Minister Faust From (html) (classic books for 10 year olds txt) š
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āHawk King, whoād supposedly exiled himself inside the Blue Pyramid almost every day and night for the last nine years, he came to visit me.ā
āYou? Personally?ā
He nodded slowly and heavily, as if the power of his claim were in the mass of his chin. My wristband buzzed three quick vibro bursts into my skin; I subtly tabbed the ACKNOWLEDGE key to let Ms. Olsen know Iād received her message.
āI was sitting up on the roof of my apartment building drinking coffee,ā said Kareem, unaware of what I had waiting in store for him, āpounding out my column on my manual typewriter like I did every Sunday night. Every once in a while Iād look aroundā¦maybe at all the network transmission towers, at the lights of the Hermes Theater, or over at the Tachyon Tower, wondering what kind of astonishing discoveries they were finding in their dimensional research labs, scanning out past the edge of the galaxy, spelunking black holes, gazing at quasarsā¦
āAnd while my head was all whirling inside those mysteries, suddenly the moonlight went out.
āI looked up, and I was staring into the moon-frosted silhouette of a man-hawk.
āHe swooped down, landed in front of meāsix-four, golden beak and gold-rimmed eyes glittering, flapping his huge black-and-gold wings with enough strength in em to crush me like a ripe tomato.
āI thoughtā¦I thought he was there to kill me, Doc.ā
He shook his head again, got out of his chair to gaze through the window across the Bird Island skyline.
āBut heād come to tell me heād read what Iād written,ā said Kareem, āā¦and that he thought I was right.
āI couldnāt believe it. I was completely in awe, humbled that heād even read something Iād written, that heād been moved by something I said. And somehow I managed to cough up the guts to ask him why heād come to me.
āAnd then he invoked a spellā¦and transformed himself. Into a man, an old man, maybe five-seven, in a crummy, crumpled suit looking like something my grampa wouldāve worn in maybe 1945. He was sitting there in front of me, a black man. In a wheelchair. Told me his name was Dr. Jacob George James āJacksonā Rogers. That he wasnāt a god, but a man from the dawn of civilization whoād gained his celestial powers by leading a war to avenge his slain father, the ancient Sudanese mystic named Lord Usir.
āI mean, itās a Sunday midnight and Iām sitting at the feet of the man Hawk Kingās turned into, whoās revealing to me his life story underneath the city lights and the moon and the stars. He told me that after ruling over the lands of the Nile for a century as its Hawk King, he felt emptyā¦Except for great-grandchildren, heād outlived everyone heād cared about: wives, mother, friends, cousinsā¦and in all that time heād never gotten over the loss of his father, which happened even before heād been born. So he left. Went up into the stars to try to find his fatherās souls. Found himself still in battle against his evil uncle, Warmaster Set, and holding back the chaos of the cosmic serpent ĆĆ£pep.
āSometimes heād come back for a while, rescue Egypt when she was in troubleā¦and after Egypt fell, he helped out in other places where people still knew his secret names, in MeroĆ«, in Namoratunga, in Timbuktuā¦but heād always go back out into the rolling deeps of space, searching for his father.
āAnd then, one time, after searching for he didnāt even know how long and still not finding him, he came back. But everythingād changed. He realized itād been seven thousand years since heād been born, and he hardly even recognized the world anymore. But he saw a war going onāWorld War Twoātook a side, raised his own army. The F*O*O*J.
āBut when the war was over he wanted a life, not as a hawk man but as a man. So he transmuted himself back into his human body. Itād agedānot seven thousand years, of course, but still. And when he went looking for a place to live, he made a discovery: most places in the city wouldnāt rent to a black man.
āHe knew what it was like to be a persecuted refugeeāthatās how heād started his life, since his uncleād murdered his father and he was raised by his single mother, a warrior-woman on the run. So he decided to blend in. Got an apartment in Ellison Heights in Stun-Glas. Practiced medicine for people who couldnāt afford it. Got his doctorates in archeology and cosmology and taught at the university and tried just to live as a man by day while guiding the F*O*O*J as a mystic-philosopher-king by night.
āBut Dr. Rogersā¦he was devastated by what he saw in the world. And he justā¦he couldnāt figure out what to do with his powers that wouldnāt involve conquering the planet, killing and destroying to impose his will, and he didnāt wanna solve things like that. Said it wasnāt right and that it wouldnāt work in the long run anyway. So heād decided to bide his time, do his research, figure everything out.
āHe told me, when he came to see me that night, that heād finally figured it all out. Partly because of the death of Brother Maximus Security. And partly because of what I wrote.
āHe told me he was reaching out to what he called āthe virtuous youngā to become his Shemsu-Heru. That he would entrust us with certain powers, his to enhance and his to take away depending on what we did with them. And then he gave me a papyrus roll, what he called The Book of Doing Knowledge. Told me to search out the canopic jars heād left around the city, across the Americas, across Africaā¦and write down whatever words I found in them.
āWithin a few months Iād found a dozen jars, mostly in Stun-Glas libraries and in the Schombro Center. They were like glowing turquoise, and after you
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