Demeter’s Dream
207 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus
207 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus

Description

Change must happen, and it must happen now if America and the rest of the world are to be saved from self-destruction through insidious corruption, greed, and ever-increasing evil.

In this part mystery, part political/mythological/religious satire, Demeter’s dream is simple: to save the world by replacing the current outdated and abused systems of democracy and capitalism with tulipocracy, a new Christian-based philosophy with the redistribution of wealth at its core – Tulip being an acronym for trust, unity, love, integrity, and peace.

The dream sounds simple enough. Unfortunately, dark forces in both the mortal and immortal worlds are stacked against her.

Dr. Paul Z. Dias is about to cross the street on his way to the White House where he is to address the US Cabinet. It will be the most important speech of his life. All he has to do is convince his learned and influential audience that Demeter’s dream is the right course for the future of America and the rest of the world…

…but Paul’s own world is about to be turned upside down...

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 19 février 2019
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781925880526
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Tony Thistlewood
Personal information about the author is available on the “About Me” page of his website.
Website tonythistlewood.com
Fiction Demeter’s Dream The Oxford Photograph Stealing Tomorrow’s Thunder The Little Tin Box Caistor Parsons: The Gingerbread Man
Non-fiction Kings & Queens of England …and how they got there…
IN MEMORIAM
For my dear brother Dr. John M. Thistlewood 1936 – 2017
I look forward to a great future for America...a future in which our country will match its military strength with our moral restraint, its wealth with our wisdom, its power with our purpose. President John F. Kennedy: 35th President of the United States of America.
 
**
No dream is too big. No challenge is too great. Nothing we want for our future is beyond our reach.
Donald J. Trump: 45th President of the United States of America.
Chapter 1
From the very minute they first met, all those years ago, she knew that he would never be out of her mind, nor she his ­– never – it was written.
And now their big day had arrived.
Together they had striven long and hard for this day. And they could not have been more prepared for it. Now, with God’s help, their ideas would begin to change the course of American history, and they could – no, no, must – must also drag the whole world in a new direction – the right direction, their direction. It would be a slow, frustrating process; they knew that. Yet, it had to be done; a renaissance of their beloved America was long overdue.
Ann Dias absentmindedly ran her fingers through her long, luxurious, flaxen hair as she watched her husband, Dr. Paul Z. Dias, climb into the back of the government limo – she had no idea what make of car it was; she wasn’t into cars. Paul turned towards her, smiled, and blew her a kiss. She was about to return the kiss when she realized that she was holding the laser pointer he needed for his presentation. She had picked it up from the hall table but forgotten to give it to him.
‘Wait, Albert!’ she called out to the driver and raced over to the car. She gave the pointer to Paul, and then practically ravished him with a proper, lingering kiss, much to Albert’s amusement.
Ann stood back and watched the car slowly crunch down the curved, gravel driveway. She didn’t stop waving until he was out of sight. She had had a premonition, and it frightened her although she didn't usually have any truck with such rubbish. She hadn't mentioned it to him, of course. Nothing must distract him this day.
**
Dr. Paul Z. Dias was the recently appointed Secretary of the Department of the Environment and Agriculture, a newly created department with a cherished seat in the US Cabinet. Paul sat, deep in thought, behind a large modern desk in a large modern office. The ultra-modern building that housed his new department was already colloquially known as the new “EnAg” building.
Like Ann, Paul had prayed for this day. He had to get it right; he had to keep focused; nothing must distract him – nothing.
On the desk in front of him lay his Gucci polished-leather briefcase. He checked its contents for the umpteenth time. The briefcase, a present from Ann, was in midnight blue and perfectly complemented the dark-blue suit he was wearing. He fastened the gold locks on the briefcase, glanced at the carriage clock on the desk, checked it with his Rolex, and then marched purposefully out of his office, briefcase firmly clutched in his right hand. He was not going to let anyone carry it for him today. If he heard his secretary’s good luck wishes as he passed her desk, he didn’t acknowledge them. The secretary raised an eyebrow; it was unlike her boss to be so distant. Outside his office suite, two waiting bodyguards fell into step behind him; he didn’t notice them either.
The trio crossed the grand atrium with its fifty-feet high glass pyramid, the centerpiece of the entrance to the modern building that was home to his new department. The shoes of the trio clicked in unison on the marble floor as they headed towards the glass doors and the street beyond. People stood aside to make way for them. They reached the door; it slid silently open for them as if it, too, recognized the importance of the day.
Outside, Foggy Bottom was bathed in brilliant spring sunshine. Dias paused to inhale the fresh air. One of the bodyguards raced forward to open the rear door of the waiting Tesla electric car. Dias stared inside the car, hesitated, and then, as if noticing the guard for the first time, shook his head.
‘No, I’ll walk,’ he said gruffly.
Without waiting for, or expecting, a reply, Dias set off at a brisk pace towards Pennsylvania Avenue.
The senior bodyguard looked annoyed but nevertheless indicated for the driver to follow the Honorable Paul Dias at a respectable distance.
As Dias strode along, every minute detail of his carefully researched presentation churned in his mind. Although he had endlessly rehearsed what he was going to say with Ann, even so, every possible angle, every conceivable objection, still continuously streamed through his highly intelligent brain. He was convinced that he had left nothing to chance; all bases were more than adequately covered — so why the nerves?
Without warning, Paul Dias cut down an ally into G St NW. His exasperated body guards raced up to him.
‘Sir, the Tesla can’t follow us; it’s a one-way street…’
The electric Tesla, although capable of accelerating from zero to 100 mph in six-seconds, had been whispering along some twenty yards behind them.
‘Don’t need it,’ Dias snapped and continued walking.
The guard, talking into his wristwatch, instructed the Tesla driver to go around the block and meet them in 17th St NW outside the Eisenhower Executive Office Building.
On went Dias, not seeing the George Washington University nor the substantial edifice that housed the World Bank as he pressed on towards the White House and his destiny. He was even oblivious of the stares of people who thought they knew, or at least recognized the handsome, well-dressed, blue-eyed man with the dark, wavy, gray-flecked hair. Those who wanted to say, ‘Hi’, wisely changed their minds when they set eyes on the two giant bodyguards walking determinedly either side of him, but one step back – they knew their places.
Dias had not told his bodyguards, or anyone else for that matter, that he intended to call in on the first female vice president of the United States, Peta Hopeit, to make sure that he could still rely on her crucial support. At least, that was the only reason he wanted to see her – until now. The beautiful and intelligent vice president had offices in the nineteenth century, Alfred B. Mullet designed, Eisenhower Executive Office Building that was originally built to house the Departments of State, War and Navy.
Turning into 17th St NW, Dias headed for the lights that allowed pedestrians to cross the four busy lanes of traffic to the Eisenhower Building. The pedestrian lights were red. Paul Dias, oblivious of the lights, was about to step into the traffic when a black hand pulled him back.
The bodyguards waved furiously at the Tesla, which had just turned into the street further down.
The Tesla accelerated towards the trio.
The lights changed, Dias stepped into the street and strode to the middle of the road with the two bodyguards just behind him. The Tesla was now rapidly approaching on his right; unaccountably, the driver didn’t seem to notice the lights, which were still in Dias’s favor.
The Tesla kept accelerating…Dias kept walking…a large, black hand reached out for Dias…
**
In the Cabinet Room in the White House, Attorney General Adam Themison was becoming increasingly nervous. He looked across the table at President Conway Posey and was disturbed to see that he had already adopted his trade-mark aggressive and contemplative posture: elbows on the oval table, chin resting on clenched fists. It made his expression difficult to read as Themison had learned from long, and sometimes bitter, experience. As he watched, a scowl lined the President’s chubby face, while a lock of thick, boyishly curly, yet graying fair hair fell across his deeply furrowed brow. Behind him, Themison noticed the crossed flags of the United States and the president’s own flag and their respective ironic mottos: “In God We Trust” and “e Pluribus Unum” (one from many). Even so, the flags were salutary reminders to the twenty Cabinet members present of their collective and individual duty – and some needed reminding more than others, Themison thought.
Directly across the table from the president, and therefore on Themison’s right, sat the vice president of the United States of America, the beautiful Peta Hopeit – she insisted that her name be pronounced “Hopyte” rather than “Hopit” to avoid any Peter Rabbit jokes. She appeared to be busily reading a file. In truth, she was too embarrassed to look the President in the eye, and Themison believed he knew why.
On the President’s right sat Secretary of State Chuck Nyckson, while Secretary of Defense Michael Pallaster was on the President’s left. Directly opposite Pallaster and thus on the vice president’s right, sat Secretary of the Treasury Haden Ploutonos. All other members of the Cabinet sat in the order of the date of creation of their department. Paul Dias’s department, Environment and Agriculture, was the last department created and so his chair was at the end of the oval table to the left of the President.
With ever deepening concern, Themison’s eyes wandered to Dias’s vacant chair.
Normally, various department advisers would be seated directly behind the Cabinet member they served. However, this was not a normal day, and the only adviser present was Jake Jefferson, sometimes called Jeff, the president’s chief of staff.
The room was strangely quiet. Some, like Peta Hopeit, studiously read the papers in front of them, or at least appeared to, while others gazed absentmindedly out of the Georgian style wi

  • Univers Univers
  • Ebooks Ebooks
  • Livres audio Livres audio
  • Presse Presse
  • Podcasts Podcasts
  • BD BD
  • Documents Documents