Pig: A Thriller (25 page)

Read Pig: A Thriller Online

Authors: Darvin Babiuk

BOOK: Pig: A Thriller
9.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

             
“Kitty porn?” Snow offered.

             
“No, beets. That joke wasn’t even funny.”

             
“Go on. What’s your idea for the business?”

             
“I’m thinking of calling it the Iron Curtain.”

“What would you sell?”

“Shower curtains. Institutional strength. Guaranteed to last. What do you think about this for a slogan? ‘Crushing capitalism since 1848?’”

“I think I’d rather hear about Niels Bohr. And that worries me.”

 

 

“Bohr introduced the idea that an electron could drop from a higher-energy orbit to a lower one, emitting a photon, or light quantum, of discrete energy. This became the basis for quantum theory.”

“And to think I gave up listening to you talk about draperies for this,” complained Snow. “I thought that was Einstein.”

“No, Einstein was Relativity.”
             
“I thought that was Heisenberg.”

“No, he was Quantum Theory.”
             

“Which? Heisenberg or Bohr?”

“Bohr. No, Heisenberg. Well, both.”

             
“Holy Hockey!” Snow swore. “My mind feels like it’s back on the mushrooms again.”

“He never went into the corners you know."

"Who?"

"Einstein. He hung around the blue line, dreaming up crazy theories and letting the other physicists slug it out in the corners doing the math to prove his beautiful theories worked.”

“How do you keep track of all this?”

“There’s a lot of time for thinking sitting around in the gulag.”

“I thought time didn’t exist?”

Magda shrugged. “What the fuck do I know? I’ve probably just eaten too many mushrooms.”

“Start over again. From the beginning,” Snow demanded. “Go ahead. And take your time.”

 

 

             
“It’s not hard,” Magda insisted. “Just basic Physics.
             
“First came the classical approach, which said there was only one reality at a time. Everything was separate, it was an either/or world that pretty much mirrored what came from our senses. For Newton, there were three dimensions of space, each of them absolute. Time was absolute. It had no connection to space or the rest of the physical world. It talked about solid bodies moving through empty space. The problem was it stopped working when you added fast-moving bodies with small numbers of molecules.

             
“Einstein fixed that by re-defining Time and Space. Space, he said, is not empty or even just three dimensional. Objects are not solid. Time is relative, not an absolute. For example, two people travelling at different speeds see the same thing differently. They even age differently at different speeds. Moreover, neither existed by itself; space and time are intimately connected in a ‘space-time continuum.’ Reality can’t be measured with just our senses. Like Geiger counters, all we can ‘see’ are the consequences, not the phenomenon itself.

             
“For Newton, everything was cause and effect. If A happens, B’s gotta be the result. Kick a football and it will do exactly the same thing every time. Einstein said, ‘No, it depends on what’s involved.’ Then Heisenberg came along and said they were both full of shit. Newton and Einstein’s ideas only worked on objects with a huge number of molecules. Start looking at small objects and the result was uncertain; it depended on probabilities. There might be a sixty percent chance of an object doing one thing, a thirty percent chance of it doing another and ten percent of yet a third. In fact, all three possibilities existed at the same time. All exist simultaneously, and all are equally real. Which one it ended up being depended on how we observed the object. Reality is a complicated web of relations between parts of a unified whole, or interconnectedness. Everything is part of everything else. As a result, anything that ‘could’ possibly happen, ‘must’ happen. Anything possible was in fact mandatory. All is interconnected, interrelated and interdependent. Everything is simply a manifestation of the oneness in one guise or another. Sound familiar?”

             
“Buddhism?” asked Snow.

             
“Yeah. Remember the multi-verse? When you came over the other night for the soup and mushrooms? We’re back to it again. Buddhism teaches reality cannot be grasped with our brains. They’re too primitive. Everything that comes out of them is just illusion. We don’t have a uni-verse, we have a multi-verse, an infinite number of universes existing together. They’re constantly splitting and interacting and affecting each other. Each event in our universe has energy, like a light wave and casts interference patters in all the other universes. Probabilities. It could be here, it could be there; in fact, all those possibilities exist. Every time a new possibility becomes possible under quantum theory, another multi-verse splits off.

“You and everything around you are a cloud of probabilities actualizing yourselves in the quantum field. Nothing you sense is reliable -- no sound, smell, taste, touch or sight actually exists; no, scratch that, they all exist. You are swimming through the quantum soup, trying to understand infinity with the crude tools of the five senses. Your brain disappears and reappears at every second, and yet this magic act occurs too quickly for you to detect it. You try to change the whirling dance of the cosmos into slow-motion events that seem ‘real.’

“The brain is Newtonian, thoughts are not. Our thoughts and minds exist in the quantum world, not the ‘real’ one. Thinking is at root of everything we do. Every thought causes a shift in the patterns and probabilities. With your slightest desire, you make the universe tremble. Reality is the result of complex, unbeknownst negotiations between the observer and the observed.”

 

 

             
Reality is in the eye of the beholder.

Reality is the eye. Behold her.

Reality is the "I".

Be.

Hold her.

 

 

“The future is merely a necklace of ‘nows’.” -- Dennis Michael McKenna

 

 

 

             
Scrotum was lying on the desk, staring intently out the window intently at a group of swallows pecking seeds off of the ground. They hopped left, Scrotum’s head turned left. Turn to the right, and so did the cat’s head.

             
“What do you see?” Snow said, rubbing the cat behind the ears. “Birds? You know what you could do with those birds if I opened the door and you could catch them?”

             
Scrotum looked at Snow like he had discovered how to fuse hydrogen atoms.
             
“Put them in your mouth and eat ‘em!” Snow growled, rubbing his knuckles fondly over the cat’s skull.

             
Scrotum turned back to the window and looked at the swallows like he’d never thought of that before.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Do you really believe this?” Snow asked Magda.

“No.”

“Good. ‘Cause it’s nuts.”

“Yeah, it is,” agreed Magda. “I don’t believe it. I believe it’s even crazier than that. Time marches on, people say. But does Time have to march? Can’t it sashay? Dawdle? Take a rest? Not only do I think time doesn’t exist, I think it’s got multiple dimensions, the same way space does. Space has at least three dimensions that we know of. How could time possibly have only one? One direction? One flow? One way? It must have dimensions we don’t know about. Nothing is the only one of its kind. Vegetables? There’s vegetables I ain’t even tried yet, like okra. Sins? The same; so many I can’t wait to try. Love? Myriad kinds. God? There’s a whole passel of ‘em. Time? Only one? Come on, get real. You know what I think?”


I’m a lot of things, Magda. Omniscient isn’t one of them.”

 

“I think time is informed by entropy — the level of disorder in a system — and that the movement from low to high entropy as the universe expands establishes the direction in which time flows. Furthermore, I think our universe is just one member – and a relatively young one at that -- of a large family or universes and that in some of our sibling universes time runs in the opposite direction. Some others, don’t experience time at all; once a universe cools off and reaches maximum entropy, there is no past or present.”

“I don’t have a fucking clue what you’re talking about,” Snow admitted. “I can tell you this, though. Whatever they did to your mind back in that
gulag
psychiatric ward ain’t pretty.”

 

 

 

“In the strict formulation of the law of causality—if we know the present, we can calculate the future—it is not the conclusion that is wrong but the premise.”

--
Werner Heisenberg

 

 

 

 

“There is nothing in any scientific equation that says time can’t flow in any direction. Newtonian, Einsteinian, Klingon? What kind of math doesn’t matter. And how come there’s only two axes, past and future? Why can’t there be many?”

             
“Then why doesn’t it?”

             
“Why doesn’t it what?”

             
“Move backwards? Sideways? Along a diagonal? Kitty corner? In figure eights? In cute little hearts dotting the letter ‘I?’ How come when we drop an egg it only flashes forward and we see it smashed on the floor? How come we never see the smashed egg go backwards and recombine into egg white and yolk inside a perfectly sealed shell?”

             
“Entropy.”

             
“Entropy, huh?”

             
“Yeah, entropy.”

             
“What’s entropy?”

             
“You are, Snow. You’re Mr. Entropy, Snow. You’ve given up on everything, except being a man. It just keeps slipping away with you. What you need to learn is that if you don't keep putting energy back into the system, it's just going to slip back into nothingness. Like you sucking on that vodka tit in your porta-cabin. I’ll bet your mother even had to have your birth induced.”

"Don’t talk about my mother.”

“You know what you are, Snow?”

“No, what?”

“The world’s longest-surviving suicide victim, that’s what you are.”

 

 

“It is believed by most that time passes; in actual fact, it stays where it is. This idea of passing may be called time, but it is an incorrect idea, for since one sees it only as passing, one cannot understand that it stays just where it is.”

 

-- Dogen (Zen Master)

 

 

“Entropy, the Second Law of Thermodynamics, measures disorder in a system, which states that unless you add energy to something, it degrades; its mixed-up-ness will increase. The one thing it won’t do is stay the same. Everything before and everything after is going to have different order than it does now, one way or another it’s going to be different. So it works all ways, past and future and other directions we don’t have names for yet. How does the English saying go?  The only thing constant is change?”

“I still got the same problem. We only ever see the egg go forwards, into the future smashed on the floor or frying up into an omelette on the stove.”

“With mushrooms? And garlic? And dill?” Magda was turning into Pavlov’s dog just thinking about it.

“If you want.”

“I knew you’d get to that. The arrow of time.”

“With elephants, right?” Snow teased. “Arrows to shoot the elephants.”

Magda ignored him. “If I can’t talk about your mother, you will not talk about shooting elephants.

“I told you. Your problem is that you’re still thinking with your brain. Using it to measure reality is like using a thermometer to measure radiation. Our brains were designed to understand hunting and gathering, running away from tigers, chasing after pussy: medium-sized objects moving in three dimensions at moderate speeds. The problem is not everything in the world falls into that category. At the atomic or cosmic level -- atoms and galaxies, in other dimensions or at the speed of light, using our brains to figure out what’s going on is like using Jello to tighten bolts.

“The brain sees time as series of snapshots but that’s all just a delusion. Our brains tell us otherwise -- we have memories, we see cause and effect -- but it’s all a huge illusion.  We can’t prove we woke up this morning. We guess we did because that’s what our heads tell us and it tallies with our conversations with others. We live in a universe with neither past nor future. We live in an eternal present, we only experience moments we call ‘now.’ Each ‘now’ is perfectly contained.

“For a convinced physicist, the distinction between past, present, and future is only an illusion. Each instant is like a photograph, a unique snapshot. In this way, we are alive and dead at the same time. The particular arrangement of particles in the universe at this very moment includes the neurons in my brain which contains, my memories, and this conspires to give me the overwhelming impression that I did indeed wake up, etc.

“Imagine you’re sitting here in your porta-cabin watching
Muffy the Vampire Layer
and slugging back vodka at 9:00 pm. Five minutes later your glass is empty and clock reads 9:05. It looks like the same you, the same room, the same glass. It’s not. Quantum mechanics dictates that in fact they are very different. They just appear very similar.

“There are other possibilities for you and your booze. There is the possibility that at 9:05 you will find your glass is still full. There’s even the possibility your porta-cabin has been has been hit by a meteor. The possibility isn’t great, but it exists. The complex rules of quantum mechanics ties the separate snapshots together in some fashion and tends to exclude the least likely snapshots. Time does not flow. It doesn’t pass. It just is. Past and future aren’t different places. ‘When’ doesn’t exist. Asking when depends where you are. Space-Time? It’s a continuum. In some places, ‘when’ was hundreds of years ago. In some other places, it hasn’t happened yet.

“You know why we say we ‘tell’ time, don’t you?”

“No, why?”

“Because time is a fiction – story – and can only be told, not proven.  Stories survive. Tales. Culture. Myth. Cans of whipped cream and cell phones with voice mail don’t. Instead of us telling time, it’s been telling us. What we’ve got to do is dissolve the ego and kill time. Not while it away, pass it, but annihilate it. Destroy it. Slaughter the motherfucker.  The only good time is a dead time.”

 

 

 

“God does not play dice with the universe.”  – Albert Einstein

 

Other books

The Siren of Paris by David Leroy
Sci Spanks by Anastasia Vitsky, Eve Langlais Anne Ferrer Odom, MarenSmith, Kate Richards, Cathy Pegau, Sue Lyndon, Natasha Knight, Eva Lefoy, Erzabet Bishop, Louisa Bacio, Leigh Ellwood, Olivia Starke, Carole Cummings
All That Followed by Gabriel Urza
Early One Morning by Robert Ryan
Crag by Hill, Kate
Magnificent Delusions by Husain Haqqani
The Cinderella List by Judy Baer
A Quiet Flame by Philip Kerr
Edge of Battle by Dale Brown