Jeanette
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Jeanette locates Moro. "The lives you saved by preventing a nuclear war, did they die at a later date?" "Everybody dies. Even those who are near immortal will die eventually." Moro answers. "Well, yeah." Jeanette was not asking for the obvious. Moro continues. "We may never know the names or the number of people saved by preventing the nuclear weapons from detonating or reaching their intended targets. Maybe this will answer your question. People who were destined to die did have children. Those children had children. In those areas, the population increased, not decreased." Jeanette got an answer; the part regarding stopping an event that was to happen still bugs her. To get the answer she's after, Jeanette uses Hitler as an example. "Have the Texas Spirits made any attempts to kill Adolf Hitler?" Moro responds with a short answer. "No." "Why not? Think of all the lives you would have saved! You saved lives by pulling people out of gas chambers and fooled the Nazis into thinking they succeeded and you did it to get the Genesis 12:3 blessing. How much more of the Genesis 12:3 blessing would you have received if had simply killed Hitler?" "World War II is an event that was supposed to happen." Jeanette fires back. "Isn't that what you said about the nuclear war?" "It was hindsight that told us that World War II was to happen. However, prophecies told us there would be a nuclear war. The fact people began sending nukes to each other confirms this. Those nuclear weapons did not detonate." "If it was prophecy, wouldn't the Middle East go nuclear?" "Did you ever read the book of Jonah in the Bible? As prophesied, Yehovah was to destroy Nineveh in forty days. You know how that turned out." "The people of Nineveh repented. Because they repented, God did not destroy them. You, on the other hand, interfered with what you claim is a prophetic nuclear war." "That prophecy will happen. If not now, then later." Jeanette lets that sink in for a second. "Is Israel apart of that prophecy? I mean, according to that prophecy will Israel get nuked?" "Yes." "Then that prophecy will never come to pass. If you are not able to disable that nuke, you will go five minutes back in time to transport the nuke in space. If that does not work, you will put up a shield around Israel, anything to get the Genesis 12:3 blessing. If you are correct when you said the world is in the mess that it is in because you prevented a nuclear war in the Middle East, then this world will remain this way for thousands of years. Why do you want that blessing so much anyhow? If that blessing works then you must have so much wealth that you don't know what to do with it." "We don't want it for ourselves. We want it for Charlton." Jeanette takes a deep breath. "I recall you mentioning that before. Let me rephrase the question. Why do you want that tiny nation blessed?" "We want Yehovah to protect Charlton." "That's it?" Jeanette exclaims. "That is the reason you have saved the lives of millions of Jews? That's the reason you defended Israel as if your lives depend on it? Think, Moro! You don't need the Genesis 12:3 blessing for that! All you have to do is decloak one of your ships. No one will come within a hundred miles of you. Charlton would be as secure as the gold in Fort Knox." "You don't get it, Jeanette. We want Yehovah to protect Charlton." "You're right. I don't get it. You are more than capable of protecting Charton yourselves. You want Charlton protected from a time traveler? Is that what this is about?" Moro shakes her head. "No." "Well, what then?" Jeanette thinks she figured it out. "You want the protection that only God can provide. I'm sorry that I have to break it to you; when Revelation 21:1 comes to pass, Charlton is going bye bye. Genesis 12:3 can't save Charlton from Revelation 21:1. If you want a new Charlton, you need to talk to a scholar who has studied the Bible longer than I've been alive. I don't have an answer for you." Jeanette pauses. "If you skip down to Verse 24, it says there will be nations. That applies to people, not places. I don't think we can apply that to Charlton." "People need places to live." Jeanette is skeptical. "I don't know. Why do you want to stay in Charlton when you can live in Jerusalem?" "Charlton is the only home I and many others have ever known. You probably think of me as just a Spirit, created in a lab. We are not extras in a science fiction franchise." Moro retrieves her mobile device, accesses an image and hands it to Jeanette. "I was one in this picture." An adult, male wolf Spirit is holding Moro. Facing the street, he is standing by the front door of a townhouse. Jeanette accepts the mobile device. "Every year on my birthday, Dad and I had our picture taken together in front of our house. It turned into a family tradition." "This is in Charlton?" Jeanette asks. "This looks like the townhouses in New England." Jeanette then comments on the visual clues. "You're birthday is in the fall." "For the look of Charlton, we borrowed ideas from Europe. And yes, I was born in the fall, my favorite season of the year which is when we have all of the fun holidays: Sukkot, Thanksgiving, Hanukkah and New Years. The last one is a winter holiday." Hikaru, Penny and the others approach. "Moro is showing me pictures of when she was a little girl." Jeanette looks around. "We need a place to sit." The small group has a seat at a table where they will soon have dinner. Moro shows them pictures of her and her dad on her first birthday, second birthday, third and so forth, one from each year in front of their home. "What year were you born?" Jeanette asks. "The glasses your dad is wearing suggests the mid-twentieth century." "1940." Moro answers. "You will be a hundred and twenty-six this year. You're just a young pup." The small group watches Moro grow up, one year at a time. These pictures are also a snapshot of a time in which fashion had radically changed. "Even into my twenties, Dad and I did this every year." After showing those pictures, Moro pulls up something else. "This is a home movie of Hanukkah 1956." In it are Moro's grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins and siblings. "This isn't in your tiny townhouse that we saw, is it?" Jeanette asks. "No." The black and white home movie of a family of wolf Spirits reminds Jeanette of the birthday party in the Symbicort commercials. Jeanette gets back to the original conversation. "I understand wanting to protect the only place you've called home; when God fulfills Revelation 21, He will have something better." "I don't know." Moro does not sound too excited. "If you want to live in a place that's old, that's on you. I don't know if God will make that accommodation even if you do decide to cash in your Genesis 12:3 blessings." Jeanette Isabelle
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