Orb (20 page)

Read Orb Online

Authors: Gary Tarulli

Tags: #Adventure, #Science Fiction, #sci-fi, #Outer space, #Space, #water world, #Gary Tarulli, #Orb, #outer space adventure

We reluctantly returned to the table to finish our dinner. During a lull in conversation I decided to pre-empt Thompson.

“I have a name for the planet. For everyone’s consideration, that is.”

“This should be good,” Thompson warned. “Let’s hear it.”

“Orb.”

“That’s it?” said Diana, taken aback. “Are all the two-letter names taken?”

“Let’s hear the reasoning,” Thompson said. “Kyle always has a reason.”

“And you shall have it. I was looking for a name that evoked some of the planet’s more predominant and intriguing features when it occurred to me that there was one quality applicable not only to the planet but to its principal occupant, the spheres. Both are round, like an orb, which happens to be the Latin word for circle, sphere, or disk. When I delved further into the definitions, I liked the sound of it more and more: Mysterious, like the power and glow of a magician’s orb; celestial, like the transparent spheres carrying the heavenly bodies in their revolutions; poetic, another word for eye. Anyway, I felt it had an air of mystery, timelessness….”

I looked around. No one offered a comment, not even Kelly, which had me worried.

“Well,” Thompson began, realizing I was hanging on his next words, “perhaps I was wrong assigning this job to you. Two days to come up with only three letters? Shit, how long does it take you to write a complete sentence?”

“I can come up with something else—”

“No. I doubt we have the time. Anyway, I consider it a terribly … a terribly
good
name for the planet.”

When he finished, the crew laughed and I along with them. They had conspired to keep silent as a way of drawing out my insecurity.

Melhaus remained quiet for his own reasons. Fortunately, he withheld criticism, for I was tempted to share one more definition for an orb: A spherical
artifact
found on some digital images.

I joined Kelly in her cabin, long after everyone (except Thompson, who was enjoying sleeping in the open air) had gone to their quarters to rest.

“Your name for the planet is wonderful,” Kelly said. “Quixotic? Wrong word. Fanciful. It somehow evokes this odd notion I have—I can’t shake it—that there is more here, on this world, than meets the eye.”

“Can you be more specific?”

“No.”

“Too bad,” I said. “Ever since we got here I’ve had a similar notion. Like we’re all missing something right in front of us. But then again, I’m subject to fanciful and quixotic flights of imagination.”

She smiled, placed one delicate hand on each side of my face and pressed her lips against my forehead.

“That’s why I lov…”

I felt her go tense. She caught herself, but not in time.

“No, you can say it. Once or twice my parents did.”

“Kyle,” she began, her eyes misting.

I hated myself at that moment. For draining the life out of a moment.

“Kelly, what do you see in me?” I implored, desperate to apologize.

Recovering with a broken smile, she replied, “Do you want a list? It’s rather long. I can omit the physical stuff.”

“Will that shorten the list much?”

“Oh yes, considerably.” She was teasing me now.

“Not completely?”

“No.”

“Give me the abridged version.”

She thought a moment and said, “I already did. Almost. A few moments ago.”

I guess she had. Like Orb: Three little letters.

Internalizing
 

“YOU NEVER TOLD me the details of your nightmare,” Kelly said, sitting at my workstation. “You do remember having one?”

After spending the night together, we were preparing for day five on Orb. More accurately, she was. I was languishing on the bed, admiring her form as she passed a fine-toothed comb through the lustrous strands of her long black hair.

“Remember? I wish I didn’t. I was completely and utterly bald and Thompson—that is Thompson with a thick head of hair—was joking about it. They call them night terrors for good reason.”

“You poor dear,” Kelly responded, continuing her combing, waiting patiently to see if I was willing to get up off the bed or, better yet, entertain her with a straight answer. Either would do.

I recalled the dream in all too vivid detail but hadn’t intended to inflict those details on Kelly, or anyone else for that matter. Dreams tend to lose a lot in the retelling. At best they can be mildly amusing; at worse, induce coma. For that reason I keep them to myself—unless there’s some underlying reason not to do so. Kelly seemed eager to hear mine, so I decided to make an exception. When I finished the telling, I asked, “Ever have a similar nightmare?”

“Happily, no. But then again, I probably don’t dwell on isolation and dying quite as much.”

“You’re a few years younger,” I said. “Give yourself time.”

She came over and sat next to me on the bed. Since she hadn’t slipped into a coma, I decided to press my luck in the dream department.

“Want to hear one more?”

“Sure.”

I recounted the first time I dreamed about my little melting island of ice. “Well, Sigmund, do I need to lie back for my analysis?”

“You’ll get a lot more than analysis if you do,” she answered.

“Don’t pull any punches, Doc,” I said. “I think I can take it. I can accept being as messed up as everyone else.”

Looking pensive, she took several strands of her glossy hair and placed them over my upper lip, giving me an instant Fu Manchu mustache.

“I have some of it,” she said, critically reflecting on my new look. “A part of you wants to be alone, but not lonely.”

“A seeming contradiction. I like it.”

“I thought you might. But there is something more, something I can’t put my finger on.”

I clasped a pencil thickness of her hair and put it to her lip. We sat evaluating each other.

“You look good with a moustache,” she said.

“You too. Will I need therapy?”

“Yes, I’m afraid so. This goes deep. Very deep indeed. I have an hour session open this evening at twenty-two hundred.”

“I can definitely make that,” I said.

At the breakfast meeting, with dozens of Orbs floating offshore as a backdrop, Thompson called us to task, starting with me.

“Kyle,” he said, with a derisive inflection and a look boring a hole clear through me, “communications major, right?”

“Last time I checked my resume,” I said warily.

“I fail to believe,” Thompson went on, ratcheting up the sarcasm, “that you haven’t come up with some insight, some plan of action to … what’s your favorite word? Oh, yeah,
communicate
with the Orb.”

Thompson never abandoned his biting sense of humor, but if you were foolish enough to ignore the serious message behind the verbal barbs, he’d just as soon sink you with a broadside.

I chose to stay afloat.

“We’ve moved on from debating what they are?” I asked.

“I’ll throw that back on you,” he responded. “Haven’t we seen enough? Aren’t the Orbs behaving, or if you prefer a less humanizing word,
existing,
in a sentient manner?”

“Difficult to argue otherwise.” Then, contributing my own dose of sarcasm: “That’s a long way from sitting down to afternoon tea with them.”

“Very well then, tell us the obstacles we’re facing; maybe they’ll provide insight on how to proceed. Go ahead, play the pessimist. You’re good at it.”

“Thanks,” I returned. “A talent of mine acquired through a lifetime of experience.”

Where to begin? I looked around the table, studying the varying expressions on the faces staring intently at me. Maybe that was exactly where to start.

“Pessimism, right? OK, then. From Communications 101: It’ll take two to communicate, Humans and Orb. Let’s explore the human half of the equation, starting with a brief chat about the weather. Distill your impression of yesterday’s down to three words or less. How about you, Diana?”

“A bit rainy,” she said. Only she said it while slowly counting to three on her fingers. Her way to poke fun at me. This wasn’t going to be smooth sailing.

“And you, Bruce?”

“Changeable, but sunny.”

“Typical.” I said, “Can you and Diana ever agree on anything?”

But the discrepancy in their responses was exactly what I expected to hear.

“Let’s try something even less subjective,” I said.

On the table in front of me I noticed an empty, off-colored, drink container. I pointed it out.

“Paul, what color is the container?”

“Silver.”

“Kelly?”

“I thought of it as more of a blue.”

“Another disagreement,” I said. “What the hell is wrong with you people?”

“No, it’s definitely gray,” Diana volunteered. “But don’t mind me.”

“I won’t. Tell me this: Did the way each of you perceive the container, or the weather, actually differ?” I didn’t wait for an answer. “Doubtful. Only the
words
you each chose to interpret your perceptions differed. And there’s my point. Language, our principal form of communication, can be an inexact tool, even when we all speak the same one.”


Mais nous ne fait pas
,” Paul said.

“Very funny.” Now I had him working on me. “You said?’”

“But we do not.”

“OK, OK.
Scusi, signore Paolo
,” I said. “Two can play that game.
Noi esseri umani non tutti parlano la stessa lingua
. We humans don’t all speak the same language. A gifted person may boast of fluency in five. Too bad: There are five thousand more. That’s a lot of different ways to say silver. Or a lot of ways
not
to say silver, if you get my meaning.”

“I speak Swahili,” Diana boasted.

“Good for you,” I said,


Kweli, nasema kiswahili
.”

“Diana…” Thompson cautioned.

“Well, he didn’t believe me.”


When
…” I said, trying to retain the initiative, “…when we manage to get our language in sync, we often don’t understand even our most basic and innate differences: Those of race, age, and sexual preference. Oh yeah, excuse me, Diana, careless of me, I omitted gender. You reminded us of that one when you set foot on this planet.”

“Can’t wait to see how that plays on Earth,” she responded.

“I guess that will depend on the particular culture in which it is received, won’t it?”

“Or the particular religion.”

“Now
there’s
a point to consider. Religion. And ideologies. There are thousands of them. And as many wars in their name. Put the blame where you like—there’s enough to go around—but often it comes down to miscommunication: Ideas degraded to disinformation, half-truths, and outright lies; the dumbing-down of information to flashing holo images or brief sound bites. Even honest disagreements, those where the truth of a matter has yet to be established, are plagued by our inability to pass along ideas without alteration, without subconsciously attaching our own bias. Opposing ideas divide into warring camps: Science versus Nature; Science versus Religion; Science versus the Arts.”

“Didn’t you and Larry get into that last one?” Diana asked.

“You know we did,” I responded. “And we never did reach an understanding. I’m not exactly sure why. It transcends language. Differences in temperament? In intellect? Even when we act with the best of intentions, when we try to pass information faithfully from one person to another, something is inevitably lost.”

Reaching across the table, I picked up the empty silver, gray, blue—take your pick—juice container and studied Melhaus, who, despite presently being the subject of our attention, never looked up.

“Should I complete the thought?” I asked Thompson, who had been carefully watching both of us. A resigned motion indicating assent indicated he had a damned good idea of what I was about to say.

“Humanity’s failing is evident right here in our own midst, for as smart as we are supposed to be, there is a growing divide between Melhaus and the rest of us which none of us seems able to bridge. Failing so miserably at transcending the barriers we have erected between ourselves, what are our chances with the Orb?”

There was a moment’s pause before the silence was broken. By Paul.

“Larry’s harder.”

“Say again?” I said, louder, not quite sure Melhaus was getting it.

“Harder,” Paul repeated, practically shouting across the table, “Larry’s harder to communicate with than the Orb.”

The brilliant physicist remained reclusive, choosing to make entries on his AID, electing to stay in his own cyberworld. His failure to acknowledge Paul was especially disturbing. Paul was the one person who had yet to argue with him. He was the one person who tried the hardest to see the world through Melhaus’s eyes.

“Even when we scale the walls between us,” I said resignedly, “we really don’t fully understand each other. How can we when we understand ourselves even less?”

If he heard, Melhaus was unmoved, and for the first time I began to believe, not wanting to, we would utterly fail in our attempt to reach him. Apparently, Paul felt the same way.

“Might as well go on,” he said, dismayed.

Looking to Thompson, I received unspoken confirmation. He appeared deep in thought.

“Might as well,” I repeated. I considered what to say, then began anew. “I have a few questions for you, Diana.”

“Why do I feel you already have the answers?” she said, feigning a scowl. “But go right ahead anyway.”

“How many species of mammals are there?”

“About four thousand and declining. Unfortunately there’s an uneven balance between newly discovered species and the ones humans are extincting.”

“And what is the genetic confluence between humans and other mammals?”

“In the ninety plus percent range.”

“So on our own planet, with most of our own genetic code in common, and having the luxury of a ten-thousand year head start, we’ve established only the most cursory communication with a mere handful of fellow mammals?”

“Somebody,” Kelly said, “is a
real
slow learner.”

“Good one,” Diana said, laughing, then, still addressing Kelly, “
You
more than anyone understands just how much Kyle appreciates a responsive audience.”

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