American Savior

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American Savior Page 7

by Roland Merullo


  “But why the ‘have to’?” I couldn’t keep myself from asking. “That’s the tough part, for me at least. It seems to me you could do anything you damn well please.”

  “My mother has so ordained,” he said.

  “Your mother?” Zelda sounded excited. “In the Bible you’re always speaking of the father. ‘My father in heaven,’ and so on.”

  “Same thing. Mother, father, me. Same thing.”

  “The holy trinity,” I suggested.

  “Sure,” Jesus said, “if you like that model. The whole point of the teachings I gave in those days was to try to break you people out of your insistence on identifying with the physical body. All suffering comes from that identification, that should be obvious enough. They have been altered, unfortunately, but the original meaning of my words had to do mostly with that.” He paused for a moment. I saw him staring out the window, and it did seem to me that he was communing in some way with the trees and stones there. This is my body. That is my body. I am not my body. I had a little stretch of wishing I’d paid more attention in Sunday school.

  “Listen,” Jesus said. He leaned forward so his head was closer to us. “I do not want to get too far into this right now. Later, if you like, we can take a walk in the desert or something and have a private tutorial. I would be happy to do that. But right now, we have a couple of hours together on the road, and it might be our last quiet time for a while, so I want you to fill me in, to the extent possible, on the situation I am getting into.”

  Zelda and I looked at each other. “You first,” we both said at the same moment.

  “Okay,” I said. “I’ll do the Republicans and you do the Democrats, deal?”

  She nodded. “You first.”

  “Okay. But I want to preface my remarks by saying that these are crude approximations.”

  “Fine, it is the big picture I want. And be blunt.”

  “That’s never a problem for him,” Zelda noted.

  “The big picture,” I said, “is that, at this point, less than five months before the actual election, you are way behind the eight ball. Everyone else has had at least a year’s head start, raised a lot of money, been through a series of tough primaries, contentious debates. You’re going to be seen as a Jesus-Come-Lately, if you want the harsh truth.”

  “I do.”

  “All right, then. The good news is that the two main people you’ll be up against are not exactly….”

  “Divine,” Zel put in when I hesitated.

  “Right, divine. On the Republican side, you have Marjorie M. Maplewith, hardass senator from Idaho. Her husband, the Reverend Aldridge Maplewith, is pastor of a megachurch in Boise, famous TV preacher, multimillionaire, proud Christian conservative. Marjorie inherited a fortune from two family-owned businesses—ski resorts and aluminum mining—and when she married Aldridge it was like two empires coming together. She calls herself the ‘Proactive Protector’ of American values and territory. Wants to double the size of the armed forces. Got a bill passed in Congress that increases penalties for any crime that harms a child, and people admire her for that. Molesters go to jail and never get out. Parents who hurt their kids in any serious way go behind bars for a decade, automatic loss of parental rights, that type of thing. She talks about privatizing government services, the post office, for example, so big business likes her. She picked Adam Clarence, congressman from West Virginia, for her running mate—he’s basically a nobody, and people wonder if there is something behind the scenes, a favor owed or something. She’s raised lots of money from a relatively small number of wealthy donors and conservative PACs, and she flies around the country to these carefully screened rallies that her staff puts together and then films in a way that makes them look larger than they really are. Well-oiled campaign. Ruthless in what she’ll say about her opponent. Abortion is murder, period. Homosexuality is a sin against God and should be outlawed. She would also outlaw X-rated movies, shut down X-rated Internet sites—though nobody has been able to pin her down as to how she’d actually accomplish that. She believes there should be no public money for birth control education in this country or abroad. The government should get out of people’s lives … except if it wants to eavesdrop on them for national security reasons. That enough, or you want more detail?”

  “Fine for now,” Jesus said.

  “Your turn, Zel.”

  “Well,” Zelda touched her new earrings in a contemplative way and then said, “in a nice twist, the Dems have put up a military man this year. Dennis Alowich. His grandfather emigrated from Lithuania, and the name was formerly Alowicious. There might be some Jewish blood there, we’re not sure, but you can bet it’s being looked into. Not the biggest military man, only a colonel, but a war hero who retired, invented a kind of insecticide called GreenBiscuit that kills bugs without harming people, made a fortune selling that, served as governor of Washington State for a term, secretary of veterans affairs for a term, then retired a few years ago to get his campaign together. Chose Senator John-John Maileah from Hawaii, because Maileah has been a party stalwart for thirty years and they owed him something. Not as much money as Marjorie Maplewith, a more pleasing personality by most estimates, but not as good a campaigner, and not as bright. He tends to hedge on the social issues when he’s speaking to certain audiences, though he’s generally progressive. Talks tough on national defense. His big issue is raising teachers’ salaries, making schools safe, college affordable, etcetera. Plus, his wife is the famous soap opera star Lenda Elliot. She draws some big crowds and people like her.”

  “Fine,” Jesus said.

  “They have both bases covered pretty well,” I said. “The right loves Maplewith; the left likes Alowich. What I’m wondering is, where do you fit in?”

  “The middle,” Jesus said.

  “Everybody wants the middle. The closer you get to the middle, the more votes you get. Poli-Sci 101.”

  “I’m running on the beatitudes.”

  There was a stunned silence in the front seat. After a minute, I said, “You mean blessed are the meek and so on? Those beatitudes?”

  “Exactly.”

  “They’ll hammer you on national defense,” Zelda said, voicing my thoughts. “They’ll say, ‘What do you propose if the U.S. is attacked again, turn the other cheek?’ People will mock you.”

  “It would not be the first time.”

  “But would you say that, really? Turn the other cheek, I mean?”

  “I said it before, didn’t I?”

  “But, if you’re head of a nation and you do that, you’ll … you’ll go the way of Tibet. The enemy, whoever it is, will come in, torture people, kill millions, take over the country in a week. You have to get fifty or sixty million votes to be elected president. Say something like that and you won’t get two million. It would be like saying, ‘I want to take from the rich and give to the poor.’ Nice idea. But a presidential candidate says that and he might as well run off to, I don’t know, Venezuela or something. You’d be finished.”

  “Let me handle it,” Jesus said. “I think I can say it in a way that makes sense to people. We’re not going to hand the country over to the bad guys. I am not naive.”

  “I’m glad to hear you say there are bad guys.”

  “Of course there are.”

  “Why?” Zelda said.

  “What do you mean, why?”

  “Why are there bad guys? Why did you make them, or why did your mother and father make them? It’s a personal question; it has nothing to do with strategy. I’ve always wondered. Every day I deal with people who’ve been raped, or abused, or abandoned by their spouse, or something like that. And I’ve always wanted to ask you why you let that happen?”

  “The laws of earth,” he answered. “It’s not that way everywhere. Once you get off this troubled blue sphere, there is not so much pain. This is the sphere of suffering. It is something you all, individually, have to figure your way out of. A life here, in the eyes of most of the rest of crea
tion, even the great blessing of a human life here, is not considered a day at the beach. You work harder than souls in most of the incarnations. You suffer more pain, and more different types of pain. You worry much more—especially in the industrialized societies, where true peace of mind is rare. A lifetime on earth is the equivalent of a difficult childhood. Eventually you grow out of it. What scars and lessons you carry forward from this childhood, that’s completely up to you.”

  “But why do you allow it to be this way?”

  “It is the law.”

  “But why can’t the law have no pain in it? Why can’t we all be happy to start out with? Why was there original sin or whatever it was? Adam and Eve and the apple, and so on?”

  “Like this universe, you are engaged in a constant expansion of yourselves,” Jesus went on. “That expansion takes effort. Pain is involved in that effort. I could go into more detail, but now is not the time.”

  “Why not? She’s asking an important question.”

  “Too complicated for you.”

  “Even for me?” I said.

  “Especially for you.”

  I looked in the mirror, and I was glad to see a smile at the corners of his mouth. So God had a sense of humor after all—all my golfing friends thought so.

  “How about a hint, at least?”

  “All right. When you have a dream, you feel it is absolutely real, correct?”

  “Sure, sometimes.”

  “And then you wake up and you realize it was not absolutely real.”

  “Okay,” I said. “So this is the dream.”

  “I have come, as I did last time, to show you how to awake from the dream.”

  “Into paradise,” Zelda suggested.

  “Yes, though even paradise is not static.”

  “It’s like my work,” she said. “Not to compare your work and my work, but my job is to help people move beyond the memories and bad thoughts that haunt them.”

  “A perfect analogy,” Jesus said. “You cannot snap your fingers and bring them peace. They themselves must do the work, though you and others can help them. Similarly, the saints and angels are helping you.… I shall tell you more in future conversations.”

  “Why not now,” I said.

  “Because at the moment I am interested in things political. The rally on Wednesday, for one thing. How are security preparations going?”

  I told him things were going well, which was more or less the truth, but Zelda gave me a funny look, as if I had just lied to God, and then an awkward silence fell over us for a few miles. We pulled into a rest area because Jesus said he had to use the facilities.

  We made a bathroom visit, then rendezvoused out in the eating area. That same awkwardness sloshed around among us, as if we’d grown close there in the car, and it had made us—Zelda and me at least—self-conscious. I bought three cups of coffee (Jesus likes it black, with two sugars), and we were standing out in the fresh air when I said to him, “You should prepare yourself for the spiritual shock of meeting the Thomas clan. We’re a bit … well, let me put it this way, I’m the most normal one of the bunch.”

  “I will not be meeting them today,” Jesus said. He drank his coffee in gulps. “I am heading back to West Zenith now.”

  “Now? But we’re going the other way.”

  “I shall hitch a ride.”

  “It’s not safe,” Zelda said.

  “And I’m in charge of security. I won’t let you.”

  That remark produced the first full smile I’d seen from him on that odd day. It was a phenomenal smile. His lips spread wide, revealing the perfect set of teeth. It made you happy to see that smile, made you hope for better things, and I began to think that maybe, just maybe, in spite of the beatitudes, he might do okay on the campaign trail.

  “I will be fine,” he said. “Remember, I would like to start out from Zenith on the day following the kickoff rally. Ask your father to set up a schedule, Russell. He is our transportation guru, our logistics man.”

  “Okay,” I said, though what I wanted to do was take him by the lapels of his sport jacket and shout, “The transportation guy? My dad? He’s lucky he can find his way home from work! Are you nuts!”

  Jesus tossed his coffee cup in a trash barrel and put his hand on my right shoulder. I felt a tremor go through my body. Now, I should say that I had minimal experience with drugs, a few experimental moments in my college years, no inhaling, and so on. Lucky for me, I suppose, those experiments never resulted in any great thrill. But I had some experience with prescription painkillers, and I had used alcohol on a number of occasions to alter my mental state, so I was not unaware of the possibilities of chemical joy. His touch gave me a clearer sense of all that. It made me happy in a way I can’t describe. Happy, optimistic, confident. It lasted maybe half a minute after he took his hand away.

  “Everything is fine exactly as it is,” Jesus said, before he walked away. For a few minutes after he touched me, I found that easy to believe.

  We watched him cross three lanes of high-speed traffic, the median, and then three more lanes, as casually as if he were crossing a side street in a country town at six a.m. When he was safely on the other side, we got into my car and drove east.

  FOURTEEN

  It was only about twenty-five miles from the interstate rest area to the humble city of North Salem, where I had been born and raised and where my parents, Arnold and Maria Thomas, still lived. Given the city traffic, however, twenty-five miles translated into about forty minutes, plenty of time for Zelda and me to have one of the worst fights in our history.

  Not fifteen seconds after we’d said our good-byes to Jesus and told him to be careful, she started in on me. “You are utterly, utterly disrespectful to him,” she said, pushing herself to the far side of the front seat.

  “I’m respectful in my own way. You’re like a teenage girl with him. Lord this and Lord that. You’re so wonderful-looking, Lord.”

  “Well, he is.”

  “Flattery is not what he wants. He said so himself.”

  “You’re jealous.”

  “If so, I’m jealous of Jesus, and you’re jealous of fifty-year-old nurses. And, anyway, what’s there to be jealous about? He’s Jesus. He’s God. He’s celibate and so on. I’m not that jealous of celibate type guys.”

  “He is not celibate.”

  “How do you know?” I asked, and at that moment I thought she was going to tell me they had spent the night together, and if she had said that, I was going to pull the car over to the side of the highway and hand her the keys and I was going to be done with all of it—Zelda and the engagement, Jesus and the campaign. I was going to take my savings out of the bank and go to Bermuda or Belize or Saskatchewan for a long vacation and then figure out a new existence for myself. A career as an atheist. A life on the streets. I was going to start my own hedge fund. That’s how deep the old bruises were.

  “I can feel that kind of thing in a man. Celibate is the last thing he is.”

  “Did he come on to you?” I asked, before I could stop myself. “Did you sleep with him or something?”

  “You are disgusting. You really are.”

  “I’m just asking. And you’re just not answering.”

  “Some questions are not worthy of being answered.”

  “And maybe some men are not worthy of being engaged to.”

  “I didn’t say that. You have no faith in anybody, even yourself. It’s like you’re going through the motions with him. Did you really do the security stuff he asked you to?”

  “Talk about questions that aren’t worth being answered.”

  “Did you?”

  “Of course I did. It’s all set. Chief Bastatutta himself told me everything is in place. Did you do the press stuff?”

  She nodded, arms crossed, eyebrows and mouth squeezed into unhappy lines. “I wish you’d let go and trust for once in your life,” she said, in a less belligerent tone. “I’ve never given you one reason to doubt my faithf
ulness, not one, and you know it. He’s performed miracles, and chosen you for the most important work of your life. And you’re wavering inside.”

  “I quit my job, Zelda. That’s not exactly a sign of wavering.”

  “You quit your job for me. You were afraid you’d lose me if you didn’t believe in him.”

  “Would I have?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “Honest, at least.”

  “And I quit my practice. Do you have any idea what it feels like to leave forty-three people hanging, people who depended on you? Some of whom can barely get through a day without thinking of ending their lives?”

  She started to cry. We went along for a few miles that way. The tall buildings at the center of the city came into view. The traffic thickened. I paid the toll and, after worming my way through the cars and trucks for another few miles, took the ramp that led to the bridge that crossed the river that separated North Salem from the sophisticated world, the world of atheists and journalists, the world of doubt, complications, moral relativity.

  “Do you believe I love you?” Zelda asked, as we were in the middle of the span.

  “Most of the time, yes.”

  “Do you believe it’s possible for me to love you and worship him at the same time?”

  “Sure, in principle. In reality, he’s so damn human-seeming that it’s hard for me. He’s handsome. Dresses well. The guy would make a great anchorman.”

  “Can you let go of that anchorman obsession? Please! Do you think my dream in life is to be married to an anchorman?”

 

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