“Damn,” the gremper said. “I wish I could take you back to those days. The guys in my outfit… the guys would’ve liked you. We could’ve shown you some times.”
To his amazement, Remi believed him. After a momentary pause, he asked, “Tell us… tell us about the guys.”
The three of them deliberated later, some distance from the tree, as dusk shadows began stretching across the park. Of course the old man left his big-ear unplugged while they passed judgment. He looked up when they returned to squat before him.
“We decided on a penalty for the way you invaded our privacy,” Roland said, speaking for all.
“I’ll accept your justice, sirs,” he said, inclining his head.
Even Crat grinned as Roland passed sentence. “You gotta come back here again next week, same time, and tell us more about the war.”
The old man nodded — in acceptance and obvious pleasure. “My name is Joseph,” he said, holding out his hand. “And I’ll be here.”
Over the next few weeks he kept his promise. Joseph told them tales they had never imagined, even after watching a thousand hypervideos. About climbing the steep flanks of the Pennine Alps, for instance, and then the Bernese Oberland — slogging through gas and bugs and radioactive mud. He described digging out booby traps nearly every meter of the way, and prying out the bankers’ mercenaries every ten or so. And he told them of his comrades, dying beside him, choking in their own sputum as they coughed their lungs out, still begging to be allowed to press on though, to help bring the Last War to an end.
He told them about the fall of Berne and the last gasp of the Gnomes, whose threat to “take the world down” with them turned out to be backed by three hundred cobalt-thorium bombs… which were defused only when Swiss draftees finally turned their rifles on their own officers and emerged from their shattered warrens, hands high over their heads, into a new day.
As spring headed toward summer, Joseph commiserated over the futility of high school, even under a “new education plan” that forced on students lots of supposedly “practical” information, but never did a guy any good anyway. He held them transfixed talking about the way girls used to be, back before they were taught all that modern crap about psychology and “sexual choice criteria.”
“Boy crazy, that’s what they were, my young tomodachis. No girlie wanted to be caught for even a minute without a boyfriend. It was where they got their sense of worth, see? Their alpha to omega. They’d do anything for you, believe most anything you said, so long as you promised you loved ’em.”
Remi suspected Joseph was exaggerating. But that didn’t matter. Even if it was all a load of bull semen, it was great bull semen. For the first time in his life, he contemplated the prospect of getting older — actually living beyond twenty-five — with anything but a vague sense of horror. The idea of someday being like Joseph didn’t seem so bad… as long as it took a long time happening, and providing he got to do as much as Joseph had along the way.
It was the profession of soldiering that fascinated Roland. Its camaradarie and traditions. Crat loved hearing about faraway places and escape from the tight strictures of urban life.
But as for Remi, he felt he was getting something more… the beginnings of a trust in time.
Joseph was a great source of practical advice, too — subtle verbal put-downs nobody here in Indiana had heard in years, but which would burrow like smart bombs dropped among the gang’s foes, only to blow up minutes, even hours, later with devastating effect. One day they met the same group of Ra Boys in the park and left them all scratching their heads in confusion, reluctant even to think of tackling Settlers anytime soon.
Roland talked about joining the Guard, maybe trying for one of the peacekeeping units.
Remi began tapping history texts from the Net.
Even Crat seemed to grow more reflective, as if every time he was about to lose his temper, he’d stop and think what Joseph would say.
No one worried overmuch when Joseph failed to show up one Saturday. On the second unexplained absence though, Remi and the others grew concerned. At home, sitting at his desk comp, Remi wrote a quick ferret program and sent it into the Net.
The ferret returned two seconds later with the old man’s obituary.
The mulching ceremony was peaceful. A few detached-looking adult grandchildren showed up, looking eager to be elsewhere. If they had been the sort to cry, Remi, Roland, and Crat would have been the only ones shedding tears.
Still, he had been old. “If any man’s led a full life, it was me,” Joseph once said. And Remi believed him.
I only hope I do half as well, he thought.
So it came as a shot from the sky when Remi answered the message light on his home comp one evening, and found logged there a terse note from Roland.
OUR NAMES LISTED IN PROGRAM GUIDE FOR A NET SHOW…
“Right!” Remi laughed. The law said whenever anyone was depicted, anywhere in the Net, it had to go into the listings. That made each weekly worldwide directory bigger than all the world’s libraries before 1910.
“Probably some Quayle High senior’s doing a Net version of the yearbook…”
But his laughter trailed off as he read the rest.
IT’S ON A REMINISCENCE DATABASE FOR WAR VETS, AND GUESS WHO’S LISTED AS AUTHOR
Remi read the name and felt cold.
Now, don’t jump to conclusions, he told himself. He might’ve just mentioned us… a nice note about getting to know three young guys before he died.
But his heart raced as he sought the correct Net address, sifting through layer after layer, from general to specific to superspecified, until at last he arrived at the file, dated less than a month ago.
THE REMEMBRANCES OF JOSEPH MOYERS: EPILOGUE: MY LAST WEEKS — ENCOUNTERS WITH THREE CONFUSED YOUNG MEN.
This was followed by full sight and sound, plus narration, beginning on that afternoon when they had met and held impromptu court where an elm tree shaded them from the glaring sky.
Perhaps someone neutral would have called the account compassionate, friendly. Someone neutral might even have described Joseph’s commentary as warm and loving.
But Remi wasn’t neutral. He watched, horrified, as his image, Roland’s, and Crat’s were depicted in turn, talking about private things, things spoken as if to a confessor, but picked up anyway by some hidden, hi-fidelity camera.
He listened, numbed, as Joseph’s editorial voice described the youths who shared his final weeks.
“… had I the heart to tell them they were never going to Patagonia or Antarctica? That the New Lands are reserved for refugees from catastrophe nations? And even so there isn’t enough thawed tundra to go around?
“These poor boys dream of emigrating to some promised land, but Indiana is their destiny, now and tomorrow…”
I knew that, Remi thought, bitterly. But did you have to tell the world I was dumb enough to have a dream? Dumpit, Joseph! Did you have to bare it all to everybody?
A neutral party might have reassured Remi. The old man hadn’t told very many people. It was in the nature of the Net, that vast ocean of information, that most published missives were read by only one or two others besides the author himself. Maybe one percent were accessed by a hundred or more. And fewer than one piece in ten thousand ever had enough viewers, worldwide, to fill even a good size meeting hall.
Perhaps all that had gone through Joseph’s mind when he made this last testament… that it would be seen by only a few old men like himself and never come to his young friends’ attention. Perhaps he never understood how far ferret-tech had come, or that others, who had grown up with the system, might use the directories better than he.