Heads. Part 3

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I leaned my head to one side, giving him that much. 'If by naive, you mean she doesn't know what it's like to be in a sc.r.a.p, you're wrong.'

'She knows intellectually,' William said. 'And she's sharp enough that that may be all she needs. But she doesn't know what a dirty fight really is.'

'You think this is going to get dirty?' 'It doesn't make sense,' William said. 'Four hundred heads is gruesome, but it isn't dangerous, and it's been tolerated on Earth for a century ..

'Because nothing ever came of it,' I said. 'And apparently the toleration is wearing thin.'

William rubbed thumb and forefinger along his cheeks, narrowing his already narrow mouth. 'Why would anyone object?'



'For philosophical reasons, maybe,' I said.

William nodded. 'Or religious reasons. Have you read Logologist literature?'

I admitted that I hadn't.

'Neither have I, and I'm sure Rho hasn't. Time we did some research, don't you think?'

I shrugged dubiously, then s.h.i.+vered. 'I don't think I'm going to like what I find.'

William clucked. 'Prejudice, Micko. Pure prejudice. Remember my origins. Maybe the Task-Felders aren't all that forbidding.'

Being accused of prejudgment irritated me. I decided to change the subject and scratch an itch of curiosity. He had shown the QL to me earlier, but had seemed to deliberately avoid demonstrating the thinker. 'Can I talk to it?'

'What?' William-asked, then, following my eyes, looked behind him at the table. 'Why not. It's listening to us now.

QL, I'd like to introduce My friend and colleague, Mickey Sandoval.'

'Pleased to meet you,' the QL said, its voice gender-neutral, as most thinker voices were. I raised an eyebrow at William. Normal enough, house-trained, almost domestic. He understood my expression of mild disappointment.

'Can you describe Mickey to me?' he asked, feeling challenged now.

'In shape and form it is not unlike yourself,' the thinker said.

'What about his extensions?'

'They differ from yours. Its state is free and dynamic. Its fink with You is not Primary. Does he want controlling?' William smiled triumphantly. 'No, QL, he is not an instrumentality. He is like myself.'

'You are instrumentality.'

'True, but for convenience's sake only,' William said.

'It thinks you're part of the lab?' I asked.

'Much easier to work with it that way,' William a.s.sured Me.

'May I ask another question?'

'Be my guest,' William said.

'QL, who's the boss here' '

'If by boss you mean a node of leaders.h.i.+p, there is no leader here. The leader will arise at some later date, when the instrumentalities are integrated.'

'When we succeed,' William explained, 'then there will be a boss, a node of leaders.h.i.+p; and that will be the successful result itself.'

'You mean, QL thinks that if you achieve absolute zero, that will be the boss?'

William smiled. 'Something like that. Thank you, QL.' 'You're welcome,' the QL replied.

'Not so fast,' I said. 'I have another question.' William extended his hand, be my guest.

'What do you think will happen if the cells in the Cavity reach absolute zero?'

The interpreter was silent for a moment, and then spoke in a subtly different voice. 'This interpreter is experiencing difficulties translating the QL thinker's response,' it said. 'Do you wish a statement in post-Boolean mathematical symbols by way of direct retinal projection, or the same transferred to a slate address, or an English interpretation?' 'I've already asked this question, of course,' William told me. 'I have the mathematics already, several different versions, several different possibilities.'

'I'd like an English interpretation,' I said.

'Then please be warned that response changes from hour to hour in significant ways,' the interpreter said. 'This might indicate a chaotic wave-mode fluctuation of theory within the QL. In other words, it has not yet formulated are adequate prediction, and cannot. This thinker will present several English-language responses, but warns that they are inadequate for full understanding, which may not be possible for organic human minds at any rate. Do you wish possibly misleading answers?'

'Give us a try,' I said, feeling a sting of resentment. William sat at the manual-control console, willing to let this be my own contest.

'QL postulates that achievement of absolute zero within a significant sample of matter will result in a new state of matter. Since there is a coupling between motion of matter in s.p.a.cetime and other forces within matter, particularly within atomic nuclei - the principle upon which the force disorder pumps operate - then this new state of matter may be stable, and may require substantial energy input to return to a thermodynamic state. There is a small possibility that this new state may be communicable by quantum forces, and may induce a similar state in closely a.s.sociated atoms.'

I glanced at William. 'A very small possibility,' William said. 'And I've protected against it. The copper atoms are isolated in a Penning trap and can't come in contact with anything else.'

'Please go on,' I told the interpreter.

'Another possibility involves a hitherto undiscovered coupling between states of s.p.a.cetime itself and thermodynamic motion of matter. If thermodynamism ceases within a sample, the nature of s.p.a.cetime around the sample may change. Quantum ground states may be affected. Restraints on Probabilities of atomic positions may induce an alignment Of virtual Particle activities, with amplification of other quantum effects, including remote release of quantum information normally communicated between particles and inaccessible to non-communicants.'

'All right,' I said, defeated. 'William, I need an interpreter for your interpreter.'

'What the math says,' William said, eyes s.h.i.+ning with what must have been joy or pride, it could not have been sadness, 'is that a kind of crystallization of s.p.a.cetime will occur.'

'So?, 's.p.a.cetime is naturally amorphous, if we can poetically use terms reserved for matter. Crystallized s.p.a.ce would have some interesting properties. Information of quantum states and positions normally communicated only between particles - through the so-called exclusive channels - could be leaked. There could even be propagation of quantum information backwards in time.'

'That doesn't sound good,' I said.

'It would be purely local,' William said. 'Fascinating to study. You could think of it as making s.p.a.ce a superconductor of information, rather than the highly limited medium it is now.

'But is it likely?'

'No,' William said. 'From what I can understand, no QL prediction is likely or unlikely at this point.'

The Ice Pit farms and support warrens occupied some thirty-five hectares and employed ninety family members. That was moderately large for an isolated research facility, but old habits die hard - on the Moon, each station large and small is designed to be autonomous, in case of emergency, natural or political. Stations are more often than not spread so far apart that the habit makes hard sense. Besides, each station must act as an independent social unit, like a village on Earth. The closest major station to us, Port Yin, was six hours away by shuttle.

I had been a.s.signed twelve possible in-family girlfriends at the age of thirteen. Two resided at the Ice Pit. I had met one only casually, but the other, Lucinda Bergman-Sandoval, had been a love friend since we were sixteen. Lucinda worked on the farm that grew the station's food. We saw each other perhaps once a month now, my focus having s.h.i.+fted to extra-family women, as was expected when one approached marriage age. Still, those visits were good times, and we had scheduled a chat dinner date at the farm cafe this evening.

I've never cared much what women look like. I mean, extraordinary beauty has never impressed me, perhaps because I'm no platinum sheen myself. The Sandoval family had long since accepted pre- and post-birth transforms as a norm, as had most lunar families, and so no son or daughter of Sandoval BM was actively unpleasant to look at. Lucinda's family had given her normal birth, and she had chosen a light transform at age seventeen: she was black-haired, coffee-skinned, purple-eyed, slender and tall, with a long neck and pleasant, wide face. Like most lunar kids, she was b.i.+.c.hemical - she could go to Earth or other higher-gravity environments and adjust quickly.

We met in the caf6, which overlooked the six-hectare farm spread on the surface. Thick field-reinforced windows separated our table from high vacuum; a bra.s.s bar circled the enclosure to rea.s.sure our instincts that we would not fall off to the regolith or the clear polystone dome below.

Lucinda was a quiet girl, quick and sympathetic. We talked relations.h.i.+ps for a while - she was considering an extrafamily marriage proposal from a Nernst engineer named Hakim. I had some prospects but was still barn dancing a lot.

'Hakim's willing to be name-second,' she said. 'He's very generous.'

'Wants kids?'

'Of course. He told me they could be ex-utero if I was squeamish.' Lucinda smiled.

'Sounds rad,' I said.

'Oh, he's not. just ... generous. I think he's really sweet on me.'

'Advantages?'

She smirked lightly. 'Lots of advantages. His branch controls Nernst Triple contracts.'

'Nernst's done some work for us,' I said.

'Tell,' she instructed me softly.

'I probably shouldn't. I haven't even thought it through ... '

'Sounds serious.'

It could be, I suppose. The council president may try to stop something my blood-sister is doing.'

Lucinda raised her wide, thin eyebrows. 'Really? On what grounds?, 'I'm not sure. The president is Task-Felder ...

'So?'

'She's a Logologist.'

'Mm hmm. So? They have to play by the rules, too.'

'Of course. I'm not making any accusations ... But what do you know about Logologists?'

Lucinda thought for a moment. 'They're tough on contracts. Daood - that's Hakim's brother - he administered a design contract to the Independence Station near Fra Mauro. That's a Task-Felder station.'

'I know. I was invited to a barn dance there last month.'

'Did you go?'

I shook my head. 'Too much work.'

'Daood says they rode the Nernst designers for eight weeks, jumped them between three different specs. Seemed to be a management lag - Task-Felder niggles from the top down. No independent thinking from on-site managers. Daood was not impressed.'

I smiled. 'We've upset some Nernst people ourselves. Last year, on the refrigerator repairs and radiator upgrades.' 'Hakim mentioned that ... Daood said we were saints compared to Task-Felder.'

'Good to know we're appreciated by our brother BMs.' She mused for a moment. Our food came on an arbeiter delivery cart. 'I've heard about Io, of course. That was hard to believe. Have you read any of Thierry's works?' Lucinda asked. 'They were popular when we were kids.'

'I managed to avoid them,' I said. K. D. Thierry, an Earthborn movie producer who called himself a philosopher and acted like a dictatorial guru, had founded Chromopsychology in the late twentieth century, and then had spun it off into Logology.

'He must have written about three hundred books and LitVids. I read two - Planetary Spirit and Mother Mind? They were pretty strange. He tried to lay down rules for everything from what to dream to toilet training.' I laughed. 'Why did you read them?'

Lucinda shrugged. 'I used to scan a lot of LitVids. They were in the library. I called them up, paid the fee - about half what most LitVids cost. Lots of pretty video stuff. Sparkling lakes and rivers on Earth ... pictures of Thierry riding his solar-powered yacht around the world. That sort of thing. All very attractive to a Moon girl.'

'Did you read anything that explained what happened on Io?'

'I remember something about Thierry being told by an angel that humans were the sp.a.w.n of warring G.o.ds, superbeings. They lived before the birth of our Sun. He said that deep within us were pieces of the personalities of some of these G.o.ds.'

'I'll buy that,' I said.

'The rest of the G.o.ds' minds had been imprisoned, buried by their enemies under sulphur on the 'h.e.l.lmoon'. They were waiting for us to liberate them and join with them again. Something like that.' She shook her head.

I knew the rest of the story; it was in files on recent history I had studied in secondary. In 2090, Logologists on Mars had taken out a thousand-year development lease on Io from the Triple; violent, useless Io, visited only twice in history by human explorers. The new leaseholders set up a human-occupied station on Io in 2100. The station was lost with all occupants during the formation of a new Pelean-cla.s.s sulphur lake. Seventy-five loyal Logologists died and were never recovered; they are still there, entombed in black sulphur.

The Logologists had never admitted to looking for lost G.o.ds.

I shuddered. 'I didn't know what they were after. That's interesting.'

'It's spooky,' Lucinda said. 'I stopped reading him when I realized he thought he was writing history. These folks think he's practically a G.o.d himself.'

'They do?'

'You're dealing with them, and you don't know what they think?'

'My shortcomings are legendary,' I said, raising my hands.

'What kind of G.o.d?'

'They say he didn't die, that he was in perfect health. He just left his body behind like a husk. Now he's supposed to advise the Logologists through spiritual messages to his chosen disciples, each generation. He anoints them with blue cold, they say. Whatever that is. So what does Rho want to do that they don't like?'

'My lips are sealed. Rho gives the press conferences around here.'

'But the president knows?'

'I presume she must.'

'Thanks for trusting me, Micko.' She gave me a narrow grin to let me know she was teasing. Still, I felt uncomfortable.

'I can say I don't like any of it,' I confessed. 'It makes things a lot more complicated.'

'Better get on with your homework, then,' she advised.

The deeper I dug into Logology, the more fascinated I became. And repelled - though fascination won out in the end. Here was a creed without a coherent philosophy - a system without a sensible metaphysics Here was puerile hypothesis and even outright fantasy masquerading as revealed truth. And it was all based on a single supposed insight into the human mind, something so audacious - and so patently ridiculous - that it was fascinating.

K.D. Thierry had exploited everybody's deeply held wish to partic.i.p.ate in the unfolding of a Big Event. In this he was little different from other prophets and messiahs; the real differences lay in how much we knew about Thierry, and how ridiculous it seemed that a man such as he could be vouchsafed any great truth.

Heads. Part 3

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Heads. Part 3 summary

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