the devil into a
daughter of God he himself also began to more greatly appreciate the
ways of the divine.
* * * *
*
Kalan sat on the bench. He was
upset. For so long, in adult sanctification division, he had been
number one. He had laughed when Jenny first joined the adults and had
failed miserably. With the younger audience he himself had always
taken the more mature approach, but had eventually yielded to Jenny’s
crazy, funky love to try and win the youth. But when he had graduated
to adult’s division he had gone back to his traditional ways and
had great success. He ended up praying for Jenny to get it together,
but now, after John Dawkins had become a Member of Parliament, Jenny
Savereign was getting all the praise. And she had finally taken him,
again, at number one.
He sat on the
bench, outside of the centre for sanctification, looking up at the
sky, when Jenny came up to him.
‘This crazy funky
life has taught me a lot, Kalan Listomore. But one thing I have
learned is this. We all learn from each other and all good things
take some time.’ And then she kissed him on the cheek, told him he
was luvverly with her cute little voice, and disappeared up the path.
And then Kalan started laughing.