"Robert Thurston - SLIPSHOD, AT THE EDGE OF THE UNIVERSE" - читать интересную книгу автора (Thurston Robert)
SLIPSHOD, AT THE EDGE OF THE UNIVERSE
SLIPSHOD, AT THE
EDGE OF THE UNIVERSE
ON SLIPSHOD,
THE LARGEST of the asteroids at our edge of the universe, we set up a
temporary camp. I guess "we" is inappropriate since I, as their
prisoner, had nothing to do with the operation. With no atmosphere on
Slipshod (the name given the asteroid by our exec officer, Elaine), we had to
stay within the transparent dome. Actually, I did not have to stay within the
dome. I could slip out and drift over the asteroid's surface. I had no need
of atmosphere and was, by human definition, noncorporeal. Yet I could not
waste energy reserves by going far. I had a substantial amount of reserve,
but did not want to waste any in case a chance for a real escape came. And
Slipshod was so plain and monotonous that scenic tours were out of the
question. Elaine traced
her fingers along the surface of one of the screens in the computer where I
was, by human definition, caged. As her fingers lingered on the screen, I
sipped at her energy. At that moment I needed none of the human energy, but I
could never resist absorbing some of it from this woman who was regarded as
so beautiful among the others. In my own sense of beauty, she is beautiful
for the energy I absorb from her, an energy that, as it dissipates through my
system, gives me a feeling like no other, like no other species I have
absorbed from. Humans had the best reserves of energy I had ever experienced,
and the most flavorful as well. And Elaine's was the energy I most craved.
Truly, it was superior to the energy received from any of my own kind whom I
have loved or killed in the elongated span of my existence. Days ago,
according to their measure of time, Elaine and Casey, the ship commander,
discussed the mission just after making love in her quarters. During their
peculiar expressions of passion, the heel of Elaine's foot had pressed
briefly, and hard, against the screen of her room's computer terminal and, as
a result, I was riding on a surge of energy that sent me bouncing from
circuit to diode to cable and back again. At the time I paid little attention
to what the two were saying, although like everything else I ever heard I
remembered it later. "I have
serious misgivings," Casey said, his words coming out of his mouth in
odd groupings, nothing like the rhythm of speech he normally employed. "About
what?" Elaine asked, as she rubbed his chest. Casey was muscular,
according to the impressions of others that I picked up when I absorbed from
the humans aboard the ship. (Muscularity, and for that matter, all
corporeality drew my interest easily as a field of study.) The others
regarded his face, however, as something less than beautiful, as they judged
beauty. Elaine of course was the standard. She was beautiful, even with her
face marred by its continual unhappiness, and Casey was not. For a long
while Casey lay with his eyes shut and steadied his breathing. "Misgivings,"
Elaine prompted. "Yes.
About our goals. Our mission objective. The dark at the end of the tunnel."
"You're
posing again." "I have
gotten through life this way. Don't stop me now. What I mean, Elaine, is that
I always wanted my life to mean something." "It
does. You're a commander." "Hollow
triumph. I'm a commander who has never fought a major battle, never made an
impact on political structures, never discovered anything significant during
years of exploring the backwater regions of the universe." I could
understand Casey because of the rare absorptions I had drawn from him, but I
tended to avoid his energy unless I was in a low-level state. Elaine again
accused him of posing and for a short while he became more direct. "This
mission is a punishment. No, not a punishment -- that would imply someone out
to get me. I am not that important. No one is out to get me. I am just
someone in the command structure, and a lower-echelon commander at that, who
can be given a futile mission because there is nothing important for him to
do anyway. What are we doing, when you come right down to it? Someone a
thousand light-years away has theorized the location of the edge of the
universe and so, as outsiders and therefore expendable, we are sent to the
nearest point that the theory says it might be. If there is no edge to the
universe, then the universe is infinite, as we have always comfortably
believed, and we can go on forever looking for it. Talk about being shunted
aside." Elaine stayed
quiet. I could imagine her thoughts, though. She did not really like Casey,
and she thought his skills at making love were just another part of his
posing, but she needed the feelings, the sensations that the act provided,
and he tended to provide these sensations most efficiently. So she let him
pose, both in speech and manner because, for the time being, he suited her,
and of course there was not much opportunity aboard a small ship, many of
whose inhabitants had been surgically altered to deny normal human urges. The
higher command officers were allowed to refuse the alterations. "If
there is no edge to the universe," she finally said, "then we will
prove it, and that will be that, and in its way that'll be your contribution.
In the meantime, while we wait for it, touch me there. Ah, I feel that all
through me." I agreed with
Elaine. Whether or not there was an edge to the universe, a physical
measurable border where it all ended, did not matter to me. What I am
particularly irritated about, as I review that conversation, is Casey's
statement that he had made no significant discoveries. They had, after all,
come to my planet, mapped it, communicated with us, and then -- in a peculiar
and arrogant act of human assertion -- had figured out a way to capture one
of its beings -- me -- and store it in a computer to take it home for further
study. By the time I had figured out how to bypass the netting of electrical
impulses that had trapped me, their ship had carried me too far away from my
planet to return. I do not know if I would have returned had there been an
opportunity. This computer provides so many of the needs I had to struggle
for at home that I find it quite relaxing. Besides, observing humans, or any
other creatures, fascinates me. On our planet, we only had us. The humans
thought that snaring me was akin to imprisoning a ghost or pulling a being
made of water out of an ocean, things that apparently human beings had
accomplished in earlier expeditions in their history. History itself was a
concept that I had struggled to understand. The whole idea of keeping a
record of the past was anathema to me, and I suspected that, if my species
had kept a history instead of an orally transmitted set of astonishing and
ever-changing tales, our history would be longer than theirs but with less
self-congratulation. Now,
according to every calculation and examination of physical data accomplished
by the ship computer, we have reached the goal, the edge of the universe --
surely, irretrievably, and all the other adverbs of certainty in the
ingenious human lexicon. The absolute edge. On the other side of it was
nothing. On this side of it were Slipshod and the last few asteroids on the
way to the edge. The concept
of the edge of the universe meant little to me. I lived, for the time being,
in the universe of this computer and it was a vast one. With its twistings
and turnings, its loops and spirals, its way of curving back into itself,
this was an infinite universe -- as infinite as I needed, if that is not some
sort of contradictory term. Humans worry about the convolutions and layered
meanings of language, but I find them rich and abundant and representative of
another kind of infinity, one which could occupy me forever. Humans call
their good feelings happiness. That word is sufficient for me to describe the
lack of resentment I feel at being separated from my own kind and imprisoned
in this computer. Sometimes I
realized that I needed the humans for the surges and bursts of erratic energy
that kept me going. I am, like them, finite and, if they die without
transmitting me to a place where there are more of them, I will die, too. Snap
out of existence, and it won't matter. I can go on longer than they, since I
have stored abundant reserves of their energy in the computer's dark places,
enough energy to keep me going for a long period of their time, even after
the computer itself fails. If I could absorb enough energy to leave them and
go home across the void, I might try it. I have a good sense of where home
is. It is mapped in their computer memory, and I can carry the information
along with me --but I could only make it if I could count on encountering
other beings, in other ships on their way to other places. The other way I
could die is for the computer to be destroyed. For now,
though, we are on Slipshod, and with the humans I look out at the edge of the
universe and try to see something more, some detail, some moving thing that
would let us perceive what the other side of the universe was like. "What
are we looking for?" Casey said. "If we could see something out
there, it would not be the edge of the universe. If the universe ends here,
there can be nothing out there. Anything out there would just be an extension
of our universe. I mean, even now, all we have are computer readings that
indicate this is the edge along with an undeniably human fear to test it
further." The single
foray the ship had made toward the edge had resulted in all the controls of
the ship going haywire and forcing it to turn away and return to Slipshod. "What
about if this is not the absolute edge?" said Blackie, a crewman.
Blackie was the physical opposite of Casey, small and unimpressive.
"What about if this is the borderline with another universe? An edge, a
border we can't cross, but another universe out there, existing
separately?" "If so,
I hope it's better than this one," Elaine said, her voice strange, what
the humans call distracted. "Another universe like this one would be a
waste of time by whoever's building the universes." "Multiverses,"
I said through the computer's audio system. Most of the crew were, as always,
startled by one of my rare speaking intrusions. Either they forget me or do
not, unlike Elaine, care to admit I am here, that I am, for good or ill, one
of them, a crewmember, albeit undocketed. Apparently the reason they are
uneasy with me is that I have no physical presence among them. "If where
we are is a universe," I continued, "and there is another universe,
then your God or Creator made multiverses." "Is that
so, what the spark-dog says, is that true, Casey?" Blackie asked. Blackie
himself was never sure about anything and always asking others for
verification. "Semantics
have never been my strong point," Casey responded. "Thing is, now
that we have pretty much verified this is the edge of the universe, what do
we do now?" Elaine, whose
warm hands on the computer surface had been transmitting some complicated and
thrilling energy, abruptly walked away from the computer, toward Casey, and
said: "We are here to be sure, to check further. I'll go. Let me
go." "Go
where?" Casey asked.
"To the
edge. Through it." She now stood
in front of him, her posture defiant. "It's
too risky," Casey said. "You might --" "I might
die, I might be repelled as the ship was and smash to my death on an asteroid
surface, or dissipate into the void, be snuffed out of existence, turned into
a giant cosmic turnip? I'm aware of all that. I accept the risk." I did not
like what I felt then, as I saw the possibility of her actual death and, with
it, my own loss of her peculiarly exhilarating energy, so I interrupted
again: "What you say is of the highest probability. You will simply die,
which will prove nothing." She whirled
around, walked angrily toward the computer, bent her head a bit as if to talk
into one of the speakers, as if it were my mouth if I had a mouth: "And
so what, you bundle of -- of whatever you are? What do you really know of
human life? We are here to discover, explore, whatever. If we just make
notes, enter data, turn around, go slinking back to let the theorists have
their field day, what is proven? If somebody doesn't take the risk of going
too far, then what is life worth?" "I am
not certain about what you call the 'worth of life.' It is not much a part of
my culture. We believe we live forever somewhere, in some state, in some
--" "God,"
Casey said, his eyebrows raising abruptly and with the kind of dramatic look
that Elaine called a pose, "spare us the religious crap of a being who
is no more than sparks and radioactive dust particles." "I was
not referring to religion, as you understand it," I replied, wishing I
could place the emotional intonations and stresses into my speech the way
Casey and Elaine did. "Religion is, for us, fact. We are not corporeal
-- therefore, we may speculate that we continue in some form. We cannot, we
believe, be dissipated altogether." I recalled
their struggles to capture me and the further struggles to store me in this
computer, efforts I never understood. The only reason I have discovered about
why they needed to capture me is the expectation of profit from exhibiting
me. Since I can only be detected and not seen, I am not sure how they planned
to accomplish that. Elaine stared
at the computer for a long moment, then turned back toward Casey. "Casey,
give me the chance. I want to be footnoted in history for having tried, even
if the note ends she was never seen or heard from again, okay? Okay?" Casey glared
at her, and the sense I received from him was genuine loneliness, the loss of
her. But finally he nodded his head. "Sure, Elaine, go ahead with it.
We'll load you down with recording equipment and bring that data home to the
theorists, too. And, if you survive this, well, that'll shake them up
good." Elaine looked
almost smug. I did not understand, could not understand. "Foolish
damn bravado, that's all it is," Blackie said angrily. "Suicide,
you ask me. A wish to become nothing. I mean, if there's nothing on the other
side, then that's what you'll be, nothing." "Yes,
but if it is indeed another universe, then...then we'll at least know." WE WATCHED
ELAINE sail toward the edge of the universe. She propelled herself toward it
with thrusters attached to her suit, using the thrusters to give her a direct
and quick line to the edge. Blackie watched nervously, his mouth twisted into
the most negative look he could imagine -- for whose audience, I wondered.
Casey was not looking at him at all. Maybe Blackie was not as godless as he
pretended. His sour expression may have been intended to register with his
god. Casey's face
was anxious, worried. He fidgeted while he kept Elaine in a fixed focus on
various scanner screens. As he touched a screen, I was there to draw out
bursts of his energy. He glanced down at his hand as if aware of my
absorptions. Elaine slowed
as she neared the area which the computer had calculated as the edge itself.
There was no sudden rejection of her, no throwing back, as there had been
with the ship. Spreading her arms as if diving into water she plunged right
toward the edge. For a moment
she seemed to disappear. There was an instant of what might have been optical
illusion as parts of her appeared chopped off before passing through the
edge. Finally, she was gone. It seemed
momentarily darker where she had gone through. Casey made a strange, choking
sound followed by a faint whisper. Blackie closed his eyes. Suddenly
Elaine was on the other side, looking back toward us. I wondered if the
calculations had been wrong. If she could be seen, whole and unchanged,
perhaps she had not really gone through the edge, gone through anything.
Perhaps she was in between worlds, in some kind of airlock between universes.
According to
the computer's tracking, she had vanished. The records showed a blip of
nothingness during her pass-through and continued to go on registering
nothing. Apparently, wherever she was, it was beyond the universe we were in,
beyond the edge, in some other place. Elaine was
Elaine for only a short while, less than half a minute. Her physical change
was rapid, but it progressed through perceivable stages. She split apart, at
first into aspects of herself. Her face floated in front of her head; her
arms and legs were visible as separate entities of skin, bone, muscle, veins,
arteries. Her pressure suit intermingled with parts of her and broke up into
bits of itself, before dissolving. At one point her torso and hips exchanged
places. There was something about children's toys in the computer's memory
banks, and the first stage of Elaine's transformation reminded me of it. The next
stage was a transmutation of Elaine's individual parts. They sent out thin,
sparkling rays of light as they changed texture, color, then rejoined in no
human order -- she was no longer head, body, limbs -- no longer even
recognizably human. If anything she was a casual geometric construction with
no logic to it but a great deal of knobby and gnarly surface. Even with no
face she seemed to stare at us. This new
entity lasted only a short time. It shifted and there was a new splitting
apart -- now she was small bits, fragments, of swirling light. I sensed that
the energy of her had grown, and I knew what I could do. I collected my
energy reserves and eased out of the computer, passed through the wall of the
dome, and into the vacuum of space. Crossing to the edge of the universe used
up nearly all of the reserves, more than I had anticipated, and I knew I
could not return to Slipshod. For a moment it looked as if I might snap out
of existence before I reached the edge. But, even with the diminishing
reserves, I felt more alive than I had since I had been captured and shoved
into the computer. I barely
noticed my passing through the edge. The other side was still, with a sense
of no distance, no dimension, no existence. But I did exist, and I was there.
And Elaine was right in front of me, as swirling iotas of energy. Sensing her
welcome, I joined with her. I changed, too. She became my energy, the energy
I now needed, and I became hers. I was Elaine and she was I, and she was no
longer Elaine and I was no longer I. Neither one of us wanted to return to
the others or go to any home planet or go anywhere. She believed that our
union was not sexual, and I saw that it had nothing to do with the
accumulation of energy I had craved. There was something more and we did not
know what it was. We thought we might find out. Or might not. We were where
we were, and that is where we are.
SLIPSHOD, AT THE EDGE OF THE UNIVERSE
SLIPSHOD, AT THE
EDGE OF THE UNIVERSE
ON SLIPSHOD,
THE LARGEST of the asteroids at our edge of the universe, we set up a
temporary camp. I guess "we" is inappropriate since I, as their
prisoner, had nothing to do with the operation. With no atmosphere on
Slipshod (the name given the asteroid by our exec officer, Elaine), we had to
stay within the transparent dome. Actually, I did not have to stay within the
dome. I could slip out and drift over the asteroid's surface. I had no need
of atmosphere and was, by human definition, noncorporeal. Yet I could not
waste energy reserves by going far. I had a substantial amount of reserve,
but did not want to waste any in case a chance for a real escape came. And
Slipshod was so plain and monotonous that scenic tours were out of the
question. Elaine traced
her fingers along the surface of one of the screens in the computer where I
was, by human definition, caged. As her fingers lingered on the screen, I
sipped at her energy. At that moment I needed none of the human energy, but I
could never resist absorbing some of it from this woman who was regarded as
so beautiful among the others. In my own sense of beauty, she is beautiful
for the energy I absorb from her, an energy that, as it dissipates through my
system, gives me a feeling like no other, like no other species I have
absorbed from. Humans had the best reserves of energy I had ever experienced,
and the most flavorful as well. And Elaine's was the energy I most craved.
Truly, it was superior to the energy received from any of my own kind whom I
have loved or killed in the elongated span of my existence. Days ago,
according to their measure of time, Elaine and Casey, the ship commander,
discussed the mission just after making love in her quarters. During their
peculiar expressions of passion, the heel of Elaine's foot had pressed
briefly, and hard, against the screen of her room's computer terminal and, as
a result, I was riding on a surge of energy that sent me bouncing from
circuit to diode to cable and back again. At the time I paid little attention
to what the two were saying, although like everything else I ever heard I
remembered it later. "I have
serious misgivings," Casey said, his words coming out of his mouth in
odd groupings, nothing like the rhythm of speech he normally employed. "About
what?" Elaine asked, as she rubbed his chest. Casey was muscular,
according to the impressions of others that I picked up when I absorbed from
the humans aboard the ship. (Muscularity, and for that matter, all
corporeality drew my interest easily as a field of study.) The others
regarded his face, however, as something less than beautiful, as they judged
beauty. Elaine of course was the standard. She was beautiful, even with her
face marred by its continual unhappiness, and Casey was not. For a long
while Casey lay with his eyes shut and steadied his breathing. "Misgivings,"
Elaine prompted. "Yes.
About our goals. Our mission objective. The dark at the end of the tunnel."
"You're
posing again." "I have
gotten through life this way. Don't stop me now. What I mean, Elaine, is that
I always wanted my life to mean something." "It
does. You're a commander." "Hollow
triumph. I'm a commander who has never fought a major battle, never made an
impact on political structures, never discovered anything significant during
years of exploring the backwater regions of the universe." I could
understand Casey because of the rare absorptions I had drawn from him, but I
tended to avoid his energy unless I was in a low-level state. Elaine again
accused him of posing and for a short while he became more direct. "This
mission is a punishment. No, not a punishment -- that would imply someone out
to get me. I am not that important. No one is out to get me. I am just
someone in the command structure, and a lower-echelon commander at that, who
can be given a futile mission because there is nothing important for him to
do anyway. What are we doing, when you come right down to it? Someone a
thousand light-years away has theorized the location of the edge of the
universe and so, as outsiders and therefore expendable, we are sent to the
nearest point that the theory says it might be. If there is no edge to the
universe, then the universe is infinite, as we have always comfortably
believed, and we can go on forever looking for it. Talk about being shunted
aside." Elaine stayed
quiet. I could imagine her thoughts, though. She did not really like Casey,
and she thought his skills at making love were just another part of his
posing, but she needed the feelings, the sensations that the act provided,
and he tended to provide these sensations most efficiently. So she let him
pose, both in speech and manner because, for the time being, he suited her,
and of course there was not much opportunity aboard a small ship, many of
whose inhabitants had been surgically altered to deny normal human urges. The
higher command officers were allowed to refuse the alterations. "If
there is no edge to the universe," she finally said, "then we will
prove it, and that will be that, and in its way that'll be your contribution.
In the meantime, while we wait for it, touch me there. Ah, I feel that all
through me." I agreed with
Elaine. Whether or not there was an edge to the universe, a physical
measurable border where it all ended, did not matter to me. What I am
particularly irritated about, as I review that conversation, is Casey's
statement that he had made no significant discoveries. They had, after all,
come to my planet, mapped it, communicated with us, and then -- in a peculiar
and arrogant act of human assertion -- had figured out a way to capture one
of its beings -- me -- and store it in a computer to take it home for further
study. By the time I had figured out how to bypass the netting of electrical
impulses that had trapped me, their ship had carried me too far away from my
planet to return. I do not know if I would have returned had there been an
opportunity. This computer provides so many of the needs I had to struggle
for at home that I find it quite relaxing. Besides, observing humans, or any
other creatures, fascinates me. On our planet, we only had us. The humans
thought that snaring me was akin to imprisoning a ghost or pulling a being
made of water out of an ocean, things that apparently human beings had
accomplished in earlier expeditions in their history. History itself was a
concept that I had struggled to understand. The whole idea of keeping a
record of the past was anathema to me, and I suspected that, if my species
had kept a history instead of an orally transmitted set of astonishing and
ever-changing tales, our history would be longer than theirs but with less
self-congratulation. Now,
according to every calculation and examination of physical data accomplished
by the ship computer, we have reached the goal, the edge of the universe --
surely, irretrievably, and all the other adverbs of certainty in the
ingenious human lexicon. The absolute edge. On the other side of it was
nothing. On this side of it were Slipshod and the last few asteroids on the
way to the edge. The concept
of the edge of the universe meant little to me. I lived, for the time being,
in the universe of this computer and it was a vast one. With its twistings
and turnings, its loops and spirals, its way of curving back into itself,
this was an infinite universe -- as infinite as I needed, if that is not some
sort of contradictory term. Humans worry about the convolutions and layered
meanings of language, but I find them rich and abundant and representative of
another kind of infinity, one which could occupy me forever. Humans call
their good feelings happiness. That word is sufficient for me to describe the
lack of resentment I feel at being separated from my own kind and imprisoned
in this computer. Sometimes I
realized that I needed the humans for the surges and bursts of erratic energy
that kept me going. I am, like them, finite and, if they die without
transmitting me to a place where there are more of them, I will die, too. Snap
out of existence, and it won't matter. I can go on longer than they, since I
have stored abundant reserves of their energy in the computer's dark places,
enough energy to keep me going for a long period of their time, even after
the computer itself fails. If I could absorb enough energy to leave them and
go home across the void, I might try it. I have a good sense of where home
is. It is mapped in their computer memory, and I can carry the information
along with me --but I could only make it if I could count on encountering
other beings, in other ships on their way to other places. The other way I
could die is for the computer to be destroyed. For now,
though, we are on Slipshod, and with the humans I look out at the edge of the
universe and try to see something more, some detail, some moving thing that
would let us perceive what the other side of the universe was like. "What
are we looking for?" Casey said. "If we could see something out
there, it would not be the edge of the universe. If the universe ends here,
there can be nothing out there. Anything out there would just be an extension
of our universe. I mean, even now, all we have are computer readings that
indicate this is the edge along with an undeniably human fear to test it
further." The single
foray the ship had made toward the edge had resulted in all the controls of
the ship going haywire and forcing it to turn away and return to Slipshod. "What
about if this is not the absolute edge?" said Blackie, a crewman.
Blackie was the physical opposite of Casey, small and unimpressive.
"What about if this is the borderline with another universe? An edge, a
border we can't cross, but another universe out there, existing
separately?" "If so,
I hope it's better than this one," Elaine said, her voice strange, what
the humans call distracted. "Another universe like this one would be a
waste of time by whoever's building the universes." "Multiverses,"
I said through the computer's audio system. Most of the crew were, as always,
startled by one of my rare speaking intrusions. Either they forget me or do
not, unlike Elaine, care to admit I am here, that I am, for good or ill, one
of them, a crewmember, albeit undocketed. Apparently the reason they are
uneasy with me is that I have no physical presence among them. "If where
we are is a universe," I continued, "and there is another universe,
then your God or Creator made multiverses." "Is that
so, what the spark-dog says, is that true, Casey?" Blackie asked. Blackie
himself was never sure about anything and always asking others for
verification. "Semantics
have never been my strong point," Casey responded. "Thing is, now
that we have pretty much verified this is the edge of the universe, what do
we do now?" Elaine, whose
warm hands on the computer surface had been transmitting some complicated and
thrilling energy, abruptly walked away from the computer, toward Casey, and
said: "We are here to be sure, to check further. I'll go. Let me
go." "Go
where?" Casey asked. "To the
edge. Through it." She now stood
in front of him, her posture defiant. "It's
too risky," Casey said. "You might --" "I might
die, I might be repelled as the ship was and smash to my death on an asteroid
surface, or dissipate into the void, be snuffed out of existence, turned into
a giant cosmic turnip? I'm aware of all that. I accept the risk." I did not
like what I felt then, as I saw the possibility of her actual death and, with
it, my own loss of her peculiarly exhilarating energy, so I interrupted
again: "What you say is of the highest probability. You will simply die,
which will prove nothing." She whirled
around, walked angrily toward the computer, bent her head a bit as if to talk
into one of the speakers, as if it were my mouth if I had a mouth: "And
so what, you bundle of -- of whatever you are? What do you really know of
human life? We are here to discover, explore, whatever. If we just make
notes, enter data, turn around, go slinking back to let the theorists have
their field day, what is proven? If somebody doesn't take the risk of going
too far, then what is life worth?" "I am
not certain about what you call the 'worth of life.' It is not much a part of
my culture. We believe we live forever somewhere, in some state, in some
--" "God,"
Casey said, his eyebrows raising abruptly and with the kind of dramatic look
that Elaine called a pose, "spare us the religious crap of a being who
is no more than sparks and radioactive dust particles." "I was
not referring to religion, as you understand it," I replied, wishing I
could place the emotional intonations and stresses into my speech the way
Casey and Elaine did. "Religion is, for us, fact. We are not corporeal
-- therefore, we may speculate that we continue in some form. We cannot, we
believe, be dissipated altogether." I recalled
their struggles to capture me and the further struggles to store me in this
computer, efforts I never understood. The only reason I have discovered about
why they needed to capture me is the expectation of profit from exhibiting
me. Since I can only be detected and not seen, I am not sure how they planned
to accomplish that. Elaine stared
at the computer for a long moment, then turned back toward Casey. "Casey,
give me the chance. I want to be footnoted in history for having tried, even
if the note ends she was never seen or heard from again, okay? Okay?" Casey glared
at her, and the sense I received from him was genuine loneliness, the loss of
her. But finally he nodded his head. "Sure, Elaine, go ahead with it.
We'll load you down with recording equipment and bring that data home to the
theorists, too. And, if you survive this, well, that'll shake them up
good." Elaine looked
almost smug. I did not understand, could not understand. "Foolish
damn bravado, that's all it is," Blackie said angrily. "Suicide,
you ask me. A wish to become nothing. I mean, if there's nothing on the other
side, then that's what you'll be, nothing." "Yes,
but if it is indeed another universe, then...then we'll at least know." WE WATCHED
ELAINE sail toward the edge of the universe. She propelled herself toward it
with thrusters attached to her suit, using the thrusters to give her a direct
and quick line to the edge. Blackie watched nervously, his mouth twisted into
the most negative look he could imagine -- for whose audience, I wondered.
Casey was not looking at him at all. Maybe Blackie was not as godless as he
pretended. His sour expression may have been intended to register with his
god. Casey's face
was anxious, worried. He fidgeted while he kept Elaine in a fixed focus on
various scanner screens. As he touched a screen, I was there to draw out
bursts of his energy. He glanced down at his hand as if aware of my
absorptions. Elaine slowed
as she neared the area which the computer had calculated as the edge itself.
There was no sudden rejection of her, no throwing back, as there had been
with the ship. Spreading her arms as if diving into water she plunged right
toward the edge. For a moment
she seemed to disappear. There was an instant of what might have been optical
illusion as parts of her appeared chopped off before passing through the
edge. Finally, she was gone. It seemed
momentarily darker where she had gone through. Casey made a strange, choking
sound followed by a faint whisper. Blackie closed his eyes. Suddenly
Elaine was on the other side, looking back toward us. I wondered if the
calculations had been wrong. If she could be seen, whole and unchanged,
perhaps she had not really gone through the edge, gone through anything.
Perhaps she was in between worlds, in some kind of airlock between universes.
According to
the computer's tracking, she had vanished. The records showed a blip of
nothingness during her pass-through and continued to go on registering
nothing. Apparently, wherever she was, it was beyond the universe we were in,
beyond the edge, in some other place. Elaine was
Elaine for only a short while, less than half a minute. Her physical change
was rapid, but it progressed through perceivable stages. She split apart, at
first into aspects of herself. Her face floated in front of her head; her
arms and legs were visible as separate entities of skin, bone, muscle, veins,
arteries. Her pressure suit intermingled with parts of her and broke up into
bits of itself, before dissolving. At one point her torso and hips exchanged
places. There was something about children's toys in the computer's memory
banks, and the first stage of Elaine's transformation reminded me of it. The next
stage was a transmutation of Elaine's individual parts. They sent out thin,
sparkling rays of light as they changed texture, color, then rejoined in no
human order -- she was no longer head, body, limbs -- no longer even
recognizably human. If anything she was a casual geometric construction with
no logic to it but a great deal of knobby and gnarly surface. Even with no
face she seemed to stare at us. This new
entity lasted only a short time. It shifted and there was a new splitting
apart -- now she was small bits, fragments, of swirling light. I sensed that
the energy of her had grown, and I knew what I could do. I collected my
energy reserves and eased out of the computer, passed through the wall of the
dome, and into the vacuum of space. Crossing to the edge of the universe used
up nearly all of the reserves, more than I had anticipated, and I knew I
could not return to Slipshod. For a moment it looked as if I might snap out
of existence before I reached the edge. But, even with the diminishing
reserves, I felt more alive than I had since I had been captured and shoved
into the computer. I barely
noticed my passing through the edge. The other side was still, with a sense
of no distance, no dimension, no existence. But I did exist, and I was there.
And Elaine was right in front of me, as swirling iotas of energy. Sensing her
welcome, I joined with her. I changed, too. She became my energy, the energy
I now needed, and I became hers. I was Elaine and she was I, and she was no
longer Elaine and I was no longer I. Neither one of us wanted to return to
the others or go to any home planet or go anywhere. She believed that our
union was not sexual, and I saw that it had nothing to do with the
accumulation of energy I had craved. There was something more and we did not
know what it was. We thought we might find out. Or might not. We were where
we were, and that is where we are.