Neal Stephenson’s Cryptonomicon uses the historical Turing as a character. It’s an excellent novel. Turing was recently portrayed by Benedict Cumberbatch in a movie, The Imitation Game.
This one is for Alan Turing.
Omni, Ellen Datlow, 1986
The nut-brown boy stood in the California field, his Asian face shadowed by a hardhat, his short stocky frame clothed in a T-shirt and a pair of brown shorts. He squinted across the hip-high grass at the spraddled old two-story ranch house, whistling a few bars from a Haydn piano sonata.
Out of the upper floor of the house came a man’s high, frustrated “Bloody hell!” and the sound of a fist slamming on a solid surface. Silence for a minute. Then, more softly, a woman’s question, “Not going well?”
“No. I’m swimming in it, but I don’t see it.”
“The encryption?” the woman asked timidly.
“The tesseract. If it doesn’t gel, it isn’t aspic.”
The boy squatted in the grass and listened.
“And?” the woman encouraged.
“Ah, Lauren, it’s still cold broth.”
The boy lay back in the grass. He had crept over the split-rail and brick-pylon fence from the new housing project across the road. School was out for the summer and his mother—adoptive mother—did not like him around the house all day. Or at all.
Behind his closed eyes, a huge piano keyboard appeared, with him dancing on the keys. He loved music.
He opened his eyes and saw a thin, graying lady in a tweed suit leaning over him, staring. “You’re on private land,” she said, brows knit.
He scrambled up and brushed grass from his pants. “Sorry.”
“I thought I saw someone out here. What’s your name?”
“Pal,” he replied.
“Is that a name?” she asked querulously.
“Pal Tremont. It’s not my real name. I’m Korean.”
“Then what’s your real name?”
“My folks told me not to use it any more. I’m adopted. Who are you?”
The gray woman looked him up and down. “My name is Lauren Davies,” she said. “You live near here?”
He pointed across the fields at the close-packed tract homes.
“I sold the land for those homes ten years ago,” she said. She seemed to be considering something. “I don’t normally enjoy children trespassing.”
“Sorry,” Pal said.
“Have you had lunch?”
“No.”
“Will a grilled cheese sandwich do?”
He squinted at her and nodded.
In the broad, red-brick and tile kitchen, sitting at an oak table with his shoulders barely rising above the top, he ate the slightly charred sandwich and watched Lauren Davies watching him.
“I’m trying to write about a child,” she said. “It’s difficult. I’m a spinster and I don’t know children well.”
“You’re a writer?” he asked, taking a swallow of milk.
She sniffed. “Not that anyone would know.”
“Is that your brother, upstairs?”
“No,” she said. “That’s Peter. We’ve been living together for twenty years.”
“But you said you’re a spinster … isn’t that someone who’s never married, or never loved?” Pal asked.
“Never married. And never you mind. Peter’s relationship to me is none of your concern.” She placed a bowl of soup and a tuna salad sandwich on a lacquer tray. “His lunch,” she said. Without being asked, Pal trailed up the stairs after her.
“This is where Peter works,” Lauren explained. Pal stood in the doorway, eyes wide. The room was filled with electronics gear, computer terminals and bookcases with odd cardboard sculptures sharing each shelf with books and circuit boards. She rested the tray precariously on a pile of floppy disks atop a rolling cart.
“Time for a break,” she told a thin man seated with his back toward them.
The man turned around on his swivel chair, glanced briefly at Pal and the tray and shook his head. The hair on top of his head was a rich, glossy black; on the close-cut sides, the color changed abruptly to a startling white. He had a small thin nose and a large green eyes. On the desk before him was a high-resolution computer monitor. “We haven’t been introduced,” he said. pointing to Pal.
“This is Pal Tremont, a neighborhood visitor. Pal, this is Peter Tuthy. Pal’s going to help me with that character we discussed this morning.”
Pal looked at the monitor curiously. Red and green lines shadowed each other through some incomprehensible transformation on the screen, then repeated.
“What’s a ‘tesseract’?” Pal asked, remembering what he had heard as he stood in the field.
“It’s a four-dimensional analog of a cube. I’m trying to find a way to teach myself to see it in my mind’s eye,” Tuthy said. “Have you ever tried that?”
“No,” Pal admitted.
“Here,” Tuthy said, handing him the spectacles. “As in the movies.”
Pal donned the spectacles and stared at the screen. “So?” he said. “It folds and unfolds. It’s pretty—it sticks out at you, and then it goes away.” He looked around the workshop. “Oh, wow!” The boy ran to a yard-long black music keyboard propped in one corner. “A Tronclavier! With all the switches! My mother had me take piano lessons, but I’d rather play this. Can you play it?”
“I toy with it,” Tuthy said, exasperated. “I toy with all sorts of electronic things. But what did you see on the screen?” He glanced up at Lauren, blinking. “I’ll eat the food, I’ll eat it. Now please don’t bother us.”
“He’s supposed to be helping me,” Lauren complained.
Peter smiled at her. “Yes, of course. I’ll send him downstairs in a little while.”
When Pal descended an hour later, he came into the kitchen to thank Lauren for lunch. “Peter’s a real flake,” he said confidentially. “He’s trying to learn to see certain directions.”
“I know,” Lauren said, sighing.
“I’m going home now,” Pal said. “I’ll be back, though … if it’s all right with you. Peter invited me.”
“I’m sure it will be fine,” Lauren said dubiously.
“He’s going to let me learn the Tronclavier.” With that, Pal smiled radiantly and exited through the kitchen door, just as he had come in.
When she retrieved the tray, she found Peter leaning back in his chair, eyes closed. The figures on the screen were still folding and unfolding.
“What about Hockrum’s work?” she asked.
“I’m on it,” Peter replied, eyes still closed.
Lauren called Pal’s foster mother on the second day to apprise them of their son’s location, and the woman assured her it was quite all right. “Sometimes he’s a little pest. Send him home if he causes trouble … but not right away! Give me a rest,” she said, then laughed nervously.
Lauren drew her lips together tightly, thanked the woman and hung up.
Peter and the boy had come downstairs to sit in the kitchen, filling up paper with line-drawings. “Peter’s teaching me how to use his program,” Pal said.
“Did you know,” Tuthy said, assuming his highest Cambridge professorial tone, “that a cube, intersecting a flat plane, can be cut through a number of geometrically different cross-sections?”
Pal squinted at the sketch Tuthy had made. “Sure,” he said.
“If shoved through the plane the cube can appear, to a two-dimensional creature living on the plane—let’s call him a ‘Flatlander’—to be either a triangle, a rectangle, a trapezoid, a rhombus, a square, even a hexagon or a pentagon, depending on the depth of penetration and the angle of incidence. If the two-dimensional being observes the cube being pushed through all the way, what he sees is one or more of these objects growing larger, changing shape suddenly
, shrinking, and disappearing.”
“Sure,” Pal said, tapping his sneakered toe. “That’s easy. Like in that book you showed me.”
“And a sphere pushed through a plane would appear, to the hapless flatlander, first as an ‘invisible’ point (the two-dimensional surface touching the sphere, tangential), then as a circle. The circle would grow in size, then shrink back to a point and disappear again.” He sketched two-dimensional stick figures looking in awe at such an intrusion.
“Got it,” Pal said. “Can I play with the Tronclavier now?”
“In a moment. Be patient. So what would a tesseract look like, coming into our three-dimensional space? Remember the program, now … the pictures on the monitor.”
Pal looked up at the ceiling. “I don’t know,” he said, seeming bored.
“Try to think,” Tuthy urged him.
“It would …” Pal held his hands out to shape an angular object. “It would like like one of those Egyptian things, but with three sides … or like a box. It would look like a weird-shaped box, too, not square. And if you were to fall through a flatland …”
“Yes, that would look very funny,” Peter acknowledged with a smile. “Cross-sections of arms and legs and body, all covered with skin …”
“And a head!” Pal enthused. “With eyes and a nose.”
The doorbell rang. Pal jumped off the kitchen chair. “Is that my Mom?” he asked, looking worried.
“I don’t think so,” Lauren said. “More likely it’s Hockrum.” She went to the front door to answer. She returned a moment later with a small, pale man behind her. Tuthy stood and shook the man’s hand. “Pal Tremont, this is Irving Hockrum,” he introduced, waving his hand between them. Hockrum glanced at Pal and blinked a long, not-very-mammalian blink.
“How’s the work coming?” he asked Tuthy.
“It’s finished,” Tuthy said. “It’s upstairs. Looks like your savants are barking up the wrong logic tree.” He retrieved a folder of papers and print-outs and handed them to Hockrum.
Hockrum leafed through the print-outs. “I can’t say this makes me happy. Still, I can’t find fault. Looks like the work is up to your usual brilliant standards. Here’s your check.” He handed Tuthy an envelope. “I just wish you’d had it to us sooner. It would have saved me some grief—and the company quite a bit of money.”
“Sorry,” Tuthy said.
“Now I have an important bit of work for you …” And Hockrum outlined another problem. Tuthy thought it over for several minutes and shook his head.
“Most difficult, Irving. Pioneering work there. Take at least a month to see if it’s even feasible.”
“That’s all I need to know for now—whether it’s feasible. A lot’s riding on this, Peter.” Hockrum clasped his hands together in front of him, looking even more pale and worn than when he had entered the kitchen. “You’ll let me know soon?”
“I’ll get right on it,” Tuthy said.
“Protegé?” he asked, pointing to Pal. There was a speculative expression on his face, not quite a leer.
“No, a young friend. He’s interested in music,” Tuthy said. “Damned good at Mozart, in fact.”
“I help with his tesseracts,” Pal asserted.
“I hope you don’t interrupt Peter’s work. Peter’s work is important.”
Pal shook his head solemnly. “Good,” Hockrum said, and then left the house with the folder under his arm.
Tuthy returned to his office, Pal in train. Lauren tried to work in the kitchen, sitting with fountain pen and pad of paper, but the words wouldn’t come. Hockrum always worried her. She climbed the stairs and stood in the open doorway of the office. She often did that; her presence did not disturb Tuthy, who could work under all sorts of adverse conditions.
“Who was that man?” Pal was asking Tuthy.
“I work for him.” Tuthy said. “He’s employed by a big electronics firm. He loans me most of the equipment I use. The computers, the high-resolution monitors. He brings me problems and then takes my solutions or answers back to his bosses and claims he did the work.”
“That sounds stupid,” Pal said. “What kind of problems?”
“Codes, encryptions. Computer security. That was my expertise, once.”
“You mean, like fencerail, that sort of thing?” Pal asked, face brightening. “We learned some of that in school.”
“Much more complicated, I’m afraid,” Tuthy said, grinning. “Did you ever hear of the German ‘Enigma,’ or the ‘Ultra’ project?”
Pal shook his head.
“I thought not. Don’t worry about it. Let’s try another figure on the screen now.” He called up another routine on the four-space program and sat Pal before the screen. “So what would a hypersphere look like if it intruded into our space?”
Pal thought a moment. “Kind of weird,” he said.
“Not really. You’ve been watching the visualizations.”
“Oh, in our space. That’s easy. It just looks like a balloon, blowing up from nothing and then shrinking again. It’s harder to see what a hypersphere looks like when it’s real. Reft of us, I mean.”
“Reft?” Tuthy said.
“Sure. Reft and light. Dup and owwen. Whatever the directions are called.”
Tuthy stared at the boy. Neither of them had noticed Lauren in the doorway. “The proper terms are ana and kata,” Tuthy said. “What does it look like?”
Pal gestured, making two wide swings with his arms. “It’s like a ball and it’s like a horseshoe, depending on how you look at it. Like a balloon stung by bees, I guess, but it’s smooth all over, not lumpy.”
Tuthy continued to stare, then asked quietly, “You actually see it?”
“Sure,” Pal said. “Isn’t that what your program is supposed to do—make you see things like that?”
Tuthy nodded, flabbergasted.
“Can I play the Tronclavier now?”
Lauren backed out of the doorway. She felt she had eavesdropped on something momentous, but beyond her. Tuthy came downstairs an hour later, leaving Pal to pick out Telemann on the synthesizer. He sat at the kitchen table with her. “The program works,” he said. “It doesn’t work for me, but it works for him. I’ve just been showing him reverse-shadow figures. He caught on right away, and then he went off and played Haydn. He’s gone through all my sheet music. The kid’s a genius.”
“Musical, you mean?”
He glanced directly at her and frowned. “Yes, I suppose he’s remarkable at that, too. But spacial relations—coordinates and motion in higher dimensions … Did you know that if you take a three-dimensional object and rotate it in the fourth dimension, it will come back with left-right reversed? So if I were to take my hand—” he held up his right hand—“and lift it dup—” he enunciated the word clearly, dup—“or drop it owwen, it would come back like this?” He held his left hand over his right, balled the right up into a fist and snuck it away behind his back.
“I didn’t know that,” Lauren said. “What are dup and owwen?”
“That’s what Pal calls movement along the fourth dimension. Ana and Kata to purists. Like up and down to a flatlander, who only comprehends left and right, back and forth.”
She thought about the hands for a moment. “I still can’t see it,” she said.
“I’ve tried, but neither can I,” Tuthy admitted. “Our circuits are just too hard-wired, I suppose.”
Upstairs, Pal had switched the Tronclavier to a cathedral organ and steel guitar combination and was playing variations on Pergolesi.
“Are you going to keep working for Hockrum?” Lauren asked. Tuthy didn’t seem to hear her.
“It’s remarkable,” he murmured. “The boy just walked in here. You brought him in by accident. Remarkable.”
“Can you show me the direction, point it out to me?” Tuthy asked t
he boy three days later.
“None of my muscles move that way,” the boy replied. “I can see it, in my head, but …”
“What is it like, seeing that direction?”
Pal squinted. “It’s a lot bigger. We’re sort of stacked up with other places. It makes me feel lonely.”
“Why?”
“Because I’m stuck here. Nobody out there pays any attention to us.”
Tuthy’s mouth worked. “I thought you were just intuiting those directions in your head. Are you telling me … you’re actually seeing out there?”
“Yeah. There’s people out there, too. Well, not people, exactly. But it isn’t my eyes that see them. Eyes are like muscles—they can’t point those ways. But the head—the brain, I guess—can.”
“Bloody hell,” Tuthy said. He blinked and recovered. “Excuse me. That’s rude. Can you show me the people … on the screen?”
“Shadows, like we were talking about,” Pal said.
“Fine. Then draw the shadows for me.”
Pal sat down before the terminal, fingers pausing over the keys. “I can show you, but you have to help me with something.”
“Help you with what?”
“I’d like to play music for them … out there. So they’ll notice us.”
“The people?”
“Yeah. They really look weird. They stand on us, sort of. They have hooks in our world. But they’re tall … high dup. They don’t notice us because we’re so small, compared to them.”
“Lord, Pal, I haven’t the slightest idea how we’d send music out to them … I’m not even sure I believe they exist.”
“I’m not lying,” Pal said, eyes narrowing. He turned his chair to face a mouse on a black ruled pad and began sketching shapes on the monitor. “Remember, these are just shadows of what they look like. Next I’ll draw the dup and owwen lines to connect the shadows.”
The boy shaded the shapes he drew to make them look solid, smiling at his trick but explaining it was necessary because the projection of a four-dimensional object in normal space was, of course, three-dimensional.
“They look like you take the plants in a garden, flowers and such, and giving them lots of arms and fingers … and it’s kind of like seeing things in an aquarium,” Pal explained.