The Year’s Best Science Fiction: Seventh Annual Collection

Home > Other > The Year’s Best Science Fiction: Seventh Annual Collection > Page 68
The Year’s Best Science Fiction: Seventh Annual Collection Page 68

by Gardner Dozois


  Here he shows us a man living through a nearly perfect day—and it had goddamned well better be!

  Just Another Perfect Day

  JOHN VARLEY

  Don’t Worry.

  Everything is under control.

  I know how you’re feeling. You wake up alone in a strange room, you get up, you look around, you soon discover that both doors are locked from the outside. It’s enough to unsettle anybody, especially when you try and try and try to recall how you got here and you just can’t do it.

  But beyond that … there’s this feeling. I know you’re feeling it right now. I know a lot of things—and I’ll reveal them all as we go along.

  One of the things I know is this:

  If you will sit down, put this message back on the table where you found it, and take slow, deep breaths while counting to one hundred, you’ll feel a lot better.

  I promise you will.

  Do that now.

  * * *

  See what I mean? You do feel a lot better.

  That feeling won’t last for long, I’m sorry to say.

  I wish there was an easier way to do this, but there isn’t, and believe me, many ways have been tried. So here we go:

  This is not 1986.

  You are not twenty-five years old.

  The date is

  January February March April May June

  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

  2006 2007 2008

  A lot of things have happened in

  twenty twenty-one twenty-two

  years, and I’ll tell you all you need to know about that in good time.

  For now … Don’t Worry.

  Slow, deep breaths. Close your eyes. Count to a hundred.

  You’ll feel better.

  I promise.

  * * *

  If you’ll get up now, you’ll find that the bathroom door will open. There’s a mirror in there. Take a look in it, get to know the

  forty-five forty-six forty-seven

  -year-old who will be in there, looking back at you …

  And Don’t Worry.

  Take deep breaths, and so forth.

  I’ll tell you more when you get back.

  * * *

  Well.

  I know how rough that was. I know you’re trembling. I know you’re feeling confusion, fear, anger … a thousand emotions.

  And I know you have a thousand questions. They will all be answered, every one of them, at the proper time.

  Here are some ground rules.

  I will never lie to you. You can’t imagine how much care and anguish has gone into the composition of this letter. For now, you must take my word that things will be revealed to you in the most useful order, and in the easiest way that can be devised. You must appreciate that not all your questions can be answered at once. It may be harder for you to accept that some questions cannot be answered at all until a proper background has been prepared. These answers would mean nothing to you at this point.

  You would like someone—anyone—to be with you right now, so you could ask these questions. That has been tried, and the results were needlessly chaotic and confusing. Trust me; this is the best way.

  And why should you trust me? For a very good reason.

  I am you. You wrote—in a manner of speaking—every word in this letter, to help yourself through this agonizing moment.

  Deep breaths, please.

  Stay seated; it helps a little.

  And Don’t Worry.

  So now we’re past bombshell #2. There are more to come, but they will be easier to take, simply because your capacity to be surprised is just about at its peak right now. A certain numbness will set in. You should be thankful for that.

  And now, back to your questions.

  Top of the list: What happened?

  Briefly (and it must be brief—more on that later):

  In 1989 you had an accident. It involved a motorcycle which you don’t remember owning because you didn’t buy it until 1988, and a city bus. You had a difference of opinion concerning the right of way, and the bus won.

  Feel your scalp with your fingertips. Don’t be queasy; it healed long ago—as much as it’s going to. Under those great knots of scar tissue are the useless results of the labors of the best neurosurgeons in the country. In the end, they just had to scoop out a lot of gray matter and close you back up, shaking their heads sagely and opining that you would probably feel right at home under glass on a salad bar.

  But you fooled them. You woke up, and there was much rejoicing, even though you couldn’t remember anything after the summer of ‘86. You were conscious a few hours, long enough for the doctors to determine that your intelligence didn’t seem to be impaired. You could talk, read, speak, see, hear. Then you went back to sleep.

  The next day you woke up, and couldn’t remember anything after the summer of ‘86. No one was too worried. They told you again what had happened. You were awake most of the day, and again you fell asleep.

  The next day you woke up, and couldn’t remember anything after the summer of ‘86. Some consternation was expressed.

  The next day you woke up, and couldn’t remember anything after the summer of ’86. Professorial heads were scratched, seven-syllable Latin words intoned, and deep mumbles were mumbled.

  The next day you woke up, and couldn’t remember anything after the summer of ‘86.

  And the next day

  And the next day

  And the day after that.

  This morning you woke up and couldn’t remember anything after the summer of ‘86, and I know this is getting old, but I had to make the point in this way, because it is

  2006 2007 2008

  and we’ve begun to think a pattern is established.

  No, no, don’t breathe deeply, don’t count to one hundred, face this one head on. It’ll be good for you.

  Back under control?

  I knew you could do it.

  What you have is called Progressive Narco-Catalepti-Amnesiac Syndrome (PNCAS, or “Pinkus” in conversation), and you should be proud of yourself, because they made up the term to describe your condition and at least a half-dozen papers have been written proving it can’t happen. What seems to happen, in spite of the papers, is that you store and retrieve memories just fine as long as you have a continuous thread of consciousness. But the sleep center somehow activates an erase mechanism in your head, so that all you experienced during the day is lost to you when you wake up again. The old memories are intact and vivid; the new ones are ephemeral, like they were recorded on a continuous tape loop.

  Most amnesias of this type behave rather differently. Retrograde amnesia is seen fairly frequently, whereby you gradually lose even the old memories and become as an infant. And progressive amnesias are not unknown, but those poor people can’t remember what happened to them as little as five minutes ago. Try to imagine what life would be like in those circumstances before you start crying in your beer.

  Yeah, great, I hear you whine. And what’s so great about this?

  Well, nothing, at first glance. I’ll certainly be the last one to argue about that. My own re-awakening is too fresh in my mind, having happened only fifteen hours ago. And, in a sense, I will soon be dead, snatched back from this mayfly existence by the greedy arms of Morpheus. When I sleep tonight, most of what I feel to be me will vanish. I will awake, an older and less wise man, to confusion, will read this letter, will breathe deeply, count to one hundred, stare into the mirror at a stranger. I will be you.

  And yet, now, as I scan rapidly through this letter for the second time today (I said I wrote it, but only in a sense; it was written by a thousand mayflies), they are asking me if there is anything I wish to change. If I want a change, Marian will see that it is made. Is there anything I would like to do differently tomorrow? Is there something I want to tell you, my successor in this body, to beware of, to disbelieve? Are there any warnings I would issue?

  The answer is no.

  I w
ill let this letter stand, in its entirety.

  There are things still for you to learn that will convince you, against all common sense, that you have a wonderful life/day ahead of you.

  But you need a rest. You need time to think.

  Do this for me. Go back to the date. Mark out the last number and write in the next. If it’s a new month, change that, too.

  Now you will find the other door will open. Please go into the next room, where you will find breakfast, and an envelope containing the next part of this letter.

  Don’t open it yet. Eat your breakfast.

  Think it over.

  But don’t take too long. Your time is short, and you won’t want to waste it.

  * * *

  That was refreshing, wasn’t it?

  It shouldn’t surprise you that all your favorite breakfast foods were on the table. You eat the same meal every morning, and never get tired of it.

  And I’m sorry if that statement took some of the pleasure out of the meal, but it is necessary for me to keep reminding you of your circumstances, to prevent a cycle of denial getting started.

  Here is the thing you must bear in mind.

  Today is the rest of your life.

  Because that life will be so short, it is essential that you waste none of it. In this letter I have sometimes stated the obvious, written out conclusions you have already reached—in a sense, wasted your time. Each time it was done—and each time it will yet be done in the rest of this letter—was for a purpose. Points must be driven home, sometimes brutally, sometimes repetitiously. I promise you this sort of thing will be kept to an absolute minimum.

  So here comes a few paragraphs that might be a waste of time, but really aren’t, as they dispose neatly of several thousand of the most burning questions in your mind. The questions can be summed up as “What has happened in twenty years?”

  The answer is: You don’t care.

  You can’t afford to care. Even a brief synopsis of recent events would take hours to read, and would be the sheerest foolishness. You don’t care who the President is. The price of gasoline doesn’t concern you, nor does the victor in the ‘98 World Series. Why learn this trivia when you would only have to re-learn it tomorrow?

  You don’t care which books and movies are currently popular. You have read your last book, seen your last movie.

  Luckily, you are an orphan with no siblings or other close relatives. (It is lucky; think about it.) The girl you were going with at the time of your accident has forgotten all about you—and you don’t care, because you didn’t love her.

  There are things that have happened which you need to know about; I’ll speak of them very soon.

  In the meantime.…

  How do you like the room? Not at all like a hospital, is it? Comfortable and pleasant—yet it has no windows, and the only other door was locked when you tried it.

  Try it again. It will open now.

  And remember …

  Don’t Worry.

  * * *

  Don’t Worry. Don’t Worry. Don’t Worry.

  You will have stopped crying by now. I know you desperately need someone to talk to, a human face to look into. You will have that very soon now, but for another few minutes I still must reach out to you from your recent past.

  Incidentally, the reason the breathing exercises and the counting are so effective is a post-hypnotic suggestion left in your mind. When you see the words Don’t Worry, it relaxes you. It seems that some part of your mind retains shadows of memory that you can’t reach—which may also account for why you believe all this apparent rubbish.

  Are the tears dry? It did the same thing to me. Even seeing my own face aged in the mirror didn’t affect me like seeing the view from my windows. Then it became real.

  You are on one of the top floors of the Chrysler Building. Your view to the north included many, many buildings that were not there in 1986, and jumbled among them were many familiar buildings, distinctive as fingerprints. This is New York, and it is a new century, and that view is impossible to deny and as real as a fist. That’s why you wept.

  Not too many more bombshells to go now. But the next one is a doozy. Let’s creep up on it, shall we?

  You’ve already looked at the three photographs on the table beside your breakfast. Consider them now, in order.

  The big, bluff, hearty-looking fellow is Ian Maclntyre, whom you’ll meet in a few minutes. He will be your counselor/companion today, and he is the head of a very important project in which you are involved. It’s impossible not to like him, though you, like me, will try to resist at first. But he is too wise to push it, and you’ve always liked people, anyway. Besides, he has a lot of experience in winning your friendship, having done so every day for eight years.

  On to the second picture.

  Looks almost human, doesn’t he? If the offspring of Gumby and E.T. could be considered human. He is humanoid: two eyes, nose, mouth, two arms and two legs, and that goofy grin. The green skin you’ll get used to quickly enough.

  What he is, is a Martian.

  See, fifteen years ago the Martians landed and took over the planet Earth. We still don’t know what they plan to do with it, but some of the theories are not good news for Homo sapiens.

  Don’t Worry.

  Take a few deep breaths. I’ll wait.

  * * *

  That last thought is unworthy of you and unjust. I would not waste your time with a practical joke. You must realize I can back up what I say.

  To illustrate, I want you to go to the south windows of your apartment. Go through the billiard room into the spa, turn left at the gym, and open the door beside the Picasso, the one that didn’t open before. You’ll find yourself in an area with a view of the Narrows, and I’m sure I won’t need to direct you beyond that.

  Take a look, and come right back.

  * * *

  All right, you just had to prove you could do things your own way, didn’t you? I don’t care that you brought the letter with you, but your having done so provides one last bit of proof that I know you pretty well, doesn’t it?

  Now, back to the bloody Martians.

  It’s amazing how on-target Steve Spielberg was, isn’t it? The way that ship floats out there … and it’s bigger than the mother ship in Close Encounters. That sucker is over thirty miles across. At its lowest point it is two miles in the air. The upper parts reach into space. It has floated out there for fifteen years and not budged one inch. People call it The Saucer. There are fifteen others just like it, hovering near other major cities.

  And you think you have detected a flaw, don’t you? How would you have seen it, you ask, if it had been a cloudy day? If it had been just a normal New York smoggy day, for that matter. Then you’d be reading this, scratching your head, wondering what the hell I’m talking about.

  The answer will illustrate everyone’s concern. There are no more cloudy days in New York. The Martians don’t seem to like rain, so they don’t let it happen here. As for the smog … they told us to stop it, and we did. Wouldn’t you, with that thing floating out there?

  About the name, Martians …

  We first detected their ships in the neighborhood of Mars. I know you’d have found it easier to swallow, in a perverse way, had I told you they came from Alpha Centauri or the Andromeda Galaxy or the planet Tralfamadore. But people got to calling them Martians because that’s what they were called on television.

  We don’t think they’re really from Mars.

  We don’t know where they’re from, but it’s probably not from around here. And, by that, I mean not just another galaxy, but another universe. We think our own universe exists sort of as a shadow of them.

  This will be hard to explain. Take it slowly.

  Do you remember Flatland, and Mr. A Square? He lived in a two-dimensional universe. There was no up or down, just right and left, forward and backward. He could not conceive the notion of up or down. Mr. Square was visited by a three-dimensional bein
g, a sphere, who drifted down through the world of Flatland. Square perceived the sphere as a circle that gradually grew, and then shrank. All he could see at any one moment was a cross-section of the sphere, while the sphere, god-like, could look down into Mr. Square’s world, even touch inside Square’s body without going through the skin.

  It was all just an interesting intellectual exercise, until the Martians arrived. Now we think they’re like the sphere, and we are Mr. Square. They live in another dimension, and they don’t perceive time and space like we do.

  An example:

  You saw they appeared humanoid. We don’t think they really are.

  We think they simply allow us to see a portion of their bodies which they project into our three-dimensional world and cause to appear humanoid. Their real shape must be vastly complex.

  Consider your hand. If you thrust your fingers into Flatland, Mr. Square would see four circles and not imagine them to be connected. Putting your hand in further, he would see the circles merge into an oblong. Or an even better analogy is the shadow-play. By suitably entwining your two hands in front of a light, you can cast a shadow on a wall that resembles a bird, or a bull, or an elephant, or even a man. What we see of the Martians is no more real than a Kermit the Frog hand puppet.

  The ship is the same way. We see merely a three-dimensional cross-section of a much larger and more complex structure.

  At least we think so.

  Communication with the Martians is very frustrating, nearly impossible. They are so foreign to us. They never tell us anything that makes sense, never say the same thing twice. We assume it would make sense if we could think the way they do.

  And it is important.

  They are very powerful. Weather control is just a parlor trick. When they invaded, they invaded all at once—and I hope I can explain this to you, as I’m far from sure I understand it myself, after a full day with Martians.

  They invaded fifteen years ago … but they also invaded in 1854, and in 1520, and several other times in the “past.” The past seems to be merely another direction to them, like up or down. You’ll be shown books, old books, with woodcuts and drawings and contemporary accounts of how the Martians arrived, what they did, when they left … and don’t be concerned that you don’t remember these momentous events from your high school history class, because no one else does, either.

 

‹ Prev