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Authors: Connie Willis

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BOOK: Bellwether
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The idea that chaos and significant scientific breakthroughs are connected was first proposed by Henri Poincaré, who had been unable to forget putting his foot on the omnibus step and having it all come clear. The pattern of his discovery, he told the Société de Psychologie, was one of unexpected insight arising out of frustration, confusion, and mental chaos.
Other chaos theorists have explained Poincaré’s experience as the result of the conjunction of two distinct frames of reference. The chaotic circumstances—Poincaré’s frustration with the problem, his insomnia, the distractions of packing for a trip, the change of scenery—created a far-from-equilibrium situation in which unconnected ideas shifted into new and startling conjunctions with each other and tiny events could have enormous consequences. Until chaos could be crystallized into a higher order of equilibrium by the simple act of stepping onto a bus. Or into a flock of sheep.
They weren’t in the hall. They were in the outer office and on their way into Management’s white-carpeted inner sanctum. The secretary flattened herself against the wall to let them pass, clutching her steno pad to her chest.
“Wait!” Management said, putting his hands up as if doing a sensitivity exercise. “You cannot come in here!”
Ben dived to head off the lead ewe, which must not have been the bellwether, because even though he got it stopped at the door and held it there, pushing against its shoulders like a football tight end, the other sheep simply swarmed past it and into Management’s office. And maybe I had misjudged them and they did have brains. They had unerringly headed straight for the part of the building where they could do the most damage.
They did it, tracking in an amount of dirt I wouldn’t have thought their little cloven hooves could carry, leaving a long smear of dirt-laden lanolin on the white walls and Management’s secretary as they brushed past them.
Ben was still struggling with the ewe, which was eager to join the flock, now heading straight for Management’s polished teak desk.
“Endangering the welfare of live animals,” Management said, clambering up on top of it “Providing inadequate project supervision.”
The sheep were circling the desk like Indians riding around a wagon train.
“Failing to institute proper security measures!” Management said.
“Facilitating potential,” I murmured, trying to get them moving in another direction, any direction.
“These animals should not be in here!” Management shouted from the top of his desk.
The same idea had apparently occurred to the sheep. They set up a pitiful bleating all at once, opening their mouths in a continuous, deafening
baa.
I looked sharply at the sheep, trying to spot where the bleating had originated, but it had seemed to come from everywhere at once. Like hair-bobbing.
“Did you hear where the bleating started?” I shouted to Ben, who let go of the ewe, and the sheep were suddenly on the move again, milling randomly through the office and toward the door to the secretary’s hall.
“Where are they going?” Ben said.
Management had clambered down off his desk and was shouting warnings again, looking slightly more dressed-down than before. “HiTek will not tolerate employee sabotage! If either of you or that
smoker
let these sheep out on purpose—”
“We didn’t,” Ben said, trying to get to the door. “They must have gotten out by themselves,” and I had a sudden image of Flip leaning on the paddock gate, flipping the latch up and down, up and down.
Ben made it to the door as the last two sheep were squeezing through, bleating frantically at the thought of being left behind.
But once in the hall they began milling aimlessly around, looking lost but immovable.
“We have to find the bellwether,” I said. I began to work my way through them, searching for the pink ribbon.
There was a yelp from the end of the hall and a “Blast you, you brainless critter!” It was Shirl, her arms full of papers. “Get out of my way, you fool animal!” she shouted. “How did you get—” She stopped short at the sight of the hallful of sheep. “Who let them out?”
“Flip,” I said, feeling around a ewe’s neck for the ribbon.
“She can’t have,” Shirl said, wading toward me through the sheep. “She’s not here.”
“What do you mean she’s not here?” I said. Two ewes pushed past me on either side and nearly knocked me down.
“She quit,” Shirl said, swatting at the one on the left with her papers. “Three days ago.”
“I don’t care,” I said, pushing at the other one. “Somehow, somewhere, Flip is behind this. She’s behind everything.”
The sheep surged suddenly down the hall toward Personnel. “Where are they going now?” Ben said.
“They have no idea,” I said. “Behold the American public.”
Management emerged from his office, Dockers in disarray. “This sort of behavior is obviously a side effect of nicotine!”
“We have to find the bellwether,” I said. “It’s the key.”
Ben stopped. He looked at me. “The key,” he said.
Management bellowed, “When I find out who’s causing this—this chaos—”
“Chaos,” Ben said, almost to himself. “The key’s the bellwether.”
“Yes,” I said. “It’s the only way we can get them back to Bio. You start at this end, and I’ll take the other end. Okay?”
He didn’t answer me. He stood, transfixed, while the sheep milled around him, his mouth half open, his eyes squinting behind his Coke-bottle glasses. “A bellwether,” he said softly.
“Yes, the bellwether,” I said, and it took a long moment for his eyes to focus on me. “Find the bellwether. Think pink,” and I started for the end of the hall. “Shirl, run down to the lab and get a halter and lead.” Something suddenly struck me. “Did you say Flip quit?”
Shirl nodded. “That dentist she met in the personals. He moved, and she followed him. So they could be geographically compatible.” She went back down the hall in the direction of Bio.
The sheep were in the stairwell, milling frightenedly at the edge of the top stair, and it was too bad it wasn’t a cliff. Maybe they’d still fall down it and break their necks—but no such luck. They clambered lightly down a flight and into the hall to Stats. I ran back upstairs. “They’re heading for Stats!” I shouted to Ben.
He wasn’t there. I ran back down the stairs and stopped halfway. In a corner on the floor, thoroughly trampled and very dirty, was the pink ribbon. Wonderful, I thought, and looked up to see Alicia Turnbull glaring at me. “Dr.
Foster”
she said disapprovingly.
“Don’t tell me,” I said. “None of the Niebnitz Grant winners were ever involved in livestock stampedes.”
“Where is Dr. O’Reilly?” she demanded.
“I don’t know,” I said. I picked up the draggled ribbon. “I don’t know where the bellwether is either. Or what sort of project will win the Niebnitz Grant I do, however, have a good idea what those sheep are doing to Stats at this very minute, so if you’ll excuse me—” I said, and pushed past her out of the stairwell and into the hall.
At least they can’t do any damage in my lab, I thought, hoping the rest of the doors were shut.
The flock was still in the hall, so they must be. Gina was at the far end, coming out of the stats lab.
“Time for a bathroom break,” she said as soon as she saw them, and ducked through a door.
I started through the sheep, leaning down to lift up their chins and look into their vacant faces for an expression that looked slightly cross-eyed or halfway intelligent.
The door opened again. “There’s one in the bathroom,” Gina said. She edged her way down the hall toward where I was gazing into the sheeps’ eyes.
They all looked cross-eyed. I peered anxiously into their long faces, into their vacant eyes, that were born to have an
i
branded between them.
“There’d better not be one in my office,” Gina said, and opened her door.
“Shut your door!” I said, but too late. A fat ewe was already through it.
“Shut
it,” I said again, and she did.
The rest of the sheep congregated outside her door, milling and
baaing
, desperately seeking someone to tell them what to do, where to go. Which must mean the ewe in Gina’s office was the bellwether.
“Keep it there!” I shouted through the door. The ribbon wasn’t strong enough for a leash, but I had a Davy Crockett jump rope that might be. I started for my lab, wondering what had happened to Ben. Probably Alicia had found him and was telling him about her Niebnitz sure thing.
There was a shriek from Gina’s office, and her door opened.
“Don’t—” I shouted. The ewe dived through the door and into the midst of the flock like a card disappearing into a deck. “Did you see where she went, Gina?”
“No,” she said tightly. “I didn’t.” She was clutching a battered pink box. A torn white net ruffle trailed from one corner. “Look what that
sheep
did to Romantic Wedding Barbie!” she said, holding up a lock of brunette hair. “It was the last one in Boulder.”
“In the greater Denver area,” I said, and went into the stats lab.
All I need now is Flip, I thought, and was amazed she wasn’t there in the stats lab, having quit or not. A sheep was, munching thoughtfully on a disk. I grabbed it out of her mouth, or most of it, pried her large square teeth apart, fished out the remaining piece, and looked squarely into her slightly crossed eyes.
“Listen to me,” I said, holding on to her jaw. “I’ve had all I can take for one day. I’ve lost my job, I’ve lost the only person I’ve ever met who doesn’t act like a sheep, I don’t know where fads come from and I’m never going to find out, and I’ve
bad
it. I want you to follow me, and I want you to follow me now.” I threw the pieces of disk on the floor and turned and walked out of my lab.
And she must have been the bellwether, because she trotted after me all the way down two flights into Bio, and through the lab to the paddock, just like Mary and her little lamb. And the rest of the flock followed, wagging their tails behind them.

 

 
ostrich plumes (1890—1913)—–
Edwardian fashion fad inspired by Charles Darwin and related public interest in natural history. The curling plumes were dyed all colors and worn in the hair, on hats, fans, and even feather dusters. Related fads included trimming hats and dresses with lizards, spiders, toads, and centipedes. As a result of the fad, ostriches were hunted into extinction in Egypt, North Africa, and the Middle East. Recurred in 1960s with minidresses, wigs, and capes of ostrich plumes dyed neon orange and hot pink.

 

I called Billy Ray to come pick the sheep up.
“I’ll send Miguel down with the truck right away,” he said. “I’d come myself, but I’ve got to go down to New Mexico and talk to this rancher about ostriches.”
“Ostriches,” I said.
“They’re the latest thing. Reba’s raising fifty of them on a spread outside Gallup, and ostrich steak’s selling like gangbusters. Lower in cholesterol than chicken and tastes better.”
One of the sheep had gotten itself stuck in the corner of the fence again. It stood there, looking blankly at the fence post like it had no idea how it had gotten there.
“Plus you can sell the feathers and tan the skin for purses and boots,” Billy Ray said. “Reba says they’re going to be
the
livestock of the nineties.”
The sheep butted its head against the post a couple of times and then gave up and stood there, bleating, a nice object lesson.
“I’m sorry the sheep thing didn’t work out,” Billy Ray said.
Me too, I thought. “You’re getting out of range,” I said. “I can’t hear you,” and hung up.
You can learn a lot from sheep. I went over to the corner and put my hands under its chin and on its rump. “You have to turn around,” I said. “You have to go in another direction.”
I dragged it around to face the other way. It immediately began to graze.
“You have to admit it’s no use and go try something else,” I said, and went back into the lab. Shirl was there. “Where’s Dr. O’Reilly?” I said.
“He was in talking to Dr. Turnbull a minute ago,” she said.
“Good,” I said, and went back up to my stats lab to write up my report for Management.
“Sandra Foster: Project Report,” I typed on a disk the ewe hadn’t eaten.
Project goals:

 

Determine what triggers fads.
Determine the source of the Nile.
Project results:

 

Not found. Pied Piper may have something to do with it, for all I know. Or Italy.
Found. Lake Victoria.
Suggestions for further research:

 

Eliminate acronyms.
Eliminate meetings.
Study effect of antismoking fad on ability to think clearly.
Read Browning. And Dickens. And all the other classics.
I printed it out, and then gathered up my coat and non-wallet-on-a-string and went up to see Management.
Shirl was there, running a carpet cleaning machine. Management was dusting off his desk, which had been pushed against one corner.
“Don’t step on the carpet,” he said when I came in. “It’s wet.”
I walked squishily over to his desk. “The sheep are all in the paddock,” I said over the sucking sound of the carpet steamer. “I’ve arranged for them to be sent back.” I handed him my report.
“What’s this?” he said.
“You said you wanted to reevaluate my project’s goals,” I said. “So do I.”
“What’s this?” he said, scowling at it. “Pied Piper?”
“By Robert Browning,” I said. “You know the story. Piper is hired to free Hamelin of rats, does so, but the town refuses to pay him. ‘And as for our Corporation—shocking.’”
Management reared up behind his desk. “Are you threatening me, Dr. Foster?”
“No,” I said, surprised. “‘Insulted by a lazy ribald?’” I quoted, “‘You threaten us, fellow? Do your worst/Blow your pipe until you burst.’ You should read more poetry. You can learn a lot from it. Do you have a library card?”

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