He shuffled closer to the equation cube and noted with some interest that his walking made no sound. Hesitantly, he reached out a hand and touched the cube with an index finger, ready to snatch it away at an instant’s notice. The cube was soft to the touch, not hard and rigid as he had expected it might be, and neither warm nor cold. It made no indication of reaction to his touch, so he laid his hand upon it. With his palm flat against its surface, it seemed even softer than it had before. He pressed lightly upon it and felt the quiver underneath his palm, as if he had placed his hand upon a plate of jelly.
On the surface of the cube something moved and, startled, he stepped away. The equations, he saw, were changing and shifting about, and the diagrams were changing, too. The changing and the shifting at first was slow, deliberate, but quickly they became faster. They ran in a fascinating fluid motion, dissolving and running and combining into something else and then the something else was gone and there was something new. It is talking to me, he told himself, trying to communicate, attempting to bridge the gap that lies between the two of us. He watched hypnotically, and every now and then it seemed that he might be arriving at some understanding, but then the equations and the diagrams would change and he’d lose what had seemed, for a moment, to be some feeble inkling of the meaning that was being written on the blackboard surface of the cube.
Out of the corner of one eye, he glimpsed a movement and quickly stepped away, but there was no place to go, no place he could run. The other cubes were closing in on him. Already a tight ring of them had formed, blocking all possible escape. On the surfaces of all of them the equations and the diagrams were changing and shifting. It was an unnerving sight; while there still was no sound, he had the impression that all of them were shouting at him.
More were arriving all the time and some of them soared off the ground to perch upon those that had surrounded him and others came and settled down upon the second tier, as if they were concrete blocks and some invisible mason was using them to erect a wall around him. They were towering over him, and all the time they were moving in and he was half dizzy with the riotous running of their colors as the equations raced and scintillated to effect the changes. He had the fleeting impression that they no longer were trying to communicate, but under some impelling circumstance had come together to solve some weighty and complicated problem, with the equations building to immense complexity and the diagrams becoming twisted into inconceivable dimensions.
Then they toppled in upon him, the wall of them that had been built around him caving in and crashing down upon him. He screamed in terror, but as they came down upon him, the terror went away and he was left with a sense of wonder that was so deep it seemed to engulf all the universe. He was not crushed. Nothing at all happened to him except that he now stood in the center of the pile of cubes that had collapsed upon him. He stood unharmed in the midst of a sea of multicolored jelly and he feared, for a moment, that he’d either drown or suffocate, for in this close-packed jelly mass, there could be no air and his nostrils and his mouth and throat would fill with jelly and it would get into his lungs—
This did not happen. He felt no discomfort. For a moment he struggled to swim through the mass of jelly, seeking to rise to the surface where there would be air to breathe. Then he ceased his efforts, for somehow he knew he had no need of air and that he would not drown. The equation cubes were sustaining him, and within the midst of them, no harm could come to him. They did not tell him this, but he knew it. He had the impression that he had absorbed the message by a strange osmosis.
All the time the equations kept running around him and some of then twined themselves around him and some of them went through him and others of them went inside of him and stayed there and, in that moment, he seemed to understand that he had become an equation among all the rest of them. He felt the equations flowing through him and all around him and some of the diagrams joined together and constructed an intricate house for him and he crouched inside it, not knowing what he was, but for the moment quite content with being what he was.
Chapter Thirty-five
A group of Listeners gathered for the coffee hour.
“What is the word on Mary?” asked Ann Guthrie.
“No one seems to know,” said James Henry. “At least no one is talking.”
“Doesn’t anyone ever go to see her?” asked Ann.
“I did,” said Herb Quinn. “I could only go in for a moment. She seemed to be sleeping.”
“Or under sedation,” said Janet Smith.
“Perhaps,” Herb agreed. “The nurse marched me out. Visitors are not welcome.”
“I’d feel better,” said Ann, “if Old Doc were still around to take care of her. I don’t know about this new doctor.”
“Tennyson?”
“Yes, Tennyson.”
“I think you’re wrong,” said James Henry. “He seems an all-right guy. I had a talk with him a few weeks ago.”
“But you don’t know how good a doctor he is.”
“No, I’ve never been to him.”
“I had a sore throat a while ago,” said Marge Streeter. “I went to him and he cured it for me quickly. He is a pleasant man. Easy to talk with. At times Old Doc was grumpy.”
“That’s right,” said Herb. “Used to give me hell for not taking care of myself.”
“I don’t like some of the stories that are going around about Mary,” said Ann.
“None of us do,” said Herb. “Vatican’s always full of gossip. I never believe anything I hear.”
“Something must have happened,” said Janet. “Something rather terrible. All of us have had shocks. It can happen.”
“But we come out of it quickly,” said Herb. “A day or two.”
“Mary’s getting old,” said Ann. “Maybe she’s not up to it anymore. She should ease up. There are clone Marys coming up. They could take over.”
“Cloning bothers me,” said Marge. “I know it makes a lot of sense and is generally accepted throughout most of the human galaxy. Still, it has a creepy feel to it. Anyone who dabbles in cloning must think they have a license to play God. The whole idea is unnatural.”
“Playing God is nothing new,” said James. “Throughout all of history, both human history and otherwise, there has been a lot of God playing. The most flagrant example is the race that Ernie ran across. You remember it. Several years back.”
“That’s the one,” said Herb, “that creates worlds and peoples them with creatures out of their own imagination.…”
“That’s right,” said James, “but the worlds are logical. Not a few sticks and a pile of mud and magic mumbled over them. That race’s worlds are well engineered. All the factors that should go into the creation of a planet. Nothing phoney about them. All the right pieces put together correctly. And the creatures they put on them logical as well—some terribly screwy biological setups, but they work.”
“Yes, I know,” said Herb, “and then what happens? Each world becomes a stress world, a living laboratory with the populations subjected to all sorts of tests, faced with all kinds of situations that have to be solved if they want to survive. Intellectual beings used as test animals. Probably a lot of data is obtained and some social problems studied in some depth, but it is rough on the planet populations. And for no purpose.”
“Maybe there is a purpose,” said Janet. “Mind, I’m not defending the action, but there could be a purpose. Maybe not one that we would find sufficient, but …”
“I don’t know about that,” said Ann. “I’m inclined to doubt it. There must be, there simply has to be a set of universal ethics. There must, through all of space and time, be some things that are wrong and others that are right. We can’t excuse a vicious race for its vicious acts on the sole ground that the race itself is vicious, that it knows no better.”
“That is an argument,” said James, “that could go on forever.”
“Did Ernie ever pin down the coordinates for that race of planet-making g
ods?” asked Marge.
“I don’t believe he did,” said Herb. “He went back several times, made a number of observations. In a perverse sort of way, he worked up some interest in the situation—that and all the various world situations that the race cooked up. But he finally decided he was not getting much of any real interest, so he pulled back and canceled out.”
“He was lucky he could cancel,” said James. “Sometimes these experiences build up so much fascination that we get pulled back—just as Mary was pulled back to Heaven.”
“The one that I keep thinking about,” said Marge, “is that old senile computer Betsy blundered into several years ago. Out on one of the globular clusters centered almost exactly above the galactic core. The computer is still in command of a vast array of rather mysterious machinery created for some unknown purpose. Some of the machinery apparently is beginning to break down because of lack of maintenance. What the machines were supposed to do, Betsy hasn’t figured out. The entire planet’s haywire. At one time there apparently was an intelligent biology there, but whether it built the machines Betsy doesn’t know. The biology by now is fairly well wiped out, and what is left of it gone into hiding.”
“Betsy is still working on that one,” said Ann.
“And likely to be for some time,” said Herb. “Vatican has a special interest in the senile computer. They would like to know how and why a computer can fumble its way into senility. No one says so, but Vatican probably has His Holiness in mind.”
“The Pope’s not old enough,” said Marge, “for anyone to suspect him of senility.”
“Not yet,” said James. “He is still a youngster. But the time could come. Give him a million years or so. I suspect Vatican is quite capable of thinking a million years ahead.”
“Vatican won’t exist for a million years,” said Ann.
“Don’t bet on that,” said Herb. “Robots are the most stubborn thing there is. They don’t cave in. They won’t give up. These Vatican robots have too much going for them to even think of it. In a million years they well may have the galaxy in the hollows of their hands.”
Chapter Thirty-six
Jill went to the clinic to visit Mary. The nurse met her at the door. “You can stay for only a few minutes,” said the nurse. “Don’t try to speak with her.”
Jill moved a few feet into the room and stopped, looking down upon the frail, pallid woman on the bed, her body so thin and unsubstantial that its shape barely showed beneath the sheet. Her gray hair was spread out on the pillow. Her two clawlike hands lay outside the sheet, clutched together, the fingers interlaced, as if in desperation. Her thin lips were loosely pulled together. The jawbone and the cheekbones stood out in all their starkness, thinly covered by a parchment skin.
There was about her, Jill thought with some alarm, a certain look of skin-and-bones holiness, reminiscent of a drawing she once had seen of a fanatic medieval hermit who had managed to starve himself into acceptable holiness. This, she thought, this poor wreck of a woman, this skeleton—this is the one who is being touted as a saint!
Mary’s eyes came open, slowly open, not naturally, but as if she’d forced them. Her head was so positioned on the pillow that the opened eyes looked squarely into Jill’s face.
The loose lips moved and a question came out of them, a thin whisper that cut across the silence of the room.
“Who are you?” she asked.
Jill whispered back at her. “I’m Jill. I dropped by to see you.”
“No,” said Mary, “you are not Jill. I have heard of Jill but I’ve never seen her. And I’ve seen you. Somewhere I have seen you.”
Jill shook her head slowly, thinking to calm the woman on the bed.
“I recognize you,” insisted Mary. “Once, long ago, we talked together, but I can’t remember where.”
The nurse stalked toward Jill, then halted when Mary spoke again.
“Come close,” she said. “Close so I can see you better. My eyes are bad today. Bend down so I can see you.”
Jill moved close to the bed, bent down.
On the sheet the two clasped hands came apart and Mary lifted a paper-tissue hand and patted Jill upon the cheek.
“Yes, yes,” she said. “I know you.”
Then the hand fell back and the lids slid down across the eyes.
The nurse was beside Jill, tugging at her. “You’ll have to leave now.”
“Get your hands off me,” said Jill in sudden anger. “I’m going.”
Outside the clinic, she drew in a deep breath, suddenly feeling free. There was death inside that room, she told herself. Death and something else.
The sun was moving down the west, hanging just above the purple mountain wall, and this final hour of sunlight lay like a soft benediction on the land. Now, for the first time since she had come to End of Nothing (how long had it been—a few days, a few weeks, a few months?)—now, for the first time, she saw the land on which she stood not as an alien world, not as a grotesque setting for the great incomprehensibility that was Vatican, but as a place where she lived, as an environment in which she had comfortably settled herself.
Vatican lay against the land, now a part of it, growing out of the land as if it had sprouted roots deep into its soil—not a glaring obtrusion, but something that had grown as naturally as trees, blending into the biota of the planet. To the east and south lay the fields, the gardens and the orchards, an idyllic oasis that moved in close to the mass of squat, spreading buildings that made up Vatican, an ordered interface that linked Vatican to the primal soil. To the west were the mountains, the cloudlike mass of blue that was forever shifting shades, the continual shadow-show that Jason Tennyson had fallen in love with that first moment he had set eyes upon it. When he had drawn her attention to the mountains, she had not been impressed; to her, at that time, a mountain was a mountain and that was all it was. She had been wrong, she told herself. A mountain was a friend, or at least it could be one if you allowed it to be. The feeling for the great blue surge against the sky had stolen on her gradually from days of seeing it, becoming acquainted with it, and now realizing for the first time what it had come to mean to her—a landmark in her life, an ever-watching, surprisingly protective presence, a familiar figure that she could always turn to. It was only, she told herself, that until this moment she had never taken the time to stand and look. She had been wrong and Jason had been right.
Standing there, thinking of Jason and the mountains, it seemed suddenly imperative that she see him. He had not been at the clinic, which might mean he was home, although she could not be sure he was. He had fallen into the habit lately of going on long walks, or he might have gone once again to call on Decker.
She rapped on his door and there was no answer. He might be napping, she told herself, and turned the knob. The door came open when she pushed on it. On End of Nothing, few doors were ever locked. There was little need of locks.
The apartment was empty; it had an empty hollowness. There was no clatter in the kitchen, so Hubert wasn’t there. A small blaze burned on the fireplace grate.
“Jason,” she called, speaking more softly than she had intended to, the hush of the room imposing an instinctive urge to silence. She saw herself reflected in the large mirror mounted on the wall above the fireplace, a lost figure standing in the emptiness of the vacant room, a pale smudge of face emblazoned by the redness of the disfigured cheek.
“Jason,” she called again in a slightly louder voice.
When there was no answer, she walked through the open bedroom door. The bed was made up, the colorful coverlet drawn over it. The bathroom door was open.
She turned back to the living room and there stood Jason, in front of the fireplace, with his back to it, facing out into the room, staring out into the room, but there was a blankness on his face that seemed to say he was seeing nothing. Where had he come from? she wondered. How could she have missed him? She had not heard the door open or close and, as a matter of fact, there had been to
o little time since she had left the room for him to come through the door and walk across the room to the fireplace.
“Jason,” she said sharply, “what’s the matter with you?”
He swung his head toward her at the sound of her voice, but he registered no recognition at the sight of her.
She moved quickly to him, stood facing him, reached out with both her hands and grasped him by the shoulders. She shook him. “Jason, what’s going on?”
His eyes, which had seemed glazed over, brightened slightly.
“Jill,” he said in a halting, doubtful voice, as if he was not able to accept the fact that she was there. “Jill,” he said again, reaching out to grasp her by the arms. “Jill, I’ve been away.”
“I know you have,” she said. “Where have you been?”
“Another place,” he said.
“Jason, snap out of it. What other place?”
“I went to the equation world.”
“That place you dream about? That you have nightmares over?”
“Yes, but this time it was not a dream. I was there. I walked its surface. I and Whisperer …”
“Whisperer? That little puff of diamond dust you told me about?”
“We went as one,” he said. “We went together.”
“Come on, sit down,” she said. “Is there something that you want? I’ll get you a drink.”
“No, nothing. Just stay with me.”
He lifted a hand off her arm and ran it across her cheek in a caress—the cheek that carried the ugly, angry scar. He had grown into the habit of doing that—as if he might unconsciously be trying to express his love of her despite her disfigurement. At first she had flinched away from the gesture. Other than that caress, he had never, since shortly after they had met, made any move or said a word to indicate that he was aware of it. That, she knew, was one of the many reasons that she loved him. No other man, no other person, had ever been able to be, or seem to be, so unaware of that terrible scar. Now she no longer flinched away from the caress. She had come, instead, to value it, as if it might be some form of benediction.