Eye in the Sky bk II: Artifact, ch 5
By blackrandl1958
Thanks to my team. Harddaysknight is my mentor and gives me critical review. SBrooks103x also gives me a pre-post read. My editors are Girlinthemoon, Hale1 and GeorgeAnderson. I thank you all.
Molly and Bertrand decided to stay at Baxter House for at least a couple of days and see what they could discover about the Baphomet statue. They took it into the fruit trees left from the former plantation, experimented with fish at the lagoon and tried to use it on one another. The Templar stories of cords touching the idol and conferring power to anyone who wore them intrigued them. They made an experiment using strips of elastic bandages and Oliver agreed to wear one.
He was very embarrassed to discover that they wanted to do sperm counts on him before wearing the bandages and after. He absolutely refused until Kane took him aside. She led him to her bedroom and soon returned with the sample. They sent it off by boat to a clinic in Nassau and he began to wear the arm band. After three days they tested him again and when the tests returned they discovered that his counts had more than doubled.
Molly made a small incision on his forearm and the next day it had vanished without a trace. He attempted some measure of control and discovered that he could quell an argument between Ben and Bannon by concentrating on calmness and serenity. He repeated the process on Molly and Bertrand when they began to argue about whether the statue was from the time of the crusades or a later French construction.
He induced Kane to a state of writhing horniness by becoming aroused himself and discovered that Bannon was also extremely aroused when she went naked into Ben's room. He quickly concentrated on ice water and cold winds and both girls settled down. He took off the arm band and refused to wear it again. He told the two researchers what had happened.
"What if I get angry? Is everyone in the house going to start fighting one another? This thing is dangerous. We need to get rid of it."
The two scientists disagreed strenuously. The destruction of ancient historical artifacts was fundamentally against their sense of ethics.
"What if we just kept the book and got rid of the statue?" he asked.
"Oliver, you're talking about destroying something that existed and formed a major part of the story of man since before the dawn of history. No one knows how old that head is," Molly told him.
"Yes, but it's creepy and it's soaked in the blood of all that history and it's dangerous. Let's suppose that the US Government gets their hands on it. That's the best possible scenario. The president covers up the fact that she has it. She uses it and wins the next election. The next thing you know there will be a new amendment repealing the 22nd amendment so she can have a third term. All of a sudden congress is rubber stamping all her decisions and the Supreme Court decided it's all constitutional. This thing scares me to death. It's dangerous in any hands, and suicidal if it gets in the hands of an ambitious man."
"You're wrong, Oliver," Kane walked into the room. "It's not dangerous in any hands."
"Why not? Is there any politician in the world you trust with that kind of power?"
"I'm not the cyanic you are," she said. "I don't know any, but somewhere out there is a politician with ethics. But it isn't dangerous in any hands. It's not dangerous in our hands."
"You're wrong, Kane. What happens when one of you does something that makes me mad? It makes you all mad. When I get sad, are you all going to throw yourselves off the balcony? If I'm hungry or excited you all get like that too. It's very dangerous."
"Where's your arm band, baby?"
"I took the thing off. I don't want it around me."
"Exactly! That's what I'm talking about. It's safe with you. None of us want to use it. It's locked up in a box. I think it's helping us. Look at you, you're fitter than ever. My hair has grown two inches in two months. Look at Ben and Bannon. They're maturing before our eyes. Bertrand is working out with us. Did you work out before?"
"Hardly; I don't know what's come over me. I feel better than I have in years."
"Things have been happening to me too," Molly told them. "I don't want to talk about it. The point is, this thing is not evil. What would happen if it were put in a hospital somewhere? What if a farmer owned it? What's its range? How much power does it have?"
Ben and Bannon had come in and were sitting and listening. "What I want to know is where it came from and how it works," Bannon said. "What are your ideas? Is it some kind of holy thing? Is it alien technology? Is magic real?
"I'm leaning toward the first option," Bertrand said. "It first shows up in Hebrew history. What if it really is something like the Ark of the Covenant that God gave his people to allow them to survive as a tiny nation among all their hostile and powerful enemies?"
"I'm not even sure I believe in God," Molly told him. "The idea isn't rational. I've never seen any way to prove or disprove the existence of Gods. There's no science that has any authority on the subject."
"Maybe this is the proof," Ben told her. "Do you believe in aliens or magic?"
"No, I believe in science. I believe that if we were properly equipped and educated we could find out how it works. Technology always looks like magic to the ignorant."
"So you think it's a piece of technology?" Bertrand said.
"Yes, but we don't understand how it works."
"You're contradicting yourself," Bannon told her.
"How am I doing that?"
Bannon stood up and paced the room, lost in thought for a moment. She went and sat on Oliver's lap and curled up.
"If it's technology, where did it come from? Technology demands technicians to build it. There is no known technology that can explain its existence or its effects. We're back to God, aliens or magic."
Molly thought for a moment. "You're right, Bannon. You're a very smart girl. I'm arguing in a circle. I have no explanation. The only way out for me is to posit a highly technical civilization before recorded history. There is absolutely no evidence of that. I can't argue for it. Okay, I give up. Let's suppose it's God. Can we understand how it works?"
"Not here," Bertrand said. "We don't have the equipment or the skills. There is no property known to man that can have all these effects. The only thing that would explain it is some sort of radiation or field that causes the phenomenon. If there is such a thing we've never discovered it and wouldn't know how to test for it if it existed."
"Could it be duplicated?" Ben asked.
"I don't see how," Molly replied. "You would have to discover how it works first. There is evidently some sort of duplication going on with the cords. What would happen if two people with cords fought?"
"Likely they would cancel each other out," Bertrand said. "Do you want to do an experiment?"
"Yes," Molly said at the same time Oliver said, "No."
Oliver laughed. "We'll drop the two of you on Goat Cay with a couple of arm bands and let you fight it out. But seriously, I think it's too dangerous. What if the thing amplifies the effect and you kill each other. I'm not doing it and I don't want anyone else to. You're all adults and you can make up your own minds, but Kane, Bannon, Ben; I don't want you to do it. I love you too much to risk something happening to you."
"Of course we won't do it," Bannon buried her face in his chest. "We would never do something you thought was dangerous."
"I'm not doing it either," Bertrand said. "Oliver makes too much sense. So the question is, what are we going to do with it?"
"Destroy it," Oliver said. "Either we make armbands for everyone in the world or we make sure no one gets their hands on it."
"I would like to test it," Molly said. "I don't see any way to do that without Nazi's in suits taking it away from us."