"Be skeptical," Sister Paterna Testa warned him. "This may be only tales of imagination, that some gifted nun made up to while away a winter"s evening for her sisters-and if it is, I am sure it has gained episodes from other tellers as the winters have rolled."
"Or it could indeed be words left to you by that monk." The abbot nodded at the portrait. "I promise I
shall not be credulous, sister, for who could know the events that befell the Saint after his death?""Only one inspired by St. Vidicon himself," Sister Paterna Testa sighed, "or one who delighted in imagining what befell the Foe of Perversity in the afterlife. You remember how St. Vidicon died?"
"Who does not?" the abbot asked. "Though it is hard for any of us to believe that a world so full of people as Old Earth could be so blinded by prejudice and ignorance as to seek to obliterate the Roman Catholic Church."
"Impossible though it seems, our traditions speak of it."
The abbot nodded. "We have histories of Terra that testify to it, ones brought by our ancestors when they
came to this world-and not Church histories only, but also those by lay scholars, non-Catholics, agnostics, and even an atheist."
"Do you really?" Sister Paterna Testa looked up with interest. "Do they also tell that only a speech by
our Holy Father the Pope was able to save the Church?
"They do indeed, for apparently he was an extremely charismatic speaker."
"But how could the whole world hear him?"
"You must promise me not to speak of this to any outside our Orders," the abbot admonished, "and
swear your nuns to silence, too, for we do not wish the people of Gramarye to be contaminated by too
much knowledge of advanced technology."
"Even so was the wish of our ancestors, though I sometimes question their wisdom," Sister Paterna Testa said. "Well, as you ask, I shall promise. How was it done?"
"By a magical instrument called "television," by which the picture of the Holy Father was projected into every living room on the planet," the abbot said, "or at least those who chose to see it-and since the issue was hotly debated, more than half the planet watched. Certainly all the Catholics did, and the fallen-away Catholics, of whom there were many, many more."
"And St. Vidicon was responsible for maintaining this magic spell?"
"This electronic miracle, let us say," the abbot answered. "It was he who was the engineer who oversaw
the operation of the transmitter-but the instrument was old and faulty, and kept burning out resistors and failing."
"So he took the place of that resistor," Sister Paterna Testa said in awe.
"He did indeed, and the Pope"s speech was heard through to the end," the abbot said. "Fallen-away
Catholics came flooding back into the churches, and the world"s governments saw that they could not rule against so very many of their citizens-so the Church was saved."
"But Father Vidicon was dead," Sister Paterna Testa whispered.
The abbot nodded. "The electrical fire that had burned out the resistors, also burned out his life. He was
declared a saint within the year, for none could doubt that he was a martyr for the Faith."
"None could," Sister Paterna Testa agreed, "though by the time the Pope declared his knowledge, many miracles had already saved those who called upon the Saint for aid."
The abbot nodded. "Any who worked with magical equipment, even as Father Vidicon had."
"Of course." Sister Paterna Testa smiled. "By the time they called upon him, St. Vidicon had already
bested the worst of the spirits that plague humankind with the urge to fail, and thereby turn their own
devices against them."
"What spirits were those?" The abbot leaned forward, the intensity of his hunger for learning finally unveiled. "How did Father Vidicon defeat them?"
Sister Paterna Testa laughed softly, then began the tale. * * *
(ENDING).
"So our Order was founded by one who served as the channel for Creation?" the abbot asked, his eyes
alight with the glory of the tale.
"So the tales say." Sister Paterna Testa"s eye twinkled. "But would it not be a victory for Finagle if we were to believe such a tale as might be made up by a nun with a wild imagination?"
"Or by a priest like our own Father Ricci, his was not above a prank or two." The abbot grinned, sharing her amus.e.m.e.nt. "Well, Sister, when I write down this account, I shall caution all who read it to take it as pure imagination-an amusing tale only, but one that ill.u.s.trates Father Vidicon"s essential nature."
"Which is?"
"Devout, but with a sense of humor-and a huge enjoyment of irony, and a delight in solving
paradoxes." The abbot throttled back his amus.e.m.e.nt and nodded. "Have no fear, Sister-this tale may not be true, but it is an inspiration."
"Indeed-for any member of your order must be an engineer before he can become a monk, is that not
so?"
"It is."
"Then how shall we claim descent from St. Vidicon?" Sister Paterna Testa demanded. "We are not
engineers, after all, but teachers and healers."
"Healers of the human mind," the abbot pointed out, "and I cannot help but think, Sister Paterna Testa,
that so complex an ent.i.ty as the brain must easily be liable to as much confusion and paradox as any computer."
Now Sister Paterna Testa smiled with her full warmth, face radiant as she leaned forward and rested her
hand on his. "Trust me, Father Abbot-it surpa.s.ses them all." * * * When that the blessed Father Vidicon did seize upon a high-voltage line and did cleave unto it, aye, even unto death, so that the words of our blessed Holy Father the Pope might reach out through the satellites to all the television transmitters of the world, for the saving of our most Holy and Catholic Church-aye, when that he did thus die for the Faith and did pa.s.s into one enduring instant of blinding pain, he was upheld and sustained by the knowledge that, dying a martyr, he would pa.s.s straightway to Heaven and
be numbered among the Blest.
How great was his dismay, then, to find himself, as the pain dimmed and awareness returned, falling through darkness, amidst a cold that did sear his soul. Distantly did he espy certain suns, and knew thereby that he did pa.s.s through the Void, and that his eternal fall was not truly so, but was only the absence of gravity. Indeed, he knew the place for an absence of all, and fear bit his soul-for thus, he knew must h.e.l.l be: a place of lacking, of absence of being.
Then, in his terror, did he cry out in anger, "My G.o.d! For Thee did I give my life! Wherefore hast thou doomed me?" Yet no sooner were the words said than he did repent, and cursed himself for a faithless fool, thus to doubt even now in death, that the Christ would uphold him.
And straightway on the heels of that thought, came the shock of insight-for he saw that, if he did die to cheat the Imp of the Perverse, defeating Finagle himself by his very perversity, he must needs expect reversal of expectation-which is to say that, if he died expecting the vistas of Heaven, he would most certainly discover the hollowness of h.e.l.l.
Then courage returned, and resolution; for he did come to see that the struggle was not ended, but only begun anew-that if he did desire Heaven, he would have to win to it. Then did he wonder if even the saints, they who dwelt in G.o.d, could count their toils ended-or if they chose eternally to struggle "gainst greater forces.
Then did his Mission become clear to him, and the blessed knew wherefore he had come to this Void.
The enemy "gainst whom he had striven throughout his life, endured still-and now would Father Vidicon confront him, and look upon his face.
With the thought, his fall slowed, and he saw the mouth of a tunnel ope in the darkness before him, and it did glow within, a sullen red. Closer it did come, and wider, stretching and yawning to swallow him; yet Father Vidicon quailed not, nor tried to draw back. Nay, bravely he stood, stalwart in nothingness; yea, even eagerly did he strain forward, to set foot upon infirm, fungoid flesh and stride into h.e.l.lmouth.
As he strode, the sullen glow did brighten, gaining heat until he feared it would sear his flesh, then remembered that he had none. Brighter and hotter it flowed, until he turned thorough a bend in its tube, and found himself staring upon the Imp of the Perverse.
Gross it was, and palpable, swollen with falsehood and twisted with paradoxes. Syllogisms sprouted from its sides, reaching toward Father Vidicon with complexes of bitterness, and it stood but did not stand, on existential extensions.
"Turn back!" roared the Imp, in awesome sardonicism. "Regress, retrograde! For none can progress that
do come within!"
"Avaunt thee!" cried Father Vidicon. "For I know thee of old, b.l.o.o.d.y Imp! "Tis thou who dost drive every suicide, thou who dost strengthen the one arm of the Bandit who doth rob the gambler compulsive, thou who dost bring down freezing snow upon the rec.u.mbent form of the will-leached narcotic! Nay, I know thee of old, and know that he who retreats from thee, must needs pursue thee! Get THEE behind ME-for I shall surpa.s.s thee!"
"Wilt thou, then?" cried the Imp. "Then look to thy defense-for I shall undo thee!"