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The Voice of Many
Waters
Summary:
A beautiful race, the Humana lack war, jealousy, and other human
vices; however, they also have virtually no religious or aesthetic
sense. Peter, a Neo-Catholic priest, wishes to change this so he
calls upon Xanthu, a SoulSinger, in the hope that the insect-like
creature can awaken the Humana’s souls and help them to find not
only their love for art, beauty, and deep emotion, but, above all,
their love for God...yet as the silver-stringed instrument of the SoulSinger rises in a nest of claws and its first pure bell-like
notes ring forth, what terrible, irreversible truth will be brought
to light and will this alien Eden--or Father Peter--ever be the
same?
Excerpt:
Call me Peter.
I’m a Neo-Catholic priest here on Duran, where the air’s sweet as
incense but the natives aren’t ripe for conversion. Moral and
upright though they be, they have about as much religious or
aesthetic sense as a sand flea. They’ll break their equivalent of
bread with you and shelter you for the night, but mention salvation
or Jesus on a cosmic cross, and they’ll tilt their heads as if you’d
spewed the purest form of nonsense.
Take my word for it, it gets frustrating.
Now don’t get me wrong. I’m not new to the missionary calling.
Between interstellar trips at the speed of light, I’ve sought to
bring alien souls to Christ for four decades and know that sometimes
the Lord sees fit to try your faith and patience with a
recalcitrant, backsliding race. I’ve been to a score of worlds and
preached to beings of every description, some so vicious and
unspiritual I trembled in their presence. I even converted a fierce
Muran warlord with two heads and no heart. Bathing those horny heads
with their reptilian mentalities in the blood of the Cosmic Lamb
made me weep with love and gratitude to our Creator. If I’d ever had
doubts about my calling, his hissed, duo recital of the 900th Psalm
after I baptized him would have banished them. I felt blessed,
supremely blessed, to be allowed to travel throughout the galaxy,
spreading the Word.
But that was before I met the Humana.
Their name itself is ironic, for they are both more and less human
than we. Physically, they’re similar but taller and more beautiful.
Most importantly, they lack our vices. War, violence, jealousy,
betrayal are virtually unknown to them as they live peacefully in
their efficient villages and cities. But on the other side,
religion, deep love, art, and aspiration are virtually unknown too.
Their emotions are as mild as the Duranian climate, which is that of
a godless Eden where there is little sickness and the gravity is
only eighty-eight percent that of Earth’s.
“Father Peter,” Kiri says, his double-pupilled eyes gazing calmly
into my own, “do you really believe that one of your race was sent
by a god to redeem you all and later rose from the dead?”
“I do,” I answer. “But He was sent not by a god but by the one and
only God.”
Kiri moves off a few steps, his two meter frame slim and supple.
Like all Humana, he wears a plain, functional robe yet always looks
elegant, perhaps because of his graceful form.
I take a deep breath of the sweet air. In this valley called Li
outside their city of Tebbe, exquisite red Peona blossoms drift and
flavor the spring wind. Soon, they will return to the earth and die,
to be reborn in flowering shrubs the following spring.
“Do you also believe,” Kiri says, “that this Christ visits worlds
throughout the galaxy and offers them redemption in return?”
“He comes in many forms,” I tell him. “He goes wherever a sentient
race exists with the spark of soul to receive Him. Sometimes he
appears as human, sometimes as one of them, but always, the form
itself is irrelevant. On Lanura, Christ appeared as a Lanuran, who,
as you know, resembles your four-legged Tarzi. Elsewhere—”
“But surely,” Kiri says, “these visitors could be pretenders. Your
ancient writings, I believe, warn more than once of false prophets.”
I hesitate, thinking of how our faith as evolved in the millennia
since we reached the stars.
“Whatever His manifestation,” I say, “whatever the form He chooses
to adopt, He is still the Cosmic Christ. As stated in the Bible
Galactica, Book of Jora, first chapter, seventh verse, ‘He may come
in many guises, but He is always the one true Evangel.’ Or even
better, consider the stirring promise of verse twelve, where His
divine diversity is affirmed: ‘We are the light of many worlds:
those that followeth us shall not walk in darkness, but shall have
the light of life.’”
Kiri gazes at me, his placid, beautiful features courteous and
respectful, but I know that if he were a human skeptic, he would
laugh in my face. Humana, though, don’t laugh or deride, and all
their Doubting Thomases keep their own counsel...
[end excerpt] Reviews:
"There's science fiction, and then
there's science fiction. Stories as far out as this are not to
everyone's liking, but nobody can deny that there is a great
imagination at work here." -- Christian Saunders, Morpheus Tales
Reviews
"The Voice of Many Waters is a
novelette you can easily read in one sitting... John Rosenman is a
talented and experienced writer who always entertains—even when he
has something important to say." -- Clayton Clifford Bye
About the Author
John B. Rosenman
has sold over three hundred stories to places such as “Weird Tales,”
“Treachery and Treason,” “Whitley Strieber’s Aliens,” “Galaxy,” and
“Hot Blood.” His mainstream novel, “The Best Laugh Last,” was
published in 1981 and 1982 by McPherson & Company. “More Stately
Mansions,” a collection of short fiction, was published by Dark
Regions Press in 1998. He has also written five science-fiction
adventure novels including: “Beyond Those Distant Stars” (NovelBooks
2003, republished by Mundania Press), “Speaker of the Shakk,” (Mundania
Press), “Alien Dreams” (Drollerie Press), “Dax Rigby, War
Correspondent” (Lyrical Press), and an African science-fiction
novel, “A Senseless Act of Beauty” (Blade Publishing). “Here Be
Dragons” is a science-fiction horror booklet available from Eternal
Press.
John received his Ph.D. in 1970 and is an English professor
at Norfolk State University. His office contains dozens of items
from one of his favorite movies, “The Wizard of Oz.” He and his wife
Jane have a son and daughter. They recently celebrated their
forty-second wedding anniversary. Currently, John is working on
“Dark Wizard,” a science-fiction adventure novel based on “The
Wizard of Oz,” and revising “Inspector of the Cross,” a novel about
an elite agent for an Earth-based empire which has fought an alien
menace for three-thousand years. A former Chairman of the Board for
the Horror Writers Association, John now writes a monthly blog on
writing (along with 30 other writers) at StoryTellers Unplugged.com.
Readers can visit him at johnrosenman.com |