“Of course you know these things, perhaps even better than I since you were alive then. Forgive me. I have got into the bad Residential habit of explaining the obvious. An occupational disease.” He was disarming. “The point I’m trying to make is that my suspicions of you were unworthy and unfounded since there was no leader of the lutherists to escape; all involved responded nicely to indoctrination and that was the end of it. The story I heard in school was a popular one. The sort that often evolves ... like Lucifer and the old Christian God, for instance ... for white there must be black, that kind of thing. Except that Cave never had a major antagonist, other than in legend.”

“I see. Tell me, then, if there was no real leader to the lutherists, how did they come by their name?”

His answer was prompt. “Martin Luther. My friend in the H.O. told me this morning over the telephone. Someone tried to make an analogy, that’s all, and the name stuck though, as a rule, the use of any words or concepts derived from the dead religions is frowned upon. You know the story of Martin Luther? It seems that he....”

“I know the story of Martin Luther,” I answered, more sharply than I intended.

“Now I’ve tired you.” Jessup was sympathetic. He got to his feet. “I just wanted to tell you about my suspicions, that’s all; I thought it might amuse you and perhaps bring us closer together for I’d very much like to be your friend, not only for the help you can give me up here but also because of your memories of the old days when Cave and Iris, his mother, still lived.”

“Iris was at least five years younger than Cave.”

“Everyone knows that, my friend. She was his spiritual mother, as she is ours. 'From the dark womb of unbeing we emerge in the awful light of consciousness from which the only virtuous escape is Cavesway.’ I quote from Iris’s last testament. It was found among her papers after her death.”

“Did she take Cavesway?”

Jessup frowned. “It is said that she died of pneumonia but had death not come upon her unexpectedly it was well known that she would have taken Cavesway. There has been considerable debate over this at Dallas. I hear from highly placed people that before many years have passed they will promulgate a new interpretation, applying only to Iris, which will establish that intent and fact are the same, that though she died of pneumonia she intended to take Cavesway and, therefore, took Cavesway in spirit and therefore in fact.”

“A most inspiring definition.”