New Frontiers (12 page)

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Authors: Ben Bova

BOOK: New Frontiers
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By the time he reached his brother's rectory, it was almost midnight. But Jason felt strangely calm, at peace with himself and the untrustworthy world that he would soon be departing.

Jason pounded on the rectory door until Michael's housekeeper, clutching a house robe to her skinny frame, reluctantly let him in.

“The monsignor's sound asleep,” she insisted, with an angry frown.

“Wake him,” Jason insisted even more firmly.

She brought him to the study and told him to wait there. The fireplace was cold and dark. The only light in the room came from the green-shaded lamp on Michael's desk. Jason paced back and forth, too wired to sit still.

As soon as Michael padded into the study, in his bedroom slippers and bathrobe, rubbing sleep from his eyes, Jason started to pour out his soul.

“Give your entire estate to the Church?” Michael sank into one of the leather armchairs.

“Yes!” Jason pulled the other chair close to his brother and leaned forward eagerly. “With certain provisions, of course.”

“Provisions.”

Jason ticked off on his fingers: “First, I want the Church to oversee the maintenance of my frozen body. I want the Church to guarantee that nobody's going to pull the plug on me.”

Michael nodded warily.

“Second, I want the Church to monitor medical research and decide when I should be revived. And by whom.”

Nodding again, Michael said, “Go on.”

“That's it.”

“Those are the only conditions?”

Jason said. “Yes.”

Stirring slightly in his chair, Michael asked, “And what does the Church get out of this?”

“Half my estate.”

“Half?” Michael's eyebrows rose.

“I think that's fair, don't you? Half of my estate to the Church, the other half waiting for me when I'm revived.”

“Uh … how much is it? I mean, how large is your estate?”

With a shrug, Jason said, “I'm not exactly sure. My personal holdings, real estate, liquid assets—should add up to several billion, I'd guess.”

“Billion?” Michael stressed the
b
.

“Billion.”

Michael gulped.

Jason leaned back in the bottle-green chair and let out a long breath. “Do that for me and the Church can have half of my estate. You could do a lot of good with a billion and some dollars, Mike.”

Michael ran a hand across his stubbly chin. “I'll have to speak to the cardinal,” he muttered. Then he broke into a slow smile. “By the saints, I'll probably have to take this all the way to the Vatican!”

*   *   *

WHEN JASON AWOKE,
for a startled instant he thought that something had gone wrong with the freezing. He was still lying on the table in the lab, still surrounded by green-coated doctors and technicians. The air felt chill, and he saw a faint icy mist wafting across his field of view.

But then he realized that the ceiling of the lab had been a blank white, while the ceiling above him now glowed with colors. Blinking, focusing, he saw that the ceiling, the walls, the whole room was decorated with incredible Renaissance paintings of saints and angels in beautiful flowing robes of glowing color.

“Where am I?” he asked, his voice a feeble croak. “What year is this?”

“You are safe,” said one of the green-masked persons. “You are cured of your disease. The year is anno Domini 2089.”

Half a century, Jason said to himself. I've done it! I've slept more than fifty years and they've awakened me and I'm cured and healthy again! Jason slipped into the sweetest sleep he had ever known. The fact that the man who spoke to him had a distinct foreign accent did not trouble him in the slightest.

Over the next several days Jason submitted to a dozen physical examinations and endless questions by persons he took to be psychologists. When he tried to find out where he was and what the state of the twenty-first-century world might be, he was told, “Later. There will be plenty of time for that later.”

His room was small but very pleasant, his bed comfortable. The room's only window looked out on a flourishing garden, lush trees, and bright blossoming flowers in brilliant sunlight. The only time it rained was after dark, and Jason began to wonder if the weather was somehow being controlled deliberately.

Slowly he recovered his strength. The nurses wheeled him down a long corridor, its walls and ceilings totally covered with frescoes. The place did not look like a hospital, did not smell like one, either. After nearly a week, he began to take strolls in the garden by himself. The sunshine felt good, warming. He noticed lots of priests and nuns also strolling in the garden, speaking in foreign languages. Of course, Jason told himself, this place must be run by the Church.

It wasn't until he saw a trio of Swiss Guards in their colorful uniforms that he realized he was in the Vatican.

“Yes, it's true,” admitted the youthful woman who was the chief psychologist on his recovery team. “We are in the Vatican.” She had a soft voice and spoke English with a faint, charming Italian accent.

“But why—?”

She touched his lips with a cool finger. “His Holiness will explain it all to you.”

“His Holiness?”


Il papa.
You are going to see him tomorrow.”

The pope.

They gave Jason a new suit of royal blue to wear for his audience with the pope. Jason showered, shaved, combed his hair, put on the silky new clothing, and then waited impatiently. I'm going to see the pope!

Six Swiss Guardsmen, three black-robed priests, and a bishop escorted him through the corridors of the Vatican, out into the private garden, through doors and up staircases. Jason caught a glimpse of long lines of tourists in the distance, but this part of the Vatican was off-limits to them.

At last they ushered him into a small private office. Except for a set of French windows, its walls were covered with frescoes by Raphael. In the center of the marble floor stood an elaborately carved desk. No other furniture in the room. Behind the desk was a small door, hardly noticeable because the paintings masked it almost perfectly. Jason stood up straight in front of the unoccupied desk as the Swiss Guards, priests, and bishop arrayed themselves behind him. Then the small door swung open and the pope, in radiant white robes, entered the room.

It was Michael.

Jason's knees almost buckled when he saw his brother. He was older, but not that much. His hair had gone white, but his face seemed almost the same, just a few more crinkles around the corners of his eyes and mouth. Mike's light-blue eyes were still clear, alert. He stood erect and strong. He looked a hale and vigorous sixty or so, not the ninety-some that Jason knew he would have to be.

“Mike?” Jason felt bewildered, staring at this man in the white robes of the pope. “Mike, is it really you?”

“It's me, Jace.”

For a confused moment Jason did not know what to do. He thought he should kneel to the pope, kiss his ring, show some sign of respect and reverence. But how can it be Mike, how can he be so young if fifty years have gone by?

Then Pope Michael I, beaming at his brother, held out his arms to Jason. And Jason rushed into his brother's arms and let Mike embrace him.

“Please leave us alone,” said the pope to his entourage. The phalanx of priests and guards flowed out of the room, silent except for a faint swishing of black robes.

“Mike? You're the pope?” Jason could hardly believe it.

“Thanks to you, Jace.” Mike's voice was firm and strong, a voice accustomed to authority.

“And you look—how old are you now?”

Ninety-seven.” Michael laughed. “I know I don't look it. There've been a lot of improvements in medicine, thanks to you.”

“Me?”

“You started things, Jace. Started me on the road that's led here. You've changed the world, changed it far more than either of us could have guessed back in the old days.”

Jason felt weak in the knees. “I don't understand.”

Wrapping a strong arm around his brother's shoulders, Pope Michael I led Jason to the French windows. They stepped out onto a small balcony. Jason saw that they were up so high it made him feel a little giddy. The city of Rome lay all around them; magnificent buildings bathed in warm sunshine beaming down from a brilliant clear blue sky. Birds chirped happily from the nearby trees. Church bells rang in the distance.

“Listen,” said Michael.

“To what?”

“To what you don't hear.”

Jason looked closely at his brother. “Have you gone into Zen or something?”

Michael laughed. “Jace, you don't hear automobile engines, do you? We use electrical cars now, clean and quiet. You don't hear horns or people cursing at each other. Everyone's much more polite, much more respectful. And look at the air! It's clean. No smog or pollution.”

Jason nodded numbly. “Things have come a long way since I went under.”

“Thanks to you,” Michael said again.

“I don't understand.”

“You revitalized the Church, Jace. And Holy Mother Church has revitalized Western civilization. We've entered a new age, an age of faith, an age of morality and obedience to the law.”

Jason felt overwhelmed. “I revitalized the Church?”

“Your idea of entrusting your estate to the Church. I got to thinking about that. Soon I began spreading the word that the Church was the only institution in the whole world that could be trusted to look after freezees—”

“Freezees?”

“People who've had themselves frozen. That's what they're called now.”

“Freezees.” It sounded to Jason like an ice cream treat he had known when he was a kid.

“You hit the right button, Jace,” Michael went on, grasping the stone balustrade of the balcony in both hands. “Holy Mother Church has the integrity to look after the freezees while they're helpless, and the endurance to take care of them for centuries, millennia, if necessary.”

“But how did that change everything?”

Michael grinned at him. “You, of all people, should be able to figure that out.”

“Money,” said Jason.

Pope Michael nodded vigorously. “The rich came to us to take care of them while they were frozen. You gave us half your estate, many of the others gave us a lot more. The more desperate they were, the more they offered. We never haggled; we took whatever they were willing to give. Do you have any idea of how much money flowed into the Church? Not just billions, Jace. Trillions! Trillions of dollars.”

Jason thought of how much compound interest could accrue in half a century. “How much am I worth now?” he asked.

His brother ignored him. “With all that money came power, Jace. Real power. Power to move politicians. Power to control whole nations. With that power came authority. The Church reasserted itself as the moral leader of the Western world. The people were ready for moral leadership. They needed it, and we provided it. The old evil ways are gone, Jace. Banished.”

“Yes, but how much—”

“We spent wisely,” the pope continued, his eyes glowing. “We invested in the future. We started to rebuild the world, and that gained us the gratitude and loyalty of half the world.”

“What should I invest in now?” Jason asked.

Michael turned slightly away from him. “There's a new morality out there, a new world of faith and respect for authority. The world you knew is gone forever, Jace. We've ended hunger. We've stabilized the world's population—
without
artificial birth control.”

Jason could not help smiling at his brother. “You're still against contraception.”

“Some things don't change. A sin is still a sin.”

“You thought temporary suicide was a sin,” Jason reminded him.

“It still is,” said the Pope, utterly serious.

“But you help people to freeze themselves! You just told me—”

Michael put a hand on Jason's shoulder. “Jace, just because those poor frightened souls entrust their money to Holy Mother Church doesn't mean that they're not committing a mortal sin when they kill themselves.”

“But it's not suicide! I'm here, I'm alive again!”

“Legally, you're dead.”

“But that—” Jason's breath caught in his throat. He did not like the glitter in Michael's eye.

“Holy Mother Church cannot condone suicide, Jace.”

“But you benefit from it!”

“God moves in mysterious ways. We use the money that sinners bestow upon us to help make the world a better place. But they are still sinners.”

A terrible realization was beginning to take shape in Jason's frightened mind. “How … how many freezees have you revived?” he asked in a trembling voice.

“You are the first,” his brother answered. “And the last.”

“But you can't leave them frozen! You promised to revive them!”

Pope Michael shook his head slowly, a look on his face more of pity than sorrow. “We promised to revive you, Jace. We made no such promises to the rest of them. We agreed only to look after them and maintain them until they could be cured of whatever it was that killed them.”

“But that means you've got to revive them.”

A wintry smile touched the corners of the pope's lips. “No, it does not. The contract is quite specific. Our best lawyers have honed it to perfection. Many of them are Jesuits, you know. The contract gives the Church the authority to decide when to revive them. We keep them frozen.”

Jason could feel his heart thumping against his ribs. “But why would anybody come to you to be frozen when nobody's been revived? Don't they realize—”

“No, they don't realize, Jace. That's the most beautiful part of it. We control the media very thoroughly. And when a person is facing the certainty of death, you would be shocked at how few questions are asked. We offer life after death, just as we always have. They interpret our offer in their own way.”

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