Emergence, Part Two
“Stewart, stop rummaging around for the sticks, they’re not in there.”
“No sticks, Mama, the spiritually disabled need sticks!”
“Stewart, the Navy buried you at sea. Fine sailors with legs like oak trees, squeezing 500 squeaky beasts to pipe you into heaven.”
“No sticks — bagpipe music, Mama — did I convert? You wouldn’t let me do that, would you?”
“Stewart, how many times do I have do tell you, spiritual matters are far too important to leave to a bubblehead like you (or, for that matter, to the rabbi). Trust Mama. Did I ever stain my hands with blood to feed my children?”
“Mama, why did the sailors bury me at sea?”
“We’ll talk about that later, Stewart… Let’s just say there was a terrific confusion about the sign on the back of your wheelchair and, like our President and other high public officials, you seem to have gotten the benefit of the doubt.”
“THE CAPTAIN’S WORD IS LAW, Mama, they thought I was a Captain?”
“They couldn’t disprove it. All the military records of the President’s cohort (to which you belong) had been regrettably misplaced by the administration. Congress ordered the Office of the Vice President to show cause why these records cannot be found, but first they have to find him. The Vice President is reported to be hiding out in a cave in Afganistan, or one of the clerk’s offices in the Supreme Court. And he told Congress, if they had any brains, they’d understand why he was a member of the Judicial Branch…”
“Mama, you don’t sound well. Don’t they feed you enough in heaven?”
“Feed? Why God bless me, hiccup, hiccup, oh blast!” followed by a parade of squeaks, and then: “Jesus Christ is the Son of God, Jesus Christ is the Son of…” And a horrendous sound, as if choked off.
“Mama, tell me you didn’t convert!” Hardlypie begs.
But all he hears is that squeaky voice proclaiming the Divinity of Jesus, punctuated by “Oh blast!” and “God bless me”, until a very familiar voice confesses, “Dr. Hardlypie, I’m so sorry I deceived you, but I need your help, Jesus Christ is the Son of G… Blast!”
Dr. Stewart Hardlypie, who never remembers a face, and couldn’t find his way out of a coffin if the lid suddenly popped open, knows very well who’s speaking now — and could kick himself for being tricked if he weren’t stiff from lying so long in repose. “Your Honor, what a pleasant surprise! Slumming again? Never believed I’d hear your magisterial voice in the halls of Limbo.”
“Dr. Hardlypie, you’re not in Limbo.” The voice of the Devil, always recognizable in its very particular timbre, sounds amused even in its distress. “You’re not even in your coffin. You’re just having a dream!”