"Reality School: In the Entropy Zone," by Jeffrey A. Carver
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Reality School: In the Entropy Zone
by
Jeffrey A. Carver
First published in SCIENCE FICTION AGE, March
1995.
Copyright © 1995 Jeffrey A. Carver
All rights reserved. This work is the literary property of the
author and a part of his livelihood. You are free to download this story for
your own enjoyment. You may print a copy, if you like, for your own use,
including sharing it with friends. You may not post it elsewhere on the
web. Permission to distribute for any except personal use is explicitly
denied.
Reality School: In the Entropy Zone
As we walk through the entropic boundary, I expect to feel...I don't know
what...some startling physical sensation. Instead, it's more like walking into
the shadow of a towering building. A draft of cooler air passes through my
blouse.
Then everything changes...
*
Looking back, it seems almost impossible to believe. Reality School, from
matriculation to retirement, was supposed to fill seven of my best years--years
of learning and challenge, and perhaps even occasionally danger. The time I
actually spent cannot be measured; it was a time in which the world almost
changed beyond recognition--and I changed into something, someone, I hardly
know.
*
For my first day at school, my parents had gotten us up at dawn and piled me
and my older sister into our ancient station wagon, Woodie. We drove for a long
time, before turning into the entrance to the school. I remember this clearly,
even though I was a girl only six and a half at the time. My parents told me
later that I'd complained so much about the length of the trip that they very
nearly turned around and drove me back home. They wouldn't have, of course; they
knew how important the reality school was--not just to us, but to the whole
world. Why else would they have put me through all that testing, and cried when
I was accepted?
I remember this, too: my complaints vanished the instant we passed through
the reality school's continuum-bubble. A great shock wave hit the hood of the
car and flashed past the windows in rainbow colors, and suddenly everything
around us changed. Everything--including Woodie. Our station wagon was
transformed from a sagging road-barge into a shining fuselage, powered by
glowing fusion thrusters and floating on a magnetic cushion. I screamed with joy
and amazement, deafening my mom and dad. Marie was screaming just as loudly. At
the same moment, the school grounds changed from scorched desert grass to a
fairyland setting of whipped cream lawns, cotton candy trees, and gingerbread
buildings. I hopped up and down with delight.
It was all window-dressing, of course--not just for the kids, but for the
parents, who were preparing to leave their children with a school that few of
them could really hope to understand. The parents believed in the school's
mission, or they wouldn't have been there; but it probably helped to have the
special effects to ease the transition. The effects had little to do with the
real function of the school, of course, but it would take us a while to
understand that.
Daddy drove up to the parking area, where a centaur with an armband directed
him to a space that looked as if it had been saved just for us. We all piled
out, Daddy warning me not to touch the fusion thrusters, whose glow was slowly
fading to chrome silver. We had a good laugh, walking around our gleaming
spaceship-car. Then a team of whinnying ponies drew up, pulling a cart for my
bags. We loaded the cart and headed into the administration building.
*
I have no memory of registration, but I vividly recall the "reality-view"
posters that glowed in the walls, and the clots of strange kids gathered around
gawking at them. The posters looked like moving holograms, and at first I
thought they were just pictures made by artists. It turned out they were actual
images of reality-threads that "shapers," as graduates of the school were
called, had encountered and safely sealed off from our timeline. Marie and I
gaped at a world where everyone lived in clouds, where the whole
world
seemed to be clouds, and nothing looked quite solid, including the people.
"Wow," I said, feeling the kind of thrill that I got from my favorite stories.
Then we turned to an image filled with stalactites and stalagmites that
flickered and slowly changed color as if under a black light. That one stumped
us, until an older boy stepped up and explained that it was microscopic metal
crystals: a world where everything was solid-state, and all life took the form
of electrons and photons. Phew, I thought. Why bother?
The boy, though, seemed to actually
like the idea, the way I'd liked
the clouds. He grinned, and told me his name was Ashok. And I began to wonder if
kids like him were about to become my friends.
*
It was only a little later, at the dorm, that Mom and Dad and Marie had to
say good-bye to me. I flashed from giddy pleasure to tears, and starting
bawling, "I don't want to stay! I don't
want to! I want to go
home!"
"Alexandra, we've been planning this a long time," my dad started to say, all
rationally. Only he couldn't get it out; he started crying, too, and turned away
so I wouldn't see. You'd think it would have been Mom crying, but she was the
one who tried to calm me down, "Honey, the tests said you were one in a million.
Now, you go show them how you can do this! It's
so important--"
No no no I don't care...!
That was when the school's departure routine kicked in. My dorm room suddenly
blossomed out into a beautiful little sun porch, where some of my favorite
characters--Peter Rabbit and Eeyore and Maxine the bunny and Berlioz the bear
were all having tea together, and one after another, they beckoned me to join
them. That broke the cycle of tears, for the moment; it was enough to make me
let my parents go.
And from then on, life was never to be the same...not even in the ways we'd
expected.
*
I am utterly alone--in a steaming jungle. Animals shriek in the distance.
Where has everyone gone? "Rober-r-r-ta?" I cry, shivering. "Lisa? Danny?" I
stumble back the way I came, searching for them. But where the entropic boundary
stretched a moment ago, a jungle now goes on forever.
I teeter on the edge of panic. If I'm to find my world again, I can only
plunge ahead. I have a job to do. An adult's job, even if I am only six and a
half. I have already grown beyond my calendar age.
But I seem to have forgotten what exactly I am supposed to do.
*
Lisa Hoopner, my roommate, became my best friend right from day one. She was
just a few months older than me, and one of the things I liked about her was her
laugh, which was a kind of whoop that came out at the funniest times. Another
thing I liked was her
Bahhston accent. We didn't talk with accents in
California, I said; and every time I said it, she gave a whoop and talked to me
in a bubbling
upbeat voice that was supposed to sound like people from
around here. I didn't think it sounded much like me, but it made me laugh
anyway.
Lisa and I were both pretty homesick, but it helped having each other to be
friends with. For one thing, we both liked Berlioz and Maxine, and we both
thought Mr. Playstead, the head teacher, was nice but kind of stuffy, and we
both liked Mrs. Randolph because she made us laugh, and we both thought the
cafeteria was awesomely yucky. Once we'd agreed on all that, everything else
seemed pretty minor. Oh, and we both liked Danny Hutton, a boy from Iowa who we
could tell was putting on a brave front, even though he was obviously even more
homesick than we were.
Most of the kids were pretty nice. We had a lot of counseling sessions, some
by ourselves, and some in groups where we talked about the things that we liked,
and the things that scared us. That helped us get to know each other, I guess. I
understand now that they'd selected us not just for our imaginations, but for a
certain sociability and a certain toughness of mind, not that I would have put
it that way then. They didn't want any wild-eyed or selfish individualists
getting hold of the reins of reality. It was risky enough with the people they
did choose.
The teachers had lots of activities to help us get to know each other--games
and stories and plays. But the main activity was learning to
shape
reality.
*
In the beginning we shaped storybook landscapes and scenes. Try to imagine a
roomful of six-, seven-, and eight-year-olds bubbling with imagination, perched
under strange helmets of silver and glass, with visions of stories taking form
right before their eyes. (None of our creations were permanent, of course--and
they were strictly confined within the shielded training rooms. But if a leakage
had occurred, the continuum- barriers around the school grounds would have kept
anything we did from reaching the world outside.)
We learned right away that our mind's eye views of such magic places as Oz,
Middle Earth, Peter Rabbit's forest, and Barsoom differed wildly from one
another. Sometimes that caused arguments, which we were supposed to settle among
ourselves. But other times we just had fun building one vision upon another,
castle upon cloud upon ocean upon desert--until our landscapes grew into
something that was as much
us as it was the stories that had inspired us.
We were learning to create. Later, we would learn to
choose realities
from the crazy chaos that the universe offered up to us. But in those days, we
were consumed with
building.
We were also learning to share...
One day Lisa and I worked together on a special play cottage made of clouds.
It was delicate, puffy, and ethereal--and it had lightning bolts flashing across
the doorways, and only Lisa and I could make the lightning go away to let us in.
Even so, we made sure the point got across by patrolling the area in our
helmets, telling everyone else to stay out. Mr. Playstead came upon us and
planted himself in my path with a scowl. "Alexandra," he said sternly, "this
space is for everyone, not just for people who appoint themselves queen for a
day."
I was stunned, and suddenly ashamed. I didn't know quite what he meant by
"queen for a day," but I
knew we were supposed to share our creations
with everyone, and not keep them to ourselves. I felt my face get hot as I
looked at Lisa. Mr. Playstead hadn't said anything to her yet. She looked away
guiltily. I knew we were both in for a special counseling session later, after
Mr. Playstead reported this.
I was ready to let the cottage dissolve back into a cloud of smoke, taking me
with it. But Lisa was quicker. She caught Tommy Harte's eye, and with a look
invited him into the cottage. When Mr. Playstead saw that, he nodded
approvingly. Lisa cheered up right away. Before I knew what was happening, she'd
opened the cottage into a big pavillion and told
everyone to come in. I
stood there, burning with humiliation, as Mr. Playstead watched Lisa being so
generous.
I stalked away, refusing to look at her. Finally, I sat down in a far corner
of the room to make shapings by myself. The only trouble was, no ideas came.
Nothing at all. I was getting madder by the minute. I heard Lisa come up behind
me, and I glanced her way sullenly, ready to say something nasty.
"Meow."
She was holding a pair of little grey tiger kittens, offering one to me. I
glowered. But I took one of the kittens anyway, and after Lisa had gone back to
play, I hugged it carefully. It purred and strutted in my lap, and as I petted
it, I began to feel better.
When the counselor asked me about it later (in my regular session--Mr.
Playstead didn't send me in for a special visit, after all), I told her that I
knew I shouldn't have done that with the private cottage-making, and I wouldn't
do it again. She peered at me through her big, wide glasses and said, "You mean
you've learned something about not being selfish?"
I shrugged, uncomfortable under her stare. "I guess so."
Dr. Shelby nodded carefully. "Have you forgiven Lisa for being quicker, and
cleverer about changing what she was doing when you both got caught?"
The question surprised me. I didn't think Lisa
had been caught. But
yes, the kitten had helped me forgive her.
I nodded.
"You know, it's a pretty tall order to learn not to think just of yourself,"
Dr. Shelby observed. "But this thing between you and Lisa
could be a
valuable lesson. If the time ever comes when you have to reach deep inside
yourself for strength, deeper than you think you
can reach, I hope it
will help you to remember this."
I stared back at her in alarm. Although she said it nicely, I could feel the
weight of seriousness behind her words. Anything that would make me remember
this in a good way, I thought, was something I didn't want to face. But I
didn't say that; I just nodded.
Dr. Shelby peered at me. The light glinted off her glasses as she looked at
the clock and said our session was over.
*
I walk, alone and lonely, through the pellucid green light of the jungle.
After a time, I step through a hedge...and my surroundings change utterly, to a
world of astonishing precipices and ravines, illumined by lightning flashes.
Another reality, joined to mine like a soap bubble? Or is this my world, after
entropy has ravaged it like a marauding beast?
With a shiver, I back away from a terrifying precipice. "Where have you all
gone?" I whisper to my missing friends. "What am I supposed to do here, all
alone?" Even as I ask, I know the answer: Find the reality-thread that belongs
to us, and bring it back to our world.
There is no one here--just a few winged creatures, soaring off the cliffs,
pterodactyllike. Still, I feel--I cannot say how--that Lisa is out there, not in
this place of cliffs and ravines, maybe, but somewhere, across some gulf that I
cannot even see. I cry out to her in a tiny voice, barely a whisper.
I struggle to think. It is not just the world gone mad; it is me, too. I am
no longer the person I was, not a six-year-old girl, or even a twelve-year-old.
I look down at my lanky, bony body and flex my leathery wings. What have I
turned into?
I peer down into a ravine. Lights twinkle in the darkness below. Cities? I
feel a surge of hope. Perhaps down there are people, some connection...
I launch myself from the cliff.
*
We grew up fast in the reality school, and not just fast, but
differently from our sisters and brothers on the outside. I guess our
parents knew that could happen, and thought it worth the risk. What we had to do
was so dreadfully important, and it could only be done by people who started
very, very young. People with plastic minds, who could learn to visualize
(
discern, they called it) different levels of reality without blocking
out what they saw with denial. People with blazing imaginations, without the
layers of preconceptions that adults have, who could be trained to pick out
entropic changes at a distance, and visualize appropriate responses.
That's adult-talk. Sorry; what they needed was young people with unbridled
hope. People like us.
We learned about this gradually, over time, absorbing our mission not so much
through our heads as through our pores. When we graduated, it would be up to us
to "maintain the order." Even now that sounds ponderous to me--almost
pretentious. A few years ago, it would have been preposterous. But of course
that was before the entropic rift opened, before the Earth became a place where
reality "fluttered" from day to day, and moment to moment.
*
The first time we got to see real shapers at work was, undoubtedly, the
turning point when I really began to feel in my bones what we were doing. The
teachers led us single-file into a shielded observation room that overlooked the
actual Reality Shaping Center. This was where the best of us would work, after
graduation. It was the only such center in America, one of three in the world.
We were electrified with excitement, and whispered and hissed to each other
while our teachers frowned over the group. I sat between Lisa and Roberta
Kisnet, and we held each other's hands tightly, trying to keep from bursting
with anticipation.
The shapers were four or five years older than us, which seemed a lifetime.
They wore silver helmets which, surprisingly, were smaller and simpler-looking
than our training helmets. A few of them walked around, but mostly they stayed
seated, their gloved hands waving in the air as they gestured and probed at
whatever realities they were viewing in their closed universes.
They were not actually
journeying in other realities, we were
told--but viewing them through tiny windows opened in the continuum by the
shaping amplifiers. They were watching for reality-threads that threatened to
intrude upon our own...like radar watching for enemy airplanes.
We saw the other realities on monitors, along with the adult supervisors.
About half the center was filled with consoles, where the supervisors
coordinated everything that was happening here with the centers at CERN and
Kyoto--a lot of frowning adults with headsets studying computer consoles. But
the other side, where the shapers were working...
wow.
We saw a dramatic episode almost right away. On one of the shapers' monitors,
a strange scene came into focus: a mountain range melting under a big red sun. I
stared open mouthed, as a teacher explained. It was
our sun, diseased and
swollen, devouring our Earth--in another reality. I sat frozen, not sure whether
to be fascinated or terrified. We heard the voices of the supervisors calling
additional shapers into the circuit, and explaining exactly what was wrong.
"...We've got to calm that sun down, give us a nice cool breeze...that's
it...and hold the mountains together with your hands...." And we saw the
shapers stirring in their seats, turning to one another and working together
with murmurs of agreement. We saw the mountains being held in place by ghostly,
virtual hands--and we saw icy breaths cooling the sun.
I scarcely understood what I was seeing; but the image- crafting of three or
four shapers, working in harmony, was pushing away that dangerous
reality-thread. There was something almost mystical, and very personal, about
the shapers' joined struggle against the forces of entropy. The scientific staff
didn't explain it that way; they talked of
synergistic field-
configurations and
Lang-Lawrence contractions. But as far as the
shapers were concerned, there was an
enemy out there. And by creating
their images in concert, they were able to defeat the enemy, or at least to push
it back out of range.
Were they actually
cooling that bloated sun in the other reality,
changing what existed in another thread, or were they just weaving a spell to
prevent the thread from intruding on our own? In a practical sense, it didn't
matter. What mattered was that they were closing off the danger from our own
world, keeping the enemy at bay however they could. It was like virtual
reality--except that any one of those threads could have come swirling up out of
the netherrealms of chaos to overwhelm our world, if the shapers had not been
there with their fingers in the dike, manning the ramparts, battening down the
hatches of reality.
I didn't know then that the really dramatic perils were the easiest to detect
at a distance, and the easiest to defend against. Most of the dangers were more
insidious--shifts in climate, or in ecological balances, or even changes in
human history. The shapers often sensed a change--and then had to wait, like
bloodhounds on leashes, while the supervisors conferred about what courses of
action to follow, or even about which reality-thread was the right one. There,
we learned, lay the subtlest perils to our world.
We beginning students were far more interested in the vivid dangers. To our
satisfaction, before we left the center that day, we saw spidery aliens marching
through the streets of St. Louis, enclosing buildings in strange cocoons. As
one, we felt a great, gasping pulse of fear before the aliens faded in a shimmer
of heat--as a group of shapers focused their thoughts together and wove a web of
protection that banished the aliens from our reality.
When our observation session was over, I could hardly move. I was trembling
in my seat, and my fingers were white from clenching Lisa's hand so hard. I
looked at Lisa and she looked wide-eyed back at me.
I had never in my life been so scared. Or so excited.
*
I soar, spiraling down into the darkness of the ravine, praying that the
twinkling jewels below me are civilization. I am breathless with fear. What have
I turned into, that I soar on leathery wings? Am I not still human?
"Yes, I am!" I cry, and with that, my wings are gone, and I am falling. The
sparkling points below me are not cities but...stars. My heart pounds. I want to
scream, but my breath will not leave my chest.
Is anyone else alive in the great void of stars wheeling around me? "Lisa?" I
whisper. "Roberta? Danny? Ashok?" For a heartstopping moment I see their faces
in the stars, luminous faces. I imagine that they are calling out to me. But I
am helpless to answer. There is a power blocking me, a darkness called Chaos. I
imagine the entire population of the Earth, all of humanity, floating out there,
calling to me.
I am supposed to save them.
Weightless, I fall...
*
We continued to spend a lot of time with the counselors, doing group
exercises and letting off steam and trying to understand the meaning to
us of what we were training for. But I don't think, really, that there
was any way they could truly prepare us for a job that was, essentially, to hold
the world in our hands.
Eventually the gravity of our teachers' words began to reverberate like bass
drum beats--not so much in the classrooms as in our minds:
"...the sorting of entropic realities demands the talents of children your
age..."
"...must do what older people, even experts, can't..."
"...when adults try to focus through these windows, it turns to mud...adults
resist...we're never sure, the layers of ambiguity are too great..."
"...as you learn to
feel the difference between realities... must
learn wisdom, yet through a lens of innocence..."
"...might last until you're thirteen...only one has worked past fourteen, by
the calendar...."
By the calendar. We were already aware that we were growing older at
an accelerated rate, our intellects and emotions veering ahead in an alarming,
zigzag fashion. It all had to do with entropy.
I never really understood entropy, not the way the scientists talked about
it. We learned about disorder, of course, and something called "the laws of
thermodynamics," which were undergoing some late revision. It might have been
the work of theorists that had brought us to this plight in the first place. Not
that they'd meant to; they were just fooling around with fusion implosions and
micro-singularities, and trying to learn how to control entropic folds in
space-time...not on a world-wide scale, but on a quantum level, a subatomic
level. What harm could there possibly be in that? But somehow there
was
harm in it; somehow they caused, or at least allowed entry to, the rift that put
us where we are now.
Many of them denied that. It was entropic drift, they theorized--a natural
phenomenon, swirling just below the apparent calm of our spacetime continuum. It
may have been chance that it intruded into our world when it did; and without
the developments that made the shaping amplifiers possible, we would have been
defenseless against it. But whether it was a natural phenomenon or an artificial
one was irrelevant now. Either way, it threatened to destroy our world as we
knew it. Not that it
meant to; it wasn't living; it didn't know us,
didn't care about us one way or another. It just followed the laws of physics.
But the laws of physics changed, from one reality thread to the next.
What the shapers had to know was how to sort through the many possible
realities that floated like tangled seaweed in the ocean of entropy, and how to
follow the one strand that belonged to our timeline and our lives. Not just our
lives personally, but the life of the world. The job of the shapers was to
preserve reality, guided by the supervision staff, according to guidelines
agreed upon by the joint policy committees...
"...what you will be doing is a privilege, and a responsibility. You will be
honored for doing what no one else on Earth can do..."
*
Not everyone honored what we were doing, not at all. Many people were only
vaguely aware of the reality schools at all, and didn't much care about us one
way or another--except maybe to object to the government funding that kept us
going. They thought--I don't know, that we were doing nothing real at
all--casting illusions in the air, mirages, New Age miracles, who knew what for,
maybe just for our own entertainment.
How
could they believe that, when we all knew--despite the best
efforts of the shaping centers--that changes were inevitably creeping into our
continuum?
Were people just stupid? At first I thought so. Later, I understood better.
It's called
variable persistence of memory. Simply put: different people
remember the past differently...for a while. Every time our reality-thread
changes, there is a collective adjustment of memory. But not all at once, or at
the same time. An extreme example: If I wake up one morning, remembering that
Unimerica has fifty-seven states, and the capital is in Toronto, and you
remember that it's only forty- seven states, and the capital is in
Washington--and the history books at the library disagree with each
other--that's variable persistence of memory. A few weeks later, we'll all
remember the same thing. But which way will it be? And which was the original?
The staffs at the shaping centers are supposed to know, but their memories
change, too. So whom do we believe?
What a lot of people believed was: nothing has changed.
My example may have been a poor one. Nothing that dramatic had happened, that
we knew of. A more realistic example might have been something like this: a
subtle shift in global climate, or in population patterns of the tsetse fly.
Then you have the supervisory staffs arguing over what
was, or what
should be.
And it's those questions that set off the people who opposed us. They were in
the minority, we were told--but they were everywhere. We were opposed by
elements of the religious right, the humanist left, the Islamic center, the
Russian capitalist resurgency, the South African whoknowswhats, and a whole lot
more that I've mercifully forgotten. Some of them opposed us because they didn't
have shaping centers of their own, and they felt disadvantaged; others opposed
us because we were "treading where mankind wasn't meant to tread."
We were just kids. We were too young to understand--thank God, or Allah, or
our lucky stars, take your pick--that there were groups that would have liked
nothing better than to close us down, or even kill us if necessary. The
extremists were a small minority, and we were well insulated from them.
The plain truth was, most people didn't understand what it was that we
did--or why. Some thought that we deliberately
changed reality, a bunch
of meddlers altering the natural order of things according to our own whims.
Early on, before the U.N. committee was formed and guidelines established, there
might have been those who tried that; but those people were stopped after they
tried to eradicate the mosquito, and changed a hundred ecologies by accident.
No, we at the reality school were closely supervised; and the coordination with
the Euro and Japanese groups was intense, with several major universities
involved. There were the occasional policy disagreements, but those were minor.
Or so we were told.
At the time, they didn't say too much to us about the rumors of other nations
hurrying to build their own shaping centers, outside the control of the U.N.
committee. Or about the bombing in Baghdad of what was supposed to have been a
munitions plant, but nobody really believed it...
The hardest opponents for
us to hear about were the ones like Reverend
Patwell and his church, right in the next county, who claimed, not that we were
favoring American interests over others, but that we were defying God's will by
imposing our order onto His.
That was nonsense, of course. As far as I was concerned, we were helping God
hold His world together. Okay,
maybe humans had caused this mess in the
first place. But without us--or people like us--who knew what might have become
of our world, our reality?
I can talk about it with a certain clarity now, because I've seen what
happened when it went wrong. I've seen what happened when the school, the
neighborhood, the whole fix on the reality that was our world began to dissolve.
*
The voices and faces have faded. I sense a planetary surface beneath me,
and the hazy glow of an atmosphere. I have come to rest, pressed against a rocky
surface, stars twinkling overhead.
Where am I what am I who am I...?
I live I breathe I think I feel...
In the gloom of an unearthly dawn, I curl my fingers in front of me, and I
can just make out their webbed, bony shape.
Terrified, I shut my eyes, and imagine a place of darkness where Chaos lives
and reaches out to destroy this universe...and I begin to feel that this Chaos
has needs and wants of its own, and it is insatiable. And somehow it is testing
me.
I hear a rumbling groan...of something living, something in pain. I stand and
look around. I am on a tiny island in the midst of a green sea.
I am halfway up a small, rocky knoll, and I climb it on my webbed hands and
feet. I peer over a ledge and see a bloated, toadlike monster, bellowing to the
sky, bellowing...
*
It was May, and out on the playground some girls were practicing unamplified
"makings"--little cloud castles floating along the hedgerow separating our
school from a convent on the grounds behind us. There wasn't much that could
happen with unamped makings; it was more like projecting little holograms, using
the outdoor landscape programs. Except this time something did happen--something
terrible.
I was in the cafeteria with Lisa and Roberta. We heard the yelling and ran
outside. Across the playing field, kids and teachers were gathered around
someone on the ground. Some of the kids were screaming.
"Who is it? Who is it?" Someone was running beside us-- Tommy Harte, I think.
"You children stay clear!" shouted Mr. Playstead, turning to wave us back. We
crept close enough to see that they were all gathered around the still form of a
child. At first we couldn't see who it was. Then Lisa cried, "It's Judy Keller!
It's Judy! Is she
dead?"
Of course she isn't dead, I thought. But then I took a good look at Mr.
Playstead's face--and I knew at once that she
was dead. For a long,
breathless moment, I wasn't so much scared as curious: Why was Judy dead? What
could she have done that made her dead?
And then I felt fear and grief rush over me, in a great crashing wave.
It soon became obvious that the teachers were wondering the same thing I had
wondered. Mr. Playstead raised his voice through the yelling and confusion.
"Kids,
listen up! This is
important. I want you all to stop any
shapings
right now--even little ones. And I want to know, did anyone
think, or imagine--even for a second,
even in play--that Judy might die?"
"No!" "No!" We all frantically proclaimed our innocence, terrified of being
blamed for Judy's death. All, that is, except poor Ellie Cottman, who burst into
tears.
"Ellie?" Mr. Playstead asked, straining to make his voice gentle when you
could tell he wanted to scream. "Did you...think about Judy dying? Or have some
sort of
feeling about it?"
Ellie nodded, sobbing. "Playing, we were only playing--" she babbled, and I
looked at Lisa and she looked at me, agreeing with our eyes that
we would
never have done something so awful, and at the same time knowing that we could
just as easily have done it. Then we all had to get out of the way, because the
school infirmary people were there with stretchers and emergency gear, and they
were trying to resuscitate Judy and they wanted us out of the way
now.
I had a fleeting thought that maybe I could do something to help Judy--maybe
some sort of a shaping that would restore her to life. It wasn't that I wanted
to be a hero or anything; but I was so scared at this new thing, death, that had
invaded our school that I would have done anything to drive it out. I was about
to raise my hand and tell Mr. Playstead, when he seemed to sense my thought--or
maybe what a lot of us were thinking. He suddenly barked, "Whatever happens, I
don't want any of you trying to
think Judy back alive! Is that
understood?"
He turned, glaring, and that was when I saw the ground shifting and bubbling
around the stretcher that Judy was lying on, and I realized that someone had
already tried to do just what I was thinking. I followed Lisa's gaze and saw
that it was Danny Hutton--you could tell by the crestfallen look on his freckled
face--and Mr. Playstead probably saw it, too, but he didn't say anything. He
began herding us forcefully toward the buildings, saying over and over, "We have
to find out what happened...my God, what could have happened...?"
*
The beast looks up at me with fiery eyes, its breath hissing like a great
steam engine. Behind it, something is thrashing in the water. The beast roars in
anguish and scrabbles helplessly at the edge of the cliff overlooking the sea.
The water erupts. A second creature bursts into the air, struggling...and
crashes under again. The first beast claws helplessly at the ledge, and glares
up at me with eyes that are not threatening, but pleading.
I look at my webbed hand, and shudder with understanding. No no no no...I'm
terrified of deep water...the thing is huge, how could I possibly...?
The creature's roar shatters my thoughts. I don't know this creature,
don't want
to know it, don't know the rules here, don't know what is
happening.
Through my cowardly shame I see, or imagine, a squirming patch of darkness in
the sky. Entropy. Chaos. Feeding on my fear, my inaction.
I climb awkwardly over the stones, scuttling past the creature, burned by the
pain in its eyes. I gaze down and see its mate, a blotch deep in the green
water, sinking.
I hesitate a long moment before I leap.
*
By the time they got us all gathered for a meeting in the school auditorium,
I knew that the world had been altered in some new and terrible way, that
something had torn us loose from reality's moorings. The meeting was hopeless,
just a lot of whispered conferences among the teachers and school officials.
Once in a while they turned to the kids to comfort us, or ask something, or
sometimes just to gaze helplessly over the room. They admonished us not to use
our powers until they learned what was going on. We could smell their fear. They
didn't know what had gone wrong, but the implications clearly went beyond the
death of one student, however awful and shocking that might have been.
I sat in my seat, cloaked in a strange, foggy calm. Once in a while, the
numbing fog swirled, and I trembled in helpless terror. But whatever had
happened, the older shapers would take care of it; they had to. We should just
sit tight until they found out what had gone wrong, and fixed it. That's what
the teachers kept saying, and we tried to believe it. Lisa, beside me, chewed
her knuckles, and cried softly over and over, "Judy's dead, Alexandri...she's
dead...Alexandri, what are we going to do...what are we going to do...?" I don't
think she actually looked at me once the whole time; she didn't look at anybody.
Despite the warnings, a lot of kids were having trouble keeping their
imaginations in check. The auditorium kept trembling with little quakes of
suppressed shapings, imaginary beings and objects flickering in the air, then
vanishing. The teachers must have announced a dozen times that we were about to
move into the shielded training rooms, where even our random shapings could have
no permanent effect. The first few times, I felt reassured--
something was
being done--but there was always some delay, and we stayed in the auditorium
while maintenance people rushed about trying to put up temporary shields.
The teachers themselves were looking more and more panicky, and we all wished
that we could
hear them talking among themselves--and I guess someone
finally wished hard enough to make it happen. We suddenly heard Mr. Tea's voice
boom out into the auditorium as he whispered to Miss Jennings: "--A NEW ENTROPIC
FOLD--THE SHAPING CENTER IS
GONE! IT'S VANISHED COMPLETELY! CERN AND
KYOTO, TOO. WE HAVE NO ONE LEFT BUT THE STUDENTS. GOD HELP US!"
And that was when Mr. Tea realized that
everyone was hearing him. He
closed his mouth and turned pale, as the auditorium fell dead silent.
*
The sea crashes around my ears. I am breathing water. I blink, and my
vision clears. This is the element my body was made for, not the harsh rocks of
the island.
I cry out, and hear my voice booming out in great echoes over the seafloor.
Rolling, I peer downward and see the base of the atoll slanting into the shadowy
depths, and far below, the drowning creature. I plummet in pursuit. By the time
I come alongside it, I am swimming in a twilight world. I hook the being's arm,
circle around it, and find myself squarely before its eyes--dark and sightless.
I have come too late...I waited too long, too fearful...
I release her body to sink into the abyss. And the grey of the undersea world
closes in around me.
*
No need to belabor the bedlam, the near breakdown of order in the school, the
disappearance of the counselors and most of the teachers.
No need to belabor our panic, when four of
us vanished, swallowed by a
wall of fog that materialized in the courtyard, neatly dividing us as we were
walking back, in exhaustion, to our dorms.
No need to belabor our helplessness.
Had one of
us somehow caused this? There was no reason to think so.
And yet... Judy had died, and I could think of many times when I'd thought mean
things about one or another of my classmates, or teachers--and any one of those
times might have caused the same thing to happen.
Outside the school, it took a few days for the world to catch up with what
had happened. What Mr. Tea had said was true, but, as we soon learned, only part
of the truth. Apparently a
new shaping center had come on line, somewhere
in China, without any coordination with our center or the ones at CERN or Japan.
The result was some sort of conflict--
disharmony, they called it--in the
shapings from one center to the next. No one knew exactly what the conflict was,
but the result was that all four centers vanished, shapers and all, into a newly
created entropic fold. And our school hovered right at the brink of the fold.
The continuum-bubble provided some protection for the outside, but ripple
effects were being felt all over the world: freak storms, unexplained computer
failures, bridges collapsing...and all being blamed on us.
The political uproar was incredible.
A lot of people called for us to be shut down at once. We weren't really
doing anything at that point, since it was just the students and a
handful of teachers left, and no shaping amplifiers; but that didn't stop them
from calling for our heads. The school perimeter was physically sealed off,
though we still had electronic communication, and we were dependent upon
supplies and electric power from the outside. Security for the power lines was
beefed up right away. The integrity of the continuum- barrier was essential; it
was the only way to keep whatever terrible thing had swallowed our people from
swallowing the rest of the world, too.
The scientists said that the new fold in the entropic zone appeared to have
produced a strange doubling over of the continuum-bubble that enclosed our
reality school. Something similar must have happened in China and Japan and at
CERN, but there the folds had closed in upon themselves and vanished, swallowing
the shaping centers whole. The training school at CERN had vanished, too; the
one in Japan, located farther from the shaping center, was reportedly safe, but
isolated from the fold. Only we were poised at the very edge of the entropic
boundary.
There were rumors that a manmade singularity floated somewhere deep in the
entropy zone, wreaking havoc, but our scientists said there was no evidence for
that. To us kids, it was a meaningless question; we just knew that what was
happening was bad. And there seemed nothing to be done about it. We were the
only ones left. But what could
we do--especially without the amps and our
helmets?
Someone pointed out that Judy's death had happened just
after the
disappearance of our shapers--the result of a stray thought on the part of a
student. So whatever had gone wrong, it meant that we students could exert more
power than before. And that meant...bad things could happen even without the
amps. But perhaps
good things could happen without them, too.
That thought gave us hope. Not much, but it was something.
*
The days that followed brought ever more frightening news from the outside
world: earthquakes, civil unrest, solar flares, threats of war. There was little
doubt now that it was connected to the entropic folding. At least people
believed now that what we did here at the school was real. And it was some
consolation that the rest of the world still
existed. One of my
nightmares was that the entropic bubble would just swallow the Earth whole, the
way it had swallowed the shapers, like a serpent devouring its tail.
Like everyone else, I phoned my parents and sister, and afterward cried for
hours. My parents wished they'd never enrolled me at the school, and they wanted
to take me home. But that was impossible, of course--and not just because of the
continuum-bubble that enclosed us. Outside our perimeter, we were now
effectively quarantined--not by the civil authorities, but by a growing army of
protesters.
We first learned about it on the TV news. The Robert Patwell church had
gotten to us first and formed a human blockade around the school property. They
were praying and singing, and Reverend Patwell himself was out there with a
microphone calling on us to give up our pact with the devil. Never before had I
seen such naked hatred directed at
me. Other groups were out there, too,
maneuvering for position. Environmental groups were cheek-by-jowl with foreign
agents, claiming we were destroying the world in the name of protecting the
American way of life. Some were making noises about cutting off our power and
water. Fortunately for our sanity, the school grounds were wooded
inside
the perimeter, and that kept the protesters mostly out of sight. We could just
see one clot of them, way down at the end of our driveway.
We watched a big argument on TV between Reverend Patwell's people and some
nuns from the Catholic convent over the hill from us. Apparently the nuns
thought we were a hazard to God's Kingdom, too; but they thought we were
victims, not perpetrators. They didn't go around using names like "servants of
the darkness." And they didn't take too kindly to Patwell leading his throngs
over the convent grounds like an army invasion, setting up their human chain.
Once Patwell had done it, all the others followed suit. The sheriff's department
was out there, and the National Guard, and we were grateful to see men with
rifles standing watch under the high-tension power lines that fed our bubble.
"Jesus," said Harvey Snowden in disgust. He was one of the older boys, but
he'd gotten too close to the wall of fog, and it had changed him. He now looked
like a scrawny twenty-year-old woman. It scared the rest of us just to look at
him. "Isn't it bad enough, without all these religious nuts going at it with
each other?" Harvey was an atheist who wished they'd all go away.
That set off Danny Hutton, whose dad was a Congregational minister. Reverend
Hutton had visited the school chapel once and preached to us about how the
reality school was a special kind of service to God--and if the scientists who
had gotten us into this were guilty of meddling pride, so were certain church
organizations. I tried to take comfort in those words now, but it wasn't easy.
"Not everyone who
believes is crazy like
them!" Danny snarled. He
stormed away from the TV--mad at Harvey, mad at Reverend Patwell, and mad at the
gnawing zone of entropy that was eating our world alive.
"You'd think," said Lisa, quivering in front of the TV, "that people would
try to behave a little better, what with the apocalypse on us and all." She got
up to try again to call her parents; she hadn't been able to get through to them
yet. She was worried that they'd already disappeared. Physically, Lisa looked to
be about ten now, but something was happening; she was becoming a young woman.
She was even starting to gravitate toward the boys for comfort, especially Danny
Hutton. It was three days since the entropic fold had taken Judy and the
shapers.
Apocalypse? I thought stupidly, and realized with a shock that all
this really did have serious eschatological overtones to it.
Eschatological? Where the hell had I learned to use words like that?
And know what they meant?
*
What is happening to me? I am in a desolate wasteland of ash-choked
craters and volcanic eruptions. Is it punishment for my failure to save the
creature in the sea? Is this what it all turns into, when we fail, each one of
us, to save the other? I hack for breath in the smoky air, and stagger forward.
I can feel the flux of entropy burning around me like an electrical
discharge, threatening to destroy not just the world but my own mind and soul.
If I don't keep moving, I will die here. And I will have helped no one.
I trudge among volcanic vents that steam and smolder. What could my puny
thoughts do to change this? Somewhere there must be a toehold on reality, a
leverage point. It is what we came here, all of us, to find. "Give me a place to
stand, and I will move the Earth," Archimedes said. That is what we must do, to
push back the tide of entropy. And yet, flames of doubt lick at me.
The ground shudders, a low rumble in the earth. A moment later, a peak in
front of me explodes. I fall to the ground as a column of smoke towers into the
sky. Blazing lava rains down onto the earth. A river of blood-red magma streams
toward me.
Am I about to be incinerated, buried in final failure? As my mind seethes,
the tide of burning earth drives toward me. And a thought slowly comes into
focus: it was my own doubt that brought the volcano into being. My own fears. If
I allow them to, my fears will swallow and destroy me.
I remember the creature who died in the sea because of my hesitation. And yet
I know: I am not powerless. I still have my being, my spirit, my will. I am a
shaper. I blink, remembering that, as the lava sweeps toward me like a tidal
wave of flame.
*
"They're at the power lines! They're trying to cut the power lines! Tell Mr.
Playstead!" Roberta tore out the door of the TV room, running to find someone in
charge.
I stood open-mouthed, watching her disappear around the corner. I ran into
the TV room, where a few of the kids were watching the special report. On
camera, a utilities truck was pulled up to an electric tower, and a man was
maneuvering himself in the cherry picker toward the power lines. The camera
switched to Reverend Patwell, who was rejoicing loudly. It looked to be
protesters, not the electric utility, doing the deed.
Where were the security
forces? "My God," I croaked. "If they cut off the power--"
"There goes the continuum-bubble," Harvey rattled hoarsely. He was trembling
with rage.
"But don't we have some kind of...backup?" whispered Lottie Gerns. "A
generator? Something?"
Harvey laughed like a man about to commit mayhem. It made me shiver, coming
from someone who looked like a woman. "For the lights, yeah--but not the bubble.
It takes too much power. Why do you think we have those high tension lines
coming in?"
I swallowed, watching the man in the cherry picker. He was peering down, and
the camera shifted to a knot of people gathered around some sort of control
station. The man on the truck was waiting for the power to be shut off, so he
could cut the line down.
"Then--" I said "--there won't be any containment at all." Whatever effects
had leaked out till now, the worst of the entropic influence was contained
within our bubble.
"You got it," said Harvey. "
Mr. Playstead--you see these jerks?"
Mr. Playstead was breathless as he ran into the room. "I just talked to the
sheriff," he gasped. "He said they'd stop it. They don't know what happened to
the security people--they seem to have vanished."
We watched, petrified, as the cameras panned to the flashing lights of the
sheriff's cars pulling up. There was a lot of shouting. Finally the crowd gave
way, and a couple of tough- looking deputies with high-powered rifles took up
guard posts. After a short argument, the utility truck drove away.
I nearly collapsed with relief, my heart pounding. Where was Lisa? She hadn't
seen this; I had to go tell her. I ran from the room, looking for her.
She wasn't in the cafeteria, or in the dorm. I finally found her outside
behind the main building, huddled on the grass under some trees. Not alone. With
Danny Hutton. I ran up, yelling, "Lisa! Danny! You won't believe what--" before
I saw what they were doing. They were kissing. No, more than kissing. They were
groping. Frantically.
I staggered to a halt, the words still tumbling out of my mouth. Lisa shrank,
glaring at me with murderous fury. "Would you get the hell
out of here?"
she snapped.
I stood there, dumbfounded and humiliated. "But--" I choked, not knowing what
to say next. I was appalled--but was it because she was doing this when the
whole world was at stake, or because I was jealous? And who was I jealous
of--Lisa or Danny?
Lisa seemed unable to say anything else; she just glared. Danny looked away
from both of us, in acute embarrassment. In the end, I fled back to our room,
hardly remembering why I'd been looking for her in the first place.
*
That night, a loud concussion woke us all up and sent us running to the TV.
It took a few minutes for the backup generator to come on.
Someone had managed to blow up the power lines, after all.
*
The lava parts like the Red Sea, a river of fire on either side. I watch,
stunned, as walls of glowing earth rise around me. Can my own belief have such
power? I descend into the earth, flaming magma cocooning me.
Volcanic heat rages against my skin. I feel chaos plucking at me, magnetic
fields streaming through me. I am floating in a firestorm of magma, like a
spirit swimming in the fires of creation. It all begins to blur, then comes back
into focus. It is not the Earth I am floating in, but a lake of luminous red,
with a flame burning brightly at its center. It is an enormous candle, a sunken
lake of wax, the light of the flame glowing through its translucent walls. It
seems impossible.
But not as impossible as the voices.
The human voices, all around me.
*
"Alexandri!"
I heard my name called, and didn't want to answer. I was holed up in my room,
weeping into my blanket. I was no longer six years old, but--what? Thirteen?
Thirty? My breasts hurt, and I'd gotten my period--just after the miserable cold
breakfast we'd all had together, after the loss of the continuum-bubble, after a
nighttime vigil waiting for protesters to invade us, protesters who never came.
I'd complained to Lisa about my cramps--we'd sort of made up, because with the
whole world falling apart, what was the point of staying mad?--and she'd
grunted, "Well, about time it happened to you, too! I don't know how much more
time we'll have! Enjoy it while you can."
I'd stared at her, bewildered. I wasn't even sure exactly what she meant.
After seeing her with Danny, I figured she meant sex. But it was all so alien to
me, so unreal. It wasn't bad enough what was happening to the world--did we have
to grow old in these great, uneven jags?
We were just
kids, damn it!
I heard my name called again. But I didn't want to talk to anyone. If there'd
been any counselors left in this place, I wouldn't have talked to them, either.
I especially didn't want to hear about Lisa and Danny Hutton.
"Alexandri, come see what's happened outside!" It was Lottie Gern, and she
was frantic. She ran back out of my room, and on to Roberta's room, shouting.
I cursed and went outside. I found Lisa and Danny and most of the kids, plus
Mr. Playstead and Miss Jennings, standing on the front lawn. We'd kept sentries
there all night, ready to call out at the first sign of intruders.
The forest had rolled up like an army, right to the front of the
administration building. All the desert-grass-covered mountain slopes, across
the little valley from the school property, were thick with dense woods.
There was no sign of any of the picket lines, or of any human life out there
at all.
*
Faces begin appearing in the candle rim...faces like luminous glass, to
match the voices. Danny...? Roberta...?
*
Later that day, Harvey Snowden came running in yelling that the woods were
dying. That was the first we knew that a total ecological catastrophe had set
in.
"What do you mean, dying?" I yelled back from the rec room/battle center. A
group of us had been trying to
will reality back to normal, without
effect. We'd just been listening to the TV for any mention at all of protesters,
or of
us. But all of our opponents, including Reverend Patwell, seemed to
have vanished from the face of the Earth.
"Dying!" He glared at me as if I were an idiot. "Don't you know what that
means?"
"I know, and you don't have to yell!" I shouted. But his wild, reddened face
scared me. Clearly something had scared
him, and badly. "What did you
see?" I asked, as the others gathered around.
"Dead trees--a
lot of them--all dried out, like it was winter or
something."
"It's not winter. It's May. Or June, maybe," said Lottie Gerns, sneezing for
the hundredth time that hour. Poor kid had come down with allergies, bad, and
the infirmary had no more medicine.
"No foolin'," said Harvey. "But look down in the valley, and you'll see a lot
of trees that don't know that." He waved his delicate feminine hands in the air.
"It's weird. Way down in the valley, it looks like fall--everything's all red
and yellow and brown. But closer up to us, everything's just dead. Shriveled."
"What's it mean?" asked Lottie.
"How the hell do
I know what it means? But it isn't right. And
whatever it is, it's coming from here." He looked at each one of us in turn.
"And it's spreading out into the rest of the world."
*
We learned more about it on the one staticky channel that remained on the
television. The forests were indeed dying, and the effect was spreading rapidly.
A wave of forest and plant death was rippling outward from our location. The
trees first turned fall colors--and then, instead of going into hibernation,
they died.
It had something to do with their chloroplasts. Plants everywhere were losing
their ability to photosynthesize. It was spreading like a virus, or a plague,
but much faster. No one knew what was causing it or how to stop it; but if it
wasn't stopped, it would spread over the whole planet. And if photosynthesis
stopped, well, that was it. Not just for humanity, but for everything that lived
on the Earth. Except maybe for some bacteria that lived on the bottom of the
ocean and lived off nothing but chemicals from volcanic vents. Except for them,
nothing. Not even the cockroaches would survive.
*
Our world was fast disappearing. We could no longer reach anyone by
telephone, because the phone lines were gone. I'd last talked to my parents two
days before, and I felt a terrible emptiness inside; I wondered if they were
even still alive in this reality. Mr. Tea and Mrs. Randolph took a car to
venture down the mountain into town, to try to buy food and learn what was
happening. They didn't return.
The rest of us met to decide what to do.
Mr. Playstead suggested, and we all finally agreed, that we had no choice but
to go out into it, straight into the heart of the entropic fold. The disturbance
seemed to emanate from a bank of fog that kept advancing and retreating within
the woods flanking the school. We had been afraid to venture near it, wary of
its unpredictable effects, fearful of dying for nothing. Without the shaping
amplifiers, we had only our own powers, and those not fully developed. But
everything we'd tried from outside the entropy zone had been futile. Perhaps
from within, we could do more.
It was a terrifying prospect--but as Ashok pointed out in his quiet voice, if
we didn't take the risk now, while the world was still recognizable, then our
own reality-thread would just move farther and farther away. Soon it would be
too late for us to have any chance at all of regaining it. Whatever the risks,
this was our only hope.
Mr. Playstead stood before us, tugging at the frizzy grey beard he'd sprouted
in the last three days. "For what it's worth, I'm going to go with you. I don't
have your skills, but I can't just stay out here waiting for you to return.
Perhaps...my experience will be useful, somehow." He hesitated and glanced at
Miss Jennings, who nodded silently and stepped up beside him. She was not about
to be left behind, either.
Mr. Playstead cleared his throat. "I want to emphasize one thing to you all.
When the shapers were lost, we think it was because of a conflict with the other
shaper teams. That must not happen again. Do you understand what I'm saying?"
There were some murmurs of assent, and some of impatience.
"I'm saying, we have to work in harmony. Whatever we find in there--and I
don't know what it will be, but people--" and his voice was strained as he
searched for words "--if we're going to defeat this thing, we have to do it
together. Any one of you alone might not be strong. But the combined strength of
a dozen shapers, in the fold--" He paused for breath, but then he seemed to run
out of words, and he shrugged. He looked very old to me, and tired.
I turned to look at Lisa, and her eyes met mine for just a moment. She was
scared, but soberly so. I was stunned by the maturity I saw there in her gaze,
and wondered what was wrong with me that I wasn't so grown up myself. I was
still petrified at the thought of not being a kid anymore. And terrified of what
we had to do. I felt an impulse to grab her hand and hold it, the way we had
that first time we'd seen the graduate shapers at work. But almost as if
something in her had sensed my urge, I saw her reach out and find Danny's hand,
on the other side of her. I saw Danny squeeze back. Stung, I looked away.
The decision to go was unanimous. We began joining up to go out in pairs. We
would fan out in force, but each of us would have one primary buddy to watch out
for. I looked at Lisa, and saw her eyes searching Danny's, their hands gripping
each other's tightly. Humiliated all over again, I turned to see who else needed
a partner.
Roberta, eyes full of fear behind her glasses, looked at me questioningly. I
took a breath and nodded back.
*
We all walked into the dying forest together, abreast in a line. There was
very little talk, just the rustle of leaves and the snapping of twigs beneath
our feet. When we came to the wall of fog that marked the boundary, Roberta and
I exchanged final glances.
Mr. Playstead raised his hand, surveying our lineup. "Godspeed," he said.
As one, we stepped through...
And I stepped, alone, into the steaming jungle.
*
We are gathered in the circle of the candle now...like swimmers facing
inward from the edge of a pool. Some of my classmates look like fire elementals,
rising from the molten lake, while others are extrusions of the walls, their
waxen faces bulging. Danny, Roberta, Judy...(isn't Judy dead? I wonder)...
Dzaou, Ashok...not everyone has made it here, but a lot of them have. I don't
see Lisa. Or Harvey, or Mr. Playstead, or Miss Jennings. Those who are here look
human, but clearly all have been through wrenching changes. Some look like
children, still; others like adults tempered by experience; and a few
look...indescribable. Children's faces with ancient eyes... or eyes bright with
youth surrounded by wrinkled and weary skin. I wonder what I look like.
It is a strange reunion: all of us gazing across the glowing lake at each
other, but no one speaking. My feelings are indescribable. I know, without
asking, that each of them has been through a terrifying journey--nine faces,
nine harrowing trips through the corridors of chaos, struggling against...what?
A dark master, on the throne of entropy? Or the meaninglessness of random decay?
I know that we all meant to
do something, but I'm not sure what. I wonder
if any of the others know.
Someone begins singing, softly. It's Judy, I think. She's alive, and I wonder
if it's because she never really died, or because we somehow brought her back to
life. I don't quite recognize the song, but it has the sound of a lullaby. Then
someone else, Danny, starts humming a hymn from church--a familiar tune, though
I don't know the name. It's beautiful, and moving in a way it never was for me
before. On the far side of the circle, half-hidden by the flame, I see the
movements of someone dancing. I think it's Ellie, but can't be sure. But I
imagine that Ellie, who thought Judy into death, has more reason than anyone to
rejoice at her being alive and among us now.
The flame begins flickering brighter, hissing. It seems to be gathering power
from the songs and the dance. The flame, I suddenly realize, is
our
expression, not entropy's. It is a kind of shaping, a way of reaffirming who we
are--of saying,
yes, we are still here, still human. I'm not sure what to
do, but I feel memories bubbling up within me.
A bunny named Maxine appears in the air before me, and a donkey named Eeyore,
and a bear named Berlioz. These are my friends who played with me in my first
days at the reality school, when I was just a child. But there are other
memories that want to come up, too--painful memories that ring with disharmony
in my mind. My selfishness with a shaping...my rejection by Lisa...my
cowardice... I don't want to let them come, don't want my failures and shame
brought into the light. I struggle to hold them in, but I cannot. My shame
begins to bubble out.
The faces of my friends are turning transparent. They take no notice of my
shame. They begin moving about the circle, passing through one another; three or
four of them are singing, their song swelling the flame. I see other people's
memories taking form like ghostly photographs in the air, and I realize that I
am not the only one who has experienced failure. It comforts me a little.
But now everyone seems to be looking
up.
*
New faces, overhead, gaze down from the haze of the outer nothingness...faces
peering like ghosts of haunted pasts.
It takes me a moment to recognize those faces...even Lisa's. She is trapped,
they are all trapped, in a nothingness outside the warmth of the candle flame.
They seem to be prisoners of the devouring entropy, while
we somehow are
regenerating our reality here in the shelter of the candle. There is a gulf
dividing us, and they cannot cross it. They cannot join us.
"Lisa?" I whisper.
Her eyes turn slowly to meet mine.
*
Help me--!
I can hear the plea, unspoken. And I cannot answer it. If they cannot cross
that gulf, how can I help?
I want to call out to her, to tell her to do it herself, to come to this
place where we are gathered, singing. I want to tell her to come out of the
darkness into the fire.
Help me--!
Lisa's eyes, pale and frightened in the sky, will not release mine. But I
don't know how to escape from that darkness any more than she does.
Or do I?
My mind reverberates with memories: of our play together at the school, the
excitement and fear we shared, learning to be shapers.
Shapers. The
memories flash in my mind, fiery with the flux of entropy. Something in that
entropy does not wish me to remember.
We are shapers. I remember her
choosing Danny over me; and even now, I tremble with anger and hurt. So much
time has passed. Must I still be angry? I tremble with the memory of my
aloneness, of the times I sensed her presence across the infinity of space and
time, and could not speak to her.
Was it that I could not, or would not?
We are human. We are shapers.
Out there in the darkness beyond the fire, my friend is trapped. Perhaps she
could come here, into the light of the fire, if there were a space for
her. I am aware of Danny gazing up at her in desire and anguish, and I wonder,
Can he not help her? And without quite knowing why, I know he cannot. It is not
his anger that keeps her out. A space must be made in the circle for her, and it
is not Danny who must make it.
The flame of the candle beats hot with the singing, with cries of,
We are
shapers! We are! coming from the others here with me...and I almost imagine
that I hear the voice of God Himself saying,
I am who I am! from the
flame.
I am suddenly certain that there is no room for any other here, unless
I make it myself. And how can I possibly make room, unless I take Lisa's
place out there, in the void and the darkness, in the chaos?
*
The songs quicken with urgency. A hundred memories shimmer and dance in the
air. I am not alone in my anguish. The others face similar choices. But only
I face
my choice.
A memory looms before me: a monstrous-looking being dying in the depths of
the sea, because I was afraid to save it. Because I was afraid.
I am a shaper.
Help me! whispers a gaze from across the gulf of darkness. Last time, you let
me die.
Electrified with fear, I make the decision. I begin to move away from the
light...rising to challenge the hissing chaos. To trade places with Lisa.
*
The transformation takes forever, hurting hurting hurting. The candlelight
recedes in the darkness, but not quietly. I feel the darkness and light
shuddering, clashing; and I am caught between them, the dark fires of entropy
flashing around me, charging me with despair. Will I die here? Or live in the
darkness forever?
*
I feel Lisa's presence passing me, on its way into the light. My anger burns
all over again. Why have
I given my life, when it was Danny she wanted?
Why?
The chaos swirls around me. I am being swallowed by the anger. I have tried
again to forgive, and failed. I wail into the darkness, "Help me, please!" and
my cry is wrapped in silence.
And yet...
I sense Lisa's presence, not fleeing to the candle and safety, but returning
for me. "Go!" I scream. "Go to him before it's too late! Damn you, go!" And
suddenly my anger disintegrates, and I find myself shuddering with pain, and
crying to Lisa to save herself, and this time I mean it without any anger at
all.
Lisa, go! Why do you think I did this?
In that moment, the distant light flares brighter, reclaiming power from the
darkness. Light and darkness clash in a fury. The energies of chaos flail about
me, defying the light's power to reclaim me. But I have made my peace. My anger
is gone,
my battle is won...and it is the chaos fighting the rearguard
battle. The darkness begins to shrink, hissing.
And I hear Lisa's voice whispering, "Come back to the light, Alexandri, come
back to the light. You are a shaper...we can shape together..."
And the light blooms around us both.
*
It is a breathtaking sight, the flattening out of the entropic fold like an
enormous soap bubble. I can see the candle, with its light and all of its faces,
slowly distorting with the refraction, transmuting into a crazy, stretched-taffy
image. The singing changes, brightening into strange and beautiful harmonies.
And around me, I hear the hiss of Chaos fading...and I hear Lisa calling me,
and Danny.
Whatever I have done, I am not the only one. I hear other voices of
gratitude...other victories claimed alongside mine. I watch as the memories
clustered in the air above the candle slowly come together, like a backwards
explosion.
And the entropic fold flattens and vanishes...
*
"Lisa?" I murmured, blinking, feeling the grass under me. I looked around,
stunned by the bright sunlight on the playground, the sky so blue it made my
eyes ache, the whisper of a breeze cooling my face.
"Alexandra!" she cried. "You're safe! Thank God!" I gazed at her in
wonderment, but before I could ask what
she remembered happening, she
threw herself into my arms, and we hugged and cried like grown women, like best
friends who had not seen each other in years. And then we turned and wept with
Danny, and Roberta, and
Judy...and we all ran laughing across the school
yard to see who else had returned.
*
Most of us made it back, but not all. We never saw Ashok again, or Lottie, or
Harvey, or Mr. Playstead, or Miss Jennings. Mr. Tea and Mrs. Randolph were here
when we returned, and a couple of the counselors. But none of the graduate
shapers.
Why? We have no idea.
I'm sometimes asked if that is fair. And I ask in return, what does
fair have to do with war? We waged war against Chaos and we won. But
those people were casualties. And there will undoubtedly be more casualties, the
next time we have to wage this war. And we will: we have not eliminated entropy
from the universe, though we seem to have closed this rift. Is there still a
micro-singularity floating out there somewhere, waiting to cause more mischief?
No one knows. And so we vow to maintain our watch.
How many others vanished from the Earth that we don't know of? I can't even
guess. I find myself wondering sometimes: didn't I have a younger brother once,
in another reality? Marie doesn't remember, nor do my parents; but they don't
have my perspective, either. Everything to them is as they think it was.
How much has the Earth itself changed? The sun seems a little cooler. I know
that the political climate is different; I remember living in a nation called
"the United States of..." I cannot seem to remember the rest of the name. I
dream sometimes of orbiting space stations glinting in the night sky, and I
think perhaps it is more than just a dream. But we have not yet gone into space,
and the sky is full of stars, and the two moons, but no spaceships.
Variable persistence of memory. I feel my own memories slowly slipping
and blurring, and I wonder--will these words, tomorrow, accurately reflect
reality as it is then?
I can only guess at my parents' feelings at seeing their child a grown
adult--and not just an adult, but an adult tempered by fire. A soldier. I am
physically and emotionally almost their age, perhaps even older in some ways,
and they don't quite understand why. But with Lisa and some of the others, I sit
on the oversight committee of the Reality School, training those who will follow
us in maintaining the integrity of our existence.
And I ask myself: What qualifies
me for this job? What qualifies
any of us to decide what reality is the real, or right, one?
I wonder who I have become, and I think of a little girl who rode a
fusion-powered turbocruiser into the school yard not so long ago, jumping up and
down with glee.
That was only a few months ago, wasn't it?
A few months ago...by the calendar.
An eternity.
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1114
"Reality School: In the Entropy Zone," by Jeffrey A. Carver
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Reality School: In the Entropy Zone
by
Jeffrey A. Carver
First published in SCIENCE FICTION AGE, March
1995.
Copyright © 1995 Jeffrey A. Carver
All rights reserved. This work is the literary property of the
author and a part of his livelihood. You are free to download this story for
your own enjoyment. You may print a copy, if you like, for your own use,
including sharing it with friends. You may not post it elsewhere on the
web. Permission to distribute for any except personal use is explicitly
denied.
Reality School: In the Entropy Zone
As we walk through the entropic boundary, I expect to feel...I don't know
what...some startling physical sensation. Instead, it's more like walking into
the shadow of a towering building. A draft of cooler air passes through my
blouse.
Then everything changes...
*
Looking back, it seems almost impossible to believe. Reality School, from
matriculation to retirement, was supposed to fill seven of my best years--years
of learning and challenge, and perhaps even occasionally danger. The time I
actually spent cannot be measured; it was a time in which the world almost
changed beyond recognition--and I changed into something, someone, I hardly
know.
*
For my first day at school, my parents had gotten us up at dawn and piled me
and my older sister into our ancient station wagon, Woodie. We drove for a long
time, before turning into the entrance to the school. I remember this clearly,
even though I was a girl only six and a half at the time. My parents told me
later that I'd complained so much about the length of the trip that they very
nearly turned around and drove me back home. They wouldn't have, of course; they
knew how important the reality school was--not just to us, but to the whole
world. Why else would they have put me through all that testing, and cried when
I was accepted?
I remember this, too: my complaints vanished the instant we passed through
the reality school's continuum-bubble. A great shock wave hit the hood of the
car and flashed past the windows in rainbow colors, and suddenly everything
around us changed. Everything--including Woodie. Our station wagon was
transformed from a sagging road-barge into a shining fuselage, powered by
glowing fusion thrusters and floating on a magnetic cushion. I screamed with joy
and amazement, deafening my mom and dad. Marie was screaming just as loudly. At
the same moment, the school grounds changed from scorched desert grass to a
fairyland setting of whipped cream lawns, cotton candy trees, and gingerbread
buildings. I hopped up and down with delight.
It was all window-dressing, of course--not just for the kids, but for the
parents, who were preparing to leave their children with a school that few of
them could really hope to understand. The parents believed in the school's
mission, or they wouldn't have been there; but it probably helped to have the
special effects to ease the transition. The effects had little to do with the
real function of the school, of course, but it would take us a while to
understand that.
Daddy drove up to the parking area, where a centaur with an armband directed
him to a space that looked as if it had been saved just for us. We all piled
out, Daddy warning me not to touch the fusion thrusters, whose glow was slowly
fading to chrome silver. We had a good laugh, walking around our gleaming
spaceship-car. Then a team of whinnying ponies drew up, pulling a cart for my
bags. We loaded the cart and headed into the administration building.
*
I have no memory of registration, but I vividly recall the "reality-view"
posters that glowed in the walls, and the clots of strange kids gathered around
gawking at them. The posters looked like moving holograms, and at first I
thought they were just pictures made by artists. It turned out they were actual
images of reality-threads that "shapers," as graduates of the school were
called, had encountered and safely sealed off from our timeline. Marie and I
gaped at a world where everyone lived in clouds, where the whole
world
seemed to be clouds, and nothing looked quite solid, including the people.
"Wow," I said, feeling the kind of thrill that I got from my favorite stories.
Then we turned to an image filled with stalactites and stalagmites that
flickered and slowly changed color as if under a black light. That one stumped
us, until an older boy stepped up and explained that it was microscopic metal
crystals: a world where everything was solid-state, and all life took the form
of electrons and photons. Phew, I thought. Why bother?
The boy, though, seemed to actually
like the idea, the way I'd liked
the clouds. He grinned, and told me his name was Ashok. And I began to wonder if
kids like him were about to become my friends.
*
It was only a little later, at the dorm, that Mom and Dad and Marie had to
say good-bye to me. I flashed from giddy pleasure to tears, and starting
bawling, "I don't want to stay! I don't
want to! I want to go
home!"
"Alexandra, we've been planning this a long time," my dad started to say, all
rationally. Only he couldn't get it out; he started crying, too, and turned away
so I wouldn't see. You'd think it would have been Mom crying, but she was the
one who tried to calm me down, "Honey, the tests said you were one in a million.
Now, you go show them how you can do this! It's
so important--"
No no no I don't care...!
That was when the school's departure routine kicked in. My dorm room suddenly
blossomed out into a beautiful little sun porch, where some of my favorite
characters--Peter Rabbit and Eeyore and Maxine the bunny and Berlioz the bear
were all having tea together, and one after another, they beckoned me to join
them. That broke the cycle of tears, for the moment; it was enough to make me
let my parents go.
And from then on, life was never to be the same...not even in the ways we'd
expected.
*
I am utterly alone--in a steaming jungle. Animals shriek in the distance.
Where has everyone gone? "Rober-r-r-ta?" I cry, shivering. "Lisa? Danny?" I
stumble back the way I came, searching for them. But where the entropic boundary
stretched a moment ago, a jungle now goes on forever.
I teeter on the edge of panic. If I'm to find my world again, I can only
plunge ahead. I have a job to do. An adult's job, even if I am only six and a
half. I have already grown beyond my calendar age.
But I seem to have forgotten what exactly I am supposed to do.
*
Lisa Hoopner, my roommate, became my best friend right from day one. She was
just a few months older than me, and one of the things I liked about her was her
laugh, which was a kind of whoop that came out at the funniest times. Another
thing I liked was her
Bahhston accent. We didn't talk with accents in
California, I said; and every time I said it, she gave a whoop and talked to me
in a bubbling
upbeat voice that was supposed to sound like people from
around here. I didn't think it sounded much like me, but it made me laugh
anyway.
Lisa and I were both pretty homesick, but it helped having each other to be
friends with. For one thing, we both liked Berlioz and Maxine, and we both
thought Mr. Playstead, the head teacher, was nice but kind of stuffy, and we
both liked Mrs. Randolph because she made us laugh, and we both thought the
cafeteria was awesomely yucky. Once we'd agreed on all that, everything else
seemed pretty minor. Oh, and we both liked Danny Hutton, a boy from Iowa who we
could tell was putting on a brave front, even though he was obviously even more
homesick than we were.
Most of the kids were pretty nice. We had a lot of counseling sessions, some
by ourselves, and some in groups where we talked about the things that we liked,
and the things that scared us. That helped us get to know each other, I guess. I
understand now that they'd selected us not just for our imaginations, but for a
certain sociability and a certain toughness of mind, not that I would have put
it that way then. They didn't want any wild-eyed or selfish individualists
getting hold of the reins of reality. It was risky enough with the people they
did choose.
The teachers had lots of activities to help us get to know each other--games
and stories and plays. But the main activity was learning to
shape
reality.
*
In the beginning we shaped storybook landscapes and scenes. Try to imagine a
roomful of six-, seven-, and eight-year-olds bubbling with imagination, perched
under strange helmets of silver and glass, with visions of stories taking form
right before their eyes. (None of our creations were permanent, of course--and
they were strictly confined within the shielded training rooms. But if a leakage
had occurred, the continuum- barriers around the school grounds would have kept
anything we did from reaching the world outside.)
We learned right away that our mind's eye views of such magic places as Oz,
Middle Earth, Peter Rabbit's forest, and Barsoom differed wildly from one
another. Sometimes that caused arguments, which we were supposed to settle among
ourselves. But other times we just had fun building one vision upon another,
castle upon cloud upon ocean upon desert--until our landscapes grew into
something that was as much
us as it was the stories that had inspired us.
We were learning to create. Later, we would learn to
choose realities
from the crazy chaos that the universe offered up to us. But in those days, we
were consumed with
building.
We were also learning to share...
One day Lisa and I worked together on a special play cottage made of clouds.
It was delicate, puffy, and ethereal--and it had lightning bolts flashing across
the doorways, and only Lisa and I could make the lightning go away to let us in.
Even so, we made sure the point got across by patrolling the area in our
helmets, telling everyone else to stay out. Mr. Playstead came upon us and
planted himself in my path with a scowl. "Alexandra," he said sternly, "this
space is for everyone, not just for people who appoint themselves queen for a
day."
I was stunned, and suddenly ashamed. I didn't know quite what he meant by
"queen for a day," but I
knew we were supposed to share our creations
with everyone, and not keep them to ourselves. I felt my face get hot as I
looked at Lisa. Mr. Playstead hadn't said anything to her yet. She looked away
guiltily. I knew we were both in for a special counseling session later, after
Mr. Playstead reported this.
I was ready to let the cottage dissolve back into a cloud of smoke, taking me
with it. But Lisa was quicker. She caught Tommy Harte's eye, and with a look
invited him into the cottage. When Mr. Playstead saw that, he nodded
approvingly. Lisa cheered up right away. Before I knew what was happening, she'd
opened the cottage into a big pavillion and told
everyone to come in. I
stood there, burning with humiliation, as Mr. Playstead watched Lisa being so
generous.
I stalked away, refusing to look at her. Finally, I sat down in a far corner
of the room to make shapings by myself. The only trouble was, no ideas came.
Nothing at all. I was getting madder by the minute. I heard Lisa come up behind
me, and I glanced her way sullenly, ready to say something nasty.
"Meow."
She was holding a pair of little grey tiger kittens, offering one to me. I
glowered. But I took one of the kittens anyway, and after Lisa had gone back to
play, I hugged it carefully. It purred and strutted in my lap, and as I petted
it, I began to feel better.
When the counselor asked me about it later (in my regular session--Mr.
Playstead didn't send me in for a special visit, after all), I told her that I
knew I shouldn't have done that with the private cottage-making, and I wouldn't
do it again. She peered at me through her big, wide glasses and said, "You mean
you've learned something about not being selfish?"
I shrugged, uncomfortable under her stare. "I guess so."
Dr. Shelby nodded carefully. "Have you forgiven Lisa for being quicker, and
cleverer about changing what she was doing when you both got caught?"
The question surprised me. I didn't think Lisa
had been caught. But
yes, the kitten had helped me forgive her.
I nodded.
"You know, it's a pretty tall order to learn not to think just of yourself,"
Dr. Shelby observed. "But this thing between you and Lisa
could be a
valuable lesson. If the time ever comes when you have to reach deep inside
yourself for strength, deeper than you think you
can reach, I hope it
will help you to remember this."
I stared back at her in alarm. Although she said it nicely, I could feel the
weight of seriousness behind her words. Anything that would make me remember
this in a good way, I thought, was something I didn't want to face. But I
didn't say that; I just nodded.
Dr. Shelby peered at me. The light glinted off her glasses as she looked at
the clock and said our session was over.
*
I walk, alone and lonely, through the pellucid green light of the jungle.
After a time, I step through a hedge...and my surroundings change utterly, to a
world of astonishing precipices and ravines, illumined by lightning flashes.
Another reality, joined to mine like a soap bubble? Or is this my world, after
entropy has ravaged it like a marauding beast?
With a shiver, I back away from a terrifying precipice. "Where have you all
gone?" I whisper to my missing friends. "What am I supposed to do here, all
alone?" Even as I ask, I know the answer: Find the reality-thread that belongs
to us, and bring it back to our world.
There is no one here--just a few winged creatures, soaring off the cliffs,
pterodactyllike. Still, I feel--I cannot say how--that Lisa is out there, not in
this place of cliffs and ravines, maybe, but somewhere, across some gulf that I
cannot even see. I cry out to her in a tiny voice, barely a whisper.
I struggle to think. It is not just the world gone mad; it is me, too. I am
no longer the person I was, not a six-year-old girl, or even a twelve-year-old.
I look down at my lanky, bony body and flex my leathery wings. What have I
turned into?
I peer down into a ravine. Lights twinkle in the darkness below. Cities? I
feel a surge of hope. Perhaps down there are people, some connection...
I launch myself from the cliff.
*
We grew up fast in the reality school, and not just fast, but
differently from our sisters and brothers on the outside. I guess our
parents knew that could happen, and thought it worth the risk. What we had to do
was so dreadfully important, and it could only be done by people who started
very, very young. People with plastic minds, who could learn to visualize
(
discern, they called it) different levels of reality without blocking
out what they saw with denial. People with blazing imaginations, without the
layers of preconceptions that adults have, who could be trained to pick out
entropic changes at a distance, and visualize appropriate responses.
That's adult-talk. Sorry; what they needed was young people with unbridled
hope. People like us.
We learned about this gradually, over time, absorbing our mission not so much
through our heads as through our pores. When we graduated, it would be up to us
to "maintain the order." Even now that sounds ponderous to me--almost
pretentious. A few years ago, it would have been preposterous. But of course
that was before the entropic rift opened, before the Earth became a place where
reality "fluttered" from day to day, and moment to moment.
*
The first time we got to see real shapers at work was, undoubtedly, the
turning point when I really began to feel in my bones what we were doing. The
teachers led us single-file into a shielded observation room that overlooked the
actual Reality Shaping Center. This was where the best of us would work, after
graduation. It was the only such center in America, one of three in the world.
We were electrified with excitement, and whispered and hissed to each other
while our teachers frowned over the group. I sat between Lisa and Roberta
Kisnet, and we held each other's hands tightly, trying to keep from bursting
with anticipation.
The shapers were four or five years older than us, which seemed a lifetime.
They wore silver helmets which, surprisingly, were smaller and simpler-looking
than our training helmets. A few of them walked around, but mostly they stayed
seated, their gloved hands waving in the air as they gestured and probed at
whatever realities they were viewing in their closed universes.
They were not actually
journeying in other realities, we were
told--but viewing them through tiny windows opened in the continuum by the
shaping amplifiers. They were watching for reality-threads that threatened to
intrude upon our own...like radar watching for enemy airplanes.
We saw the other realities on monitors, along with the adult supervisors.
About half the center was filled with consoles, where the supervisors
coordinated everything that was happening here with the centers at CERN and
Kyoto--a lot of frowning adults with headsets studying computer consoles. But
the other side, where the shapers were working...
wow.
We saw a dramatic episode almost right away. On one of the shapers' monitors,
a strange scene came into focus: a mountain range melting under a big red sun. I
stared open mouthed, as a teacher explained. It was
our sun, diseased and
swollen, devouring our Earth--in another reality. I sat frozen, not sure whether
to be fascinated or terrified. We heard the voices of the supervisors calling
additional shapers into the circuit, and explaining exactly what was wrong.
"...We've got to calm that sun down, give us a nice cool breeze...that's
it...and hold the mountains together with your hands...." And we saw the
shapers stirring in their seats, turning to one another and working together
with murmurs of agreement. We saw the mountains being held in place by ghostly,
virtual hands--and we saw icy breaths cooling the sun.
I scarcely understood what I was seeing; but the image- crafting of three or
four shapers, working in harmony, was pushing away that dangerous
reality-thread. There was something almost mystical, and very personal, about
the shapers' joined struggle against the forces of entropy. The scientific staff
didn't explain it that way; they talked of
synergistic field-
configurations and
Lang-Lawrence contractions. But as far as the
shapers were concerned, there was an
enemy out there. And by creating
their images in concert, they were able to defeat the enemy, or at least to push
it back out of range.
Were they actually
cooling that bloated sun in the other reality,
changing what existed in another thread, or were they just weaving a spell to
prevent the thread from intruding on our own? In a practical sense, it didn't
matter. What mattered was that they were closing off the danger from our own
world, keeping the enemy at bay however they could. It was like virtual
reality--except that any one of those threads could have come swirling up out of
the netherrealms of chaos to overwhelm our world, if the shapers had not been
there with their fingers in the dike, manning the ramparts, battening down the
hatches of reality.
I didn't know then that the really dramatic perils were the easiest to detect
at a distance, and the easiest to defend against. Most of the dangers were more
insidious--shifts in climate, or in ecological balances, or even changes in
human history. The shapers often sensed a change--and then had to wait, like
bloodhounds on leashes, while the supervisors conferred about what courses of
action to follow, or even about which reality-thread was the right one. There,
we learned, lay the subtlest perils to our world.
We beginning students were far more interested in the vivid dangers. To our
satisfaction, before we left the center that day, we saw spidery aliens marching
through the streets of St. Louis, enclosing buildings in strange cocoons. As
one, we felt a great, gasping pulse of fear before the aliens faded in a shimmer
of heat--as a group of shapers focused their thoughts together and wove a web of
protection that banished the aliens from our reality.
When our observation session was over, I could hardly move. I was trembling
in my seat, and my fingers were white from clenching Lisa's hand so hard. I
looked at Lisa and she looked wide-eyed back at me.
I had never in my life been so scared. Or so excited.
*
I soar, spiraling down into the darkness of the ravine, praying that the
twinkling jewels below me are civilization. I am breathless with fear. What have
I turned into, that I soar on leathery wings? Am I not still human?
"Yes, I am!" I cry, and with that, my wings are gone, and I am falling. The
sparkling points below me are not cities but...stars. My heart pounds. I want to
scream, but my breath will not leave my chest.
Is anyone else alive in the great void of stars wheeling around me? "Lisa?" I
whisper. "Roberta? Danny? Ashok?" For a heartstopping moment I see their faces
in the stars, luminous faces. I imagine that they are calling out to me. But I
am helpless to answer. There is a power blocking me, a darkness called Chaos. I
imagine the entire population of the Earth, all of humanity, floating out there,
calling to me.
I am supposed to save them.
Weightless, I fall...
*
We continued to spend a lot of time with the counselors, doing group
exercises and letting off steam and trying to understand the meaning to
us of what we were training for. But I don't think, really, that there
was any way they could truly prepare us for a job that was, essentially, to hold
the world in our hands.
Eventually the gravity of our teachers' words began to reverberate like bass
drum beats--not so much in the classrooms as in our minds:
"...the sorting of entropic realities demands the talents of children your
age..."
"...must do what older people, even experts, can't..."
"...when adults try to focus through these windows, it turns to mud...adults
resist...we're never sure, the layers of ambiguity are too great..."
"...as you learn to
feel the difference between realities... must
learn wisdom, yet through a lens of innocence..."
"...might last until you're thirteen...only one has worked past fourteen, by
the calendar...."
By the calendar. We were already aware that we were growing older at
an accelerated rate, our intellects and emotions veering ahead in an alarming,
zigzag fashion. It all had to do with entropy.
I never really understood entropy, not the way the scientists talked about
it. We learned about disorder, of course, and something called "the laws of
thermodynamics," which were undergoing some late revision. It might have been
the work of theorists that had brought us to this plight in the first place. Not
that they'd meant to; they were just fooling around with fusion implosions and
micro-singularities, and trying to learn how to control entropic folds in
space-time...not on a world-wide scale, but on a quantum level, a subatomic
level. What harm could there possibly be in that? But somehow there
was
harm in it; somehow they caused, or at least allowed entry to, the rift that put
us where we are now.
Many of them denied that. It was entropic drift, they theorized--a natural
phenomenon, swirling just below the apparent calm of our spacetime continuum. It
may have been chance that it intruded into our world when it did; and without
the developments that made the shaping amplifiers possible, we would have been
defenseless against it. But whether it was a natural phenomenon or an artificial
one was irrelevant now. Either way, it threatened to destroy our world as we
knew it. Not that it
meant to; it wasn't living; it didn't know us,
didn't care about us one way or another. It just followed the laws of physics.
But the laws of physics changed, from one reality thread to the next.
What the shapers had to know was how to sort through the many possible
realities that floated like tangled seaweed in the ocean of entropy, and how to
follow the one strand that belonged to our timeline and our lives. Not just our
lives personally, but the life of the world. The job of the shapers was to
preserve reality, guided by the supervision staff, according to guidelines
agreed upon by the joint policy committees...
"...what you will be doing is a privilege, and a responsibility. You will be
honored for doing what no one else on Earth can do..."
*
Not everyone honored what we were doing, not at all. Many people were only
vaguely aware of the reality schools at all, and didn't much care about us one
way or another--except maybe to object to the government funding that kept us
going. They thought--I don't know, that we were doing nothing real at
all--casting illusions in the air, mirages, New Age miracles, who knew what for,
maybe just for our own entertainment.
How
could they believe that, when we all knew--despite the best
efforts of the shaping centers--that changes were inevitably creeping into our
continuum?
Were people just stupid? At first I thought so. Later, I understood better.
It's called
variable persistence of memory. Simply put: different people
remember the past differently...for a while. Every time our reality-thread
changes, there is a collective adjustment of memory. But not all at once, or at
the same time. An extreme example: If I wake up one morning, remembering that
Unimerica has fifty-seven states, and the capital is in Toronto, and you
remember that it's only forty- seven states, and the capital is in
Washington--and the history books at the library disagree with each
other--that's variable persistence of memory. A few weeks later, we'll all
remember the same thing. But which way will it be? And which was the original?
The staffs at the shaping centers are supposed to know, but their memories
change, too. So whom do we believe?
What a lot of people believed was: nothing has changed.
My example may have been a poor one. Nothing that dramatic had happened, that
we knew of. A more realistic example might have been something like this: a
subtle shift in global climate, or in population patterns of the tsetse fly.
Then you have the supervisory staffs arguing over what
was, or what
should be.
And it's those questions that set off the people who opposed us. They were in
the minority, we were told--but they were everywhere. We were opposed by
elements of the religious right, the humanist left, the Islamic center, the
Russian capitalist resurgency, the South African whoknowswhats, and a whole lot
more that I've mercifully forgotten. Some of them opposed us because they didn't
have shaping centers of their own, and they felt disadvantaged; others opposed
us because we were "treading where mankind wasn't meant to tread."
We were just kids. We were too young to understand--thank God, or Allah, or
our lucky stars, take your pick--that there were groups that would have liked
nothing better than to close us down, or even kill us if necessary. The
extremists were a small minority, and we were well insulated from them.
The plain truth was, most people didn't understand what it was that we
did--or why. Some thought that we deliberately
changed reality, a bunch
of meddlers altering the natural order of things according to our own whims.
Early on, before the U.N. committee was formed and guidelines established, there
might have been those who tried that; but those people were stopped after they
tried to eradicate the mosquito, and changed a hundred ecologies by accident.
No, we at the reality school were closely supervised; and the coordination with
the Euro and Japanese groups was intense, with several major universities
involved. There were the occasional policy disagreements, but those were minor.
Or so we were told.
At the time, they didn't say too much to us about the rumors of other nations
hurrying to build their own shaping centers, outside the control of the U.N.
committee. Or about the bombing in Baghdad of what was supposed to have been a
munitions plant, but nobody really believed it...
The hardest opponents for
us to hear about were the ones like Reverend
Patwell and his church, right in the next county, who claimed, not that we were
favoring American interests over others, but that we were defying God's will by
imposing our order onto His.
That was nonsense, of course. As far as I was concerned, we were helping God
hold His world together. Okay,
maybe humans had caused this mess in the
first place. But without us--or people like us--who knew what might have become
of our world, our reality?
I can talk about it with a certain clarity now, because I've seen what
happened when it went wrong. I've seen what happened when the school, the
neighborhood, the whole fix on the reality that was our world began to dissolve.
*
The voices and faces have faded. I sense a planetary surface beneath me,
and the hazy glow of an atmosphere. I have come to rest, pressed against a rocky
surface, stars twinkling overhead.
Where am I what am I who am I...?
I live I breathe I think I feel...
In the gloom of an unearthly dawn, I curl my fingers in front of me, and I
can just make out their webbed, bony shape.
Terrified, I shut my eyes, and imagine a place of darkness where Chaos lives
and reaches out to destroy this universe...and I begin to feel that this Chaos
has needs and wants of its own, and it is insatiable. And somehow it is testing
me.
I hear a rumbling groan...of something living, something in pain. I stand and
look around. I am on a tiny island in the midst of a green sea.
I am halfway up a small, rocky knoll, and I climb it on my webbed hands and
feet. I peer over a ledge and see a bloated, toadlike monster, bellowing to the
sky, bellowing...
*
It was May, and out on the playground some girls were practicing unamplified
"makings"--little cloud castles floating along the hedgerow separating our
school from a convent on the grounds behind us. There wasn't much that could
happen with unamped makings; it was more like projecting little holograms, using
the outdoor landscape programs. Except this time something did happen--something
terrible.
I was in the cafeteria with Lisa and Roberta. We heard the yelling and ran
outside. Across the playing field, kids and teachers were gathered around
someone on the ground. Some of the kids were screaming.
"Who is it? Who is it?" Someone was running beside us-- Tommy Harte, I think.
"You children stay clear!" shouted Mr. Playstead, turning to wave us back. We
crept close enough to see that they were all gathered around the still form of a
child. At first we couldn't see who it was. Then Lisa cried, "It's Judy Keller!
It's Judy! Is she
dead?"
Of course she isn't dead, I thought. But then I took a good look at Mr.
Playstead's face--and I knew at once that she
was dead. For a long,
breathless moment, I wasn't so much scared as curious: Why was Judy dead? What
could she have done that made her dead?
And then I felt fear and grief rush over me, in a great crashing wave.
It soon became obvious that the teachers were wondering the same thing I had
wondered. Mr. Playstead raised his voice through the yelling and confusion.
"Kids,
listen up! This is
important. I want you all to stop any
shapings
right now--even little ones. And I want to know, did anyone
think, or imagine--even for a second,
even in play--that Judy might die?"
"No!" "No!" We all frantically proclaimed our innocence, terrified of being
blamed for Judy's death. All, that is, except poor Ellie Cottman, who burst into
tears.
"Ellie?" Mr. Playstead asked, straining to make his voice gentle when you
could tell he wanted to scream. "Did you...think about Judy dying? Or have some
sort of
feeling about it?"
Ellie nodded, sobbing. "Playing, we were only playing--" she babbled, and I
looked at Lisa and she looked at me, agreeing with our eyes that
we would
never have done something so awful, and at the same time knowing that we could
just as easily have done it. Then we all had to get out of the way, because the
school infirmary people were there with stretchers and emergency gear, and they
were trying to resuscitate Judy and they wanted us out of the way
now.
I had a fleeting thought that maybe I could do something to help Judy--maybe
some sort of a shaping that would restore her to life. It wasn't that I wanted
to be a hero or anything; but I was so scared at this new thing, death, that had
invaded our school that I would have done anything to drive it out. I was about
to raise my hand and tell Mr. Playstead, when he seemed to sense my thought--or
maybe what a lot of us were thinking. He suddenly barked, "Whatever happens, I
don't want any of you trying to
think Judy back alive! Is that
understood?"
He turned, glaring, and that was when I saw the ground shifting and bubbling
around the stretcher that Judy was lying on, and I realized that someone had
already tried to do just what I was thinking. I followed Lisa's gaze and saw
that it was Danny Hutton--you could tell by the crestfallen look on his freckled
face--and Mr. Playstead probably saw it, too, but he didn't say anything. He
began herding us forcefully toward the buildings, saying over and over, "We have
to find out what happened...my God, what could have happened...?"
*
The beast looks up at me with fiery eyes, its breath hissing like a great
steam engine. Behind it, something is thrashing in the water. The beast roars in
anguish and scrabbles helplessly at the edge of the cliff overlooking the sea.
The water erupts. A second creature bursts into the air, struggling...and
crashes under again. The first beast claws helplessly at the ledge, and glares
up at me with eyes that are not threatening, but pleading.
I look at my webbed hand, and shudder with understanding. No no no no...I'm
terrified of deep water...the thing is huge, how could I possibly...?
The creature's roar shatters my thoughts. I don't know this creature,
don't want
to know it, don't know the rules here, don't know what is
happening.
Through my cowardly shame I see, or imagine, a squirming patch of darkness in
the sky. Entropy. Chaos. Feeding on my fear, my inaction.
I climb awkwardly over the stones, scuttling past the creature, burned by the
pain in its eyes. I gaze down and see its mate, a blotch deep in the green
water, sinking.
I hesitate a long moment before I leap.
*
By the time they got us all gathered for a meeting in the school auditorium,
I knew that the world had been altered in some new and terrible way, that
something had torn us loose from reality's moorings. The meeting was hopeless,
just a lot of whispered conferences among the teachers and school officials.
Once in a while they turned to the kids to comfort us, or ask something, or
sometimes just to gaze helplessly over the room. They admonished us not to use
our powers until they learned what was going on. We could smell their fear. They
didn't know what had gone wrong, but the implications clearly went beyond the
death of one student, however awful and shocking that might have been.
I sat in my seat, cloaked in a strange, foggy calm. Once in a while, the
numbing fog swirled, and I trembled in helpless terror. But whatever had
happened, the older shapers would take care of it; they had to. We should just
sit tight until they found out what had gone wrong, and fixed it. That's what
the teachers kept saying, and we tried to believe it. Lisa, beside me, chewed
her knuckles, and cried softly over and over, "Judy's dead, Alexandri...she's
dead...Alexandri, what are we going to do...what are we going to do...?" I don't
think she actually looked at me once the whole time; she didn't look at anybody.
Despite the warnings, a lot of kids were having trouble keeping their
imaginations in check. The auditorium kept trembling with little quakes of
suppressed shapings, imaginary beings and objects flickering in the air, then
vanishing. The teachers must have announced a dozen times that we were about to
move into the shielded training rooms, where even our random shapings could have
no permanent effect. The first few times, I felt reassured--
something was
being done--but there was always some delay, and we stayed in the auditorium
while maintenance people rushed about trying to put up temporary shields.
The teachers themselves were looking more and more panicky, and we all wished
that we could
hear them talking among themselves--and I guess someone
finally wished hard enough to make it happen. We suddenly heard Mr. Tea's voice
boom out into the auditorium as he whispered to Miss Jennings: "--A NEW ENTROPIC
FOLD--THE SHAPING CENTER IS
GONE! IT'S VANISHED COMPLETELY! CERN AND
KYOTO, TOO. WE HAVE NO ONE LEFT BUT THE STUDENTS. GOD HELP US!"
And that was when Mr. Tea realized that
everyone was hearing him. He
closed his mouth and turned pale, as the auditorium fell dead silent.
*
The sea crashes around my ears. I am breathing water. I blink, and my
vision clears. This is the element my body was made for, not the harsh rocks of
the island.
I cry out, and hear my voice booming out in great echoes over the seafloor.
Rolling, I peer downward and see the base of the atoll slanting into the shadowy
depths, and far below, the drowning creature. I plummet in pursuit. By the time
I come alongside it, I am swimming in a twilight world. I hook the being's arm,
circle around it, and find myself squarely before its eyes--dark and sightless.
I have come too late...I waited too long, too fearful...
I release her body to sink into the abyss. And the grey of the undersea world
closes in around me.
*
No need to belabor the bedlam, the near breakdown of order in the school, the
disappearance of the counselors and most of the teachers.
No need to belabor our panic, when four of
us vanished, swallowed by a
wall of fog that materialized in the courtyard, neatly dividing us as we were
walking back, in exhaustion, to our dorms.
No need to belabor our helplessness.
Had one of
us somehow caused this? There was no reason to think so.
And yet... Judy had died, and I could think of many times when I'd thought mean
things about one or another of my classmates, or teachers--and any one of those
times might have caused the same thing to happen.
Outside the school, it took a few days for the world to catch up with what
had happened. What Mr. Tea had said was true, but, as we soon learned, only part
of the truth. Apparently a
new shaping center had come on line, somewhere
in China, without any coordination with our center or the ones at CERN or Japan.
The result was some sort of conflict--
disharmony, they called it--in the
shapings from one center to the next. No one knew exactly what the conflict was,
but the result was that all four centers vanished, shapers and all, into a newly
created entropic fold. And our school hovered right at the brink of the fold.
The continuum-bubble provided some protection for the outside, but ripple
effects were being felt all over the world: freak storms, unexplained computer
failures, bridges collapsing...and all being blamed on us.
The political uproar was incredible.
A lot of people called for us to be shut down at once. We weren't really
doing anything at that point, since it was just the students and a
handful of teachers left, and no shaping amplifiers; but that didn't stop them
from calling for our heads. The school perimeter was physically sealed off,
though we still had electronic communication, and we were dependent upon
supplies and electric power from the outside. Security for the power lines was
beefed up right away. The integrity of the continuum- barrier was essential; it
was the only way to keep whatever terrible thing had swallowed our people from
swallowing the rest of the world, too.
The scientists said that the new fold in the entropic zone appeared to have
produced a strange doubling over of the continuum-bubble that enclosed our
reality school. Something similar must have happened in China and Japan and at
CERN, but there the folds had closed in upon themselves and vanished, swallowing
the shaping centers whole. The training school at CERN had vanished, too; the
one in Japan, located farther from the shaping center, was reportedly safe, but
isolated from the fold. Only we were poised at the very edge of the entropic
boundary.
There were rumors that a manmade singularity floated somewhere deep in the
entropy zone, wreaking havoc, but our scientists said there was no evidence for
that. To us kids, it was a meaningless question; we just knew that what was
happening was bad. And there seemed nothing to be done about it. We were the
only ones left. But what could
we do--especially without the amps and our
helmets?
Someone pointed out that Judy's death had happened just
after the
disappearance of our shapers--the result of a stray thought on the part of a
student. So whatever had gone wrong, it meant that we students could exert more
power than before. And that meant...bad things could happen even without the
amps. But perhaps
good things could happen without them, too.
That thought gave us hope. Not much, but it was something.
*
The days that followed brought ever more frightening news from the outside
world: earthquakes, civil unrest, solar flares, threats of war. There was little
doubt now that it was connected to the entropic folding. At least people
believed now that what we did here at the school was real. And it was some
consolation that the rest of the world still
existed. One of my
nightmares was that the entropic bubble would just swallow the Earth whole, the
way it had swallowed the shapers, like a serpent devouring its tail.
Like everyone else, I phoned my parents and sister, and afterward cried for
hours. My parents wished they'd never enrolled me at the school, and they wanted
to take me home. But that was impossible, of course--and not just because of the
continuum-bubble that enclosed us. Outside our perimeter, we were now
effectively quarantined--not by the civil authorities, but by a growing army of
protesters.
We first learned about it on the TV news. The Robert Patwell church had
gotten to us first and formed a human blockade around the school property. They
were praying and singing, and Reverend Patwell himself was out there with a
microphone calling on us to give up our pact with the devil. Never before had I
seen such naked hatred directed at
me. Other groups were out there, too,
maneuvering for position. Environmental groups were cheek-by-jowl with foreign
agents, claiming we were destroying the world in the name of protecting the
American way of life. Some were making noises about cutting off our power and
water. Fortunately for our sanity, the school grounds were wooded
inside
the perimeter, and that kept the protesters mostly out of sight. We could just
see one clot of them, way down at the end of our driveway.
We watched a big argument on TV between Reverend Patwell's people and some
nuns from the Catholic convent over the hill from us. Apparently the nuns
thought we were a hazard to God's Kingdom, too; but they thought we were
victims, not perpetrators. They didn't go around using names like "servants of
the darkness." And they didn't take too kindly to Patwell leading his throngs
over the convent grounds like an army invasion, setting up their human chain.
Once Patwell had done it, all the others followed suit. The sheriff's department
was out there, and the National Guard, and we were grateful to see men with
rifles standing watch under the high-tension power lines that fed our bubble.
"Jesus," said Harvey Snowden in disgust. He was one of the older boys, but
he'd gotten too close to the wall of fog, and it had changed him. He now looked
like a scrawny twenty-year-old woman. It scared the rest of us just to look at
him. "Isn't it bad enough, without all these religious nuts going at it with
each other?" Harvey was an atheist who wished they'd all go away.
That set off Danny Hutton, whose dad was a Congregational minister. Reverend
Hutton had visited the school chapel once and preached to us about how the
reality school was a special kind of service to God--and if the scientists who
had gotten us into this were guilty of meddling pride, so were certain church
organizations. I tried to take comfort in those words now, but it wasn't easy.
"Not everyone who
believes is crazy like
them!" Danny snarled. He
stormed away from the TV--mad at Harvey, mad at Reverend Patwell, and mad at the
gnawing zone of entropy that was eating our world alive.
"You'd think," said Lisa, quivering in front of the TV, "that people would
try to behave a little better, what with the apocalypse on us and all." She got
up to try again to call her parents; she hadn't been able to get through to them
yet. She was worried that they'd already disappeared. Physically, Lisa looked to
be about ten now, but something was happening; she was becoming a young woman.
She was even starting to gravitate toward the boys for comfort, especially Danny
Hutton. It was three days since the entropic fold had taken Judy and the
shapers.
Apocalypse? I thought stupidly, and realized with a shock that all
this really did have serious eschatological overtones to it.
Eschatological? Where the hell had I learned to use words like that?
And know what they meant?
*
What is happening to me? I am in a desolate wasteland of ash-choked
craters and volcanic eruptions. Is it punishment for my failure to save the
creature in the sea? Is this what it all turns into, when we fail, each one of
us, to save the other? I hack for breath in the smoky air, and stagger forward.
I can feel the flux of entropy burning around me like an electrical
discharge, threatening to destroy not just the world but my own mind and soul.
If I don't keep moving, I will die here. And I will have helped no one.
I trudge among volcanic vents that steam and smolder. What could my puny
thoughts do to change this? Somewhere there must be a toehold on reality, a
leverage point. It is what we came here, all of us, to find. "Give me a place to
stand, and I will move the Earth," Archimedes said. That is what we must do, to
push back the tide of entropy. And yet, flames of doubt lick at me.
The ground shudders, a low rumble in the earth. A moment later, a peak in
front of me explodes. I fall to the ground as a column of smoke towers into the
sky. Blazing lava rains down onto the earth. A river of blood-red magma streams
toward me.
Am I about to be incinerated, buried in final failure? As my mind seethes,
the tide of burning earth drives toward me. And a thought slowly comes into
focus: it was my own doubt that brought the volcano into being. My own fears. If
I allow them to, my fears will swallow and destroy me.
I remember the creature who died in the sea because of my hesitation. And yet
I know: I am not powerless. I still have my being, my spirit, my will. I am a
shaper. I blink, remembering that, as the lava sweeps toward me like a tidal
wave of flame.
*
"They're at the power lines! They're trying to cut the power lines! Tell Mr.
Playstead!" Roberta tore out the door of the TV room, running to find someone in
charge.
I stood open-mouthed, watching her disappear around the corner. I ran into
the TV room, where a few of the kids were watching the special report. On
camera, a utilities truck was pulled up to an electric tower, and a man was
maneuvering himself in the cherry picker toward the power lines. The camera
switched to Reverend Patwell, who was rejoicing loudly. It looked to be
protesters, not the electric utility, doing the deed.
Where were the security
forces? "My God," I croaked. "If they cut off the power--"
"There goes the continuum-bubble," Harvey rattled hoarsely. He was trembling
with rage.
"But don't we have some kind of...backup?" whispered Lottie Gerns. "A
generator? Something?"
Harvey laughed like a man about to commit mayhem. It made me shiver, coming
from someone who looked like a woman. "For the lights, yeah--but not the bubble.
It takes too much power. Why do you think we have those high tension lines
coming in?"
I swallowed, watching the man in the cherry picker. He was peering down, and
the camera shifted to a knot of people gathered around some sort of control
station. The man on the truck was waiting for the power to be shut off, so he
could cut the line down.
"Then--" I said "--there won't be any containment at all." Whatever effects
had leaked out till now, the worst of the entropic influence was contained
within our bubble.
"You got it," said Harvey. "
Mr. Playstead--you see these jerks?"
Mr. Playstead was breathless as he ran into the room. "I just talked to the
sheriff," he gasped. "He said they'd stop it. They don't know what happened to
the security people--they seem to have vanished."
We watched, petrified, as the cameras panned to the flashing lights of the
sheriff's cars pulling up. There was a lot of shouting. Finally the crowd gave
way, and a couple of tough- looking deputies with high-powered rifles took up
guard posts. After a short argument, the utility truck drove away.
I nearly collapsed with relief, my heart pounding. Where was Lisa? She hadn't
seen this; I had to go tell her. I ran from the room, looking for her.
She wasn't in the cafeteria, or in the dorm. I finally found her outside
behind the main building, huddled on the grass under some trees. Not alone. With
Danny Hutton. I ran up, yelling, "Lisa! Danny! You won't believe what--" before
I saw what they were doing. They were kissing. No, more than kissing. They were
groping. Frantically.
I staggered to a halt, the words still tumbling out of my mouth. Lisa shrank,
glaring at me with murderous fury. "Would you get the hell
out of here?"
she snapped.
I stood there, dumbfounded and humiliated. "But--" I choked, not knowing what
to say next. I was appalled--but was it because she was doing this when the
whole world was at stake, or because I was jealous? And who was I jealous
of--Lisa or Danny?
Lisa seemed unable to say anything else; she just glared. Danny looked away
from both of us, in acute embarrassment. In the end, I fled back to our room,
hardly remembering why I'd been looking for her in the first place.
*
That night, a loud concussion woke us all up and sent us running to the TV.
It took a few minutes for the backup generator to come on.
Someone had managed to blow up the power lines, after all.
*
The lava parts like the Red Sea, a river of fire on either side. I watch,
stunned, as walls of glowing earth rise around me. Can my own belief have such
power? I descend into the earth, flaming magma cocooning me.
Volcanic heat rages against my skin. I feel chaos plucking at me, magnetic
fields streaming through me. I am floating in a firestorm of magma, like a
spirit swimming in the fires of creation. It all begins to blur, then comes back
into focus. It is not the Earth I am floating in, but a lake of luminous red,
with a flame burning brightly at its center. It is an enormous candle, a sunken
lake of wax, the light of the flame glowing through its translucent walls. It
seems impossible.
But not as impossible as the voices.
The human voices, all around me.
*
"Alexandri!"
I heard my name called, and didn't want to answer. I was holed up in my room,
weeping into my blanket. I was no longer six years old, but--what? Thirteen?
Thirty? My breasts hurt, and I'd gotten my period--just after the miserable cold
breakfast we'd all had together, after the loss of the continuum-bubble, after a
nighttime vigil waiting for protesters to invade us, protesters who never came.
I'd complained to Lisa about my cramps--we'd sort of made up, because with the
whole world falling apart, what was the point of staying mad?--and she'd
grunted, "Well, about time it happened to you, too! I don't know how much more
time we'll have! Enjoy it while you can."
I'd stared at her, bewildered. I wasn't even sure exactly what she meant.
After seeing her with Danny, I figured she meant sex. But it was all so alien to
me, so unreal. It wasn't bad enough what was happening to the world--did we have
to grow old in these great, uneven jags?
We were just
kids, damn it!
I heard my name called again. But I didn't want to talk to anyone. If there'd
been any counselors left in this place, I wouldn't have talked to them, either.
I especially didn't want to hear about Lisa and Danny Hutton.
"Alexandri, come see what's happened outside!" It was Lottie Gern, and she
was frantic. She ran back out of my room, and on to Roberta's room, shouting.
I cursed and went outside. I found Lisa and Danny and most of the kids, plus
Mr. Playstead and Miss Jennings, standing on the front lawn. We'd kept sentries
there all night, ready to call out at the first sign of intruders.
The forest had rolled up like an army, right to the front of the
administration building. All the desert-grass-covered mountain slopes, across
the little valley from the school property, were thick with dense woods.
There was no sign of any of the picket lines, or of any human life out there
at all.
*
Faces begin appearing in the candle rim...faces like luminous glass, to
match the voices. Danny...? Roberta...?
*
Later that day, Harvey Snowden came running in yelling that the woods were
dying. That was the first we knew that a total ecological catastrophe had set
in.
"What do you mean, dying?" I yelled back from the rec room/battle center. A
group of us had been trying to
will reality back to normal, without
effect. We'd just been listening to the TV for any mention at all of protesters,
or of
us. But all of our opponents, including Reverend Patwell, seemed to
have vanished from the face of the Earth.
"Dying!" He glared at me as if I were an idiot. "Don't you know what that
means?"
"I know, and you don't have to yell!" I shouted. But his wild, reddened face
scared me. Clearly something had scared
him, and badly. "What did you
see?" I asked, as the others gathered around.
"Dead trees--a
lot of them--all dried out, like it was winter or
something."
"It's not winter. It's May. Or June, maybe," said Lottie Gerns, sneezing for
the hundredth time that hour. Poor kid had come down with allergies, bad, and
the infirmary had no more medicine.
"No foolin'," said Harvey. "But look down in the valley, and you'll see a lot
of trees that don't know that." He waved his delicate feminine hands in the air.
"It's weird. Way down in the valley, it looks like fall--everything's all red
and yellow and brown. But closer up to us, everything's just dead. Shriveled."
"What's it mean?" asked Lottie.
"How the hell do
I know what it means? But it isn't right. And
whatever it is, it's coming from here." He looked at each one of us in turn.
"And it's spreading out into the rest of the world."
*
We learned more about it on the one staticky channel that remained on the
television. The forests were indeed dying, and the effect was spreading rapidly.
A wave of forest and plant death was rippling outward from our location. The
trees first turned fall colors--and then, instead of going into hibernation,
they died.
It had something to do with their chloroplasts. Plants everywhere were losing
their ability to photosynthesize. It was spreading like a virus, or a plague,
but much faster. No one knew what was causing it or how to stop it; but if it
wasn't stopped, it would spread over the whole planet. And if photosynthesis
stopped, well, that was it. Not just for humanity, but for everything that lived
on the Earth. Except maybe for some bacteria that lived on the bottom of the
ocean and lived off nothing but chemicals from volcanic vents. Except for them,
nothing. Not even the cockroaches would survive.
*
Our world was fast disappearing. We could no longer reach anyone by
telephone, because the phone lines were gone. I'd last talked to my parents two
days before, and I felt a terrible emptiness inside; I wondered if they were
even still alive in this reality. Mr. Tea and Mrs. Randolph took a car to
venture down the mountain into town, to try to buy food and learn what was
happening. They didn't return.
The rest of us met to decide what to do.
Mr. Playstead suggested, and we all finally agreed, that we had no choice but
to go out into it, straight into the heart of the entropic fold. The disturbance
seemed to emanate from a bank of fog that kept advancing and retreating within
the woods flanking the school. We had been afraid to venture near it, wary of
its unpredictable effects, fearful of dying for nothing. Without the shaping
amplifiers, we had only our own powers, and those not fully developed. But
everything we'd tried from outside the entropy zone had been futile. Perhaps
from within, we could do more.
It was a terrifying prospect--but as Ashok pointed out in his quiet voice, if
we didn't take the risk now, while the world was still recognizable, then our
own reality-thread would just move farther and farther away. Soon it would be
too late for us to have any chance at all of regaining it. Whatever the risks,
this was our only hope.
Mr. Playstead stood before us, tugging at the frizzy grey beard he'd sprouted
in the last three days. "For what it's worth, I'm going to go with you. I don't
have your skills, but I can't just stay out here waiting for you to return.
Perhaps...my experience will be useful, somehow." He hesitated and glanced at
Miss Jennings, who nodded silently and stepped up beside him. She was not about
to be left behind, either.
Mr. Playstead cleared his throat. "I want to emphasize one thing to you all.
When the shapers were lost, we think it was because of a conflict with the other
shaper teams. That must not happen again. Do you understand what I'm saying?"
There were some murmurs of assent, and some of impatience.
"I'm saying, we have to work in harmony. Whatever we find in there--and I
don't know what it will be, but people--" and his voice was strained as he
searched for words "--if we're going to defeat this thing, we have to do it
together. Any one of you alone might not be strong. But the combined strength of
a dozen shapers, in the fold--" He paused for breath, but then he seemed to run
out of words, and he shrugged. He looked very old to me, and tired.
I turned to look at Lisa, and her eyes met mine for just a moment. She was
scared, but soberly so. I was stunned by the maturity I saw there in her gaze,
and wondered what was wrong with me that I wasn't so grown up myself. I was
still petrified at the thought of not being a kid anymore. And terrified of what
we had to do. I felt an impulse to grab her hand and hold it, the way we had
that first time we'd seen the graduate shapers at work. But almost as if
something in her had sensed my urge, I saw her reach out and find Danny's hand,
on the other side of her. I saw Danny squeeze back. Stung, I looked away.
The decision to go was unanimous. We began joining up to go out in pairs. We
would fan out in force, but each of us would have one primary buddy to watch out
for. I looked at Lisa, and saw her eyes searching Danny's, their hands gripping
each other's tightly. Humiliated all over again, I turned to see who else needed
a partner.
Roberta, eyes full of fear behind her glasses, looked at me questioningly. I
took a breath and nodded back.
*
We all walked into the dying forest together, abreast in a line. There was
very little talk, just the rustle of leaves and the snapping of twigs beneath
our feet. When we came to the wall of fog that marked the boundary, Roberta and
I exchanged final glances.
Mr. Playstead raised his hand, surveying our lineup. "Godspeed," he said.
As one, we stepped through...
And I stepped, alone, into the steaming jungle.
*
We are gathered in the circle of the candle now...like swimmers facing
inward from the edge of a pool. Some of my classmates look like fire elementals,
rising from the molten lake, while others are extrusions of the walls, their
waxen faces bulging. Danny, Roberta, Judy...(isn't Judy dead? I wonder)...
Dzaou, Ashok...not everyone has made it here, but a lot of them have. I don't
see Lisa. Or Harvey, or Mr. Playstead, or Miss Jennings. Those who are here look
human, but clearly all have been through wrenching changes. Some look like
children, still; others like adults tempered by experience; and a few
look...indescribable. Children's faces with ancient eyes... or eyes bright with
youth surrounded by wrinkled and weary skin. I wonder what I look like.
It is a strange reunion: all of us gazing across the glowing lake at each
other, but no one speaking. My feelings are indescribable. I know, without
asking, that each of them has been through a terrifying journey--nine faces,
nine harrowing trips through the corridors of chaos, struggling against...what?
A dark master, on the throne of entropy? Or the meaninglessness of random decay?
I know that we all meant to
do something, but I'm not sure what. I wonder
if any of the others know.
Someone begins singing, softly. It's Judy, I think. She's alive, and I wonder
if it's because she never really died, or because we somehow brought her back to
life. I don't quite recognize the song, but it has the sound of a lullaby. Then
someone else, Danny, starts humming a hymn from church--a familiar tune, though
I don't know the name. It's beautiful, and moving in a way it never was for me
before. On the far side of the circle, half-hidden by the flame, I see the
movements of someone dancing. I think it's Ellie, but can't be sure. But I
imagine that Ellie, who thought Judy into death, has more reason than anyone to
rejoice at her being alive and among us now.
The flame begins flickering brighter, hissing. It seems to be gathering power
from the songs and the dance. The flame, I suddenly realize, is
our
expression, not entropy's. It is a kind of shaping, a way of reaffirming who we
are--of saying,
yes, we are still here, still human. I'm not sure what to
do, but I feel memories bubbling up within me.
A bunny named Maxine appears in the air before me, and a donkey named Eeyore,
and a bear named Berlioz. These are my friends who played with me in my first
days at the reality school, when I was just a child. But there are other
memories that want to come up, too--painful memories that ring with disharmony
in my mind. My selfishness with a shaping...my rejection by Lisa...my
cowardice... I don't want to let them come, don't want my failures and shame
brought into the light. I struggle to hold them in, but I cannot. My shame
begins to bubble out.
The faces of my friends are turning transparent. They take no notice of my
shame. They begin moving about the circle, passing through one another; three or
four of them are singing, their song swelling the flame. I see other people's
memories taking form like ghostly photographs in the air, and I realize that I
am not the only one who has experienced failure. It comforts me a little.
But now everyone seems to be looking
up.
*
New faces, overhead, gaze down from the haze of the outer nothingness...faces
peering like ghosts of haunted pasts.
It takes me a moment to recognize those faces...even Lisa's. She is trapped,
they are all trapped, in a nothingness outside the warmth of the candle flame.
They seem to be prisoners of the devouring entropy, while
we somehow are
regenerating our reality here in the shelter of the candle. There is a gulf
dividing us, and they cannot cross it. They cannot join us.
"Lisa?" I whisper.
Her eyes turn slowly to meet mine.
*
Help me--!
I can hear the plea, unspoken. And I cannot answer it. If they cannot cross
that gulf, how can I help?
I want to call out to her, to tell her to do it herself, to come to this
place where we are gathered, singing. I want to tell her to come out of the
darkness into the fire.
Help me--!
Lisa's eyes, pale and frightened in the sky, will not release mine. But I
don't know how to escape from that darkness any more than she does.
Or do I?
My mind reverberates with memories: of our play together at the school, the
excitement and fear we shared, learning to be shapers.
Shapers. The
memories flash in my mind, fiery with the flux of entropy. Something in that
entropy does not wish me to remember.
We are shapers. I remember her
choosing Danny over me; and even now, I tremble with anger and hurt. So much
time has passed. Must I still be angry? I tremble with the memory of my
aloneness, of the times I sensed her presence across the infinity of space and
time, and could not speak to her.
Was it that I could not, or would not?
We are human. We are shapers.
Out there in the darkness beyond the fire, my friend is trapped. Perhaps she
could come here, into the light of the fire, if there were a space for
her. I am aware of Danny gazing up at her in desire and anguish, and I wonder,
Can he not help her? And without quite knowing why, I know he cannot. It is not
his anger that keeps her out. A space must be made in the circle for her, and it
is not Danny who must make it.
The flame of the candle beats hot with the singing, with cries of,
We are
shapers! We are! coming from the others here with me...and I almost imagine
that I hear the voice of God Himself saying,
I am who I am! from the
flame.
I am suddenly certain that there is no room for any other here, unless
I make it myself. And how can I possibly make room, unless I take Lisa's
place out there, in the void and the darkness, in the chaos?
*
The songs quicken with urgency. A hundred memories shimmer and dance in the
air. I am not alone in my anguish. The others face similar choices. But only
I face
my choice.
A memory looms before me: a monstrous-looking being dying in the depths of
the sea, because I was afraid to save it. Because I was afraid.
I am a shaper.
Help me! whispers a gaze from across the gulf of darkness. Last time, you let
me die.
Electrified with fear, I make the decision. I begin to move away from the
light...rising to challenge the hissing chaos. To trade places with Lisa.
*
The transformation takes forever, hurting hurting hurting. The candlelight
recedes in the darkness, but not quietly. I feel the darkness and light
shuddering, clashing; and I am caught between them, the dark fires of entropy
flashing around me, charging me with despair. Will I die here? Or live in the
darkness forever?
*
I feel Lisa's presence passing me, on its way into the light. My anger burns
all over again. Why have
I given my life, when it was Danny she wanted?
Why?
The chaos swirls around me. I am being swallowed by the anger. I have tried
again to forgive, and failed. I wail into the darkness, "Help me, please!" and
my cry is wrapped in silence.
And yet...
I sense Lisa's presence, not fleeing to the candle and safety, but returning
for me. "Go!" I scream. "Go to him before it's too late! Damn you, go!" And
suddenly my anger disintegrates, and I find myself shuddering with pain, and
crying to Lisa to save herself, and this time I mean it without any anger at
all.
Lisa, go! Why do you think I did this?
In that moment, the distant light flares brighter, reclaiming power from the
darkness. Light and darkness clash in a fury. The energies of chaos flail about
me, defying the light's power to reclaim me. But I have made my peace. My anger
is gone,
my battle is won...and it is the chaos fighting the rearguard
battle. The darkness begins to shrink, hissing.
And I hear Lisa's voice whispering, "Come back to the light, Alexandri, come
back to the light. You are a shaper...we can shape together..."
And the light blooms around us both.
*
It is a breathtaking sight, the flattening out of the entropic fold like an
enormous soap bubble. I can see the candle, with its light and all of its faces,
slowly distorting with the refraction, transmuting into a crazy, stretched-taffy
image. The singing changes, brightening into strange and beautiful harmonies.
And around me, I hear the hiss of Chaos fading...and I hear Lisa calling me,
and Danny.
Whatever I have done, I am not the only one. I hear other voices of
gratitude...other victories claimed alongside mine. I watch as the memories
clustered in the air above the candle slowly come together, like a backwards
explosion.
And the entropic fold flattens and vanishes...
*
"Lisa?" I murmured, blinking, feeling the grass under me. I looked around,
stunned by the bright sunlight on the playground, the sky so blue it made my
eyes ache, the whisper of a breeze cooling my face.
"Alexandra!" she cried. "You're safe! Thank God!" I gazed at her in
wonderment, but before I could ask what
she remembered happening, she
threw herself into my arms, and we hugged and cried like grown women, like best
friends who had not seen each other in years. And then we turned and wept with
Danny, and Roberta, and
Judy...and we all ran laughing across the school
yard to see who else had returned.
*
Most of us made it back, but not all. We never saw Ashok again, or Lottie, or
Harvey, or Mr. Playstead, or Miss Jennings. Mr. Tea and Mrs. Randolph were here
when we returned, and a couple of the counselors. But none of the graduate
shapers.
Why? We have no idea.
I'm sometimes asked if that is fair. And I ask in return, what does
fair have to do with war? We waged war against Chaos and we won. But
those people were casualties. And there will undoubtedly be more casualties, the
next time we have to wage this war. And we will: we have not eliminated entropy
from the universe, though we seem to have closed this rift. Is there still a
micro-singularity floating out there somewhere, waiting to cause more mischief?
No one knows. And so we vow to maintain our watch.
How many others vanished from the Earth that we don't know of? I can't even
guess. I find myself wondering sometimes: didn't I have a younger brother once,
in another reality? Marie doesn't remember, nor do my parents; but they don't
have my perspective, either. Everything to them is as they think it was.
How much has the Earth itself changed? The sun seems a little cooler. I know
that the political climate is different; I remember living in a nation called
"the United States of..." I cannot seem to remember the rest of the name. I
dream sometimes of orbiting space stations glinting in the night sky, and I
think perhaps it is more than just a dream. But we have not yet gone into space,
and the sky is full of stars, and the two moons, but no spaceships.
Variable persistence of memory. I feel my own memories slowly slipping
and blurring, and I wonder--will these words, tomorrow, accurately reflect
reality as it is then?
I can only guess at my parents' feelings at seeing their child a grown
adult--and not just an adult, but an adult tempered by fire. A soldier. I am
physically and emotionally almost their age, perhaps even older in some ways,
and they don't quite understand why. But with Lisa and some of the others, I sit
on the oversight committee of the Reality School, training those who will follow
us in maintaining the integrity of our existence.
And I ask myself: What qualifies
me for this job? What qualifies
any of us to decide what reality is the real, or right, one?
I wonder who I have become, and I think of a little girl who rode a
fusion-powered turbocruiser into the school yard not so long ago, jumping up and
down with glee.
That was only a few months ago, wasn't it?
A few months ago...by the calendar.
An eternity.
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