Marina Lostetter – Noumenon (страница 3)
“SD drives,” Reggie corrected. “It’s subdimensional travel.” Subdimensions, ha! It was a mangled term if he’d ever heard one. Almost as bad as calling something “dark” when it was simply unknown.
That was why the missions were being put together now. Deep space travel was finally a reality, the world’s political climate was in an upswing, armed conflict was at an all-time low, resources were abundant and more evenly dispersed than ever before, population growth had leveled out at nine billion (some scientists projected a possible
Humans were finally ready to see if they could survive out there, beyond the warm embrace of their little G-type star.
“I would never make it,” Reggie said. “It’s too far. You know how long it would take to get to LQ Pyx. Generations.”
“That doesn’t mean you couldn’t go along for the ride. Get things started in the right direction.”
“But it does mean I’ll never know.” He pushed his ale away. “I’ll never know why LQ Pyx is the way it is, one way or the other.”
“So, you’re a glass-half-empty man?” McCloud tapped his fingertips against the beer glass.
Reggie shrugged. “Maybe I am.”
“Here’s something I think glass-half-empty people always fail to consider.” He paused.
Reggie pursed his lips and raised an eyebrow. “What?”
With a flick of his wrist, McCloud had the beer in his hand. In the next moment he poured it down Reggie’s front.
“Ah!” Reggie sprang up, trying to jump away from the liquid that had already soaked through to his skin. “What the hell?”
McCloud laughed. “It’s not the
“There are three dry cleaners in this sector of town,” chimed C.
McCloud was crazy.
But that didn’t mean he was wrong.
In the months of waiting that followed, after he and the professor had returned to the States, Reggie spent a long time contemplating soggy Dockers as a metaphor for life. But he was a scientist, not a poet. Math was his thing—he’d never had much use for metaphors.
He got the gist, though.
Reggie was precariously balanced on a wobbly footstool, hanging his recently framed doctoral certificate, when his phone rang. He answered using his implants. When he heard who was on the other end, and why they were calling, he dropped the diploma. Glass shattered. The fragments formed a distinct blast pattern out across his wood-laminate flooring.
“They awarded me what? My proposal … my project? Are you sure? There’s no mistake? Yes, yes, that’s me. Oh my god. I can’t—I mean, thank you. Thank you!”
After twenty-four weeks, the panel—composed of thousands of professionals from nearly one hundred nations—had voted. Another week and the votes were tallied. The top twelve proposals, one to match each of the twelve convoys, had been chosen.
And
They were going to LQ Pyx.
Without picking up the glass he dashed for the coat closet and pulled out his jacket. Two more steps brought him to his apartment door, and he was already on the phone before it latched shut behind him.
It was time for a party. The kind of party he hadn’t thrown since his undergraduate days.
“C, send a message to the troops: we’re going in!”
Even PhDs know how to get good and snockered.
“Come on. Come on, it’s fun.” Reggie entwined his fingers with a young woman’s as he led her out into the night. With his free hand he toyed with the neck of his beer bottle, and his feet took stumbling, giddy steps through the grass. Behind them the party continued to roar.
One of Reggie’s friends, Miguel, rented a house in the hills not far from campus, and Miguel had agreed to host the shindig. “It’s like your coming-out party,” he said, slapping Reggie on the back. “You know, like they have in the south when girls get their periods.”
“That’s not what a coming-out party is for,” Reggie said. To be fair, he hadn’t a clue what it was for, but it couldn’t be
Light streamed into the backyard, and music with a heavy bass beat still rocked Reggie’s insides though they’d left the speakers far behind.
With him was a dark-featured young woman, her hair as wavy and body as curvy as any Grecian goddess’—Abigail, she’d said her name was.
He just wasn’t quite sure how her hand had actually found its way into his …
The party was full of people Reggie didn’t know. Friends of friends, relatives of friends, walk-ins who’d come to investigate the noise and mooch some munchies. Abby—wait, no, she said not to call her that—Abigail was a cousin of a friend’s friend, getting her masters in English.
“What do you study?” she’d asked.
Oh. Right. Reggie had immediately grabbed her hand and led her out the back door. “I’ll show you.”
Through the flimsy wire gate, up a steep incline (pausing so she could remove her shoes), around a little rocky outcrop, and they were at the top of a tall hill. The flat little college town spread out below them, and the wonderfully wide sky stretched out above.
“Lie down,” he said, waving at a comfortable stretch of grass.
She crossed her arms and gave him a skeptical raise of one eyebrow. “Yeah, right.”
He was crestfallen, until he realized how he sounded. “Oh my god, no! I’m sorry—not like—sorry—no, look. Like this.” A little tipsy, his flop onto the ground was less than graceful. He stretched out his arms and shivered, as though he’d tucked himself into a comfortable bed. “You can’t see the stars from there,” he said when she leaned over him, hands on her hips.
Apparently deciding Reggie had no evil intentions, she shrugged and sat down beside him. She craned her neck back, trying to take it all in.
“This!” he said, reaching upward. “This is what I study.”
“The stars?”
“Yes. I’m an astrophysicist.” His tongue stumbled over the
“Oh. It’s
Reggie was half sure she was teasing.
It was also a big responsibility. But he didn’t want to think about that right now.
“
“
“They said I could name the mission whatever I wanted.” He wrinkled his nose, trying to chase a scratch. “
She punched him lightly in the arm for the joke. “So you picked
“Agamemnon and Achilles weren’t—”
She winked at him and he blushed. She was joking right back.
“Oh. A—A noumenon is a thing which is, is
“But how does that relate to your mission?”
“The convoy’s gonna go to this star, see. Variable star, which is a phenomenon. A thing to poke and prod and study. But for me, it will always be unknowable. It’s real, but unreachable. That doesn’t make it a literal noumenon, but it … it feels fitting to me. There are things I can never know, things humanity can never know—or, hell, maybe I’m wrong and nothing is unknowable, nothing unmeasurable. But that just means the noumenal world is fleeting, a vast frontier.”
She nodded to herself. “
“Yeah?”
“Yeah.”
“Good, because I already sent in the paperwork, and I’m pretty sure it’s too late to change it.”
She giggled and inched closer to him. “What do you love about them?” she asked quietly. He looked over just as a light breeze whipped her hair across her face and she tucked it back.
“Who?”
She laughed louder. “The stars.”
He thought about it for a moment. “They’re pretty. Hold on, let me finish.” He held up a finger to stave off further snickering. “Pretty, but dangerous. Powerful. And … strange. They’re mysterious to me. They’re like lighthouses. Each one is different, and each is sometimes the only part of a system we can see.”