352 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
352 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:
|
||
: Earth's Dreamlands : Info on: RPG's, :(313)558-5024 : area code :
|
||
:RPGNet World HQ & Archive: Drugs, Industrial :(313)558-5517 : changes to :
|
||
: 1000's of text files : music, Fiction, :InterNet : (810) after :
|
||
: No Elite / No porn : HomeBrew Beer. :rpgnet@aol.com: Dec 1,1993 :
|
||
:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:
|
||
|
||
Cosmic Charlie
|
||
by Colin Campbell
|
||
|
||
Cosmic Charlie pulled Lilla by the hand down the steps through
|
||
flying rice and confetti toward his car-but his car wasn't there.
|
||
Instead, a red Porsche sat at the curb next to the church. It was
|
||
covered in paper flowers.
|
||
Charlie stared at the car and then Lilla's father was standing
|
||
there grinning and pressing car keys into Charlie's hand. "This is
|
||
our surprise wedding present for you. Congratulations, kids."
|
||
"Oh daddy thank you," Lilla said and she kissed Charlie and
|
||
they climbed into the car.
|
||
The reception was at a picnic grove in the mountains behind
|
||
Santa Barbara. Charlie marveled at how well the car handled as he
|
||
drove up San Marcos Pass. He was amazed that he was married. He was
|
||
20, and he and Lilla were both still virgins. He was proud of that.
|
||
He stepped on the gas a little bit more and the Porsche surged
|
||
ahead even faster.
|
||
Then at the turnoff he misjudged the curve and misjudged his
|
||
speed and the car went skidding off the edge and there was a long
|
||
endless plunge with Lilla's scream surrounding him as he uselessly
|
||
stomped the brake and then there was a stupendous impact and a
|
||
bounce and then Charlie was upside down with blood dripping across
|
||
his eyes and he couldn't move to wipe it aside and the only thing
|
||
he could see was Lilla staring blankly, her white dress spattered
|
||
with red, and a metal rod sticking through her head from one ear to
|
||
another like a Steve Martin joke arrow.
|
||
Lilla's white dress was all he could see. The dress became
|
||
brighter and brighter and he was roaring through a tunnel of
|
||
darkness toward a bright light. And then he passed through. He
|
||
floated dreamily out of consciousness into a shouting cascade of
|
||
dream imagery. His heart stopped.
|
||
His complicated biomechanical sensory systems failed, and the
|
||
whole organic machine of Charlie's body came to a halt.
|
||
Still, each individual cell hoped to survive. A good competent
|
||
muscle cell is still alive hours and hours after the coroner signs
|
||
the death certificate. Cut an arm off and wait twelve hours and put
|
||
it back on--it can live. It's been done.
|
||
The cells are tough-the delicate part is the control system.
|
||
When that fails, everything goes to hell in a hurry and each muscle
|
||
cell sits there dimly in the dark muttering "C'mon, gimme a pulse
|
||
of blood and I'll run like hell, we can still get out of this
|
||
mess."
|
||
But the pulse of blood never came.
|
||
It was several days before the bodies were found and then the
|
||
families gathered for the funerals.
|
||
At the funeral Charlie's father found himself talking to
|
||
Lilla's parents. "Charlie had such big plans. His pal Zepp always
|
||
called him "Cosmic" Charlie, his plans were so big....now he's
|
||
gone. Poof."
|
||
"Unless he's reincarnated," said Lilla's mother.
|
||
"Reincarnation is a silly notion," said Lilla's father. He was
|
||
a mathematician. "There's not a chance in a quintillion that a
|
||
person could be reincarnated."
|
||
|
||
Charlie was unable to see the tears at the funeral, nor the
|
||
mourning that preoccupied the families for weeks. Charlie knew
|
||
nothing about it because the unique biochemical sensory device his
|
||
DNA had built was no longer reporting to his consciousness: the
|
||
complex organs and interconnective systems were dead.
|
||
But his DNA was still alive.
|
||
DNA is not a static thing. It's a complex assemblage of
|
||
billions of atoms writhing and vibrating and accomplishing tasks at
|
||
the core of the cell.
|
||
Trillions of Charlie's cells were still alive, still waiting
|
||
for that pulse of oxygenated blood, still conducting a purposeful
|
||
internal activity, his stubborn DNA still maintaining a kind of
|
||
consciousness. Charlie dreamed he was still alive.
|
||
But weeks passed and the planet continued to spin around the
|
||
sun, and Charlie's last surviving internal cells began to shut down
|
||
their processes.
|
||
Six months after the funeral, Zepp and a dozen of Charlie's
|
||
other school pals met at his gravesite overlooking the Pacific
|
||
ocean. They drank too much and didn't mention Charlie.
|
||
Charlie's DNA still vibrated and communicated to the other
|
||
strands of DNA inside each demised cell; DNA is like a virus and
|
||
can survive even if crystallized. And so part of Charlie's
|
||
consciousness dreamed on, unaware of the passing time.
|
||
On the first anniversary of the crash, Charlie & Lilla's
|
||
parents met at the gravesite on the cliffs above the Pacific ocean,
|
||
and once again they remembered Charlie. It was the last time anyone
|
||
visited Cosmic Charlie's grave.
|
||
Charlie's school pals graduated and scattered; Lilla's pals
|
||
were were all back on the East coast.
|
||
Lilla's mother and father died together in a plane crash nine
|
||
years later. Twenty years after that, Charlie's mother died of
|
||
cancer, and then within days his father shot himself.
|
||
Both of Charlie's brothers died in the Pacific Attack by the
|
||
Asian Hegemony. After 60 years Charlie's sister was dead, too. Soon
|
||
after that everyone in the world he had known was dead.
|
||
The Earth continued to spin, and the offshore winds ruffled
|
||
the grasses growing on his grave. Some of Charlie's DNA still
|
||
twirled and vibrated down below.
|
||
A century after Cosmic Charlie died, a severe earthquake split
|
||
off a sliver of the cliffside cemetery, and Charlie's gravesite
|
||
slipped toward the sea.
|
||
A thousand years after that, a new ice age began. Humanity
|
||
retreated toward the tropics as glaciers covered North America with
|
||
mile-thick ice. The coastlines of Europe receded and England and
|
||
France were once again a single land as the English Channel turned
|
||
into a narrow river. Charlie's gravesite was now a dozen miles from
|
||
the shore.
|
||
A hundred thousand years passed. A comet smashed into the
|
||
Pacific ocean and 2000 cubic miles of water flashed into steam and
|
||
the resulting storms and climactic disruptions killed 90% of all
|
||
life on Earth. Charlie's cliff tumbled into the newly risen ocean
|
||
and began to be subducted by plate tectonic activity.
|
||
A few humans survived the comet impact and they regrouped to
|
||
again cover the world with cities.
|
||
|
||
Millions of years passed and the continents shifted and
|
||
drifted. Los Angeles scraped north past San Francisco and piled
|
||
into Alaska. Charlie was now part of a geological stratum far below
|
||
the surface, but a few strands of his DNA still vibrated with a
|
||
sense of self-identity.
|
||
The Sun drifted into a cloud of hydrogen gas and flamed
|
||
briefly brighter; huge solar flares erupted and boiled the Earth's
|
||
surface and dense clouds formed. Now Earth looked like Venus.
|
||
In the heightened electromagnetic field of the more active
|
||
sun, the Earth's spin rate declined rapidly. The day was now 30
|
||
hours long and the rotational energy transferred into heat made the
|
||
continents erupt with volcanoes. After hundreds of millions of
|
||
years, no humans were left on earth, although many survived in
|
||
orbit and on planets of other stars. Charlie's molecules were now
|
||
thoroughly reduced to traces of carbon and organic matter in a vein
|
||
of rock.
|
||
After a few billion years the sun began to run short of
|
||
hydrogen and started burning helium instead. The sun ballooned into
|
||
a red giant 70 million miles in diameter and Earth was scorched to
|
||
a cinder of iron. Mercury and Venus were consumed by the fire.
|
||
Now Earth was the innermost planet. Then the sun raced through
|
||
the fusion progression as it ploughed through another rich cloud of
|
||
virgin hydrogen gas, and then went supernova.
|
||
Earth was vaporized. The remnant of the sun was a white dwarf
|
||
star that dimmed gradually over billions of years into a dark,
|
||
barely warm lump of dense matter.
|
||
|
||
By this time the universe had expanded to its limits and began
|
||
to shrink. All matter compressed toward the center and after a
|
||
hundred billion years the universe was once more a zone of
|
||
furiously compacted energy smaller than the diameter of an atom. It
|
||
reached the limits of smallness and exploded outward again.
|
||
At first the new universe was nothing but boiling quarks and
|
||
leptons. It expanded, and then went through the era of inflation in
|
||
which it hyperexpanded into a hundred trillion quadrillion
|
||
universes, each as big as Charlie's original universe.
|
||
Each universe cooled as it expanded and hydrogen and helium
|
||
gasses formed. In a few hundred million years there were trillions
|
||
of new galaxies, each with hundreds of billions of stars, and the
|
||
stars raced through evolution to explode into supernovas to form
|
||
new elements. Hydrogen and helium were joined by concentrations of
|
||
carbon and oxygen and nitrogen and silicon and sulfur.
|
||
As soon as these elements were available, dirtball planets
|
||
began to form out of the clouds around most suns.
|
||
Universes formed solar systems the same way everywhere. Bode's
|
||
Law-the curious periodicity of the orbits of the planets. The
|
||
biggest planet was always in the Jupiter spot. Earth's spot turned
|
||
out to be a resonance with water. In every star system, a water
|
||
planet formed at the distance where it could, given the heat of the
|
||
sun. Always it was a double planet, and the tides of the close
|
||
large moon kept the waters churned and sloshing.
|
||
The third stone from the sun was always awash in water and the
|
||
tidal and heliomagnetic churnings mixed and separated various kinds
|
||
of muds.
|
||
There are only a few ways for quarks to fall together into
|
||
hydrogen atoms. Hydrogens can combine to form other elements, but
|
||
they were the same elements everywhere. There are only about a
|
||
hundred kinds that could stay together long enough to look at.
|
||
Well you rub these elements around with running water for a
|
||
few billion years and they organize themselves into DNA. They can't
|
||
help it, any more than a hydrogen atom can help it when it mixes
|
||
with another hydrogen and changes to helium. That's the starting
|
||
point. Helium is the building block for life chemicals. Three
|
||
heliums make one carbon.
|
||
Every solar system had pretty much the same history. Every
|
||
life world evolved some kind of dinosaur while probing the land
|
||
masses. The designing and launching of land mass probes was an
|
||
absorbing hobby for life, and then the comets and asteroids wiped
|
||
things clean and it was always the smaller, cannier designs that
|
||
survived. The comets smashed things up every few million years.
|
||
Just as there's only one way to put a solar system together,
|
||
there's only one kind of DNA pattern that will bring about the
|
||
specialized organ, the human brain, that has been developed to
|
||
transmit and receive information from other consciousnesses, and to
|
||
store data. The problem with consciousness is that you need a
|
||
memory, and memory can be stored only in a physical system. A
|
||
consciousness can access and use memory, but only if the hardware
|
||
is working.
|
||
Although a given DNA structure is unique in its own universe,
|
||
it is bound to occur in another universe sooner or later if you
|
||
have enough universes. Since there are infinite number of
|
||
universes, there are an infinite number of universes with identical
|
||
DNA structures. In each universe, after ten billion years there
|
||
were 10 trillion galaxies, each with 100 billion stars and 100
|
||
billion water planets.
|
||
A small percentage of solar systems didn't pan out, but of all
|
||
the solar systems in a given universe, 100,000,000,000,000,000,000
|
||
had planets just about like Earth. Somewhere in the high
|
||
quintillions. And as luck would have it, as life evolved on one of
|
||
those worlds, one of them developed exactly as had Earth. And
|
||
Cosmic Charlie was born again.
|
||
His life proceeded exactly as before and then there was a red
|
||
Porsche at the foot of the stairs and Lilla's dad was there with
|
||
that strange smile and he was holding out the car keys to Charlie.
|
||
Charlie was filled with a sense of deja vu. He started the car
|
||
and drove up San Marcos Pass, and once again skidded off the edge,
|
||
only this time he survived, paralyzed from the chest down.
|
||
He went through rehabilitation and learned to live in a
|
||
wheelchair. Two years later Charlie was visiting at a friend's
|
||
house and the friends were invited to a party, but it was on a non-
|
||
wheelchair-accesss boat, and Charlie couldn't go. By this time he
|
||
had a drinking problem. He stayed home to take care of the host's
|
||
dog and parakeets for a weekend. On Saturday night he opened a
|
||
liter of Stolichnya and sipped it as he poked around the house. He
|
||
opened a drawer and there was a big pistol, a .44 Magnum just like
|
||
the ones Dirty Harry used. He took out the big black steel thing,
|
||
it was as long as his forearm, and he took a long drink of vodka,
|
||
and he waved the gun around and pulled the trigger a few times and
|
||
it clicked, and on impulse he put it to his head and pulled the
|
||
trigger. Brains splattered on the wall, and Charlie's DNA awareness
|
||
plunged blindly ahead once again into the foamy chaos of the Big
|
||
Bang.
|
||
A billion quadrillion years went by and another universe
|
||
evolved a copy of Charlie's DNA and it produced another copy of him
|
||
and the universe propelled him through exactly the same red Porsche
|
||
crash, and there he was with the pistol in his hand once again and
|
||
he put the gun to his head and pulled the trigger and the gun
|
||
clicked, and clicked, and clicked.
|
||
Then Charlie opened the gun and felt a sudden chill and his
|
||
stomach churned when he saw the dull brass of the single cartridge
|
||
in the cylinder, and the circular pit in the cartridge's primer
|
||
where the firing pin had struck. It was a dud.
|
||
If there are an infinite number of duplicates of you, your
|
||
consciousness won't notice the loss of an individual body or two.
|
||
If you pile your motorcycle into a tree and crush your head, a few
|
||
bodies out of the infinity might die, but all consciousness would
|
||
still exist. The consciousness would not be aware of the dead
|
||
bodies, no more than we are aware of the fingernails and feces we
|
||
shed each day.
|
||
There were endless identical universes in which his every
|
||
alternative choice was lived. His DNA structure could be developed
|
||
during a 100,000 year window: from the start of the Cro-Magnon era
|
||
until humans learn how to program the DNA themselves, after which
|
||
the baton of consciousness is carried forward by silicon and teflon
|
||
creatures and mankind joins the dinosaurs.
|
||
Sometimes the DNA was identical but the society was primitive:
|
||
when Charlie was born into a Stone Age family, he rarely lived
|
||
longer than a few days, due to a low Apgar rating and a lack of
|
||
sophisticated medical attention. If he did manage to survive
|
||
infancy he almost always died in childhood due to clumsiness.
|
||
True human consciousness doesn't emerge until the connection
|
||
between the right brain and the left brain, the corpus callosum,
|
||
knits together around age 10; Charlie's DNA was rarely able to get
|
||
a complete, fully developed brain into existence, let alone a
|
||
sexually mature body.
|
||
Each time Charlie's DNA replayed in a new universe, the events
|
||
of his life were depressingly similar. Even with the best foods and
|
||
nutrients available, his DNA structure was unable to build a
|
||
strong, dextrous body, and he fumbled through life after life with
|
||
the same clumsy embarrassments scarring his emotional development.
|
||
Not only was Charlie's DNA a less-than-perfect plan,
|
||
susceptible to early disease and death, but also the greatest
|
||
number of human births takes place in the last millennium of human
|
||
existence. The likely places for Cosmic Charlie's DNA to occur and
|
||
survive turned out to be societies that had equalled the medical
|
||
advances of the mid-20th century. That was the only place where
|
||
Charlie's DNA came to full adolescent bloom. And each time he drove
|
||
the new red Porsche off the cliff.
|
||
So far, in how many billions of iterations, he had yet to
|
||
live long enough to reproduce. He was always the one asleep in the
|
||
back of the car coming home from the prom when the drunken driver
|
||
piled into the parked road grader. He was always the one drowned in
|
||
two feet of water during the Cub Scout canoe trip.
|
||
There were untold billions of universes where Charlie drove
|
||
drunkenly onto the freeway in the wrong direction and suddenly
|
||
realized it just as the oncoming car smashed the world into
|
||
oblivion, and a quintillion years went by and another Charlie woke
|
||
at home in his own bed with a terrible hangover and he didn't
|
||
remember the crash. In his universe he'd gone home by a different
|
||
route when a traffic light turned red instead of green as he
|
||
approached the intersection. He sat at the red light and passed out
|
||
instead of going onto the freeway, and woke at 5am slumped over the
|
||
wheel, head aching, back stiff, the motor still running and the gas
|
||
gauge on E. He was still drunk but he drove safely home and flopped
|
||
into bed and never even remembered that he'd passed out. He never
|
||
did figure out where the gas went.
|
||
In all the universes there wasn't a Cosmic Charlie who made it
|
||
to his 24th birthday. But the Charlies kept on relentlessly coming
|
||
into existence.
|
||
It was true that the assemblage of his particular pattern of
|
||
DNA was unlikely; but every few quintillion universes or so, it
|
||
would pop up again. Not always the same situation; sometimes the
|
||
DNA structure showed up in days of Wyatt Earp and Jesse James of
|
||
the old West, and sometimes the DNA structure was born on the moon,
|
||
but all seemed to come to grips with the universe in the same
|
||
inefficient manner.
|
||
Consider a cube one light year on a side. Now set off a
|
||
flashbulb inside it once every hundred billion years. Now imagine a
|
||
being so long-lived, and so slow, that it perceived the flashes as
|
||
a continuous glow. That's what Charlie was: a collection of
|
||
miniature flashes of DNA existence, one per universe, that pile up
|
||
until they appear to be a continuous beam of light.
|
||
To the pervasive consciousness of the universe, Cosmic Charlie
|
||
is a window, a hardware assemblage. The assemblage blinks on every
|
||
few billion years, and to the viewing consciousness it is as though
|
||
the time gap did not exist.
|
||
As trillions to the trillionth power of universes blinked in
|
||
and out of existence, a resonance built up across a timeless
|
||
dimension, and when the number of individuals with the Cosmic
|
||
Charlie DNA reached the high quintillions, the resonance linked
|
||
with itself into a higher consciousness, aware of itself in the
|
||
same way that the pubescent brain becomes aware of itself when the
|
||
corpus callosum is finished and the time differential between the
|
||
two lobes become the "now" that our consciousness resides in.
|
||
UltraCharlie became more and more aware of the huge network of
|
||
his being, but he couldn't control the individual cells well enough
|
||
to discuss it or cause a change in the life-pattern. Might as well
|
||
ask a neuron to explain a thought that has passed through it as a
|
||
chemical pulse. He still kept driving that red Porsche over the
|
||
cliff.
|
||
Charlie rode through googolplexes of universes from big bang
|
||
back to coalescence, and it seemed that the bangs were happening
|
||
faster and faster, subjectively, while in his childhood the orbit
|
||
of one planet around a sun was nearly infinite. His consciousness
|
||
was limited to that of the particular body he grew in, and his
|
||
consciousness merged only with others of his exact DNA structure.
|
||
But as his experience grew, the infinity of other individuals
|
||
with his DNA structure became apparent. The more he learned, the
|
||
further away his particular childhood seemed. Now he resonated with
|
||
the consciousness of all the members of his genetic structure-the
|
||
old man and the young boy, the gnarled and maimed ones, and the
|
||
ones hopelessly mired in pretechnological poverty.
|
||
And suddenly he was walking down the steps toward the red
|
||
Porsche, and this time when Lilla's dad gave him the keys, he
|
||
handed them to Lilla, and she drove flawlessly over the mountain to
|
||
the reception. A year later Cosmic Charlie, Jr, was born, and then
|
||
the infinite flicker of DNA combinations began again.
|
||
Except that this time, the super-consciousness gained contact
|
||
with subtler variations of the DNA cognates, rather than merely
|
||
with the exact-duplicate Charlies. Charlie's cross-universal
|
||
consciousness reverberated along with the DNA of his offspring,
|
||
too, and Charlie moved up a notch on the Karmic wheel.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|