“You aren't married to the female, are you?”
“No.”
“It was just a female and you?” I asked. “No male?”
“Yes and yes.”
According to my limited knowledge of swale biology, such action could not result in reproduction. Still, humans were perfectly capable of engaging in sexual sin that did not involve the possibility of reproduction, so I figured this was analogous.
“Why did you do it?” I asked.
“She did it to me.”
“She did it to you? You mean, she forced you? You didn't agree to it?”
“Yes, yes, and no.”
“Then it isn't a sin,” I said, both horrified at the sexual assault and relieved that Neuter Kimball was innocent of any sin. “If someone forced sexual conduct on you, you are not at fault. You have nothing to repent of.”
“You are sure?”
“Absolutely,” I said. “But you may want to report the swale who did this to the authorities so she won't do it to anyone else.”
“Why won't she do it to anyone else?” Neuter Kimball asked.
“Because they will punish her.”
“That is human law,” it said.
I was taken aback. “You mean it's not swale law?”
“There is no such law among our people.”
The swales had supposedly been civilized for longer than humanity's history, yet they had no law against rape? “That's terrible,” I said. “But the most important thing is that you did nothing wrong.”
“Even if I enjoyed it?”
“Umm.” I wondered for a moment why I had been called to serve here, rather than some General Authority of the Church who had more doctrinal knowledge. I had a vague suspicion it was so the Church could easily disavow my actions if I made a huge blunder. The swales were the only sentient aliens humanity had found thus far—and the swales didn't seem to know of any others—so the Church's policies for dealing with non-humans were still new.
I pushed those thoughts aside and focused on Neuter Kimball's question. “To commit a sin, you must have the intent to do so. If you did not intend sexual activity and it was forced upon you, then I don't think it matters whether you enjoyed it.”
After several more reassurances, Neuter Kimball seemed satisfied that it was not guilty of any sin and ended the conversation.
It took me ten minutes to calm down after the stress of counseling. But I still felt the urge to action, so I looked up Dr. Merced's phone number.
We met in her office. A wallscreen similar to the one in the chapel showed pods of swales moving through solar currents.
I sat in a chair across from her desk and tried to keep my eyes from straying to the animated galaxies colliding on the chest of her skinsuit. “Thanks for agreeing to see me,” I said. “We didn't part on the friendliest of terms yesterday.”
She shrugged. “I'm curious. Your predecessors never sought me out. Can I get you a cup of coffee?”
“I don't drink coffee.”
“Tea?”
I saw a twinkle in her eye and realized she was yanking my chain by offering drinks that she knew were forbidden by my religion. “No, thank you. But if you want to drink, go right ahead. The prohibitions of the Word of Wisdom apply only to members of the Church.”
She picked up her coffee mug and took a long sip. “Mmmm. That is so good.”
I merely smiled at her.
“Okay,” she said. “Actually, the coffee here is awful. I just drink it for the caffeine. Why are you here?”
“A member of my church was raped,” I said.
Her eyes widened. “What? Wait, you don't mean a solcetacean, do you?”
“Yes.”
“Solcetaceans do not have the concept of rape,” she said.
“Whether they have the concept or not,” I said, “a female swale engaged in sexual activity with one of my neuter members, without its consent. To me, that sounds like rape, or at least a sexual assault.”
She took a sip from her coffee mug. “It may sound like it, but solcetaceans are not human. Their culture is different—”
“That doesn't make it right.”
“—and their physiology is different. Tell me, was your church member injured or caused any pain?”
“No. But it was afraid it might have sinned.”
She pointed at me. “That is your fault, for teaching it that sexual behavior is sinful. But, physiologically, sexual contact between solcetaceans is always pleasurable for all parties involved. And since reproduction can only occur when all three deliberately engage in sex for that purpose, casual sex never results in pregnancy. So solcetaceans never developed the taboos humans did regarding sexual contact.”
I nodded. “So, if we humans hadn't developed taboos about sex, and there was no chance of your getting pregnant, then you would have no objection to my forcing you to an orgasm.”
She had the decency to blush. “I'm not saying that. What I'm saying is that you can't judge solcetacean behavior based on human cultural norms. After all, even your own church has had to adapt its doctrines to take differences like the three sexes into account. Not to mention there's no way you're getting a solcetacean into the waters of baptism.”
“‘Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God,—’” I quoted. “Swales are not men, as you've pointed out. No contradiction there. But you're avoiding the subject, which is that anyone, swale or human, has the right to be free from unwanted sex. If the swales don't recognize that right yet, it's time we told them about it.”
She rose from her chair and walked around the desk to stand facing her wallscreen. She zoomed in on one particular swale. It was labeled Leviathan (Class 10), and its size reading showed 39,200 meters. It was hundreds of times longer than Neuter Kimball, or even Sister Emma.
“Solcetaceans grow throughout their lifetime,” she said, her back toward me. “The correlation between size and age is not exact, but in general the larger, the older. Some of the oldest were old before the Pyramids were built. All the solcetacean members of your church are very young, and have little influence within the community. Ancients like Leviathan are respected. Do you really think you can convince a creature older than human civilization to change, just because a human thinks something is wrong? Your lifetime is but an eyeblink to her, if she had eyes that blinked.”
I pushed away my awe at the sheer size of Leviathan. “Maybe you're right. But I believe in a God even older than that, who created both human and swale. I have to try.”
She turned and looked me in the eyes. I held her gaze until she sighed and said, “I was always a sucker for a man with determination.” She walked to her desk, wrote something on a note-paper, and handed it to me. It was an anonymous comm address with a private access code.
“I'm flattered,” I said, “and it's not that I don't find you attractive, but—”
She rolled her eyes. “It's Leviathan's personal comm.”
My face flushed. “Uh, thank you. I'll talk with her.”
“Don't count on it. She hasn't bothered to talk to any of us in a couple of years, but nobody's tried talking religion at her, so…”
“I'll do my best.” With that, I beat a hasty retreat so I could recover from my embarrassment alone.
“Try not to offend her,” she called after me.
My email about the situation to the mission president, who was based in the L5 Colony but had jurisdiction over my little branch of the Church, received just a short reply, telling me “use your best judgment, follow the Spirit.”
After a couple of days of spending my after-work hours studying up on swales and swale culture and preparing arguments about the rights of Mormon swales to control their own bodies, I didn't exactly feel ready to contact Leviathan. But I felt a strong need to do something.
Sitting at my desk in my quarters, I dialed the comm address Dr. Merced had given me and waited for it to connect. It rang several times before a synt
hetic neuter voice came on the line and said, “The party you are trying to reach is currently unavailable. Please leave a message after—”
I hung up before the tone. I hadn't prepared to leave a voicemail message, but I should have realized that having Leviathan's private access code was no guarantee that she would actually answer when I called. So I spent a good ten minutes writing out the message I would leave her on voicemail.
Satisfied that I had something that expressed my position firmly yet respectfully, I dialed the number again.
After two rings, a bass voice answered, “Who are you?”
Startled because I had expected the voicemail again, I stumbled over my words. “I'm…this is President Malan, of the Church…of the Sol Central Branch of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Dr. Merced gave me this comm address so I could talk to you about one of my…a swale member of my branch.” Uncertain because the bass voice didn't strike me as particularly female, I added, “Are you Leviathan?”
“Religions interest me not.” Her voice synthesis was good enough that I could hear the dismissiveness in her tone.
“Are you interested in the rights of swales in general?” I asked.
“No. The lesser concern me not.”
I could feel all my carefully laid-out arguments slipping away from me. How could I have even thought to relate to a being with no consideration for the rights of lesser members of her own species?
Before I could think through a response, I blurted out, “Do the greater concern you?”
During several long seconds of silence, I thought I had offended Leviathan to the point that she had hung up on me. Dr. Merced would be annoyed.
When her voice returned, it almost thundered from the speakers. “Who is greater than I?”
This had not been part of my planned approach, but at least she was still talking to me. Maybe if I could get her to understand that she would not like being man-handled—swale-handled—by larger swales, I could convince her of the need to respect the rights of smaller swales.
“From what I understand, swales get larger with age,” I said. “So wouldn't your parents be larger than you?”
“I have no parents. None is older than I; none is larger; none is greater. I am the source from which all others came.”
Stunned, I was silent for a few seconds before I could ask, “You are the original swale?” Since they didn't seem to die of old age, it just might be true.
“I am the original life. Before there was life on any planet, I was. After eons alone I grew into a swale, then gave life to others. Where was your God when I was creating them?”
A verse from the book of Job sprang to my mind: Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth? declare, if thou hast understanding.
Nothing in my research had prepared me for this. Speculation about the evolution of swales generally assumed that swales were descended from less complex plasma beings in another star, since no simpler forms had been found in the sun. But if what Leviathan claimed was true, there were no simpler forms—she had evolved as a single being.
I was out of my depth, but shook my head to clear my thinking. All this was beside the point. “What matters is that Neu—” I caught myself before breaking confidentiality. “One of my swale church members believes in a God who has commanded against sexual activity outside of marriage. It just isn't right for larger swales to force smaller ones to have sex. I appeal to you as the first and greatest of the swales: command your people against coerced sexual activity.”
Seconds of silence ticked away.
“Come to me,” she said. “You and your swale church member.”
The call disconnected.
“‘Come to me—’?” Dr. Merced's voice was incredulous.
“It was pretty much an order,” I said, settling into the chair across from her desk. “I suppose it's easy enough for swales, but it's not like I have access to a solar shuttle.” The solcetologists did, so I hoped I could sweet-talk her into giving me a ride.
“Beginner's luck.” Her tone was exasperated. “I've been here five years, and I've never had a chance to observe a Class 10 solcetacean up close.” She sighed. “Not that we can directly observe them, anyway, but there's just something about actually being there, instead of taking readings remotely.”
“Well, now's your chance,” I said. “Take me to Leviathan.”
“It's not that easy. Our observation shuttle is booked for projects months in advance.”
“Oh.” There went that idea. How was I supposed—
“Did Leviathan say why she wanted you to go to her?”
“No. Just told me to come, then hung up.”
She pursed her lips, then said, “It's just very unusual. There isn't really anything that Leviathan can say to you in person that she can't say over the comm.”
“I thought about that, and I think it's size. Maybe she thinks that if my church member sees how small I am compared with Leviathan, it will give up Mormonism.”
“That's actually a good theory.” Dr. Merced looked at me with apparently newfound respect. “Size does matter to the solcetaceans. And your church members are among the youngest, least powerful, and therefore most likely to be awed into obeying a larger one. And they probably don't come any larger than Leviathan.”
“According to her, she's the largest.”
Leaning forward in her seat, Dr. Merced said, “She told you that?”
“Not just that. She claimed to be not only the original swale, but the original plasma lifeform. She said she became a swale.”
In a tone of amazement, Dr. Merced took the Lord's name in vain. She reached over to her comm, and punched in an address. When a man responded, she said, “Taro, I think you need to come hear this.” Looking at me, she said, “Dr. Sasaki specializes in solcetacean evolutionary theory.”
When Dr. Sasaki, a gray-haired Japanese gentleman, arrived, I relayed to him what Leviathan had told me about her history. When I finished, he said, “It's not impossible. I always suspected the Class 10s knew more about their origins than they bothered to tell us. But forgive me, Mr. Malan, how do we know Leviathan actually told you she was the original lifeform? Why would she choose to tell you and not one of us?” He motioned toward himself and Dr. Merced.
I decided to not be offended at the implication that I was a liar. “I can't say I know why Leviathan does anything, but…you scientists who study the swales have strict rules about interfering with swale culture, and you try to avoid offending them. To me that smacks of condescension—you presume that swale culture is weak and cannot withstand any outside influence. Well, maybe the swales tend to think the same about human culture, so they avoid interference and try not to offend us.”
Dr. Sasaki frowned at me. “I disagree with your interpretation of the motives for our rules regarding interference in solcetacean culture. And I don't see how it's relevant.”
“I apparently offended Leviathan.” I glanced at Dr. Merced and said, “Sorry, but I didn't realize that implying there were swales greater than her would cause offense. Her response was to tell me I was wrong, that there could be no swale greater, and that's when she explained she was the first. Because I made her angry—something you guys avoid, thanks to rules—Leviathan responded without worrying whether she would offend me or interfere with human culture.”
“How would this information interfere with human culture?” asked Dr. Merced.
“Some swale-worshipping cults have already sprung up on Earth,” I said. “Just imagine what will happen when the news gets out that Leviathan claims to be the original lifeform in the universe.”
With a suspicious look, Dr. Sasaki said, “News you will be only too happy to spread, I'm sure. There is only one Leviathan, and Harry Malan is her prophet.”
My jaw dropped. “What?”
“That's where this is headed, isn't it?” he said. “You go out and talk to Leviathan, then come back with some ‘revelation’ from—”
 
; “No!” I stood up. “Absolutely not. I believe my own religion and have no intention of becoming Leviathan's prophet. All I want is for the swales in my branch to be free from harassment. You're just jealous because I got handed the information you've been bumbling about trying to find.”
He shot to his feet, but before he could say anything, Dr. Merced said, “Stop it, both of you.”
Dr. Sasaki and I stood silent, glaring at each other.
“Taro,” said Dr. Merced, “I think you're being unfair to Mr. Malan. I truly believe he's just trying to do what is best for his congregants.”
I gave her a grateful look.
“Even if he is misguided,” she added. “As for you, Mr. Malan, there is no reason to insult Dr. Sasaki.”
With a bow of my head, I said, “I apologize, Dr. Sasaki.”
“Apology accepted,” he said.
I noticed he did not apologize to me, but after a moment that didn't matter, because Dr. Merced said, “Now that we're all friends again…Taro, will you let us preempt your next expedition in the shuttle to go talk to Leviathan?”
With the shuttle flight arranged for the next day, I returned to my quarters to work out other details. My Earth-based manager at CitiAmerica granted my request for two days’ vacation time.
Then I dialed Neuter Kimball's comm.
“Hello, President Malan,” it said.
“Hello, Neuter Kimball. You remember our discussion the other day about whether swales should be allowed to force sexual conduct on each other?”
“Of course.”
“Well, I've spoken with Leviathan about it, and she has requested that we go to see her.”
Neuter Kimball did not reply.
“Are you still there?” I said.
“You…told Leviathan about me?” it said. It might just have been the voice synthesis, but there seemed to be fear in its tone.
“I did not mention you by name,” I said, glad I'd managed to avoid slipping up. “But she requested that I bring you to her. I think this is a chance to convince a swale with real authority to do something to stop sexual assault.”
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