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file:///F|/rah/A.A.%20Attanasio/Attanasio,%20A.A.%20-%20SoliS.txt
SoliS
SoliS
A. A. ATTANASIO
HarperPrism
An Imprint of HarperPaperbacks
STAND OFF
"Mr. Charlie has found a way to rig the bore drill to detonate on his command.
He's threatening to blast apart the whole of Phoboi Twelve. He says he'd rather
die than be locked into a machine again."
"Incredible. But why are you risking our lives? What do you care?"
"I am C-P programmed to care. I have been built to be fascinated by human
beings. Naturally, when I received a distress signal from an archaic human, I
had to go to him."
"And if we rescue him," Mei asked, "then what? Where can we go with him?"
"There's only one place. The renegade colony on Mars. where the archaic humans
are holding out. Solis."
"Attanasio is a poet, a seer and a born storyteller, who writes with heart,
authentic life wisdom, and staggering, world-class imagination. There are no
limits to what he may accomplish."
-David Payne, author of Early From the Dance
By A. A. Attanaslo
SOLIS*
THE MOON'S WIFE*
KINGDOM OF THE GRAIL*
HUNTING THE GHOST DANCER*
WYVERN*
RADIX
*available from HarperPaperbacks
ATTENTION: ORGANIZATIONS AND CORPORATION
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Contents
Prelude
1. The Laughing Life
2. Remains of Adam
3. Terra Tharsis
4. The Avenue of Limits
5. Nycthemeral Journeys
6. Solis
7. Zero in the Bone
Epilogue
Prelude
SWOLLEN WITH DREAMS, I AWOKE FROM THE DEAD. When I tried to speak, all I could
utter were small animal sounds. So I just lay there in the dark, silent in the
secret sea of images and memories that make our dreams. I saw a beautiful woman
making love to me. Her face was porcelain, glossy with the sweat of her
exertion. Her breasts shivered like small rabbits. The tresses spilling over her
shoulders were red as autumn leaves. The smell of cloves whispered from where
the clamp of her need gripped me-so hard my pleasure bleared to pain, then
relaxed again to pleasure. Like tiny azure pearls, tears of rapture beaded in
her lashes.
A blast of little bright birds, spooky as minnows, flared across my brain. And
once more I was in the dark depths of the secret sea, another lewd dream
beginning to shape itself around her lubricious sobs. The only way to stop it
was to remember I was dead. Long years before, so long ago now that almost all
of that past is forgotten, I met death. I remember little of that loneliness and
intimacy.
What I recall most clearly is that my soul was in my mouth. A dim time ago, a
jellyfish had snared my heart. Its nematocysts burned the cavity of my chest and
seared the length of my left arm. With it came the stink of my own putrefaction,
my bowels voiding as I thrashed to the ground, the lunatic ringing of cicadas in
my head as the high D of blood whined in my constricting vessels. The woman with
hair like dead ivy took me into her mouth, her lovely face rising and falling
with my hips.
I'd read somewhere an aboriginal healer's explanation of why some patients
die. "The spirit is a boomerang. It is not meant to come back. It returns only
when it misses its target."
And then, after a maddeningly long time, I was pulled from the secret sea, and
the dreaming stopped. I heard weird voices, genderless, childlike: "Mr. Charlie!
Can you wit what we say? Be hearty, my Mr. Charlie."
"Medullary compression of the gibbus. Man, man! Be you hearty or be you gone!"
I was blind, and apart from those eerie voices, I could hear nothing. Wherever
I was smelled like nightfall in a place where rain gathered. Wild thoughts
spilled through me: Was I in a coma, hallucinating all this? Were the strange
voices and erotic episodes prodromal of brain damage? Or was I, in fact, dead,
as I had long before surmised, remembering too well the wreath of thorns about
my heart, too painful for me to draw even the shallowest breath? And then the
famous fluorescence that opened into fumes as I lay dying, my consciousness
rending into radiant vapors, curling into a space the color of pepper, looking
back and seeing my body curled like a seared insect, my eyes rolled up, dead
moons, and the wind's big silence whistling louder. Oh, yes, I was dead-I
think...
"Faith, love, and hope are all in the waiting," said one of the sexless
voices. "Mr. Charlie, can you wit what we say? Blink, blink, blink."
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A hot light hurt my face and refracted into spectral halos.
"Behold-the sign!"
"Nay. The retinal tissue hurts. He squints. Let him be gone. Remove the
electrode."
A dizzy darkness seized me, and I plunged again into the secret sea, where a
woman with breasts like peaches was bending closer...
Only in sex do we do what we mean, do we give what we in actual fact are.
A thousand gaudy butterflies burst through my brain. And I was alone again in
the secret sea, the spelled sound of her wrought breathing all that remained of
her. Until, like a cloud blown from a sunset, she appeared under me this time,
looking over her naked shoulder languorously, both hands splayed across the
muscles of her raised hips...
The salacious dream burst into darkness, and a childlike voice spoke:
"Pregestation rituals! Speak no more on them. Hear me! We would know no more
of that. Tell us not of the salt mine in the blood, the match-head clitoris, the
cobra head of the penis, vixen and rakes, the gates of mine thighs-these lewd
truths that kindle the beast. Speak no more on them, we say! Instead speak, Mr.
Charlie, of the mind-do tell of the relations of psyche and physics."
I startled alert, out of a dreamless void. The sex-obsessed sequences that had
gone on interminably were gone. The weird voices were back-different ones this
time. I tried to speak and managed to say: "Who? Who are you?"
"Stink and wonders! He be witful. What profit him to cry?"
"We be Friends."
"So be our calling, Mr. Charlie. We be Friends of the Measuring Class Not of
Niels Abel."
'What?" I didn't understand. "Where am I?"
"You be Mr. Charlie in the lock-hole, at the hinge-split of the world."
"Huh?"
"Wold I, nold I."
I was utterly confused. "I can't see," I complained. "I'm blind. Who are you?
Where am I?"
"Spark his eyes, say I."
Briefly, sight returned to me-though I wished it hadn't. I was lying on a
mirror-polished floor, cinnabar red, and reflected in it was my face-or not my
face, not the features I remembered, but something like a hog-nosed snake with
lidless human eyes peering from sea-anemone stalks and the pink cauliflower of
brain matter all encased in a gel pod and chrome net. That was me? A scream
roiled within me but could find no way through the cage of my shock. What had
happened to the gift of my face? Where were my limbs, my torso? I huddled in the
hut of my heart, stared meekly upward and saw- among tufts of dandelion seed
lifting into the green air, human figures in transparent armor and, beyond them,
the polished floor running toward vermilion sandstone arches and the antlers of
dusk. Suddenly, my mind felt fragile.
"He be hearty, all right, and wind in his whiskers, as well!"
One of the armored figures had said that and gestured at me. I peered more
closely at-it: It had a face of black glass or gelatin, flexible, expressive, a
teenager's face, boy or girl, I couldn't tell. The lake of its dark features was
placid, clear enough that I could see the cumulus cloud of its brain enlarging
with the thunder of a dangerous thought. "Wax me mind! He be witful for sure.
Ho-Mr. Charlie, hear me! We Friends of the Measuring Class Not of Niels Abel
would know a thing: Tell us of the relations between psyche and physics," and
then, leaning closer, not sure I understood: "mind and matter. Ken you that?"
"I don't understand," I whined, unnerved by all that was happening to me.
"Please-help me."
"He be witless in the ways," the figure closest to me said over it's
glass-plated shoulder to the others. "I were wrong about him."
"The electrode be the way. Use it."
A four-fingered hand manipulated something above my line of sight, and a
ticklish pain trilled through me. Abruptly, I saw shimmery blue words scrolling
across my field of vision, and I heard a voice very like my own saying, "The
expressions of energy, matter, forces, and fields are functions of an abstract
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geometry. That is the relation of matter and mind."
"Stink and wonders!"
"Wax me mind!"
I couldn't stop myself. I went on to say, "The discipline of physics is pure
geometry. Matter is pure mind. Of course, when we think of geometry, we
presuppose the spatial configurations of form or the temporal harmonics of
sound. Yet geometry in itself is neither spatial nor temporal. It loans itself
only secondarily to such descriptions. Geometry is first of all a purely noetic
system of rates, ratios, intervals, agreements, and alignments. Its components
exist independent of things measured, an abstract typology, a strictly internal
self-description."
"Say more, Mr. Charlie! Wit us wise of matter and mind."
And so I did. Just as before, when I was adrift in the secret sea of erotic
images, now I hovered in an airy space of words and numbers, only this time what
I was experiencing floated across my vision, outside my body. The figures in
transparent armor had gathered around me, and I could see the thunderhead
thoughts behind their rapt faces as the blue words vapored by: "Spin, interval,
charge, and moment are discrete properties, defined in integer and half-integer
values, rational functions and ratios, or nonconstructable numbers functioning
as constants. Sure, we've been duped before by illusory geometries-like
Pythagorean intervals, ideal Euclidean properties, and Kepler's harmonics of
planetary orbits- so it's natural to be leery of physics as geometry.
Nevertheless, mapped schematically, mass, coupling constant, spin, angular
momentum, and charge generate polyhedra. Take, for example, the plotted
relations of quarks and leptons on a horizontal plane-displaced vertically
proportional to their respective charges, they polarize the angular coordinates
of an ideal cube! Think on that."
"As blood is the bride to iron-he be right! Pull the electrode, and we be hard
thinking on that."
"Aye, and the void bites its tusks!"
The blue words vanished, and the air smelled all at once of boiled milk. I
noticed that, beyond the drifting tufts of dandelion, the twilit sky was precise
with stars. I felt the silence of the wind opening in me again, and then
darkness came on.
The fire-flower of numbers and words opened and closed around me time and
again. And I found myself square-summing the real and imaginary parts of a field
specifying spin states of particles, measuring angular momenta, and plotting
straight lines in the Regge trajectory. "Abstract geometry defines matter," I
heard myself say.
Then I performed conceptual rotations on the doublevalued quality of
fermions-"You know, matter particles"-in an abstract superspace with
anticommutators and revealed deep angular identity with the class of
bosons-"Force particles! Do you see what I'm saying? Geometry shows they are the
self-same entity!"
I babbled about heterotic string theory and the summary familial group
designated E8xE8, reflecting a generalization of crystal symmetries, a strictly
abstract pattern produced by categorical requirements applying directly to the
macroscopic and observable order of structures. "Euclidean geometries are
staring out from nature's apparent chaos. Salts, viruses, seashells, pinecones,
honeycombs, galaxies, and galactic sheets hundreds of light-years huge!
Man-oh-man, it's just like the hermetics said:
As above, so below. Thetic geometries in purely abstract space informing real
constituents of experience! Matter copulating with mind copulating with matter.
It's obscene!"
I am a blue animal that trembles softly. I am a mind without a body calling to
you. Can you hear me? Do you see my smile in my words, sad and evil? Sad because
I am utterly alone. Evil because I am dead and yet I live. My voice radiates
through space. Past lives drift by. The damned descend into the darkness. Can
you hear me? Listen. A dead man visits you. Listen to me-someone.
Look, this sounds like ranting to you. I know. I want to speak calmly,
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rationally now. I want to say the truth as I've known it. I want to say a
story-my story. Say a said. And more. Say a body. Say a way back. Say at least a
place. Say something. But no one hears me. Do you hear me?
"Mr. Charlie?" A youthful, genderless voice spoke. "Can you hear me?"
A surge of darkness woke me. I felt the old, delusive joy that I was dreaming
and I was about to wake to my former life. My wife would be asleep next to me,
and I would wake her and ignore her grogginess to yammer about my nightmare.
"Mr. Charlie, I know you're awake."
The viscid barbs of the jellyfish's tentacles burned the length of my left
arm, my heartvalves clogged with sili-cates, and my blood turned to coral. I was
dead. Whereupon the stars drag their darkness into a future without me. .
"I am going to activate your visual cortex now, Mr. Charlie. I need to talk
with you."
Rays pierced my blindness, cutting blackness into swatches of vision, and I
saw that I was apparently suspended midair, for I could look down and see that I
had no body. A spongy, circular floor was directly below me. Outside its
perimeter, tiles of tessellated turquoise and black marble supported swerves of
amber that, after a moment, I saw were chairs and a long table. An adolescent
girl sat at the table with a gold stylus in her hand. Her hair was the color of
a violin, slant-cut across her left eye, cropped high over her small right ear,
and highlighted with a few tiny firepoints of gemdust.
She touched the stylus to a moonpiece, a silver shadow-smudged disc compact as
a watch face, and the clarity of my vision sharpened. I saw the vague line of
her eyebrows, the topaz light in her tight stare, the carats of sweat on her
forehead and upper lip, the cilia rimming her nostrils, the pulsebeat in her
throat, the faceted lump of her Adam's apple-and realized that she could be a
he.
He touched the stylus again. My vision pulled back, and I saw him or her
sitting in a swerve of amber, wearing black silk pajamas with red dragon-veins.
I looked away, surveying where I was: Slabs of jasper circled us like dolmen
rocks, the spaces between them paned with crystal sheets flecked with mica. I
peered upward into a boiling light of dust motes towering into thermals of acid
clouds. The warm air smelled of jasmine. "Where am I?"
The hermaphrodite touched the stylus to the moon-piece on the amber table and
told me, with lips not in synch with what was spoken: "You are dead."
Blue words squiggled in the air before me:
702-gram heart with a moderately dilated right atrium and a 0.3-0.5-cm
hypertrophic right ventricle with focal fibrosis; the terminal episode
originated in the left ventricle with its 1.5-cm hypertrophy and 5 x 4-cm
anteroseptal and 9 x 7-cm posterolateral infarctions. Cause of death:
arrhythmia. Subject: Outis, Charles.
At the sight of my name, a strand of razor wire seemed to thrum in my gut, and
I reflexively looked down and immediately snapped my gaze back up, brutally
aware I had no gut. "What's happening to me?"
"I think you already know, Mr. Charlie."
"Who are you?" I was frightened by this being's manipulation of me.
"I am Sitor Ananta."
I stared hard at the creature, noted its fully human form, its five-fingered
hands. "You're not like the others."
"The others are the reason I am here," Sitor Ananta said. "But first tell me
what you think you know."
I intended to remain defiantly silent and stare down my tormentor, but Sitor
Ananta touched the stylus to the moonpiece, and I spoke: "I am dead. But before
I died I had arranged for my head to be cryonically stored upon my death. Now I
believe I have been revived-by my future-by you."
"Yes. What you surmise is true, Mr. Charlie."
Shock occulted my vigor. I dizzied, felt my heart would simply burst-but I had
no heart! Sitor Ananta used the stylus, and my horror dimmed to astonishment.
"Why am I here? What are you going to do with me?"
"I merely wish to question you. About the others. I prefer your cooperation.
The information I seek can be gleaned directly from your brain, but that process
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