Gerun, the Heretic. William Maltese
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Название: Gerun, the Heretic

Автор: William Maltese

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Научная фантастика

Серия:

isbn: 9781479409365

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СКАЧАТЬ angry because he was finally getting the point.

      “Yes,” Kalvin agreed, his mentat having accepted the admission the boy was unprepared to make verbally. “The gods are often as vengeful as they are merciful. Who’s to say Jon Missionary’s god is any the less vengeful? He did, after all, allow His prophet to endure Xeon brain-blank, didn’t He? Not a very pleasant occurrence for any man, from what I’ve heard. Although it’s more merciful to the outer shell than Warluck’s sloppier-devised mind-erase.”

      “But his memory wasn’t completely gone,” Gerun insisted, referring to Jon Missionary’s remembrance of his name and melodious words.

      “So, we have always wanted to believe,” Kalvin said. “Why? Because it’s far more flattering to our egos to think that we’ve descended from a prophet than from a half-wit, isn’t it, my boy?”

      If looks could kill, Kalvin would have been a dead man. He knew Gerun, though, and he loved him more than he’d loved any of his other grandchildren. It had always been the boy’s passions which had excited Kalvin, which excited him now.

      “Which of the Religio-College’s pantheon of gods do you believe in, Gerun?” Kalvin asked, knowing the answer.

      “I believe in no god!” Gerun said too quickly, too loudly.

      “So easily you deny Him with one breath while expecting Him to succor you with the breath just preceding.”

      “I meant, I don’t know His name,” Gerun corrected, feeling like a fool. The old man had led him into the trap like a goosen could lead a flock of gysins to slaughter. Gerun was prepared to admit no more.

      “A nameless God, then?” Kalvin persisted. “One not of the Religio-College perhaps?”

      Gerun could hide nothing from the old man. The mentat-linkage Kalvin shared with his grandchild was so strong that each feared what loss he would suffer if and when the other died.

      “Jon Missionary’s god?” Kalvin prodded. Gerun was helpless to keep the answer from him. “I do believe in Jon Missionary’s god,” Kalvin admitted, marveling at the surprise in Gerun’s eyes. Did the boy really not know that, really not see that? Did Gerun really believe himself alone in suspecting Jon Missionary was a true messenger from on high? Did Gerun really believe he was the only one angry because the holy message and messenger had gotten so unbearably scrambled along the way?

      “Listen to me, Gerun, for I have yet something more to say,” Kalvin said, “and we’ve already dangerously overextended our time in which to say it. It’s important that you learn to put Jon Missionary and his legacy in proper perspective, even though it will probably be as impossible for you to manage as it has been for me to do so, not to mention all of the others who have come before us as members of our clan. Will you listen?”

      Gerun didn’t have to say, yes. His acceptance was conveyed via mentat.

      “Only Jon Missionary knows—or once knew—if his arrival was as a messenger from his god, the message hopelessly garbled en route. Jon Missionary is dead. All Melina-Lu’s attempts failed that were made to reverse his brain-blank. And there were many attempts at reversal. Remember, too, that Melina-Lu was the first true believer. Would a woman merely interested in the physical perfection of a man be so anxious to record that man’s every word? On the other hand, maybe she needed something to rationalize the insatiable passion she, a princess of the royal blood, felt for a man who came to her damaged and with a slave brand marring his otherwise perfect body.”

      “Why must you always take both sides?” Gerun criticized.

      “Because I have seen both sides and still made my choice on the side of God,” Kalvin explained patiently. Really, Gerun was such a child. Was it too much to hope he would survive the careful planning of a skillful exterminator like Warluck? “You must see both sides,” Kalvin continued.

      “Why?” Gerun asked helplessly, ashamed when his mentat, for one brief instant, penetrated through Kalvin’s defenses and read there just how much of a child Kalvin really thought Gerun was.

      “Why?” Kalvin echoed, his defenses back up. The boy must act like a man. It did Gerun no good at all to see that others—his grandfather included—saw him as a mere boy. Kalvin cursed his slip that had allowed Gerun time to glimpse Kalvin’s true feelings. “Because from the moment I leave you, and that shall be soon, I shall be too busy saving myself to save you. You will be on your own. Alone. Warluck, the Religio-College, and all the considerable power that combination can bring against you: your enemy. Where will you be if you don’t have at least one god to whom to pray? Not a willowy phantom of a god that may or may not be there, either. What kind of help to you could that kind of god possibly be?

      “Melina-Lu planted the suspicion of Jon Missionary’s god in all of us,” Kalvin hurried on. “Flattered by the idea that we were the chosen people, seeing what others hadn’t seen, we grew powerful, rich and secure. We became prideful and arrogant. We made enemies and antagonized old ones among the Religio-College. The College was kept at bay, by the way, more because of our connection to the royal house than by any of them truly believing our god could outsmart any of theirs. We grew careless, failing to see that what weakened the Religio-College in Jon Missionary’s time was its assumed involvement in an assassination attempt on the life of Maxlima II— And that assassination, my young man, was what saved Jon Missionary from the incinerator, not the lusting of a princess desirous of taking him to her bed. If Jon Missionary arrived today, he would be incinerated along with his Book, because Warluck is far more powerful than Panrun-Ru ever thought of being, and Ruellin VI is far weaker than Maxlima II.”

      Kalvin’s long discourse had left him breathless and panting. Yet, he still had more to say, even through the pale cinolinis on the horizon hinted of the day’s first sunrise. “You need faith to survive your upcoming trials, Gerun,” Kalvin said. “Faith in God. If the god we’ve all worshipped in secret all of this time isn’t a real enough god for you, marred by your suspicions that He’s no more than a madman’s ramblings, a lusting woman’s rationalizations, an arrogant clan’s excuse for feeling better than their friends and neighbors, then cast Him out of your life and believe in Sillona-Xi, or Raglistim, or Gryphis, even in Jursimms. But do believe in some god, or you’ll die on your own. And that can be a pretty lonely business.”

      “Warluck must fear our god if he’s so intent upon killing Him by killing us,” Gerun said.

      “Who can truly know Warluck’s motivations but Warluck?” Kalvin argued. “They may have nothing to do with God. They may have everything to do with power and/or politics. Ruellin VI is a weak ruler. You and I both know it. By killing us in some holy vendetta, Warluck erodes Ruellin VI’s authority even farther by implicating the ruler’s Melina-Lu connection in heresy. Save yourself and, then, indulge in ponderings as to why the killer so urgently prowled your doorstep.”

      Yes, I will save myself, Gerun promised himself. I’ll save me, and I’ll save Jon Missionary’s god with me. For what kind of god would He be with no worshipers?

      “He found us, didn’t He?” Kalvin reminded, having once again read Gerun’s mentat. “And look how easily we were won over with just the merest suspicion of His existence. Don’t think He’ll need you or me when and if He should decide to win new converts. You, on the other hand, need Him to survive. Forget all the Missionary-clan arrogance and pride piled up over all of this time. We’ve been dropped so low that we’re liable never to crawl up out of this hole again. He’s not going to help you if you attempt blackmailing Him into giving you a helping hand.”

      Gerun scanned СКАЧАТЬ