Sie sind auf Seite 1von 17

MFC/BPL

Martyr for the Cause


by
Ben Lacy

Copyright © 2009 Ben Lacy


All rights reserved

The alien ship was inside the moon’s orbit before it was detected. An amateur
astronomer was first to spot it. Measuring fifty miles in diameter, it came toward Earth at
over a thousand miles a second. Ten thousand miles above the surface the ship pulled
into orbit. The circumpolar orbit crossed the eastern United States, the middle of Asia,
and a slice of Africa.
For two days, the ship did nothing but continue its orbit around the Earth, one
rotation every two hours. On the third day, the ship disgorged dozens of smaller craft,
each about the size of a 747. These cruisers roared into the atmosphere at Mach 50.
Their skins ignored the blazing heat of friction as they pushed the Earth’s dense
atmosphere aside. The ships diverged when they came within a mile of Antarctica’s ice
covered surface from where they scattered in every direction. Within minutes, they had
crossed into the air space of every continent. Once over land, the ships went into what
human scientists could only assume was a search pattern. In the next hour, they had
passed over most of the inhabited land on Earth.
The shockwaves from this hypersonic flight shattered windows, cracked cement,
and blew out eardrums. Dozens died, a few of heart failure, more in car crashes.
Countries with air forces launched their planes. The fastest could barely break
Mach 2. Each time the jets crossed the intruders’ path, the alien ships would be 10 miles
away a second later. The aliens never even had to change course. Once they completed
their planned flight, they broke away as one to return to their mother craft.

1
MFC/BPL

All attempts to communicate with the aliens both before and during this flight
were futile. The aliens ignored radio. They ignored lasers. They ignored the massed
lights of Las Vegas blinked in Morse code. An hour after the flight though, they proved
they could communicate. Every television signal was interrupted and replaced with the
aliens’ first broadcast.
The creature that appeared on screen had a purple head shaped like an inverted
triangle. The mouth was a perfect circle lined with thin, spiked teeth all around the
perimeter. The rest of the face was a patchwork of octagons. The octagons looked more
like hard cartilage then soft flesh. Most were shades of purple. A few were bright green
or blood red. These might have been eyes, or ears, or something else. When the thing
began to speak, its mouth opened and closed like a camera lens dilating. Whatever noise
it actually made was heard through the television as English.
“People of Earth,” it began, “we mean you no harm. All will be well if you do as
we ask. We require that you kill Robert Samuel Martin. No harm will come to you if
you do.” A still picture of a white man in his early forties replaced that of the alien. His
face was fleshy and round. He was grinning slightly. His teeth were yellowed from
cigarettes and coffee. He was going bald.
The picture remained on the screen for another thirty seconds, then blinked out.
Normal programming returned for about ten seconds. Then the network news teams
broke in to announce the news again.

**********

Rob Martin wasn’t in front of a TV when the aliens demanded his death. He was
at his job on Ford Motors’ assembly line in Ford’s Detroit plant. He continued to work
for more than an hour before the police arrived. A neighbor had recognized him. Not
knowing what to do, she called the police. They brought him to the precinct house
without explanation. He was a bit mad, but his supervisor told him to go promising that
the company would send someone to help.

2
MFC/BPL

By the time Martin made it to the precinct house, the FBI had also discovered who
he was. They were there to meet him. The local FBI agents immediately took him from
the precinct. His wife arrived just as he was leaving. She tried to run up to him, but the
agents and the cops formed a wall between them as they escorted Martin to a waiting
Buick.
He was taken to the airport and a charter flew him to Andrew’s Air Force Base in
Maryland, just outside DC. From there, a helicopter flew him to the White House, and
the Secret Service took charge. They brought Martin to a plush conference room that had
a huge mahogany table in the center surrounded by large televisions each mounted with a
video camera. They left him there alone. Martin was of course stunned by all this. He
hadn’t been handcuffed and they hadn’t locked the door, but he was clearly a prisoner.
He paced the room for thirty minutes wondering how long they would make him
wait. Just as he was about to try the door, it opened; and a tall, whip thin man in his late
forties entered. The man wore an expensive but conservative business suit. His long
nose, piercing eyes, and tightly drawn mouth made him look like a hawk. The image
dissolved though as he suddenly flashed a toothy smile and extended his hand. Martin
realized he’d seen the man before on TV. He was someone important. Martin wished he
followed politics more closely because he couldn’t remember who his host was.
“Hello, Mr. Martin, I hope we haven’t kept you waiting here too long.”
Martin shook the man’s hand. “It’s been like waiting to see the dentist.” The man
gave him an odd look, just for a moment, and then chuckled softly. Martin wondered
whether his sense of humor seemed inappropriate, but he never could help himself.
The newcomer sat in one of the leather chairs around the conference table and
gestured for Martin to do the same. Once they were both seated, he said, “My name is
Thomas Church. I’m the White House Chief of Staff. Do you know why you’re here?”
“No, please tell me. Nobody would tell me a thing.”
“Of course not. It wasn’t their place to tell you; besides, we had to make sure
your lack of comprehension was genuine.” Church got up from the chair and placed a
DVD in one of the players built into the back wall. He then positioned himself to watch
Martin as Martin watched the alien’s broadcast for the first time.

3
MFC/BPL

“What the hell was that?” Martin asked once the brief clip ended.
“Something that played on every TV on the planet. What do you think of it?”
“I don’t know what to think. That thing said my name; the picture looked like one
of me. I don’t remember having any picture like that taken though.”
“You don’t know what their interest is in you?”
“No!”
Church leaned forward until their faces were inches apart, “Have you ever had an
encounter with an alien? Have you ever seen a UFO?”
“No and no, and I always thought people who claimed they did were nut jobs. At
least until everyone saw Them that is.”
“Very well, Mr. Martin. For now, you’ll stay here in the White House. It’s for
your own safety.” Church stood up and started moving toward the door.
“Wait, what about my wife and kids?”
“Would you mind taking a lie detector test?” Not allowing Martin time to
respond, he continued, “Don’t worry, the police are looking out for them. We’ll try to let
you see them soon, but for now, we think it’s best they stay home.” Church quickly left
the room, wanting Martin off balance.
While the Secret Service agents escorted Martin to his new home, Church headed
for the West Wing. He strode quickly down the halls, ignoring the various underlings
who tried to catch his eye. He turned down a section of hall guarded by Secret Service
agents. Ignoring them as well, he went into the room at the end of the hall. It was an
even larger, plusher conference room. Everyone had arrived except for the President.
Church waved to an aide standing at another door across the room. The aide nodded and
went to get the President. Church nodded to the assembled men and women as he moved
to his seat at one end of the table. Just as he reached his seat, the President entered.
“All right Tom, what have we got?” the President asked while taking the seat at
the other end of the table.
“An ordinary, blue collar Joe as far as I can tell.”
“We’ve managed to do a pretty thorough background check for the time we’ve
had,” John Taylor, Director of the FBI, offered. He looked down at a bulging file.

4
MFC/BPL

“Robert S. Martin, age 43, graduate of Roosevelt High, one year of community college,
served four years in the Air Force, honorable discharge. He’s worked for Ford the past 13
years on the assembly line. Married to Laura Martin, age 39; they have three children,
Robert Jr., 16, Sarah, 13, David, 10. He’s a registered Democrat, but with no overt
political affiliations. No criminal violations worse than a speeding ticket. He’s never
reported seeing an alien, and neither has anyone he knows that we’ve been able to
interview.”
“Could that somehow be a fake record?” Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman, General
Halsey asked.
“Not unless a lot of people are lying or have somehow been brainwashed. We’ve
interviewed people all the way back to his pre-school days, and we’re doing more still.”
“Tomorrow, we’ll send him to Bethesda for a complete medical exam. Then
we’ll give him a lie detector test,” Church added.
“So, we still don’t have any ideas on why they want him dead,” the President said
in frustration. “I take it we still can’t get any response from the alien mother ship?”
“No, sir,” General Halsey answered.
“What I don’t understand is why they want us to kill him? Why don’t they just
tell us to hand him over?” Attorney General Sandoval asked.
“I don’t know, Carmen, but I don’t think we’re going to like the answer,” Church
told her.

**********

“No, we have absolutely no intention of killing anyone. We would like to ask our
guests from the stars to please talk with us about this. I’m sure there is a non-violent
solution to this problem.” Bob Martin was watching Thomas Church answer questions at
a press conference. He’d been placed in a comfortable room with a private bath on the
third floor. The windows were barred though, and this time, the door was locked.

5
MFC/BPL

Martin took small comfort in Church’s denial that any harm would come to him.
It wouldn’t be hard for them to just make him disappear. The aliens would be happy, and
the public would pretend to believe whatever excuse was made.

**********

The next day, Martin was taken to Bethesda Naval Hospital. His blood and urine
were sampled; he had an electrocardiogram and MRI, and he was X rayed from head to
toe. From there, he was taken to FBI headquarters and given a lie detector test. All the
medical tests showed him to be a normal human. The lie detector test confirmed that he
knew nothing about the aliens.
The Cabinet was going over these results when an aide burst in and turned on a
television. The aliens were making another broadcast.
“It has been more than a terrestrial day since we last spoke to you and still Robert
Martin lives. We see that you will require a demonstration of the seriousness of our
demand.”
The camera view changed to an overhead shot of an island, surrounded by blue
water. Scattered around the edge of the screen were smaller islands. The view pulled in
closer to the island. A large airfield and a port were separated by a number of large, pre-
fabricated buildings. Several military ships were at anchor.
“Diego Garcia,” General Halsey whispered just loud enough for the others to hear.
Suddenly the screen went blindingly white. For a moment, whiteness was all that
could be seen. Then the view pulled back. A giant cloud of dust and smoke was rising
up over the ocean, spreading out toward the surrounding islands.
“God damn them,” Halsey shouted, reaching for one of the phones in front of him.
“Wait, General,” the President stopped him, “what was that?”
“Diego Garcia, a base in the Indian Ocean we share with the British. There must
be two thousand people there.” Halsey picked up the phone and started shouting for
answers from the person waiting on the other end.

6
MFC/BPL

“What do we do now?” the President asked. Everyone started talking at once.


Halsey’s voice though drowned them out.
“Dammit, I want a plane, a satellite, anything that can get us some pictures of that
island. I don’t care about radio interference. Do what it takes!”
Church watched the chaos in silence. He had a sinking feeling that he was going
to be the one who would have to decide what to do next. He was about to try and call for
order when he saw that the alien had reappeared on the screen. “Look,” he pointed. The
room fell still.
“In exactly 48 hours, if Robert Martin is not dead, we will do the same thing to the
city of Baltimore. Forty-eight hours after that we will strike Philadelphia, then New York
City.” The screen went blank for a moment, to be replaced by the network program.
Everyone stayed silent for a long moment. Then Halsey put the phone down.
“We’ve got a confirmation. Diego Garcia is gone. The U.S.S. Theodore
Roosevelt is in the vicinity. They’ve reported something resembling a nuclear explosion,
but didn’t detect any missiles or projectiles. The place apparently just blew up. Counting
the ships, there were probably over 2,500 people.”
“All right folks, we’ve got to decide what to do now,” Church began. Some of
them looked at him with disdain, shocked at his coolness. He ignored them. “We have
two days; can we evacuate Baltimore?”
“Probably,” General Halsey said, “We have plans to evacuate a city in case of a
disaster. Baltimore’s probably already being evacuated anyway. I doubt we can do
Philadelphia as well, and New York’s out of the question. They’ve picked a nice,
crowded triangle for their attack pattern.”
“Can we strike back?” the President asked. All eyes looked at Halsey.
“Our ordinary missiles won’t reach. We do have a payload of eight warheads
mounted on an Atlas rocket. It would reach, but we only have the one.”
Apparently, Church thought, the military had already been preparing for the worst.
“Do you think it will work?”
“Not a chance.”
“You don’t think a nuke can damage that thing?”

7
MFC/BPL

“It doesn’t matter if it can. It’ll be like sending a snail after a Porshe. Their ships
are so fast, they can knock it down before it gets within a thousand miles.”
“We shouldn’t attack. We’ll only be risking more aggression,” Secretary of State
Leveland told them.
“They’re going to blow up Baltimore; how much more aggressive can they get?”
Halsey responded, his voice rising.
“But if it’s a futile gesture? We have another option.”
“We know, Philip,” Church said, “and we need to discuss that more. But I don’t
think we should just give into the aliens’ demands without at least trying to resist. I
propose that we proceed with the evacuation of Baltimore, and that tomorrow, we launch
an attack on the alien ship. We’ll warn them. Maybe the threat will get them to talk. If
all that doesn’t work, then we’ll discuss the final option”
They argued for another hour. In the end though, no one had any better ideas, and
the President consented to the counterattack. As they were all leaving, Church pulled
John Taylor aside, “John, maybe it would be a good idea to bring that guy’s family here.”
Taylor looked at him and silently nodded in agreement.

**********

“In our latest Gallop poll, 33% of the American public agreed that Robert Martin
should be executed, 22% were unsure, and 45% were opposed. 52% of the public favors
military action against the aliens in the wake of the destruction of Diego Garcia and the
deaths of nearly 3,000 people. 38% are opposed. The President will hold a press
conference tonight to discuss his plans in this crisis. Sources at the White House have
stated that the President will order a nuclear strike against the alien ship.”
Martin had done nothing but watch TV for the past eight hours. It was all about
him, the aliens, and the attack on Diego Garcia. The guilt over what had happened to all
those people weighed upon him. He knew that in some way it was his fault, at least his
fault in that he was still alive. He found it almost funny that a day ago he only had to
worry about his own death.

8
MFC/BPL

His depression lifted though when his family arrived. His wife ran into his arms.
The kids immediately crowded around them, hugging them both. Everyone cried. It
would be several minutes before they stopped.
Thomas Church watched all this on a television in his office. He was a hard man.
He was calculating, cold, and logical and everyone knew it. That was why he’d had to
end his own presidential bid after the New Hampshire primary. That was why he was a
great chief of staff.
He could make the tough calls. He already knew what the call here would have to
be. In the past, this ability had always been a source of pride. Now, it was a curse that
was going to make him a modern day Pontius Pilate.

**********

The rocket blasted off from a hidden base in the Nevada badlands. The President
and his staff watched on three televisions, each showing a different view. The rocket
slowly pushed off the Earth’s surface. Once it reached the upper atmosphere, the shield
in the nose cone slid back to expose a video camera through which the rocket’s
destination could be viewed.
For long minutes, only stars could be seen. Slowly, they could see one star
growing brighter, eclipsing the others. As the image grew, the camera lens adjusted to
reduce the sun’s reflected light, and they could make out details of the alien mother ship.
“Five-hundred miles,” Halsey looked up from a computer screen, “four hundred
miles, I can’t believe it. I think it’s going to make it.”
The ship had expanded to fill the screen. From long minutes to quick seconds, the
rocket and the ship came closer and closer. A giant funnel springing out from one part of
the alien sphere now filled the screen. The military thought this might be where the
ship’s engine was. It came even closer. Everyone watching pulled back slightly as the
ship rushed toward them on the TV. The screen flashed white.
They turned to look at another TV that provided a view from DEFSAT 2, a
military satellite that had pulled into a matching orbit with the alien ship. A burst of light

9
MFC/BPL

flared from where the ship had been struck. The light slowly faded and the entire ship
came into view. They stared at it for a minute. Finally, they realized that the ship was
undamaged.
Again, it fell to Church to break the silence, “I think they’ve demonstrated where
things stand. It’s time to discuss the unthinkable. Carmen, what’s our legal position
here?”
“Our what?” the Attorney general sputtered. “We have no legal position. We
don’t even have a right to hold the guy. You’re talking murder, plain and simple.”
“That’s not quite true,” Taylor interjected. “The President can declare a state of
national emergency which would suspend constitutional rights.”
“During the emergency, but afterwards we can be made to answer for what we’ve
done,” the Attorney general replied.
“What are our allies’ positions?” the President asked.
“The Vatican says murder is wrong under any circumstance, they advise prayer
and continued attempts to negotiate,” the Secretary of State told him. “Everyone else
says, ‘Do what you have to’.”
“Look, what if this is a test?” the Attorney general asked, trying to forestall the
inevitable.
“Maybe it is, Carmen. But what’s the right answer?” Church looked around the
room. One by one the others all nodded in agreement. The attorney general bowed her
head, then nodded as well.
The FBI director stood up, “All right, how do you want to do this?”

*******************************

“After the failure of today’s attack on the alien mothership, 76% of Americans
agreed that Robert Martin should be executed, 15% are opposed, with 9% undecided.
The White House has imposed a media blackout on what they will do next. Now we take
you to Baltimore, where the evacuation is nearing completion. Jim what …” Laura
Martin turned off the TV in a near rage.

10
MFC/BPL

“I can’t believe them, what cowards.”


“Calm down honey. Thousands are already dead; what are they supposed to do? I
just wish I knew why they wanted me. I guess I’ll never know.” Martin held on to his
wife, who started sobbing in ragged bursts. They turned toward the sound of an “ahem”.
Thomas Church was standing at the door looking on.
“Mr. Church, you can’t let them kill Rob. Please, don’t.” Robert Martin
increased his grip on his wife to prevent her from charging Church.
Church had steeled himself to show no emotion. The only evidence of any was
the pasty, whiteness of his face. “Mr. Martin, tomorrow we’ll be taking you away from
here. If you have anything you wish to take care of before then, I wouldn’t put it off.”
Robert Martin had prepared for death ever since that island had been destroyed.
He was surprised at how calmly he took the news. He simply nodded. His wife, on the
other hand, started cursing Church and struggling desperately to get at him. It was all
Martin could do to keep hold of her.
“Who will you kill for them next, damn you? I hope they come for you, you
heartless monster.”
Church quickly backed out the door, closed it and locked it. She was right of
course. This was no answer, no answer at all.

*****************

Two hours before the destruction of Baltimore, the Secret Service escorted Martin
to Church’s office. After last night, Church decided it best to avoid Mrs. Martin. John
Taylor joined them, and the three of them, along with five Secret Service agents, walked
out to a waiting helicopter. Climbing in, they took seats facing each other, four on one
side, five on the other. Martin sat next to Church and across from Taylor.
As the helicopter lifted off, Martin smiled and said, “Gee, going to a lot of trouble
to off me, aren’t you?”
Taylor looked shocked at Martin’s joke. Church though remembered Martin’s
sense of humor and responded in kind, “Don’t worry Mr. Martin, it’s no trouble at all.”

11
MFC/BPL

Martin laughed. Then he sighed. His courage spent and his nerves driven to the
brink, he slumped into his seat and lay his head against the window. Out of the corner of
his eye, he could see the city passing rapidly below. He wondered what he should be
doing with his last few minutes. He thought he should be treasuring them, but instead, he
just wanted to get it over with. “You know, I just wish I knew why they want me dead. I
don’t want to die without knowing why.”
“Well, that’s one wish I can grant at least,” Church replied.
“You can!” Martin sat up.
“You can?” Taylor echoed him.
“Yes, I can. Our mistake all this time has been focusing on you; what you might
have done or who you might really be. It’s never been about you though. You’re like a
lottery winner. You were picked because you were an ordinary, average American. They
might have picked anyone.”
“Why?” Martin asked, and Taylor nodded as he asked.
“School yard bully tactics. Look, they’ve shown they can destroy us if they want,
but controlling us is something else entirely. To control us, they need to break us,
humiliate us. A people who would murder an innocent man to save themselves aren’t
worth saving. Our will to resist would be destroyed. We’d do anything they wanted.
We’d know it, and they’d know it.”
“But if that’s the case, how can you kill me?”
“Well, that’s the problem. As long as you’re alive, everyone will only focus on
you as the cause of the aliens’ wrath. Life will be a death watch; will we kill you or
watch another city go up in smoke? But as I’ve said, we can’t just give in to them.” He
paused to let Martin think about that. “So, what would you suggest we do?”
Martin turned and looked out the window again. They had left the city far behind
and were crossing over a forest. He looked back at Church. “You’re taking me to
Baltimore, aren’t you?”
Church nodded. “If you die, it will be by their hand. Instead of being the cause of
the problem, you’ll be a martyr to the cause. I know it won’t make any difference to you,
but it’ll make a lot to everyone else.”

12
MFC/BPL

Martin sat silently for a moment, then he nodded in agreement, “I think you may
be right, Mr. Church. It does make a difference, to me too.”
Church almost wished Martin wasn’t being so brave. In his own mind, Church
was prepared to take responsibility for the murder of Robert Martin. Letting the aliens
kill him might alleviate mankind’s guilt, but Thomas Church would accept no such
balms. He had to turn his head away so the others wouldn’t see his steely eyes water.
Fifteen minutes later, they were over Baltimore. They started down over
Baltimore’s famed Inner Harbor. “You know, they still might go and destroy those other
cities,” Martin said, curious to know what would happen after his death.
“They very well might, Mr. Martin. I don’t expect you to be the last to die. But at
least they’ll know we won’t stop resisting. Maybe eventually, they’ll give up and go
away.”
“Well, tell everyone Robby said to give ‘em hell,” Martin laughed.
“Don’t worry, Rob, a team of speechwriters are writing you a glorious final
soliloquy.” The two both laughed now, even Taylor joined in. The helicopter landed
right on a jetty, near the water. Martin and Church left the helicopter. The others started
to climb out, but Church waved them back.
For a moment, the two just looked at each other. To his own surprise, Church
hugged Martin. “I’m sorry Rob; I’m so very sorry.”
“I know. Don’t worry, it’s not your fault.” Martin smiled, “Besides, I’m not dead
yet. Maybe, I’ll get lucky.”
Church nodded, not really believing that. “Don’t worry about your family. I’ll
look out for them personally.” Church pointed down the pier, “Do you see that bench,
about a hundred feet from here? There’s a cooler sitting on it. You’ll find drinks and
food. Good luck, Robert Martin.” The two shook hands. Church climbed back into the
helicopter. Martin backed away as it took off, waving to them.
Martin walked to where the cooler was. Barbecue and beer, “They’ve got me
pegged,” he thought. He looked at his watch. He had about forty-five minutes. He
looked up and down the harbor. The place was completely deserted. There was a lot of

13
MFC/BPL

neat stuff here though. A line of shopping malls ran all along the harbor. Anchoring one
end was an aquarium. Next to it, he thought he saw a submarine.
He opened a beer, shoved another into one jacket pocket and a bag of the barbecue
in the other. He headed for the submarine, munching a pork rib on the way. It was an old
World War II sub. He took a quick tour through it then walked to the aquarium. The
dolphins and seals had been freed, but most of the fish remained. “To bad they have to
die also,” he thought.
He climbed up onto a platform above the bleachers surrounding the pool where
the dolphins performed. From there, he could look back onto the whole harbor on one
side and out at the ocean on the other.
“Thirty second to go. I wonder if this will hurt?”

********************

Church was standing in a bunker at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, thirty miles


northeast of Baltimore, when the time came. A flash of light blinded him even through
the quartz goggles he wore. The light slowly dimmed, and a cloud of dust began
spreading out over what had once been the city.
“Well, that’s done,” he thought. “Rob Martin’s death will tell everyone that we
won’t give in so easily.” He looked at the rising mushroom cloud and felt a bitter
determination fill him. He had just been an accomplice to a murder. He wasn’t going to
sell his conscience so cheap. Maybe Robert Martin could perform an even greater
service.

Epilogue

Ten years passed. The crowd had gathered quickly on what was once the
University of Colorado campus. Television cameras had been hastily set up and a
podium quickly assembled. Armed soldiers surrounded the podium. An officer stepped

14
MFC/BPL

to the microphone and announced, “Ladies and Gentleman, the President of the United
States.”
No band played Hail to the Chief as Thomas Church walked briskly to the
microphone. There wasn’t time; they could maintain the broadcast transmission for a few
minutes at most. The aliens wouldn’t take much longer to launch an attack. “Ladies and
Gentleman, it has been ten years. Ten years since the sacrifice,” Church began. “I have
come here before you today to deliver a message.” Church paused, then shouted, “Robert
forgives you!” Cheers rang out from the crowd.
Church smiled. He had spent the last ten years building Robert Martin into the
world’s leading religious symbol. Martin wasn’t the first to die. He wasn’t the bravest,
or smartest, or kindest either, but he was the one who had died to save mankind. More
importantly, but never spoken openly, Robert Martin had been sacrificed to mankind’s
fear. Guilt was a critical element in any religion, and it was a wonderful motivator.
Robert Martin had galvanized the people of Earth into an army of fanatics determined to
resist the aliens at all cost.
Church continued his speech, “In ten years, we have not succeeded in destroying
one alien ship, we have not succeeded in killing even a single alien, but in spite of that,
we are beating them! They have received nothing from this planet but pain and hardship.
When they tried to take our coal, they found it salted with nuclear waste. When they tried
to take our steel, they found it brittle as glass. When they tried to force us to work in their
factories, they found strikes and sabotage. The water has been poisoned; the food has
been blighted. They have received nothing for their efforts and they never will!”
Church paused and sipped some water to allow them to applaud, which they did
wildly. Church waited a moment, then set a book on the podium, “I would now like to
read a short passage from the Prophecies of Martin. The audience quieted, some bent
their heads.
With the virtual elimination of the electronic media, and the fragmentation of the
remaining populous, Thomas Church had freely embellished and expanded the legend of
Robert Martin without fear of anyone contradicting him. In fact, a desperate public had
willingly embraced each new pronouncement.

15
MFC/BPL

Thomas began to read, “And the aliens shall come to know the truth. The spirit of
mankind shines above the petty greed and naked ambition of their would be tyranny.
Their weak souls will force them to flee the light and return to the shadow where they
will not have to see just how small they truly are.” Martin closed the book, “Chapter 12,
verse 23.”
President Church walked off the podium. Everyone quickly dispersed. It was
time to go back into hiding.

********************
Just three weeks later, Thomas Church was standing in the War Room, a
renovated mine shaft just east of the Great Divide, when a radar operator lifted his head
from his screen and said, “They’re leaving!”
The room erupted in noise. Everyone crowded around the main screens. A video
link to a ground based observatory on the night side of Earth allowed them to watch as
the alien flag ship slowly pulled out of orbit. Cheers went up around the room. Ten long
years and the nightmare was finally ending.
While the others celebrated, Thomas Church stepped to the back of the room.
Right now, he was more scared than excited. Once he had realized that the aliens were
only after conquest and plunder, he had known that the day would come when they would
give up and leave. What he was less sure of was whether or not they would leave behind
a cinder.
Church had bet the lives of everyone on Earth that the aliens did only what
profited them and would not act out of spite or hate. But he really didn’t know enough
about them to do more than hope he was right. He watched the alien ship move out past
the moon’s orbit, expecting it to open fire at any moment.
“And mankind shall be renewed upon the Earth, free again to walk under a clear
blue sky, the threat from the heavens gone forever. The Prophecies of Martin, Chapter
12, verse 24, the final prophecy,” a voice near Church said.
Church looked around but he didn’t see anyone near him, only a statue of Martin,
looking defiantly to the heavens. Church looked back at the screen, apparently the

16
MFC/BPL

speaker and the prophecy were correct, the ship was picking up speed. It soon became
too small for the observatory telescope to detect. The cheering grew louder.
Church did not allow himself the luxury. There was so much to do. Millions
more would die of starvation and disease if action wasn’t taken quickly. With the alien
threat gone there would be nothing to keep everyone working together.
Church turned and looked up again at Martin’s statue. He smiled. Maybe Martin
still had a few more prophecies left in him.

17

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen