The Transmigration of Souls
Page 45
What is she doing now? Looking intently at the screen. Probably wants to see Man Into Space with her friends. So she can watch the show.
Hand casually draped over the arm of the movie chair now, the one arm separating the two seats. Glad there aren’t so many people here. No one nearby, one of the good parts about taking a girl to a shitty movie. Hand draped ever so casually over the arm of the chair, knuckles resting against the side of her thigh. No reaction. Is that good or bad? You never can tell with girls. Maybe...
His hand felt like it was tingling, fingers practically paralyzed, only inches from her lap. And she’s wearing a very short skirt. Accident or invitation? How am I supposed to know? OK, so it’s hot out. She could have worn shorts, but she didn’t...
Hand drifting now, Ling leaning forward, as if absorbed in scenes from the next preview. Something about a big, slobbery dog, images on the screen barely registering now. Scrunching closer to her. Other arm touching her back now. Loose hand suspended over her thigh.
He stole a glance downward. Bare legs gleaming in the movielight. Knees about four inches apart. Carelessness or invitation? How am I supposed to know? Well...
Leaning forward a little more, eyes still riveted to the screen. Is the movie about to start? Who cares? Fingertips resting atop her thigh. All right. You’ve backed out at this point in the past. Slight shortness of breath, the word dyspnea surfacing out of his seemingly endless store of words. Palm on the inside of her thigh.
He stole a look at her face. Nothing. Eyes on the screen, watching the titles roll. Hand moving up her thigh now. Erection starting to double up painfully in his pants. Edge of her skirt. Fail-safe point. Skin much softer the higher he went. Sudden hard bulge of tendon coming up out of the muscle, following it to the edge of her soft, silky underpants, feeling the hard, rolled seam there, softness beyond...
Strong hand holding his wrist suddenly. Tension of regret. She’ll pull it away now. Hold it in her own, hold it tight for the rest of the movie. Polite talk on the way home, a peck on the cheek, then gone.
Another voice, speaking from somewhere outside his immediate consciousness: Yes, that’s right. And by tomorrow all her girlfriends will know. That’s why they’ll giggle when they see you.
He could feel the flush of shame starting down his cheeks already.
But the hand was only on the back of his own, resting there, palm pushing down, flattening his hand against the space between her legs, his thoughts whirling giddily, making no damned sense at all.
She leaned toward him, head bumping lightly against the side of his face, and whispered, “Take it easy, Ling. This movie’s three hours long.”
o0o
Astrid Kincaid awoke and opened her eyes slowly. Outside, in the blackest imaginable night, the wind was booming hollowly, rattling the branches of bare winter trees, threatening storm. A glance at the bedside clock. Not even midnight yet. Ling resting against her, tucked under her arm, head resting against her shoulder, face pillowed on the side of her breast, breath soft and slow on her skin. Soft and slow.
Probably asleep. Usually asleep afterward. All right. Well I’ve been asleep too. Should’ve gotten up and cleaned myself at least. Damp tissue a distinct lump between her legs, where she’d stuffed it not long after they’d finished, tissue soaking with his semen, warm then, cold now. A smile in the darkness. So much for tender romance... that last of sex for which the first was made.
Some of the swelling subsided now, that pried-open feeling gone away. A little itchy, though. Not enough to make me get up and take a bath. Plenty of time in the morning.
Memory of him, huffing and puffing over her, chugging away steadily in the empty darkness, going after his own orgasm long after hers had come and gone. All right. Not spectacular. One more knot on the long, uneven quipu cord of their marriage. Twenty years. Twenty years already...
She felt herself divide suddenly. Divide again. Divide a thousand times. Images of Astrid Kincaid infinite in number, dancing in the darkness like movies on the inside of her eyes. This one like a maidservant, washing his clothes, cooking his meals, taking his semen in whatever orifice he chose. Bearing his children. His children, though they came out of her body.
Or that one. Look at that Astrid Kincaid. Defying him. Walking out the door. Resuming her life as if his hadn’t happened. Another Astrid Kincaid over there, swaying in the night, hands pressed to her face, not wanting to look at him, lying in the bed, lying so still and pale, handle of the steak knife poking up from his breast...
This whole group of Astrid Kincaids over here, so happy to serve him. In what world did those poor women dwell? Look at them smiling. Young ones with babies at breast. Old ones with grandchildren on knee, proud old women with a slim, silent gray old Chinese man walking slowly beside them.
Women who seem to have been contented with their script.
Silent old gray man at my side... Did you suck dick all your life or stand up and fight, challenge them to kill you? What script did you follow? People learn to hate their scripts, then lack the courage to write their own. My God. A life full of ellipsis marks.
Astrid Kincaid lying in the darkness, listening to the roar of a midnight wind. Remembering this particular life. In the morning. In the morning we’ll rise. Shower. Go to the ready room. Have a breakfast of steak and eggs with all our cheery comrades. Suit up. Ride our bus out to the pad, spaceship lit by searchlights, cold gray Atlantic nothing but darkness beyond, all the way out to the eastern horizon, empty black sky waiting for the Sun.
Remember how it went, that Millennial Dawn? All the people of the world coming together under the aegis of the United Nations, all the people agreeing that they must act now, together, or all die together a century or two down the road...
Ling and Kincaid, friends since that high school date, fondly remembered, rising out of the darkness on nights like this, as they drifted to sleep in each other’s arms. Ling and Kincaid, through college together. Through graduate school and jobs, through children and career, always plotting together, threading their way through a political sea, eyes, always, on their goal...
Spaceship standing tall in the searchlights now, serviced by technicians, waiting for them to come and fly it away into the empty sky. A sky which, forever afterward, would be empty no more...
She said, “But it didn’t happen that way, Dale. I remember.”
Ling still by her side but... there, by her breast, the glimmer of his eyes, open on the darkness. Softly, he whispered, “But what if it had?”
A shadow by the foot of their bed, dark man, barely visible. Dale Millikan said, “You remember because I allow you to remember, Astrid Astride.”
Not even the tiniest clench of embarrassment now. No point. Astrid astride whatever the voice of the god tells her to straddle, wriggling for the watchers, handing them her heart.
Millikan said, “When God was real, we made him dance for us. It’s why He went away. Why should you be any better?”
Ling whispered, “Did He really go away?”
Invisible smile in Millikan’s voice: “Oh, I suppose. No one was minding the store, at any rate.”
Kincaid said, “If the Multiverse is everything, where could God go?”
Ling: “And if the Multiverse is God, why are we here?”
Soft laughter from the shadow figure at the foot of the bed. “You people never give up, do you?”
Kincaid: “Why should we?”
A shifting of shadows. A nod, perhaps? He said, “The dolphins had the only answer that mattered.”
Ling, angry: “Don’t tell me that.”
“All right, Milton had the answer too. God existed when He was only a word. Supposing the word was if? If and only if. Probability begets being, God fills up with angels, the angels resent the scripts probability writes for them, fight each other, rebel against God, fall, are consumed and scattered, leaving behind the empty scaffolding of Heaven. Is that a better answer, Ling Erhshan?”
Silence.
Hearts beating in the night.
“God reduced to a drooling idiot, helpless to turn back probability, is no different from a God who has vanished.”
Kincaid: “Why should God be helpless against probability?”
Millikan said, “As well ask why probability should be helpless against God.”
Ling said, “More sophomoric twaddle.”
Again, that shadowy nod. “As, ultimately, are all questions that reach beyond causes and look for more than effects. In this Multiverse, God is no more than the vector sum of all the forces that imagine they create and destroy. Souls, like the fundamental particles they are, pass through the subtle realm of Platonic Realty, emerge changed, and the totality of the Multiverse is conserved.”
Kincaid whispered, “We haven’t come this far to be told, You live and you die; that’s it...”
A longer, darker silence, then Millikan said, “No one really dies. Not in a Multiverse where all possible histories are equivalent.”
“Are they equivalent, Mr. Millikan?” Ling, seeming to fumble for his words. “I understand, mind you, there is a finite possibility that each and every one of us will somehow live forever. I understand that, where such a thing is possible, it must be. But among the many possible histories... In most of those worlds I die. In most of them, we all die.”
Kincaid: “I was immortal in the history of my origin, in the sense that such a thing may have been biologically possible by the laws of the universe where I lived. What good did that do all the Astrid Kincaids who lived in universes where nothing but death was waiting for them?”
Millikan said, “Any two particles which have ever been in association, remain in communication, no matter how far removed they become from each other. As each universe, each history originates at a single point, as all histories and all universes originate in Platonic Reality.”
Ling said, “No information was ever passed through such a channel, nor ever could be. No spooky action...”
“But you’ve passed through all the gates now. Walked the byways of Creation. All of your lives are one life, lived in parallel. Because you forget your dreams doesn’t mean those dreams never were. And because I am here, I see to it that all lives go on.”
Kincaid, dryly: “Whether we like it or not?”
Merry laughter: “Oh, my poor little Astrid Astride. Matter and energy that may be neither created nor destroyed, only changed. Souls that travel from life to life, world to world, across all time, looking for some gray Nirvana where they may cease to be, finding only endless reincarnation...”
Suddenly they were under a pale blue sky, Ling and Kincaid side by side, still naked, the probability manager standing before them in his cheap, shabby gray suit, behind him a fat, flat mirror of an ocean that stretched out until it touched the remote end of the sky. Warm winds. Little white clouds high above.
He said, “Immortality’s the best I have to offer. The rest is up to you.” He vanished, leaving them alone.
After a while, they started to walk away up the beach together. And though they lived on forever and ever as they sailed across the wine-dark sea, looking for nothing, finding everything, Professor Ling Erhshan and Sergeant-Major Astrid Kincaid never tired of recalling the days when they sailed the Caliph’s ship and served My Lord Almansur.
Somewhere out there, somewhere by God, I swear they still live.
Behind them, hanging like a tired old moon in the empty sky, leaching back into the infinite reaches of the Multiverse, the man in the cheap gray suit wondered, for just a moment, what it would have been like to go along with them. Splendid freedom.
Paradise lost, never to be regained.
Over his shoulder, the living spirit of Dylan Thomas whispered mournfully in his ear: “Dead men naked, they shall be one with the man in the wind and the west moon. Though lovers be lost, love shall not, and death shall have no dominion.”
True enough, Dale Millikan thought.
And returned to the job of Creation.
eBooks to Come
What follows is a list of prospective eBook publications, a mix of reprint and new. The pricing schema for them is simple. Novellas, averaging 100 – 150 pages in length, will be $2.99. Full-length novels (usually more than 400 pages) will typically carry the original mass-market paperback cover price, for reprints, or $9.99 for new ones. Collections of short fiction will be priced according to length, somewhere in between. I intend to stick to that, come Hell or high inflation.
The Starover Universe
Hunting On Kunderer, 1972 reprint novella.
A Plague of All Cowards, 1976 reprint novella.
This Dog/Rat World, unpublished 1978 novella.
Acts of Conscience, 1997 reprint novel.
A Last War for the Oriflamme, new novella.
Loci of the Starover Universe, new nonfiction.
The Portmanteau Universe
The Venusians, with Michael Capobianco, unpublished 1964 novella.
Under Twilight, with Michael Capobianco, unpublished 1978 novel.
The Silvergirl Universe
When We Were New, reprint and new collection.
When We Were Real, 1999 reprint novel.
When We Were Lost, reprint and new collection.
Other Novels
Iris, with Michael Capobianco, 1990 reprint novel.
Fellow Traveler, with Michael Capobianco, 1991 reprint novel.
Dark Sky Legion, 1992 reprint novel.
Radio Silence, unpublished 1992 novel.
When Heaven Fell, 1995 reprint novel.
The Transmigration of Souls, 1996 reprint novel.
Alpha Centauri, with Michael Capobianco, 1997 reprint novel.
White Light, with Michael Capobianco, 1998 reprint novel.
Moments of Inertia, unpublished 2000 novel, parts serialized in Asimov’s, The Urban Hiker, and The North Carolina Literary Review, with a related article, “Gold from Your Novel” in Writer’s Digest.
Other Novellas
Almost Forever, 1993 reprint.
Yellow Matter, 1993 reprint.
Age of Aquarius, 1996 reprint.
The Engine of Desire, 2002 reprint.
The Man Who Counts, 2003 reprint.
Off on a Starship, 2003 reprint.
Down to the Earth Below, 2006 reprint.
The Sea of Dreams, 2009 reprint.
General Collections
Ambient Light, complete short fiction from the 1980s and 1990s.
Coronal Light, complete short fiction from the 2000s.
Zodiacal Light, short fiction from the 2010s and beyond, should I live so long. We’ll see!
Zed Variations, tales of Mr. Zed and his going doubles, including his lost-boy selves.
Tales to Dishearten, short fiction from the 1960s and 1970s, including some Starover stories.
Melting in the Sun, a collection of memoir stories, true in spirit, if not in fact.
Shambles, a nonfiction assortment, articles on writing, software design, space exploration, and more.
Roaming in the Gloaming, with Michael Capobianco. Collaborative fiction and nonfiction.
Table of Contents
Foreword
One. From the Earth to the Moon.
Two. Sartor Resartus.
Three. Children of the Lens.
Four. Tale of a Tub.
Five. Last and First Men.
Six. I Am the Only Being.
Seven. At the Earth’s Core.
Eight. The Hound of Heaven.
Nine. World Without End.
Ten. The End of the Passage.
Eleven. Down the Rabbit Hole.
eBooks to Come
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