'Mighty cold for May, isn't it?', Edgar the gardener remarked to Cheryl Biggs, a bit of a poke in the eye to a woman who was always screeching about climate change, global warming, the rising seas, the melting ice caps, and the coming environmental Armageddon.
Of course it was none of his business, but as he trimmed the hedges and raked the lawn, he could hear her go on about how soon Miami would be under water, the Maldives would disappear, southern crops would be incinerated, and life in cities would become unbearable.
People will run their air conditioners full steam, energy output will be at maximum capacity and the air will be filled with billions more tons of hydrocarbons fueling even more heat and existential destruction. Before long, there will be no stopping the inevitable. Even Canadian crops will burn up, the Colorado River will run dry, Sacramento Valley will be a charred wasteland, and Los Angeles gangs will roam the city looking for water.
Edgar shook his head when he heard the worst of it - the shrieks and lamentation, the anguish, the palpable pain - but he had to laugh at this flailing caricature of a mad woman, Sturm und Drang, sound and fury, lights out craziness, the end of days, repentance, and anticipation of a fiery, all-too-soon Judgment Day.
He pulled up his collar against the unseasonable chill - global warming, said climate activists. The melting polar ice was cooling the Arctic Ocean and currents were bringing cold water to the East Coast of the United States, chilling the air, disrupting normal Spring patterns, and keeping sweaters and mufflers from mothballs.
Edgar was old enough to have heard it all, from Al Gore's dire predictions of environmental doom, to periodic updates citing bird migrations, hurricane activity, and coral reef erosion. The drumbeat grew louder and more insistent. It was no longer just a bass line increasing in tempo, but a thundering crash of timpani, snare drums, and cymbals. Climate warriors were in the streets in phalanxes, shouting, beseeching, pleading for environmental sanity. They howled like Old Testament prophets and latter day Doomsday sayers. There is little time left.
Of course none of this was true, all confabulations and very inspired demagoguery. Harping on about something so beyond human reach but insisting that if we all pulled together and bought electric cars, turned down the heat and raised the thermostat in the summer, used prudence and good sense and gave our all for the planet, maybe...just maybe...disaster could be avoided.
Meanwhile the polar caps gained ice, flawed, biased reports predicting dramatic rises in global temperatures were uncovered for the shameless screeds they were, new underwater high-resolution spectrometry showed that the Australian coral reefs were thriving, sea levels were not rising but holding steady.
While most Americans who had been unbothered by all the climate fol-de-rol, kept their thermostats where they had always been, and kept Ford-350s at the top of the list said, 'I told you so'. They had just made it through the unconscionable government shutdown of everything during COVID, the senseless six-foot rule, outdoor masking, vigilantism and totally freaked-out housewives - all fabricated and cockamamie - that the climate change hoopla was to be expected.
Edgar was old enough to remember the Hong Kong flu, a savage, highly infections virus, when he and his young girlfriend took turns at the stove, so weak were they; but when able out they went, no masks, no distancing, no panic. Every so often a flu strain got out of hand but it would die out, would take its toll but would not be an extinction-level event. Life went on, schools remained open, businesses bought and sold, it was a challenging time but soon over.
'Soon we won't be needing you, Edgar', Cheryl said as she paid the man. 'All this...', and here she pointed to the luxuriant skip laurels, the chrysanthemums, the thick grass, the magnolia, and cherry trees all in bloom, 'will be history'.
Edgar nodded, smiled, and said, 'Not for a while, Mrs. Biggs, see you next week', and with that he loaded up his gear and headed back to Maryland. He put an Iron Maiden tape in the deck - why he still loved heavy metal was beyond him and his children but he did, dutifully almost...a statement? - swung on to the Beltway and headed for Poolesville.
'What's a mother to do?', Cheryl said, remembering the old ad for Velveeta cheese or some other spread, but this was no time for idle fancy. The climate emergency had not disappeared, just lost traction given the various wars going on, the financial scandals in Minnesota and California, and the wild doings of Donald Trump. Climate change would soon be back in the news once the seas started rising, the ice caps went back to melting, and the coral reefs began again to degrade.
Yet the ethos, the zeitgeist of America had changed once the harbinger of bad times, former President Joe Biden, was out of office. Trump had tapped a chord - Americans weren't the worriers progressives had made them out to be. Live and let live, and make hay while the sun shines had always been tried and true adages. Unbelievably, they not only didn't care about climate change, they thought the whole thing was a hoax.
Worst of all, the nation was building energy- and water-sucking data centers at an unstoppable pace. The demand for AI was growing by leaps and bounds, and the country was desperate to find ways to fuel it. Solar and wind power simply wouldn't do, nuclear would take years to build back up, so it was dig, baby dig for coal and gas.
The climate would heat up despite the new, soon to be discredited evidence that it is not, and this greedy, inconscient demand for energy to make Google searches a bit more thorough would only accelerate the trend. Not only was the climate crisis still upon us, we were even closer to disaster.
What if...what if...what if the naysayers were right and the earth was not warming, then what? The last twenty years of activism would have been for nothing, a waste of time, a buy-in to a total fabrication, a victim of the worst scam on record. Perish the thought, she said, and went about her business; but the juice had been squeezed out of the orange.
The climate and environmental conferences were airless, spiritless, poorly attended affairs. Could she simply say, 'Let bygones be bygones' and turn her attention to something else which needed fixing? Hardly. She was an old lady now, and the time for change had long gone. It was chaise lounge time at best.
'You gave it your best, dear', her husband said to her as he sprayed the rose bushes for aphids. 'It was the effort that counted'.
How could he say that, Cheryl wondered? Effort without result is wasted effort, nothing less, so there he is self-satisfied, spraying away without a care in the world when the wind had been completely taken out of her sails.
Her husband picked her an American Beauty, and the gloom lifted. Little things, she thought. I must learn; but she couldn't let go of that visceral need for social change so part of her life for decades. Is it too late for the black man? she wondered, or the mestizo?
True belief had taken its toll, and once engrained in the credulous soul, there's no getting rid of it.





