Job - A Comedy Of Justice Part 63
You’re reading novel Job - A Comedy Of Justice Part 63 online at LightNovelFree.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit LightNovelFree.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy!
'Oh, certainly. I'm not an imp faking human; I'm human. You don't think anyone could get a job like this without human experience, do you? You have to be human right down to your toes to please a fellow human most; that stuff about the superior erotic ability of succubi is just their advertising. I was a nun, Alec, from adolescence to death, most of it spent teaching grammar and arithmetic to children who didn't want to learn.
'I soon learned that my vocation had not been a true one. What I did not know was how to get out of it. So I stayed. At about thirty I discovered just how miserably, awful my mistake had been; my s.e.xuality reached maturity. Mean to say I got h.o.r.n.y, Saint Alec, and stayed h.o.r.n.y and got more so every year.
'The worst thing about my predicament was not that I was subjected to temptation but that I was not subjected to temptation - as I would have grabbed any opportunity. Fat chance! My confessor might have looked upon me with l.u.s.t had I been a choir boy - as it was, he sometimes snored while I was confessing. Not surprising; my sins were dull, even to me.'
'What were your sins, Pat?'
'Carnal thoughts, most of which I did not confess. Not being forgiven, they went straight into Saint Peter's computers. Blasphemous adulterous fornication.'
Huh? Pat, you have quite an imagination.'
'Not especially, just h.o.r.n.y. You probably don't know just how hemmed in a nun is. She is a bride of Christ; that's the contract. So even to think about the joys of s.e.x makes of her an adulterous wife in the worst possible way.'
'Be darned. Pat, I recently met two nuns, in Heaven. Both seemed like hearty wenches, one especially. Yet there they were.'
'No inconsistency. Most nuns confess their sins regularly, are forgiven. Then they usually die in the bosom of their Family, with its chaplain or confessor at hand. So gets the last rites with her sins all forgiven and she's s.h.i.+pped straight to Heaven, pure as Ivory soap.
'But not me!' She grinned. 'I'm being punished for my sins and enjoying every wicked minute of it. I died a virgin in 1918, during the big flu epidemic, and so many died so fast that no priest got to me in time to grease me into Heaven. So I wound up here. At the end of my thousand year apprentices.h.i.+p -'
'Hold it! You died in 1918?'
'Yes. The great Spanish Influenza epidemic. Born in 1878, died in 1918, on my fortieth birthday. Would you prefer for me to look forty? I can, you know.'
'No, you look just fine. Beautiful.'
'I wasn't sure. Some men - Lots of eager mother humpers around here and most of them never got a chance to do it while they were alive. It's one of my easier entertainments. I simply lead you into hypnotizing yourself, you supply the data. Then I look and sound exactly like your mother. Smell like her, too. Everything. Except that I am available to you in ways that your mother probably was not. -'
'Patty, I don't even like my mother!'
'Oh. Didn't that cause you trouble at Judgment Day?'
'No. That's not in the rules. It says in the Book that you must honor thy father and thy mother. Not one word about loving them. I honored her, all the full protocol. Kept her picture on my desk. A letter every week. Telephoned her on her birthday. Called on her in person as my duties permitted. Listened to her eternal b.i.t.c.hing and to her poisonous gossip about her women friends. Never contradicted her. Paid her hospital bills. Followed her to her grave. But weep I did not. She didn't like me and I didn't like her. Forget my mother! Pat, I asked you a question and you changed the subject.'
'Sorry, dear. Hey, look what I've found!'
'Don't change the subject again; just keep it warm in your hand while you answer my question. You said something about your "thousand-year apprentices.h.i.+p".'
'Yes?'
'But you said also that you died in 1918. The Final Trump sounded in 1994 - I know; I was there. That's only seventy-six years later than your death. To me that Final Trump seems like only a few days ago, about a month, no more. I ran across something that seemed to make it seven years ago. But that still isn't over nine hundred, the best part of a thousand years. I'm not a spirit, I'm a living body. And I'm not Methuselah.' (d.a.m.n it, is Margrethe separated from me by a thousand years? This isn't fair!)
'Oh. Alec, in eternity a thousand years isn't any particular time; it is simply a long time. Long enough in this case to test whether or not I had both the talent and the disposition for the profession. That took quite a while because, while I was h.o.r.n.y enough - and stayed that way; almost any guest can send me right through the ceiling as you noticed - I had arrived here knowing nothing about s.e.x. Nothing! But I did learn and eventually Mary Magdalene gave me high marks and recommended me for permanent appointment.'
'Is she down here?'
'Oh. She's a visiting professor here; she's on the permanent faculty in Heaven.'
'What does she teach in Heaven?'
'I have no idea but it can't be what she teaches here. Or I don't think so. Hmm. Alec, she's one of the eternal greats; she makes her own rules. But this time you changed the subject. I was trying to tell you that I don't know how long my apprentices.h.i.+p lasted because time is whatever you want it to be. How long have you and I been in bed together?'
'Uh, quite a while. But not long enough. I think it must be near midnight.'
'It's midnight if you want it to be midnight. Want me to get on top?'
The next morning, whenever that was, Pat and I had breakfast on the balcony looking out over the Lake. She was dressed in Marga's favorite costume, shorts tight and' short, and a halter with her b.r.e.a.s.t.s tending to overflow their bounds. I don't know when she got her clothes, but my pants and s.h.i.+rt had been cleaned and repaired in the night and my underwear and socks washed - in h.e.l.l there seem to be busy little imps everywhere. Besides, they could have driven a flock of geese through our bedroom the latter part of the night without disturbing me.
I looked at Pat across the table, appreciating her wholesome, girl-scout beauty, with her sprinkle of freckles across her nose, and thought how strange it was that I had ever confused s.e.x with sin. s.e.x can involve sin, surely any human act can involve cruelty and injustice. But s.e.x alone held no taint of sin. I had arrived here tired, confused, and unhappy - Pat had first made me happy, then caused me to rest, then left me happy this lovely morning.
Not any less anxious to find you, Marga my own - but in much better shape to push the search.
Would Margrethe see it that way?
Well, she had never seemed jealous of me.
How would I feel if she took a vacation, a s.e.xual vacation, such as I had just enjoyed? That's a good question. Better think about it, boy - because sauce for the goose is not a horse of another color.
I looked out over the Lake, watched the smoke rise and the flames throwing red lights on the smoke... while right and left were green and sunny early summer sights, with snow-tipped mountains in the far distance. Pat -'
'Yes, dear?'
'The Lake bank can't be more than a furlong from here. But I can't smell any brimstone.'
'Notice how the breeze is blowing those banners? From anywhere around the Pit the wind blows toward the Pit. There it rises - incidentally slowing any soul arriving ballistically - and then on the far side of the globe there is a corresponding down draft into a cold pit where the hydrogen sulfide reacts with oxygen to form water and sulfur. The sulfur is deposited; the water comes out as water vapor, and returns. The two pits and this circulation control the weather here somewhat the way the moon acts as a control on earth weather. But gentler.'
I was never too hot at physical sciences... but that doesn't sound like the natural laws I learned in school.'
'Of course not. Different Boss here. He runs this planet to suit himself.'
Whatever I meant to answer got lost in a mellow gong played inside the suite. 'Shall I answer, sir?'
'Sure, but how dare you call me "sir"? Probably just room service. Huh?'
'No, dear Alec, room service will just come in when they see that we are through.' She got up, came back quickly with an envelope. 'Letter by Imperial courier. For 'You, dear.'
Me?' I accepted it gingerly, and opened it. An embossed seal at the top: the conventional Devil in red, horns, hooves, tail, pitchfork, and standing in flames. Below it:
Saint Alexander Hergensheimer Sans Souci Sheraton The Capital
Greetings:
In,response to your pet.i.tion for an audience with His Infernal Majesty, Satan Mekratrig, Sovereign of h.e.l.l and His Colonies beyond, First of the Fallen Thrones, Prince of Lies, I have the honour to advise you that His Majesty requires you to substantiate your request by supplying to this office a full and frank memoir of your life. When this has been done, a decision on your request will be made.
May I add to His Majesty's message this advice: Any attempt to omit, slur over, or color in the belief that you will thereby please His Majesty will not please Him.
I have the honour to remain, Sincerely His, (s) Beelzebub Secretary to His Majesty
I read it aloud to Pat. She blinked her eyes and whistled. 'Dear, you had better get busy!'
Job - A Comedy Of Justice Part 63
You're reading novel Job - A Comedy Of Justice Part 63 online at LightNovelFree.com. You can use the follow function to bookmark your favorite novel ( Only for registered users ). If you find any errors ( broken links, can't load photos, etc.. ), Please let us know so we can fix it as soon as possible. And when you start a conversation or debate about a certain topic with other people, please do not offend them just because you don't like their opinions.
Job - A Comedy Of Justice Part 63 summary
You're reading Job - A Comedy Of Justice Part 63. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Robert A. Heinlein already has 506 views.
It's great if you read and follow any novel on our website. We promise you that we'll bring you the latest, hottest novel everyday and FREE.
LightNovelFree.com is a most smartest website for reading novel online, it can automatic resize images to fit your pc screen, even on your mobile. Experience now by using your smartphone and access to LightNovelFree.com
- Related chapter:
- Job - A Comedy Of Justice Part 62
- Job - A Comedy Of Justice Part 64