Requiem Of Homo Sapiens - The Wild - Part 37
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Part 37

'We dream of a unified Church, of course. The true Church is in all people, in all places we would see all peoples take joy in Ede's infinite Program. We would bring the power of G.o.d to everyone, everywhere.'

'I see.'

'We would like to believe that a part of Elder Bertram still hopes for this, too.'

Danlo smiled at Harrah and said, 'I ... have never known anyone who tried so hard to find the good even in bad men.'

'But there are no bad men. There are only negative programs.'

Again, Danlo smiled. He said, 'Negative programs, then, if you'd like.'

'All this points to why it's unlikely that Elder Bertram would have wanted to a.s.sa.s.sinate you.'

'Truly?'

'If you were killed, Pilot, how could Elder Bertram ever hope to send Architect pilots into the Vild?'

'But you have said that he opposes sending Architect children to Thiells.'

'Perhaps he hopes that there are other ways of training pilots.'

Danlo blew very softly on the ivory mouthpiece of his flute, then said, 'I think I see.

But I have taken vows, Blessed Ivi. I would never ... try to train pilots myself, for Bertram. Or for anyone else.'

'Perhaps Elder Bertram hopes that there might be other ways of utilizing your pilot's skills.'

'I do not like the way you say this word "utilize".'

'We're afraid that Elder Bertram is a very ambitious man.'

'And I am afraid ... to be afraid of this man,' Danlo said. 'This would give him an even greater power than he already has, yes?'

For a while, Danlo and Harrah sat in the morning sunlight discussing the problems and politics of the Cybernetic Universal Church. A robot came to clear their dishes, while another one brought a pot of toho tea, all cool and bitter and sweet. They returned to the hope of finding the lost Architects who were destroying the Vild stars.

Harrah believed that, while it was presently impossible to send children to Thiells to train as pilots, the pilots of the Order might carry missionary Architects in the holds of their lightships.

'These missionaries,' Danlo said, 'would bring to the lost Architects your understanding of the Program of Totality, yes?'

'We're afraid that it's not as simple as that.'

'But it is simple, truly. Why can't your missionaries say that the stars are blessed and must be looked upon with all the love of a child for his mother's eyes?'Harrah smiled and then laughed softly into the sleeve of her kimono. 'We believe that you're a very romantic man, Pilot.'

'Truly, I am.'

'But of course we can't simply send missionaries into the Vild to proselytize people with our understanding of the Program. First we would have to redefine it.'

Harrah went on to explain that the Program of Totality was no part of the holy Algorithm. In truth, few of the programs of the Church really were. In the Algorithm, like a wise father addressing his children beneath a sabi tree, Ede had spoken many words concerning the nature of life in the universe and how it should be lived. Men and women had come to interpret, debate, and formalize the imperatives implicit in these words. And so, over fifteen hundred years of falling across the stars, the greatest minds of the Cybernetic Universal Church had come to formulate many programs.

These statements of the Church's fundamental beliefs were gathered in the Commentaries, which, after the Logics and the Algorithm itself, was the most sacred body of Church literature. As Danlo would discover, the Commentaries were well named, for their full elaboration had been an historic and evolutionary process: a great Architect such as Yurik Iviongeon would put forth his understanding of what Ede had meant when He had said: 'The universe is like a universal Turing machine'.

And then others would make comments concerning Elder Yurik's inspiration, and over time there would be comments concerning arguments made about the comments of some obscure theologian of little name or accomplishment. In this way, the programs of the Church came to be formatted and defined. And although it was the prerogative of all Holy Ivis to add to the Commentaries, editing or redefining the Church's most ancient programs was always difficult. And always dangerous, for a Holy Ivi must always act with her finger on the pulse of her people. Above all she must win the Koivuniemin to her vision rather than merely commanding dissident Iviomils to obey her p.r.o.nouncements, as her exalted rank permitted her to do. A High Architect who ignored the zeal or sanctimony of the Elders risked disharmony in her Church, schism, and even war.

'You must understand,' Harrah told Danlo as she stirred some sugar into a new cup of tea, 'that it's the Elders who elect a new Ivi. And those programs that the old Ivi has redefined may be completely undone by the new. It's our duty as with every Ivi to give our people programs not just for a year but for all time. Until the end of time, until the architecture of the universe is complete.'

Here she clapped her hands once as she looked at the far wall of the room and intoned, 'First scene, please.'

At the sound of her voice, the image of Nikolos Daru Ede glittering on the wall's chatoyant surface began to dissolve and fade. In moments, in its place, there appeared the likenesses of three newborn babies, two girls and a boy. Their fat little faces were pink and round, and they were frozen into expressions of empty-eyed wonder, as if they had just attempted their first look at the marvels of the world. Each baby wore a new white kimono of precious cotton cloth; each wore a knitted white dobra snug over her or his bald head.

'Do you see my babies?' Harrah asked. 'My great-grandchildren. Tirza Iviertes and Isabel Iviorvan en li Ede these are the girls. The boy is, ah, give me a moment please.'

Harrah shut her eyes, then, as she folded her hands over her heart. Danlo thought that she had beautiful hands, with long, strong fingers still adept at plucking a gosharp's strings.

'The boy is Mensah Iviercier, of my fourteenth daughter's line she is Valeska Iviercier en li Ede. I have another daughter, Katura Iviercier, and I'm afraid I sometimes confuse their lines.'

Danlo, not quite knowing what to say, responded with a commonplace. 'They ... are beautiful children,' he told her.

Although, due to the trials of birth, Mensah Iviercier's head seemed almost as pointed as Bertram Jaspari's, Danlo spoke the truth. To him, all babies were beautiful.

'Indeed, they are,' Harrah said.

She told him, then, something of her marriage to the Elder Sarojin Eshte Iviastalir, who had died of the mehalis infection many years since. She said that during the first part of her marriage, she had borne fifty-three children, one child each year until she had begun her rise in the Church hierarchy at the age of sixty-eight. Over the past sixty years since then, her line had increased so that she counted one thousand, six hundred and seventeen grandchildren as her direct descendants, many of whom still lived in her birth city, Montellivi. So far, she had more than ten thousand great- grandchildren; there was no day of the year, she said, in which one or two new great- grandchildren did not come forth to change the face of the universe.

'We try so hard to remember their names,' she said to Danlo. 'But now, even my great-grandchildren are bearing their own children.'

Over yet another cup of tea sweetened with sugar, Harrah confided that she spent part of each morning memorizing the names of her vast family and sending birthday presents.

'There are mnemonics and other att.i.tudes of recall that the remembrancers of my Order teach,' Danlo said. 'If you'd like, I could help you with some of these att.i.tudes.'

'That's a gracious offer, Pilot, and we believe that you're a man of remarkable grace.

We've also heard that you have a remarkable memory.'

Danlo did not tell her that when he was only four years old, he had memorized the names of his grandfathers and thousands of his far great-grandfathers back some fifty generations. He chose not to explain that once, as an exercise, he had envisioned the names and faces of half a million of his own descendants, should he ever be so blessed as to father children.

'Truly, the problem is not how we remember,' he said. 'It is why we ever forget.'

Harrah smiled sadly, and she turned to face the far wall. 'Next scene, please,' she said. Almost immediately the chatoy surface of the wall glittered with new colours, and a new scene appeared. At least ten thousand Architects, as tiny as dots, stood shoulder to shoulder and face to face in a very crowded portrait of Harrah's family.

'We cannot forget that each of our children is a star,' Harrah said. 'Each of us is a child of Ede, and we were each meant to shine. Are you familiar with the Program of Increase, Pilot?'

'This is the imperative that women should bear many children, yes?'

'Indeed it is. And it's a good program, a sacred program in which we all believe.

Has not Ede told us that we should increase without bound and fill all the universe with our children's children? And yet....'

Danlo waited a moment then said, 'Yes?'

'And yet there was a time, at the beginning of the Church, when this natural increase was left to the pa.s.sion of each husband and wife.'

'I see.'

'We have all time to fill the universe, you know. And all time is in Ede, and we must remember that the Program of Increase is part of His Infinite Program which will run in its own time until halting at the end of all things.'

Danlo smiled as he squeezed his flute. He said, 'I am no Iviomil, Blessed Harrah.

You do not need to convince me.'

'No, we suppose not,' she said, laughing softly. 'And yet we do wish we could reason with the Iviomils. Bertram Jaspari wilfully forgets that it was men and women such as ourselves who once defined this program.'

'This definition ... occurred at the time of the Great Plague, yes?'

Harrah looked up suddenly and nearly dropped her tea in surprise. 'How is it, Pilot, that you know what so many elders of our Church have forgotten?'

'I ... have been studying Church history,' Danlo said. He explained that he had spent a part of every morning sitting beneath the holy heaume in his chambers, exploring various cybernetic s.p.a.ces. 'I... have found your archives, your history pools. Those which were not forbidden. There is much information there.'

'At the time of the Plague,' Harrah said, 'nine of ten children died. In some places ninety-nine of a hundred. Therefore it was necessary that a woman should bear as many babies as she could.'

'But your people ... outlived the Plague.'

'Indeed we did, as many other peoples did not. But we believe we paid a price. It was Ivi Sigrid Iviastalir and the Elders of her Koivuniemin who defined the Program of Increase as it reads today.'

'That a woman must bear at least five children?'

'Every married woman.'

'And that a woman should bear ten times as many?'

'Or more, if she is so graced. This is the ideal.'

'So many children,' Danlo said.

Harrah rubbed the soft, old skin around her eyes and sighed. She seemed almost angry as she said, 'We believe that the Program of Increase should never have been defined so as to specify a number of children required of each woman.'

'So many children. In your city, in your world, so many people.'

'Too many,' Harrah said, almost whispering. 'Too many of our people don't have enough food to eat.'

For a moment, Danlo bowed his head as he remembered what it was like to be hungry. Once, as a young man, during his journey to Neverness, he had nearly starved to death out on the ice of the frozen sea.

He asked, 'But doesn't the Algorithm say that whoever is vastened will take sustenance in the infinite body of Ede?'

'But whoever is not vastened must still eat, you know.'

'But wouldn't Bertram Jaspari say that the sufferings of this world are only a test to determine who is worthy of vastening and who is not?'

'Indeed he would.'

'And wouldn't all the Iviomils say that the sufferings of this life are redeemed when an Architect dies and his selfness is vastened in an eternal computer?'

Harrah pointed at the portrait of her family glistening on the wall. 'These are my children, Pilot! My babies. And they are hungry. The truth of evil and suffering is one of the Four Great Truths, but to seek needless suffering is a hakr against G.o.d.'

'The Program of Increase ... causes the greatest of suffering.'

'And this is why,' Harrah said, 'we must always take utmost care in formatting and defining a program.'

'Because it is harder to redefine a program than to define it in the first place, yes?'

Harrah nodded her head. 'An error written into a program as a mere reaction to a temporary problem, however grave, can lead to great harm.'

'An error,' Danlo said, deep in thought. 'Like a virus.'

'What do you mean?'

Danlo suddenly looked up at Harrah. 'Like an aberrant virus infecting one's DNA, it can become impossible to gel rid of.'At this terrible metaphor, Harrah smiled sadly and said, 'We're afraid our Holy Church is inherently conservative. But unfortunately we conserve the negative as well as the positive.'

'Isn't this the nature of orthodoxy?'

'Indeed it is.'

'But even so, your Church ... has always provided for change, yes?'

'What do you mean?'

'I have learned ... that the Holy Ivi may receive new programs.'

'And how do you think we may do this?'

'I have learned ... that the Holy Ivi is the guardian of Ede's first computer. The first eternal computer, into which he carked his soul.'

'You've learned almost too much,' Harrah said, smiling at him.

'It is said that Ede's Program for the universe is written in this computer. It is said that the Holy Ivi and only the Holy Ivi may interface with it.'

'And what else is said?'

'It is said that the Holy Ivi alone may read Ede's Infinite Program and determine which programs of the Church are in accord with it.'

'Oh, may she indeed!'

In Harrah's dark, almost black eyes there blazed a light of pure faith. She looked deeply at Danlo for a long time. In the unspoken communication flowing like water between them, Danlo understood that she would never interface Ede's eternal computer merely out of expediency or political needs.

'If the Holy Ivi is truly inspired,' Danlo said, 'if her vision is true, then it is said that she might thus redefine old programs. Or install programs that are wholly new. This is her power, yes?'

Harrah took a long drink of tea and then sighed. 'Is it also said that no Ivi has used this power in five hundred years?'

'I ... do not know.'