MARK BOURNE
MUSTARD SEED
Donnelly's hand rose high, hoisting the Bible like a trophy. Her
forehead
furrowed, and her voice rose with practiced inflection that echoed among the
rafters
and stained-glass windows. Her rhythms and cadences crested and rolled
in waves, well
rehearsed after years of roadside revivals in forgotten Southern
towns. Thank you, Lord,
for making me your instrument for one more day.
"Men of Earth are cavorting with creatures
who never read the Gospel --"
She cast her gaze across her beloved flock.
"Who never heard
the Word of God --"
They must hear her words if they were to be saved.
"Who never felt the
guiding hand of our Savior --"
She was their lamp in the darkness brought from the stars,
ever since those
first faint signals were heard by the Farside Lunar Receiver. And those
first
vessels descended from the clouds.
"Who have no souls, for the Kingdom of Heaven was
prepared by Jesus for Man
alone."
Like a lighthouse on a rocky shore, she gazed down upon
her congregation. A
subconscious clock measured the dramatic pause, then her voice
modulated to a
preordained pitch. "We walk not with angels, but with aliens blind to Man's
true
gift to God's firmament -- our Savior Jesus Christ!" She thrust the Bible before
her
like a shield. "Jesus said..." She paused to catch the eyes of those before
her; it was an
easy haul. "Jesus said, 'No one can enter the Kingdom of Heaven
but by me'!" She clenched
her eyes shut and listened.
There had been a time, years ago, when the stained glass would
have rattled with
"Amen!" and "Hallelujah!" ringing throughout the sanctuary. And on Easter
and
Christmas Sundays (when extra fold-out chairs were brought in from the
Fellowship Hall)
the room had been so filled with upraised voices that the walls
might have burst open and
flooded the world with the Lord's holy praises.
Today, though, Donnelly heard the central
heating clunk on. Far away bells in
the courthouse clock chimed the hour. Old Ralph Hardin
in the rear pews needed a
Kleenex. No more than twenty souls here today. Fewer than last
week.
She opened her eyes, lowered the Bible to the pulpit. Her brow lost its furrows,
but
not the thin lines like dried-up river beds. Her voice was almost inaudible
over the
heating system.
"Don't forget next Sunday's Christmas Eve candle-lighting service. Bring
your
friends." She despised the dead weight of defeat in her voice. "That's all."
There was
no organist to play the benediction and postlude.
She turned away, loosened her collar, and
rubbed her eyes, keeping them closed
longer than she really needed to. The sounds of
shuffling coats and snuffling
noses rose behind her. The exit door in the rear foyer
groaned on its arthritic
joints, and December's gray chill slid down out of the Ozarks and
brushed the
back of her neck. Winter's teeth nipped at Reverend Ardith Donnelly of the
Central
Presbyterian Church of Harper, Missouri.
She turned back to her pulpit to gather up the
sermon. Gerald Morris was peering
up from the floor below. The chicken farmer clutched his
overcoat against his
belly and stared at her with eyes that rarely blinked, two eggs
pressed into a
moist dough face.
"Revern' Donnelly?" His voice, like his brown suit jacket,
was thin and faded.
"Yes, Gerald, what can I do for you?"
"M'mama wants to know when you're
comin' out to the nursin' home agin. She says
your services alwiz brighten her day. She
says so alia time. She's real sick,
and the doctors, they don't know how long " His voice
thinned away to nothing.
She exhaled, then smiled. "The Lord's work keeps me busy all over,
but He and I
will be back at the home real soon. Tell your mama to keep a lookout for us."
He grinned. "Bless you, Revern' Donnelly. Jeannie and me'll have you over to the
house for
supper real soon. Thas a promise."
"Much obliged, Gerald." She smiled warmly.
"Revern'
Donnelly?" He looked away from her gaze. "Jimmy Don Ledbetter says he
saw two of them
Seekers in St. Louis last week. He says they talked with just
ever'body about how glad they
was Earth was joining the Union. Then one of them
helped Roy Capehart -- you know, the
taxidermist? -- fly through the air.
Without wings or nothin'! It was its Gift, it said.
Then another'n made colors
in the air and music came from the pictures they made. Said we
could maybe do it
someday. Ever'one had just the best time! Isn't that wonderful?"
Donnelly
looked down at him. "Gerald, doesn't the Bible tell us that God gave
Man dominion over all
beasts through Brother Adam?"
His eyes narrowed, but never blinked. "Well, I s'pose so."
"And what does the Bible say about Satan tempting Jesus with miracles?"
He looked at his
hands kneading his overcoat. "Jimmy Don Ledbetter says --"
Donnelly shut her eyes. "Gerald.
There are new temptations out there among the
stars. The Seekers know neither Christ nor
salvation, even though all you need
is the faith of a mustard seed." She replayed an old
memory: a sanctuary filled
with multitudes in her spiritual hug. She had been a pilgrim, a
searcher for
God's wisdom, sharing what she found with others. She had been young and
strong
of voice. And of spirit.
The memory faded, leaving only the floaters drifting across
the insides of her
eyelids. "Only God knows what is in their hearts," she said quietly. She
opened
her eyes. "You tell Jimmy Don --"
But he was on his way toward the exit, shrugging on
his overcoat. The door
whimpered shut behind him.
She knew as much about the Seekers as
anyone else in these parts. Twelve years
now after First Contact, dozens of assorted aliens
-- "extrasolar emissaries" --
were on Earth, mostly in big cities like New York and Moscow,
London and Tokyo,
Beijing and Bombay. Their immense ships had followed their transmissions,
offering humanity membership in a galactic trade Union that was opening new
markets in the
outer galactic reaches. The world was still knocked cock-eyed by
it all. The cultural elite
were declaring it the greatest event in human
history. A new age on Earth. Peace and
prosperity. Heaven on Earth.
But no heavenly trumpet had sounded. Just those first signals
from out of
Sagittarius, heard only by electronic ears. No salvation had come, for it
arrived
not on angelic wings and a fiery throne, but in huge vessels orbiting
Earth and landers
descending from the clouds, even in non-Christian lands. And
more were arriving all the
time.
She felt betrayed, but she wasn't sure by whom. She only knew that the invasion
was
complete. Wal-Mart was selling Seeker-inspired toys for Christmas. For
Christmas!
Hallmark's biggest sellers were miniature spaceships hanging from
Christmas trees across
the land -- "collect the whole set!" Earth would never
again know a cosmos in which Man was
adrift and alone. The fruit from the Tree
of Knowledge had tasted sweet.
Donnelly turned her
back again, stuffing the morning's text into a dog-cared
file folder. This was the third
go-round for this sermon. And the last.
The rear door complained and a cold breeze scraped
across the back of Donnelly's
neck. She sighed, but did not turn around. "Be right with
you," she called. She
listened for footsteps on the floorboards. Instead, she heard glass
tinkling the
sound a crystal chandelier makes when given a gentle swing. She turned. The
room
was empty.
"Who's there? Come out!" The tinkling stopped abruptly, as if someone
muffled
all the crystal droplets at once.
At the far end of the aisle, a knobby spike of
colored glass reached out from
behind a pew. Five faceted fingers grew at its tip and
waved. To the tinkling of
tiny bells, a spun-glass sculpture walked into the aisle.
Donnelly's
brain struggled to find analogies. A leafless bush in winter, crafted
by a glassblower.
Branches and twigs of fine crystal were shot through with
blues and reds and golds flowing
through icy veins. They reached up from a nest
of dew-dipped spider webs where indefinable
hues came and went, blending,
shifting, sparkling in the sunlight slanting through the
colored windows.
Donnelly stared across the room at the...the thing. A sour taste crawled
up onto
her tongue.
"I must ask you to leave," she said, struggling to keep the surprise and
disgust
out of her voice. "Keep your Satan-sent ways out of God's house."
The creature
quivered. Two translucent twigs reached down into the glittering
webs. They reappeared and
held aloft a meaty ovoid sac. The bladder wriggled
wetly, split open across the middle, and
spoke to Reverend Donnelly.
"Hello. Pardon me, please," it said in a dead-on Missouri
accent. "I wish to
talk with God." The fragile-looking thing scuttled up the aisle on
glassy insect
legs, bringing the sound of windchimes in the rain.
Standing there with it
approaching her, Donnelly felt a familiar bitterness burn
in her chest.
The creature reached
the steps at the base of the pulpit. Diamond glints danced
across its surfaces. It raised
the sac toward Donnelly's face. The Talker
symbiote's humanform lips smacked open, flashing
straight white teeth. "Please,"
the translator said. "Teach me to talk with God."
Donnelly
wanted to spit. "God listens to our prayers. Can you pray?" She put as
much venom into her
voice as a good Christian could muster.
"I have practiced the prayer rituals of six hundred
forty-four worlds," said the
translator. As it spoke, lights like golden fireflies chased
through its
master's branches. "I have perceived no response."
"What can you know of God?"
"I have worshipped the deities of many cultures, often at the cost of emotional
or physical
pain. Occasionally, enlightenment was gained. But none offered what
I desired."
"Why come to
me?"
"I enjoy the quiet places of your world. Trees. I enjoy trees. I was strolling
nearby
and recognized the religious symbol at the summit of this building. I
meditated, then chose
to seek out the religious leader here. That, I perceive,
is you. Your species has developed
religious expression with great complexity
and ritual. Humans have many god-forms. Perhaps
one has the answer I seek.
Perhaps you do."
The thing tweaked Donnelly's curiosity. The
Talker's perfect human voice
softened its master's alien appearance. "What do you seek?"
she asked.
The alien sparkled and its Talker took in a gulp of air. "I am old for my kind.
And an aberration. As a whole, my people dislike travel. We are --" the
translator's lips
curled upward in a wry smile, "-- home-bodies. I, however,
enjoy the company of other
species and have lived for centuries in many cultures
on many worlds. I have experienced
... marvels that cannot be spoken of in your
language, which has neither words nor concepts
to describe them."
The Talker frowned for its master. "I have reached the limits of
life-prolongation
techniques useful to my species, and now approach the end of
my biological processes. Once
I believed that I had experienced the known
universe to its fullest. But the long journey
to this galactic arm revealed many
more ... wonders beyond my experience. Oh, if only I
could share them with you!
But your language cannot convey --" Flecks of light whirled,
changing their hue.
"You have no --" The translator's rubbery features mimicked human
frustration
well. "And still there are uncountable galaxies beyond this one. I fear that I
will not live to experience all..." The sentence withered away.
It stood silent for slow
seconds, then climbed the three steps to Donnelly's
side. Crystalline arms lifted the
Talker closer. Its voice was edged with hope
and desperation. "I wish to never die."
Donnelly
studied the tiny fires and woven geometries of the alien. This creature
hoped for the
salvation promised by the Son of Man. Could it even have an
immortal soul? Would God create
mind without soul? These beings sailed the stars
long before Eve sealed Adam's fate. What
sins did they know, and were now
bringing to Earth?
Donnelly remembered the hot smells of
musty tent cloth and road dust, of
sweating sinners who wept at her feet and begged for
salvation. She had saved
souls by the dozens at each town and farm. Now, perhaps, a greater
flock was
being offered.
With proper guidance, this reborn creature and its gifted symbiote
could preach
the Word in churches, in cathedrals throughout the world. Millions would
travel
far to hear an alien proclaim God's message. And not just on Earth. Imagine the
Good
News spreading throughout the heavens! A million worlds cleansed by the
blood of Jesus
Christ. With this disciple at her side, Reverend Ardith Donnelly
could take up the sword
and see to it that Christ died for the sins of a galaxy.
This must be her true calling, the
reason God guided the Seekers' ships out of
the darkness to Earth, where the light of
Christianity could dim a million suns.
The Lord led this poor emissary to Donnelly's
pulpit, to the one true faith, to
the feet of Christ's own lighthouse. If Donnelly's
Earthly flock chose to stray
from the path of righteousness, well then she and the Lord
would carve a new
path that spread for light-years in all directions. Thank you, God. Thank
you,
dear Jesus.
She smiled down at the alien. Her voice was robed in maternal patience.
"Eternal
life is offered only to believers in Christ." She opened the Book of
Matthew. "I'd like to
share with you --"
She felt as though her skull had vanished and warm water flowed over her
brain
--
-- She is a tremendous crystal bathing in cold acid pools beneath the
spectrum-flecked
radiance of a star cluster. She sees without eyes and feels
without flesh, and she sings
without sound in perfect harmony with ten billion
others like herself on a hundred worlds.
She sings of birth, of hunger and
mystery, and of the deepest yearning she has ever
known...
-- She leaps, joyously laughing, from a cliff of black glass into an ocean lit
by a
bloated red giant sun. The hot sea engulfs her, and the Joy rushes like
fire across her
front fins, down her long spine, and into her hindbrain.
Broadcasting exaltation to all who
listen, she plunges deeper into the First
Mother Who Gave Us Life...
-- Buoyant, balloonish,
she floats high above eternal storms that stir the
Depths below. The Sky cracks with
lightning that would shatter a lesser world,
flashing and branching through the infinite
layers of creation. She waits a
calculated interval for the air to slap with thunder. The
Old Winds are angry.
It is time to drift higher, toward the tiny glows that are so far away
where the
Sky grows dark...
NO! I AM NOT THIS! I AM --
-- happy to be needed here inside my
God. We help each other, or we die
together. I feel my God's thoughts. There is a minor
infection in a main
ventricle wall. I swim there, against a pulsing tide, knowing what to
do. There
can be no greater purpose...
-- gliding above a new world, beneath a billion suns
in the galaxy's bulging
belly. Hard radiations are warm and tingly on my sails. Life is
there, its
unique power irresistible. I shall reach out to it and...
I am --
-- making food
for my children as I watch them hatch in silicate sand.
-- home from far traveling, telling
tales of worlds built on light and song.
-- an artist, sculpting nebulae to express my awe
at being in this Universe at
this time.
I AM --
-- on the floor, shouting in a large room.
The air is cold.
Donnelly found herself on the carpet in a fetal position, shouting
nonsense
syllables. She felt as though a cord had been cut, a connection severed, her
brain
detached from an infinite communion. She was adrift. Alone.
She sat up. Her skin felt like
someone else's ill-fitting clothes. Every
movement was wrong in ways she could not
describe. She was sore in her arms and
legs. And in limbs she never had.
Somewhere nearby, a
chandelier jingled in a breeze. She turned. The Talker was
frowning down at her. Below it,
crystal webs glimmered kaleidoscopically. The
Talker wriggled. "Many apologies! I did not
wish to cause discomfort. Please
forgive. I thought you wanted to share. The experiences
are impossible to
express fully in your language."
Donnelly wrapped her brain around a vocal
apparatus that was now strange,
unfamiliar. She grunted and focused her eyes on the...no,
not "alien" anymore.
She was now...
The Seeker stepped closer. "The Gift of my species is a
specialized telempathy.
We, I, collect the life experiences of non-self species. We share
these with
other non-self minds. This way all life knows what it is like to be all others.
A prized Gift in a Union of many worlds, yes ? I wished you to understand my
problem."
Donnelly,
or the part of her that was still merely Donnelly, understood. She had
sung of mysteries in
a cold acid pool. She feared the angry Winds in the clouds
of an immense Jovian world. She
had told untellable tales brought home from far
stars. Wave after wave washed over a
flickering flame of belief in ... what?
Created in God's image? How could we have gotten it
so wrong? But in each
experience, one truth was common. Life was precious. And too short.
The Seeker stepped away. "You cannot help me. I have shared your mind. You
believe in a
non-body self that continues beyond the end of physical life
functions. A common belief.
Yet you have no evidence to support it.
"Also --" The Talker frowned as if it were tasting
something sour. "Your species
has thought itself alone in the cosmos. This I have never
experienced. It was
not a pleasant sharing. I will carry the memory with me and share you
with other
non-self forms. In this way you --" It poked a glassy finger against Donnelly's
chest. Fireflies flew within its wintery branches. "-- may be immortal, in a
way, according
to your belief system."
The alien lowered its Talker back into its body. The meaty mouth
spoke through a
nest of ice. "I regret that I may not live long enough to find my answers.
There
is much to see and very little time."
With the murmur of windchimes, the alien -- no,
the pilgrim, the searcher --
scurried backward down the aisle. The rear door keened on its
hinges.
A chill breeze ran along the carpet and curled around Donnelly. She tried to
sing a
song born beneath a heaven far richer than the barren skies of Earth. She
yearned for
something wonderful she could not name. Her skin remembered the hot
embrace of a red sea
and the electric prickle of a stellar wind. The insides of
her eyelids, she knew, would
never again show merely darkness.
All it takes is the faith of a mustard seed, she had told
her flock. Lifetimes
ago. But a mustard seed tossed into an infinite orchard...
Silently,
Donnelly offered up a prayer.
After a long while, she stood, massaged stiff muscles, and
slowly walked down
the aisle to the door. It moaned a last lingering lament as she opened
it.
There were glints of light in the graveyard across the road. The Seeker was
there,
studying the ornate headstones. Donnelly wondered if it really enjoyed
traveling alone. It
couldn't hurt to ask.
She locked the door behind her and followed the prints through the
fresh mantle
of Christmas snow.