Day 17
IT WAS ON A TUESDAY NIGHT, exactly one week from the first meeting and just over two weeks from the day Caleb first set foot on American soil that the second meeting took place. The Old Theater held ten thousand seats, and an eager public lined up for ten city blocks for the first-come-first-served tickets. At twenty-five bucks a pop they were a bargain. They had all seen the replay a hundred times of that small child’s legs straightening; this was the real thing.
The LAPD had stationed itself at all the intersections and relegated itself to traffic control for most of the day. It wasn’t an unruly crowd waiting for a chance to see the boy; if anything it was a subdued, introspective crowd—a far cry from the jostling, snorting, beer-drinking types waiting for a crack at Ozzy Osbourne or the Nine Inch Nails or some other rock band, which was normal fare for a ten-block line.
To walk down the line without knowing of the event, you might think it a convention for the fringe of society. The foreign, the handicapped, the nerds, and the like.
Perhaps a full third were of foreign origin, mostly from the Middle East or Asia. Quite a few had come in traditional clothing: head wraps and white cotton robes or sarongs. Some stood in groups, all dressed identically, like monks or sheiks. Others stood in black robes, unmoving. Still others stood with clear markings on their foreheads or arms that identified their affiliation with a particular sect.
The religious community had come out in all stripes and large numbers to see the boy. Hindus, Muslims, Buddhists, and a scattering of smaller groups—Moonies, and the like. Which made sense. They had all had a week to fester over the boy’s power, and now they wanted to know for themselves. The earliest suggestions that the power had somehow been faked had been easily refuted by the media itself. So then the only real question which remained was the source of the boy’s power.
It was God, of course. Ah, but was it?
The Eastern religious elite weren’t so sure. It could well be psychic, a human’s unique connection with the universe that allowed him such power. But even so, what kind of human could connect so purely with the universe? A very great teacher indeed. A god perhaps.
And if the boy’s power did come from God, which God? The God of Mohammed? Perhaps Mohammed himself, sent by God?
The Christian community was no more united. Clearly if the boy’s power was genuine, and it seemed to be, then it came from either the Holy Spirit, as sent by Jesus Christ, or from Satan. He was either a prophet from God or an antichrist. Some had already decided on the latter, and they identified themselves with placards or picket signs with long verses from the book of Revelation.
Most of the Western world heeded the rhetoric of the parapsychologists, however, and many who waited were everyday folk who’d come to see a psychic with extraordinary powers. Or be healed by him.
Thousands who’d come leaned on crutches or sat in wheelchairs or in a few cases lay on wheeled beds. There was no telling how many others suffered from invisible ailments, but surely thousands.
They opened the doors at five, two full hours before the event was scheduled to begin, and it took all of that to ease the first ten thousand into the auditorium. Three thousand were turned away.
Jason stood on the stage behind the huge purple curtains; they’d lowered them this time, evidently for theatrical impact. It wasn’t the only change. The stage itself had been covered in a rich purple carpet. Tall palms, more than twenty of them, ran in a semicircle behind where Caleb was supposed to stand. Tall Greek pillars that looked as if they might have been ripped off from the Parthenon stood on either side. The set reminded Jason of a picture from the Jesus movie, or a passion play he’d seen once.
Organ music rumbled in low tones and colored lights cast an atmospheric red hue over the whole stage. Two black boxes—fog machines—sat just behind the curtain. Jason had beat the drums in a rock band during his college days, and they’d played exactly one gig. It was the only other time he’d seen a fog machine close up. The outfit Nikolous had hired to create the set was going Hollywood.
Jason parted the curtain and looked at the crowd. The entire floor section had been set aside for those who might find negotiating the stairs difficult, and by all appearances it wasn’t enough room. The media waited in taped sections, their cameras peering at the stage from all angles: CBS, ABC, FOX, CNN, NBC, of course, and a slew he hardly recognized. At least thirty cameras in all.
Every seat in the house was filled, and the quiet, speculative talk created a dull roar that gave the general impression a train was rolling through the station. The air conditioners were having a hard time keeping up with the mass of flesh.
Jason scanned the midtier orange seats. It was mind-boggling to think that just over two weeks ago Caleb had been hidden from the world in a monastery in northern Ethiopia, and here people were coming in droves to see him. Like a rare treasure unearthed in an archeological dig—the Holy Grail with the power of everlasting youth or something. Thinking of it in those terms, this all made sense.
What didn’t make sense was why the boy’s life had been threatened in the first place. Why had they been chased in Ethiopia? Why had the monastery been leveled? And more to the point here at home, why had the NSA been so eager to have him deported? They had saved Caleb for the moment, but to what end? The NSA didn’t do things haphazardly. And for that matter, although the boy’s burgeoning popularity may have stalled the threat, the popularity itself seemed to be getting out of control.
Caleb was a lost child, not some holy relic with magical powers. It was the impression that lingered the longest these days. Maybe Leiah’s motherly love was rubbing off on him.
His eyes suddenly met with those of a man to the near right not thirty yards away on the midtier balcony. He stood in a hooded black robe beside five other men, all Caucasian and all dressed alike. To a man, they were staring at him from behind their hoods.
Jason started and pulled the curtain closed. And what was that? A cult of reapers holding signs instead of sickles?
He parted the curtain again, barely this time. Several had shifted their attention to the crowd below, but the leader and two others still drilled the stage with their dark stares. They held pickets with the words, “Beware the Antichrist who comes as a wolf in sheep’s clothing,” scrawled in red on black boards. He blinked. Maniacs like these could be a problem. They could pose a threat, couldn’t they? How far would a disciple go to kill the Antichrist?
“It is full?”
Jason jerked back. It was Nikolous.
“Yes. The whole world is out there.”
“Good.” The Greek pulled on his lapels and rose to his toes once.
“You’re pulling out all the stops on this, aren’t you?” Jason asked.
“Of course. Anything less would be a disgrace.”
“Not to mention a whole lot less money.”
“Not everything is about money. There is far more at stake here than a few dollars. To reduce such an appointed time in history to complaints over who is making money would be to miss the point.”
“Smooth. That’s part of the spiel you plan on feeding the cameras? You actually think they’ll believe that you have no interest in the money? You’re talking what, $250,000 here, less maybe fifty for expenses? To buy the boy shoes, right?”
“Say what you like.” Nikolous glanced at his watch. “The show starts in five minutes.”
“The show, huh? And what about you, Nikolous? You’re a religious man who believes in the deity of Christ, aren’t you? Where do you think the boy’s power comes from?”
The Father peered at him over the dark bags under his eyes. “This is not about any particular religious dogma. It’s about the power of the mind, which was indeed created by God, though we don’t necessarily know how. We have evolved far, and now we have a crowning example of God’s accomplishment at our fingertips. And it is appropriate that he’s in the hands of God’s church. He’s God’s gift to the church.”
“And is God’s gift doing miracles from God?”
“Miracles are things we read about in storybooks; they certainly have no place in any thinking man’s faith. Now, if you will excuse me, I must prepare.”
Nikolous turned and walked to the stage entrance.
Jason wasn’t a theologian, but he somehow doubted they were the words the founder of Christianity would have chosen. The man was under a cloud of delusion.
Caleb and Leiah were where he’d left them, behind the stage. Caleb was playing with some marbles on the floor while stagehands walked about barking orders in their walkie-talkies and adding to the general confusion. The boy seemed more comfortable with his surroundings than he had a week earlier.
Leiah looked up and grinned deliberately. The incident at Jim’s Fish House had brought an awkwardness to their interaction, Jason thought. She’d pulled back. Not that they were close before, but at least they’d never had trouble speaking their minds. During the last four days their candor had been replaced by a sort of insecurity. A shyness. The kind of feeling you might have returning to a swimming pool the day after having the water suck your trunks off on a particularly spectacular dive that you knew darn well they were all watching.
The feeling was compounded by his budding certainty that she was terrified of his interest and was kindly withdrawing. Which in turn made him wonder if he really was interested. It felt like a nasty downward spiral.
He grinned and dipped his head.
To his right Donna’s voice broke his train of thought. “Hello, Jason. You ready for this?” She’d entered from the floor, smiling wide, obviously in her element. He glanced at the door she walked through. A guard stood by biting one of his fingernails. He’d have to talk to Nikolous about security. If Donna could just waltz in, so could the black avengers out there.
“I don’t know, Donna. Depends what this is. There’s gonna be a lot of disappointed people if he decides not to walk on water tonight.”
“He won’t. I don’t think he knows the difference between water and land. By the way, I interviewed Crandal yesterday. If you didn’t catch it, the whole thing’s being rebroadcast on the late edition tonight.”
She winked and walked by.
“And? You asked him?”
She turned back, smiling coy. “I did and he’s clean. If anything, the boy might have helped deliver him his presidency.”
“What?”
“Late Edition, Jason. Eleven o’clock. Watch it.” She headed for Nikolous and was gone.
He stared dumbly after her. She was wrong. Crandal was involved like hydrogen was involved with water. They might not see it, but it was there.
The organ music suddenly swelled and the lights dimmed. Nikolous was starting his show.
They started with the fog machines behind the curtain even before Nikolous had finished his upgraded and considerably longer speech of introduction. Jason couldn’t see the crowd, but he could almost hear their rapt silence. The new stage managers had improved the sound system, he noted. He could feel his spine rattling with the sustained note. And the light show was nothing to laugh at either. Ten new banks of lights hung from the high ceiling, shifting colored hues that leaked onto the stage despite the lowered curtain. They had most definitely gone Hollywood.
The Greek strutted offstage, and Leiah reluctantly let Caleb go. The boy did a sweet thing then. At the entrance to the stage he reached up and kissed her on the cheek. A bank of fog about six inches deep covered the stage as he walked out to the microphone, giving the illusion that he was walking on a cloud.
They didn’t lift the curtain until he stood still in the center. Then the purple curtain rose on its cables, and for the second time the world looked at the small boy on the stage of the Old Theater.
Caleb just stood there, gazing out at the lights, and Jason wondered if he would walk back again. But he didn’t. Instead he put his hands behind his back and walked slowly to his right, away from them.
They had lowered the music to a whisper, and you could hear the collective breathing of the crowd. Caleb reached the end of the stage and then turned and walked back to their end, slowly, like a schoolmaster studying a group of misfits gathered for detention.
He stopped and looked out for a long time—enough time for a few voices to begin whispering. He suddenly turned around and Jason saw his face. Caleb’s cheeks were wet with tears. But it was the only sign that he was crying. He was reacting to the crowd in their wheelchairs. Jason swallowed.
The boy suddenly turned and walked back to Leiah, who’d stepped up to the side curtain. She dropped to a knee and took the boy in her arms. But Caleb didn’t want consoling; he wanted to talk to her. He put his mouth by her ear and began to whisper.
She stood and looked at Nikolous. “He wants me to go out with him.”
The Greek hesitated. He waved her out quickly. “Go then. Go.”
Leiah quickly straightened her scarf and, with a final furtive glance at Jason, walked out onto the stage with Caleb.
He led her by the hand, he wearing his red bow tie and she her red scarf, and Jason wondered about the coincidence. They walked through the fog and stopped before the microphone. Caleb looked at her and she bent again. She listened for a few seconds and then stood. Leiah looked back at Jason one last time. He tried to give her an encouraging smile, but his heart was slamming away in his chest and he wasn’t sure what his face actually did. Whatever it was it seemed to work. She lifted the microphone from its stand and spoke to the audience.
“Caleb is from Ethiopia, as you know. His mother tongue is Ge’ez, and although he speaks some English he says he would rather that I speak for him, since I am very good at English.”
A few chuckled at that, but it was an oh-isn’t-that-cute chuckle and Jason found himself joining it.
“Those are his words, of course. He wants me to ask you if you believe in God . . .” Caleb was pulling on her arm and she bent to him, listened, and then straightened again.
“I’m sorry; he wants me to ask you if you believe in the kingdom of God.” The room remained silent, and she looked down at him for further instruction, but Caleb seemed satisfied. He looked to the crowd, waiting for some kind of response.
They waited in an awkward silence for about ten seconds. And then Caleb looked up at Leiah again, and he whispered in her ear for a long time.
When she stood, they were leaning forward in their seats to hear her words. The boy’s words.
“He says that’s what he thought. Because he has seen a lot of anger and meanness and bad things, and he doesn’t understand them. There is darkness and there is light, and he doesn’t understand why so many people would want to walk in the darkness. He says that when Jesus walked on the earth he walked in the light, and Caleb thinks it would be very good if all of you would start to walk in the light as well.”
Caleb was pulling on her arm before she finished. Leiah dipped for his words.
“He wants to know if anyone really wants to walk in the kingdom of God, because anyone who really wants to enter the kingdom of God can. It is a simple matter of belief. Of faith.”
Another tug, another whisper, another nugget.
“Whoever follows the Spirit into the kingdom becomes a son of God. His dadda taught him that. It is inside you, and everywhere, through the narrow gate. But it is very nice in that place. He thinks you should all go there and be sons of God.”
For what seemed like a full minute, no one spoke. The boy stood very still and Leiah kept looking at him for more, but he just looked at the people. Someone on the front row had a bad chest cold and coughed loudly. Jason imagined he could hear the combined whir of the cameras, but it could just as easily have been the buzz of lights above.
Caleb tilted his head up to Leiah and spoke again, quickly this time.
“He wants to know . . .” She stopped and bent to Caleb for clarification.
Leiah started again. “He wants to know who draws the pictures that move.”
Still no one responded. They were star-struck, Jason thought. Absolutely flummoxed. It was the first time the boy had spoken of his faith, and no one seemed to know what to make of it. Jason certainly didn’t. The kingdom stuff was clearly something out of a storybook or something.
Leiah was bent over Caleb yet again, and now they exchanged whispers several times. Fresh tears wet the boy’s face, and he kept looking out to the audience. When Leiah straightened she took a small step away from him. Her voice held a tremble.
“It seems very important to him for you to know that this kingdom is not a matter of eating or drinking or walking or even breathing. His dadda taught him that too. It is about peace and happiness and doing right.” She paused and shifted.
“He will ask his Father if he wants to do some things for you now.”
It was the boy’s way of saying he was going to pray for them, Jason thought. He was tying his power to a faith; that much was clear. God and Jesus and this kingdom of his—Dadda’s words for how things worked.
Caleb had closed his eyes and lifted his chin, and it occurred to Jason that something might actually happen now. Oddly he hadn’t really prepared himself for a repeat of the last meeting, maybe because it still seemed so farfetched. He had been thrown from his feet, true enough. But it had been a distant place, like in a dream. Real, but only momentarily real, if that made any sense.
And yet here he was, facing the boy who had his chin lifted, presumably praying to some God in the heavens. He swallowed and instinctively steadied himself with a hand on the wall.
Leiah stared at the boy, and she took another step back. The tears were drying on his small cheeks, and his hands hung loosely by his sides. He stood like a lost child in the middle of the large stage, with wisps of fog floating by his feet and a serene blue stage light illuminating the tall palms and pillars behind him. For a moment the scene was perfectly peaceful and as still as a painting.
For a moment.
The light came first, a jagged finger of white lightning that started above the stage and reached to the back of the arena. Jason jerked back and threw a hand up to his face. The light stuttered above them; silent for a brief blinding moment, it seemed to hang in the air.
The sound followed, a deafening thunderclap, as if a bomb had detonated twenty feet above the stage. With the clap, the lightning blinked to black. Scattered voices cried out, but for the most part, they crouched, frozen.
If Jason wasn’t mistaken, lightning had just struck—in the building.
From the corner of his eye, he saw that Leiah had dropped to her seat with her legs in front of her. He was aware that the hair on his arms stood out.
Caleb stood unmoved in the blue light. A smile now curved his lips, but his eyes were still closed.
The lightning sputtered again, but not with the same force as the first time. It cracked once, then twice. Jason felt the air feather his face and lift his bangs. A force tickled his skin and brushed through . . .
No, it wasn’t a force. It was wind! A warm wind was blowing over them!
Jason looked out to the boy again. He stood with his arms wide now, facing the wind head-on, smiling ear to ear with an open mouth, like a kid on a joyride. And suddenly the wind was more of a gale, rushing through the auditorium on its way to the stage.
The wind whipped at Caleb’s shirt and hair, flapping both back. Loose sheets of paper and wrappers spun by him. The wind gathered strength, howling loudly now. One of the camera tripods crashed to the ground. Camera crews were desperately holding on to their equipment, but they dared not interrupt their signals; this was all live. The tall palm trees bent backward and then began to fall, smashing to the plywood floor. Leiah lay flat on her back, arms spread wide. Jason thought she might be laughing.
And then the wind suddenly died.
A large orange poster with Caleb’s silhouette on it floated lazily down like a tossed feather.
And then it began again, with a loud roar. Only this time, the wind had reversed direction and rushed from the stage toward the audience.
Caleb was laughing out loud now. His hair flew past his face, and his little shoulders shook in laughter that pealed above the rush.
There were over three thousand people on the main floor, most of them sitting in wheelchairs or holding oxygen bottles or holding their walking devices with white knuckles. The wind blew through them head-on, and nobody really saw exactly what happened to them. Some things, sure. Bodies were falling over backward, and arms were flailing, and pillows and blankets and hair clips and all sorts of loose objects were flying through the air. They all saw that. But no one really saw the healing.
But suddenly the wind was gone again, and the kind of stillness that comes right after a storm settled on them while they cleared their heads. Caleb was hopping on the stage. Laughing and jumping, ecstatic.
It took all of one second for the crowd to understand what had happened. To see and feel their whole bodies. To come to the brutal realization that they had been totally and completely healed. All of them.
Pandemonium had broken out on the floor. The cameras swung and jerked to catch this one and that one, dancing or jumping, mouths screaming and arms lifted. The press lines were swarmed by people eager to try out their limbs. Three of the minitowers toppled, including CNN’s.
Caleb began to run back and forth, thrilled, hands raised to the sky, giggling and generally beside himself.
Jason watched the scene with an open jaw. It had all happened in less than sixty seconds. Maybe two minutes if you started from the time Caleb had closed his eyes. Apart from a healthy dose of hair raising, nothing had happened to him. But out there where the people had come to feel the boy’s power, they had felt it and their lives had been changed. At least in part.
This time Nikolous let the boy run around on the stage for fifteen minutes while the auditorium went nuts. Then he collected him, ushered him into the protected limousine, and whisked him off to that dungeon they called his home.
The last thing Jason saw before leaving with a grinning but otherwise unaffected Leiah was the black-clad avengers. The wind must have blown their picket signs away, but they still wore their hoods. The CBS crew was interviewing them and they weren’t smiling.