here.
It had become one of the greatest stories ever told.
Hazelius had pulled it off—brilliantly. He had even been right about his own martyrdom, his fiery transfiguration, which had gripped the public consciousness like nothing else. In death he had become a moral force, a formidable prophet, and a spiritual leader.
Noon approached, and the bartender turned up the television’s volume. The lunchtime patrons at the bar— truckers, local ranchers, a scattering of tourists—were giving the television their rapt attention.
The news program cut to a correspondent at the ranch in Colorado. The man stood in the vast crowd, gripping a mike. Sweating, his face was vivid with the same zeal that transfixed the crowd. It was contagious. The people around him chanted and cheered, sang, and brandished banners embellished with a gnarled, flaming pinon tree.
The television correspondent delivered his news, shouting over the noise of the crowd, calling the event a “religious Woodstock” and a “convocation of commitment, caring, and love.”
Behind the wooden stage stood a big New England–style barn, red with white trim. The camera came in tight on the doors. A hush fell on the crowd. At exactly noon, the doors were flung open and six people dressed in white stepped out into the sunlight.
The crowd roared like like the sea itself—magnificent, monumental, millennial.
Ford’s heart skipped as Kate approached the stage, pressing a thin, leather-bound volume to her chest. She was stunningly beautiful in a simple white dress and black gloves, which set off and complimented her jet black hair and sparkling ebony eyes. Flanked by Corcoran, also garbed in simple alabaster, the former adversaries had become friends and allies.
Four others joined them, and they stood, assembled on the stage—the six survivors of the assault on Isabella . . . Chen, St. Vincent, Innes, and Cecchini. They seemed different now, larger than life, their small-minded pettiness transfigured into a calling and a cause. They smiled and waved at the crowd, their faces glowing. Each wore a solitary silver pin, affixed to their white attire, also of a flaming pinon tree.
The crowd’s ovation thundered a full five minutes. Mounting the podium by herself, Kate gazed over the crowd. Her glossy hair—black as a raven’s wing—shone in the sunlight and her eyes blazed with life. She held up her hands and the roar subsided.
She was surprisingly charismatic, Ford thought. In the end, she hadn’t needed Hazelius. She was perfectly capable of building and leading his movement on her own, or at least in partnership with the extraordinary Corcoran. The two of them were now media goddesses and close partners, one light, the other dark, an archetypal pairing.
When the silence was complete, Kate gazed over the sea of humanity, her eyes filled with compassion and peace. She laid down the book, adjusted it, her movements relaxed and unhurried. She was a believer, serenely certain of the truth, no confusion or self-doubt anywhere.
The camera tightened in on her face. Raising the book over her head, she opened the text and held it up to the multitude.
“The Word of God,” she sang out, her voice strong and clear.
The sea of worshippers roared again. As the camera closed in on the book, Ford saw that it was the old computer printout she had shown him under the cottonwood tree—ironed out, cleaned up, and bound.
She laid the book down on the podium and lifted her hands. A hush fell again. In Ford’s restaurant, the diners had left their tables and flocked to the bar, where they watched in awe.
“I will begin by reading to you the last words spoken by God, before Isabella was destroyed and God’s voice was silenced.”
A long, long pause.
The hair on the back of Ford’s neck stood on end. He had read these and the rest of God’s so-called words a hundred times. They were ubiquitous, all over the Web, debated on television and talk radio, blogged everywhere, argued on every street corner and bookstore cafe in America. They had even begun appearing on billboards. You couldn’t escape them.
And every time he read them, he was haunted by a very strange idea. Hazelius had told him in the burning mines:
Beyond specs indeed. Every time he reread the so-called words of God, the more convinced he was that a great truth, perhaps even
Perhaps, thought Ford, this new religion might well be His most mysterious move of all.
APPENDIX
THE WORDS OF GOD
FIRST SESSION
Greetings to you, too.
Glad to be speaking to you, too. Who are you?
If you’re really God, then prove it.
I’m thinking of a number between one and ten. What is it?
Now I’m thinking of a number between zero and one.
If you’re God, then what’s the purpose of existence?
That’s a fine thing, a god who doesn’t know the purpose of existence.
How so?
Explain.
That’s a metaphysical argument, not a physical argument.
What is the universe? Who are we? What are we doing here?
What do you mean by computation? We’re all inside a computer?