[Note: By Lifting Winds Forgot and The Ceremony of Innocence precede this tale. If you've not read these two this story will make no sense at all.]
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Time, Like A River: The Voyage From Driftwood III
Part I: They called for the harp – but our blood they shall spill
Byron, By the Waters of Babylon – from
The Hebrew Melodies
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The Air Force C37A turned on base over Maryland's 'eastern shore' – flying towards it's next waypoint and now 4500 feet over the Chesapeake Bay Bridge, and Grover Smithfield looked down at Annapolis as the pilot configured flaps for the extended approach.
So many decades had passed, Smithfield thought as he looked down at the campus by the bay, since his class had first formed up on drill fields by the waterfront. JFK was in the autumn of his presidency, and only a few of his teachers glimpsed the great dissolution that would follow Kennedy's murder. One of his favorite instructors, a Navy captain who just happened to be a well regarded historian, remarked casually on the Monday after Kennedy's assassination that Lee Harvey Oswald had just accomplished what all the navies and armies of Germany and Japan had failed to do in the second world war: in the span of a few brief seconds he had completely shattered America's sense of itself. No matter who was ultimately held responsible, he saw Americans from that day forward drifting apart from one another, flying off to their polar extremes. "Belief is a fragile thing," he said, "a shared set of ideas that can disappear in an instant – even in three seconds." Smithfield remembered the captain's office, and a little sign the man had hung on the wall above his desk. "History is the graveyard of tyrannies," the little placard stated, and even now Smithfield recalled the captain had gone to work for first Nixon, then Ford, eventually ending his non-partisan career in the Carter White House. Smithfield had tried to emulate the man all his life.
But what had happened to that perspective over the years?
He watched the little harbor slide by, then Washington's eastern suburbs, looking at the captain's rigid prediction that was even now coming true. Politics had devolved from the soft art of compromise to cold obstructionism. Compromise was considered evil, and thugs on the right and idiots on the left all sounded more and more – like what? Ignorant, or simply arrogant? Unwilling to even consider a thought that didn't conform to a fixed set of ideas? Now he could see better than ever how communities had grown into ossified extensions of ideology, yet even so, looking down on the Beltway in that moment, for some reason he remembered sitting in Sergey Gorshkov's office one rainy May afternoon in Moscow, listening to the old admiral expound on the role of Soviet seapower.
"The Soviet Union will collapse soon," he'd said as their meeting drew to a close, and Smithfield had thought the man insane to speak those words aloud in that office – even if he was the architect of modern Soviet naval doctrine. "But I do not worry so much about that. Your Kennan predicted our collapse, in 1947, and he had it down almost down to the year. And he was correct, his working hypothesis was accurate, the whole
Buddenbrooks
analogy, how political cultures decay like families decay over time. But, Captain Smithfield, what troubles me most is what happens when
your
country falls. It will, you know, perhaps in your lifetime. That is the working assumption in the Kremlin, anyway."
Smithfield's Gulfstream made it's last hard left onto final – and a half mile off their left wingtip he saw two F-16s, and he thought again of Israel. That beleaguered nation had been at war since 1947, since it's modern inception – and keeping a strong military presence in the public eye was a vital fact of public life.
But here? In our skies? My, how times had changed. Was this what Gorshkov had been thinking of?
Now it was routine for airliners approaching New England from Europe, or Alaska from the Orient, to find squadrons of interceptors waiting to 'escort' them through the relevant ADIZ. Terror alerts were taken seriously now – by the military, at least – because that was the reality of post-modern 'neoliberal' existence. Newton's Laws, Smithfield sighed, just couldn't be ignored – though the political world had tried often enough – only now actions and reactions were coming so fast there was no time to adjust, no time to plan. He'd found himself reacting to events all during his presidency, rarely ever ahead of events.
And now the extreme reaction to the Hyperion Contacts – as the current president called them – with ever more liberties curtailed, and everyone clueless about the facts. Still, almost seven months after Hope Sherman's 'disappearance,' information about the project within the intel community had been rigidly compartmentalized. Of more importance, information had been stopped before reaching the greater political hierarchies within the American congress, let alone the European Union and Russia. As a result, only a handful of people around the world had any idea what had happened last Christmas – in space, between the earth and her moon. So focused had those governments been on the threat of expanding Islamist terror, the idea that the Hyperion Fusion Project had been a ruse and that so-called 'First Contact' had already occurred remained a great unknown.
The fact that Russia's intercontinental missile force had been neutralized in an instant completely altered the role of the military, and an early Cold War hysteria gripped planners in the Pentagon and the Kremlin –
"Flying Saucers and Death Rays, oh my!"
– yet countering this new threat became the next mission. Planners and designers from Boeing and Grumman and Sukhoi hypothesized and groused –
because no one knew what the threat was
– not what the threat looked like, or even what "their" capabilities were. These planners and designers just shrugged and shook their heads and wondered how best to spend the billions of dollars suddenly knocking on their doors.
So the race was on: how to assess the threat became the next great game, and the President called Smithfield, or, rather, he had called the Prime Minister of Israel...
...and now here he was...walking down air-stairs on a torrid July afternoon to a convoy of waiting Suburbans. Turning out of Joint Base Andrews onto Pennsylvania Avenue, four black Suburbans and eight motorcycles in line, making the half hour drive through the city to the Big House; once past the Beltway the traffic grew oppressively heavy, the edifice of empire was everywhere he looked, while legions of homeless and the infirm lay in every shadow. The city was, Smithfield thought, still the living embodiment of extreme contradictions, and then, the white Capitol Dome looming just ahead in a thick, brown haze. Perfect, he thought. So few with so much.
The House was unchanged, he saw, but security was oppressive now; not even one tourist on the sidewalk waiting for a tour; those had been suspended for the time being. Snipers not visible either, but he knew they were up there, watching this arrival. Through the White House gates and out of the Suburban, he heard a formation of jets overhead and didn't even bother looking at them; he saluted the pair of Marines by the entry and saw Paul Kirkland, the President's National Security Advisor, waiting, and they walked together through the West Wing to The Office.
The President looked much older now, and uncharacteristically tired, his face lined with cares he'd never imagined seven years ago, and Smithfield smiled. He paused, looked at a sword on the president's desktop, a simple Samurai's sword, and Smithfield thought it looked ancient, indeed, it's silvered steel now almost elegant with the patina of age – and use, perhaps – yet the President pointedly didn't stand, and barely acknowledged his predecessor's presence in the room.
Smithfield listened as an old clock beat away on a bookshelf, and still the President simply continued looking at the sword, his eyes fixed on the cold steel, while Smithfield remained standing. The old man wasn't aggravated by this breach of protocol – no, he was simply more interested in the mood he felt in the room. Oppressive curiosity, perhaps? With a lingering sense of despair?
"Japanese Ambassador just left," the President finally said, slowly looking up at the previous occupant of this office. "Symbolic, don't you think?"
Smithfield glanced at Kirkland, then back at the President; Kirkland shrugged, rolled his eyes, so Smithfield sat down across from the President. "Why symbolic? Think he wants you to commit seppuku?"
The President shook his head then, and chuckled. "Wouldn't be surprised, Grover. Not a bit surprised."
"What can I do for you, sir?"
"Have you been out there yet?"
"Sir?"
"KIC 8462852, the system. Have you been out there yet?"
"No, sir."
"Really? I'm surprised." The President was staring at him, as if taking the measure of his predecessor once again.
"Oh? Why's that, sir."
The President turned in his chair and looked out the window. "Don't you want to?"
"No sir, not really."
The President steepled his hands in front of his face, took a deep breath. "That ship of there's. The one on the far side. Have you seen it, know it's capabilities?"
Smithfield shook his head. "No, I haven't, and I don't."