Journey to the Year 1,000,000,000
Chapter 22
[Note: This is a Science Fiction story with some erotic scenes. It is
not
a story with erotic scenes in every chapter. Some chapters have incredible sex scenes, but many others have none. ]
Quite suddenly, every single person on the planet Earth was changed.
All twelve billion people. Every single man, woman, and child.
With the exception of Survey Service Lieutenant Commander Michael Taylor.
He started noticing it almost immediately after Pam left.
People...
changed
. Taylor tried to keep a daily routine, to push back his anxiety about Pam. Where was she? What was she doing? When would he ever see her again? He kept his mind occupied running errands.
When Taylor went to the supermarket to buy food, a woman handed him a can of beans.
"What?" said Taylor.
"They're very nutritious," said the woman, with an odd gleam in her eyes. "For a young strapping man like you, they will do your body good."
"Uh, thanks," said Taylor, putting down the can as soon as he turned away.
Two more people made unsolicited suggestions of supposedly healthy eating choices to him before he got out of the store. It was very odd.
Taylor went to get a minor repair on his air car. He had been putting it off because repairs always seemed to be so expensive, even for small things. Ben the mechanic went under the hood and nodded. "You need a new motivator. This one is shot."
Sigh.
"How much will it cost?
Ben scratched his head. "Well... normally around 400. But I'll give it to you for free."
"For free? Why?"
"I've been charging too much, Captain Taylor," said Ben. "I've been overcharging customers for years. I feel really bad about it. I can feel their angst when I charge them too much. So to pay back, I'm working for free for a while."
"I see," said Taylor, who was only beginning to. He gave Ben a hard look and
screaned
him.
People had been changed. The actual change was subtle. They had been given empathy, a big dose of it. They now desperately cared what others thought about them, how other people felt, what things bothered them.
People also seemed to have acquired telepathy. No, that was too strong. Not telepathy. Telepathic empathy. They could sense feelings in others. They could sense feelings in others, and they cared what those feelings were.
People became incredibly nice to each other. On the road Taylor had never seen such polite drivers. It was as if Perth drivers had been replaced with aliens from another planet who actually cared about their fellow commuters. They signaled appropriately, they didn't cut in front of him, and they politely waved for him to go first when the light turned green. Even pedestrians were solicitous, hurrying across the street as the light turned green so not as to delay him.
Everyone was concerned about his feelings and well-being.
But even more curiously... Taylor wasn't concerned about them. As far as he could tell, he was the only person left on the planet Earth who hadn't been changed.
Of course, Taylor
had
been changed; he had been given some level of
screaning
abilities before he had returned to 23rd century Earth. But he hadn't been changed the way everyone else had, in the here-and-now.
And then he saw another disturbing phenomena. When he walked in King's Park in downtown Perth, he saw people on park benches, staring vacantly into space. Even more disturbingly, he saw couples, grasping each other by the waist. But they weren't kissing. They were staring into each other's eyes, and making... sounds.
"Momomomomomom," said a man, staring intently into a woman's eyes.
"Momomomomomom," said the woman, staring back at him.
They both appeared hypnotized, in some kind of trance. And they weren't the only ones. Others were doing the same. All it took were two to start it.
And something else--Taylor stopped getting messages from Admiral Von Windhoek. In fact, he stopped hearing from the Survey Service entirely. He got an uneasy feeling. He drove over to Auburn Field.
There were no guards at the gate. This was the main base of the Survey Service. The main gate was never unmanned.
Taylor drove in, feeling increasingly disturbed. He saw a few Survey Service crewmen, but they didn't seem to be doing anything... they just seemed to be in a daze.
And the ships. He didn't see a single one being prepared for takeoff. There were constant landings and takeoffs at Auburn. He didn't hear or see a single one. He saw four ships of the line grounded on Auburn field, apparently empty.
Taylor went to Admiral Von Windhoek's office.
Thankfully, the Admiral was in. He was watering his plants.
His plants?
The Admiral didn't have plants.
He did now, little green things which he was watering with a big smile on his face.
"Admiral?" said Taylor.
"Ah, Taylor, so nice to see you! Come in," said Von Windhoek, still tending to his little garden by his window. "It's so fortunate I have a big window. It lets in so much sunlight, for the little ones." He smiled at Taylor.
"Ah, yes sir," said Taylor uncertainly.
The Admiral turned to him. "What are you here for? You know, I feel the Survey Service had treated you so badly. You have done so very much for us. We never talked about that promotion. Would you like that?"
"A promotion?"
"We could make you a full Commander. Or how about just jumping you to Captain? Or would you like to be an Admiral?"
"Sir... are you offering to promote me to the admiralty?"
Von Windhoek gave a wide smile. "Why not, if it makes you happy?"
"Sir, what's going on out there? I don't see any ships being prepped for launches."
"Nor will you," said Von Windhoek, plucking at one of his plants. "We have shut down all spaceflight."
"Why?"
"It offends the followers of Aura," said Von Windhoek. "They say it is destroying the planet."
"But that's junk science," said Taylor.
"That may be," said Von Windhoek. "But it upsets them terribly." He put down his watering bottle. "You know, I never realized how upset the followers of the She Goddess were until I met with them, here in this very office."
"You... met with them?"
"Yes. And I'm so glad I did," said Von Windhoek. "They are so panicked every time we launch a rocket, worried that the Earth will melt. I don't want them feeling that terror. I don't want to feel them feeling that terror. And so the Admiralty decided, as a whole, to shut down the Survey Service. I can't tell you how much better the followers of Aura feel about us now," he grinned.
"But sir... we need the Survey Service! The world needs us!"
"Not at the cost of making people upset," said Von Windhoek. "It's simply not worth it."
Taylor just stared at him. He had become a changed man.
********
All strife in the world ended.
The savage war between Denmark and New Zealand was suddenly ended, and not with a bang but with a whimper, with New Zealand agreeing to withdraw its troops and to offer reparations "and apologies for any hurt feelings".
The millions of followers of Laquinta in the Middle East suddenly begged the world's forgiveness for centuries of hostilities. They asked that all religions send missionaries to their countries to open churches there, which had always been forbidden. They apologized for beating their wives and having their way with underage girls, saying that they had a new understanding of how they felt and were very sorry for it. They promoted a new message of tolerance and wanted friendship with the entire world.
The African Union disbanded, realizing that having an organization solely based on race offended people of other races. They apologized for centuries of hostility, and revoked their calls for reparations. In fact, they reversed it; they offered to pay reparations to countries of the Northern Hemisphere, to compensate them for centuries of bad attitudes.
The crime rate plummeted. No one wanted to rob, or steal, or assault or murder now that they knew how the victims felt about it. Criminals didn't just know how victims felt, they felt it themselves. They felt the terror, the pain, the humiliation of being robbed. It now hurt them as much as it did their victims. In a day, crime was virtually eliminated.
Economic production slowed to a crawl. Scientific development slowed to a snail's pace. People were more concerned about feelings, specifically, how others felt about them. More and more people could be seen "communing", even with complete strangers, as they touched them, stared into their eyes, and muttered "Momomomomomomom" while their minds went elsewhere.
And then Pam took it all to the next level.
"I am the Goddess of Love and Empathy. Embrace
Us,
and be free," she said.
She appeared simultaneously on every holochannel on the planet Earth.
She was wearing an elegant white dress. Not the same dress from his fuck-cation with Pam, the original Pam, but something longer and more elegant.... but no less sheer. The entire planet could see the shapes of her breasts, the erect nipples, and the dark triangle between her legs. With her thick blonde hair and high cheekbones and plush red lips, she looked incredibly sexy.
"Embrace love in all its forms," she said. "Embrace empathy, and friendship," she said, stretching her arms out wide, making her breasts stick out even further. "Seek
Formos
in all things, and you will be on the road to finding
Tisson Crae
in your own hearts."
Pam had started a church. The Church of
Us
.
Membership skyrocketed. She had millions of members in the first week.
Within a month, she had billions.
And yet, she didn't visit him. Didn't come home. The main branch of the Church of
Us
was in downtown Perth, in a large church which belonged to the Equalitarians, until they gratefully donated it to Pam. She was only minutes away, which didn't really matter, and yet she never came to him.
Her message was clear. She wanted
him
to come to
her
. Just as he had given her a choice, she was doing the same.
But Taylor wouldn't go. Instead, he visited his parents.
It was as he feared. His father was sitting on the couch, watching Pam on holovision.