Writer's
Note: Please read the previous chapters and prologue of Invisible
Threads before reading this.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Cherie had stormed
around ranting and raving, and starting sentences with, "How could
you possibly...?"
Gary sat silently
through it. This was followed by a period of false calmness during
which she worked with him on the next performance--scripting every
word and going over every tone and facial expression. This had gone
on until well after midnight when they were both exhausted. She
collapsed on the sofa and he retired to his bedroom.
When he awoke, he
was 30 minutes late for work. With Cherie still asleep on the sofa,
he skipped making any noise in the kitchen to avoid waking her and
starting a sequel to last night's horror show. He stopped off at a
7-11 and got coffee and a non-fresh breakfast burrito. This set him
further behind schedule so by the time he arrived at his lab, he was
45 minutes late.
Phang looked up from
his computer as Gary rushed in. "You can relax, Lecki isn't in
yet. He said yesterday that he had a faculty breakfast and would be
late."
Gary sat back in his
chair and exhaled. "Something
goes right."
"I saw that
girlfriend of yours."
"Cherie?"
"You have more
than one? Of course, Cherie. Not a runway model but a lot hotter than
anyone I ever thought I would see you
with."
"Yeah well. I am
not really with
her. We're pretending to be together to make a better storyline for
the television show."
"You mean you
ain't tappin' that?"
"I ain't...
what?"
"Dude. Are you
sleeping with her?"
"No."
"She shut you
down, huh?"
"Its... I... She...
Yes. She shut me down."
"Stone cold, dude.
So near yet so far. And to think, I thought you were my hero."
"I'm working on
something that will usher in a new age of science and I would be your
hero if I slept with a girl?"
"Totally."
They worked in
silence. Gary was halfway done prepping for his Tuesday TA session
when Dr. Lecki strode through the door and up to his desk.
"Mr. Richardson,
may I see you a moment?" He turned and left with no further
explanation. Not good.
Gary followed Dr.
Lecki down the hallway to his office. Lecki turned sideways to slide
past two piles of books and papers and sat at his desk. "I wish to
speak with you about what your television people had to say about my
interview."
Gary paused. He knew
he should carefully phrase this answer but that would require a
talent in subtlety. "They said that there was very little that they
could use. They might be able to cut in a few lines for humor."
"Humor. Less than
optimum. But did they say anything about how I came across regarding
the scientific aspects of your... performance?"
As much as Gary
prepared himself for these discussions, the familiar anger rose. He
tried to keep his voice calm but there was too much water under than
bridge. "They said that you were dismissive and did not recognize
innovative science when it was laying at your feet."
"Those words
exactly?"
"Mild paraphrase."
Lecki sat and stared
at Gary for a moment. "While I like to believe that my body of work
has created a reputation that keeps me from being considered a
laughingstock, there is no doubt that my credibility within the
community has been damaged by my association with this. It's hard
for me to explain to someone at your point in your career the
situation that you have put me in. I'm caught between a scientific
community that frowns on the absurd and a University administration
that relishes any press that takes peoples' minds off the
performance of the football team."
Gary gripped the
armrest tightly. "My research is not absurd. I am following strict
protocols. If you and your peers could get past your regimented
biases..."
Lecki interrupted,
"Then we would believe you."
Gary was nonplussed
at the statement, "Correct."
"Then what?"
"Excuse me?" The
answer was obvious to Gary. Fame. Unlimited funding. Nobel Prize.
Lecki continued:
"Then what? What happens if I believe you? You've told me that
when you are wearing your copper hat, you can align the electrical
impulses of your brain with the Earth's magnetic field and you are
then able to perceive continuity
strings
that reach out in a true straight line possibly to the end of the
universe. Correct?"
Gary liked the
phrase continuity
strings.
"Basically."
"And by using the
combined power of your brain impulses and the Earth's magnetic
field, you are able to realign all of the mass along this
functionally infinite line to a single point and then change that
alignment slightly and put everything back where it was?"
"I don't yet
know what supplies the power. That is something that is still to be..."
"But nevertheless,
the basic explanation fits your claims."
Gary felt a trap
being set but couldn't see what it was. "More or less, yes."
"Now let's say
that your uncorroborated first-person witness is sufficient to
convince me that this is all true and not simply parlor tricks. If I
believe you, then you have the ability to bring functionally infinite
mass to a single point. And then to release all of that mass at that
single point at the same time."
Gary now realized
where this was going. He felt like he was being called out in class
for an oversight.
Lecki pressed on:
"If you released all of this mass at the same point at the same
time, what would be the result?"
The trap was sprung.
Gary had no choice but to answer. "At a minimum, an
instantaneous, exothermic nuclear reaction."
Lecki steepled his
fingers and nodded. "In laymen's terms, a nuclear explosion. As
you said, that was at a minimum. What about at a maximum?"
"The mass
density would be such that it would form a black hole."
"So, the best
case would be an explosion that would kill over 100,000 people and
the worst case is the complete eradication of the human race. And
this could happen... what?... if you sneezed at the wrong time?"
Gary was at a loss.
He was furious with himself for never thinking in these terms. Lecki
was right. He had no idea what would happen if he chose to keep all
of the matter in a single location when he snapped back the thread.
"I need... I
need to add this to my notes."
"You're still
not thinking this all the way through. If I believed that one
individual had the power to end the human race due to an
absent-minded error, what would be my moral obligation as a
scientist... as a human being?"
"I don't know."
Lecki stood from his
chair and leaned out over his desk staring straight down at Gary. "It
would be to kill you. Right now. The risk would be too great."
Gary's throat
tightened. "What do you want from me?"
"Stop this
preposterous charade! This is not science, and I'm becoming
concerned regarding your mental stability."
"I'm not crazy."
Gary insisted.
"With your
mother's condition, I have to consider the possibility that you
actually believe what you are saying and need help. If you ever
thought this was funny, let me make it clear that it no longer is
so."
"No sir. It's
not funny. Nor is using my mother's condition to try to make me doubt
my own sanity. Are we done?"
Lecki sat down. He
spoke quietly and almost with compassion. "Gary, if you are
seeing something that no one else is seeing and it makes no logical
sense, then you should
doubt your own sanity. You must."
"Are we done?"
Lecki ended the
discussion. "If you would be so kind as to keep me out of this
television nonsense from this point forward, it would be
appreciated."
"Yes sir."
Gary left the office
and headed back to the lab to return to work. What would
happen if he released additional mass at a single location? He sat at
his desk and took turns brooding and fuming through the afternoon.
***
Professor Lecki left
promptly at his usual 4pm. Phang followed at 5:30. Cherie remained
angry and Gary had heard nothing from her. For the first time in what
seemed like days, he was alone and could work and think.
He now had two
things to work on: the concentrated mass issue that Lecki had pointed
out and the strange threadless area that he had now seen twice. Once,
in the lab with Cherie, it had elicited fear in him from nowhere. The
second time, In Lecki's office, it had seemed to be involved when
he teleported from the office into the adjacent hallway. He had no
idea what it could be. It was an anomaly.
Since the
teleporting event in Lecki's office, the anomaly seemed to pose the
more immediate risk. As such, he needed to find out more about it.
The first question was: did it take up space?
He tried a simple
experiment. Standing from his desk, he moved a box of old computer
hardware to the clear area next to the door where he had previously
perceived the anomaly. The box filled that area and a roughly
equivalent area was now clear next to his desk.
Sitting again at his
desk, he focused on the trigger memory and watched as the threads
formed around him. He looked at the area near the door and the newly
clear area next to his desk. No sign of the anomaly. He waited a few
moments and tried to scan the room with his peripheral vision. This
gave him a slight headache but he saw nothing.
He moved more
furniture around to create a new clear area next to Phang's desk.
The first change he felt was the same fear that he had previously
experienced when Cherie was in the lab. He put it aside and scanned
the room. There were no threads running through the clear area next
to Phang's desk. He then moved his focus just to the right and
discerned the blurry, intangibleness that marked the anomaly. Its
size was roughly the same as before.
He spoke aloud into
the empty room. "Testing. Testing. I am testing an initial
hypothesis that the anomaly is impacted by sound waves."
No change. It
remained at the edge of his vision. The headache from concentrating
on something so indistinct was coming on strong.
He continued
speaking aloud, "Okay. It does not appear to be impacted by sound
waves. What about conversation?" If the anomaly could only be
sensed when in a state of focused brain patterns in sync with his
surroundings, could conversation further focus his thoughts and make
it appear more clearly?
There was no audial
response, but the shape grew more distinct and was slightly more
opaque. Previously, when he shifted the focus of his thought, he lost
the threads. But they remained intact. So, while the anomaly seemed
to be separate from the threads, it also might be associated with
them.
Then it was gone.
Threads instantaneously filled the space where it had been. The
gnawing sense of continuous fear had also left.
He replayed the
video paying specific attention to the camera view of the clear area.
On the video he could see nothing. He tried looking at it through his
peripheral vision and still nothing. He tried different settings, but
it was obvious that the camera had recorded nothing.
His phone vibrated
on his desk, causing him to jump. He stopped typing, saw Cherie's
name, and answered.
She didn't let him
say hello. "Where have you been?!"
"I worked late."
"Worked late? I
was expecting you here over an hour ago and I was waiting to eat
dinner until you got home so we could talk about your next
performance. It has to step up from the previous ones. Where are
you?"
"The lab."
"I'll be there
in thirty minutes. Don't get into your Pop Tart stash. I'm
starving and want to have dinner."
That was no problem
since his Pop Tart stash was empty. He had thirty minutes to try and
think up a trick that would get her mind off of teleportation.
Twenty-five minutes
later, Cherie was stopped dead in her tracks when she walked into the
lab and witnessed Gary hovering about 18 inches above the floor.
He looked up and
smiled. "I think I have the next trick."
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