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Ten years later, he still burned with resentment at the humiliation she'd put him through, but he was grateful for the lesson she'd taught him. His earlier books, and his radio talks, had not been a complete waste of time-but the harpy's triumph had shown him just how pitiful human reason was when it came to the great questions. He'd begun working on the stories of Nescia years before, but it was only when the dust had settled on his most painful defeat that he'd finally recognized his true calling.
He removed his pipe, stood, and turned to face Oxford. "Kiss my a.r.s.e, Elizabeth!" he growled happily, waving the letter at her. This was a wonderful omen. It was going to be a very good day.
There was a knock at the door of his study.
"Come."
It was his brother, William. Jack was puzzled-he hadn't even realized Willie was in town-but he nodded a greeting and motioned at the couch opposite his desk.
Willie sat, his face flushed from the stairs, frowning. After a moment he said, "This chap Stoney."
"Hmm?" Jack was only half listening as he sorted papers on his desk. He knew from long experience that Willie would take forever to get to the point.
"Did some kind of hush-hush work during the war, apparently."
"Who did?"
"Robert Stoney. Mathematician. Used to be up at Manchester, but he's a Fellow of Kings, and now he's back in Cambridge. Did some kind of secret war work. Same thing as Malcolm Muggeridge, apparently. No one's allowed to say what."
Jack looked up, amused. He'd heard rumors about Muggeridge, but they all revolved around the business of a.n.a.lyzing intercepted German radio messages. What conceivable use would a mathematician have been, for that? Sharpening pencils for the intelligence a.n.a.lysts, presumably.
"What about him, Willie?" Jack asked patiently.
Willie continued reluctantly, as if he was confessing to something mildly immoral. "I paid him a visit yesterday. Place called the Cavendish. Old army friend of mine has a brother who works there. Got the whole tour."
"I know the Cavendish. What's there to see?"
"He's doing things, Jack. Impossible things."
"Impossible?"
"Looking inside people. Putting it on a screen, like a television."
Jack sighed. "Taking X-rays?" Willie snapped back angrily, "I'm not a fool; I know what an X-ray looks like. This is different. You can see the blood flow. You can watch your heart beating. You can follow a sensation through the nerves from fingertip to brain. He says, soon he'll be able to watch a thought in motion."
"Nonsense." Jack scowled. "So he's invented some gadget, some fancy kind of X-ray machine.
What are you so agitated about?"
Willie shook his head gravely. "There's more. That's just the tip of the iceberg. He's only been back in Cambridge a year, and already the place is overflowing with wonders." He used the word begrudgingly, as if he had no choice, but was afraid of conveying more approval than he intended.
Jack was beginning to feel a distinct sense of unease.
"What exactly is it you want me to do?" he asked.
Willie replied plainly, "Go and see for yourself. Go and see what he's up to."
The Cavendish Laboratory was a mid-Victorian building, designed to resemble something considerably older and grander. It housed the entire Department of Physics, complete with lecture theaters; the place was swarming with noisy undergraduates. Jack had had no trouble arranging a tour: he'd simply telephoned Stoney and expressed his curiosity, and no more substantial reason had been required.
Stoney had been allocated three adjoining rooms at the back of the building, and the "spin resonance imager" occupied most of the first. Jack obligingly placed his arm between the coils, then almost jerked it out in fright when the strange, transected view of his muscles and veins appeared on the picture tube. He wondered if it could be some kind of hoax, but he clenched his fist slowly and watched the image do the same, then made several unpredictable movements which it mimicked equally well.
"I can show you individual blood cells, if you like," Stoney offered cheerfully.
Jack shook his head; his current, unmagnified flaying was quite enough to take in.
Stoney hesitated, then added awkwardly, "You might want to talk to your doctor at some point. It's just that, your bone density's rather -" He pointed to a chart on the screen beside the image. "Well, it's quite a bit below the normal range."
Jack withdrew his arm. He'd already been diagnosed with osteoporosis, and he'd welcomed the news: it meant that he'd taken a small part of Joyce's illness-the weakness in her bones-into his own body. G.o.d was allowing him to suffer a little in her stead.
If Joyce were to step between these coils, what might that reveal? But there'd be nothing to add to her diagnosis. Besides, if he kept up his prayers, and kept up both their spirits, in time her remission would blossom from an uncertain reprieve into a fully-fledged cure.
He said, "How does this work?"
"In a strong magnetic field, some of the atomic nuclei and electrons in your body are free to align themselves in various ways with the field." Stoney must have seen Jack's eyes beginning to glaze over; he quickly changed tack. "Think of it as being like setting a whole lot of spinning tops whirling, as vigorously as possible, then listening carefully as they slow down and tip over. For the atoms in your body, that's enough to give some clues as to what kind of molecule, and what kind of tissue, they're in. The machine listens to atoms in different places by changing the way it combines all the signals from billions of tiny antennae. It's like a whispering gallery where we can play with the time that signals take to travel from different places, moving the focus back and forth through any part of any body, thousands of times a second."
Jack pondered this explanation. Though it sounded complicated, in principle it wasn't that much stranger than X-rays.
"The physics itself is old hat," Stoney continued, "but for imaging, you need a very strong magnetic field, and you need to make sense of all the data you've gathered. Nevill Mott made the superconducting alloys for the magnets. And I managed to persuade Rosalind Franklin from Birkbeck to collaborate with us, to help perfect the fabrication process for the computing circuits. We cross-link lots of little Y-shaped DNA fragments, then selectively coat them with metal; Rosalind worked out a way to use X-ray crystallography for quality control. We paid her back with a purpose-built computer that will let her solvehydrated protein structures in real time, once she gets her hands on a bright enough X-ray source." He held up a small, unprepossessing object, rimmed with protruding gold wires. "Each logic gate is roughly a hundred lightingstroms cubed, and we grow them in three-dimensional arrays. That's a million, million, million switches in the palm of my hand."
Jack didn't know how to respond to this claim. Even when he couldn't quite follow the man there was something mesmerizing about his ramblings, like a cross between William Blake and nursery talk.
"If computers don't excite you, we're doing all kinds of other things with DNA." Stoney ushered him into the next room, which was full of gla.s.sware, and seedlings in pots beneath strip lights. Two a.s.sistants seated at a bench were toiling over microscopes; another was dispensing fluids into test tubes with a device that looked like an overgrown eye-dropper.
"There are a dozen new species of rice, corn, and wheat here. They all have at least double the protein and mineral content of existing crops, and each one uses a different biochemical repertoire to protect itself against insects and fungi. Farmers have to get away from monocultures; it leaves them too vulnerable to disease, and too dependent on chemical pesticides."
Jack said, "You've bred these? All these new varieties, in a matter of months?"
"No, no! Instead of hunting down the heritable traits we needed in the wild, and struggling for years to produce cross-breeds bearing all of them, we designed every trait from scratch. Then we manufactured DNA that would make the tools the plants need, and inserted it into their germ cells."
Jack demanded angrily, "Who are you to say what a plant needs?"
Stoney shook his head innocently. "I took my advice from agricultural scientists, who took their advice from farmers. They know what pests and blights they're up against. Food crops are as artificial as Pekinese. Nature didn't hand them to us on a plate, and if they're not working as well as we need them to, nature isn't going to fix them for us."
Jack glowered at him, but said nothing. He was beginning to understand why Willie had sent him here. The man came across as an enthusiastic tinkerer, but there was a breathtaking arrogance lurking behind the boyish exterior.
Stoney explained a collaboration he'd brokered between scientists in Cairo, Bogota, London and Calcutta, to develop vaccines for polio, smallpox, malaria, typhoid, yellow fever, tuberculosis, influenza and leprosy. Some were the first of their kind; others were intended as replacements for existing vaccines. "It's important that we create antigens without culturing the pathogens in animal cells that might themselves harbor viruses. The teams are all looking at variants on a simple, cheap technique that involves putting antigen genes into harmless bacteria that will double as delivery vehicles and adjuvants, then freeze-drying them into spores that can survive tropical heat without refrigeration."
Jack was slightly mollified; this all sounded highly admirable. What business Stoney had instructing doctors on vaccines was another question. Presumably his jargon made sense to them, but when exactly had this mathematician acquired the training to make even the most modest suggestions on the topic?
"You're having a remarkably productive year," he observed.
Stoney smiled. "The muse comes and goes for all of us. But I'm really just the catalyst in most of this.
I've been lucky enough to find some people-here in Cambridge, and further afield-who've been willing to chance their arm on some wild ideas. They've done the real work." He gestured toward the next room. "My own pet projects are through here."
The third room was full of electronic gadgets, wired up to picture tubes displaying both phosph.o.r.escent words and images resembling engineering blueprints come to life. In the middle of one bench, incongruously, sat a large cage containing several hamsters.
Stoney fiddled with one of the gadgets, and a face like a stylized drawing of a mask appeared on an adjacent screen. The mask looked around the room, then said, "Good morning, Robert. Good morning, Professor Hamilton."
Jack said, "You had someone record those words?"
The mask replied, "No, Robert showed me photographs of all the teaching staff at Cambridge. If I see anyone I know from the photographs, I greet them." The face was crudely rendered, but the hollow eyes seemed to meet Jack's. Stoney explained, "It has no idea what it's saying, of course. It's just anexercise in face and voice recognition."
Jack responded stiffly, "Of course."
Stoney motioned to Jack to approach and examine the hamster cage. He obliged him. There were two adult animals, presumably a breeding pair. Two pink young were suckling from the mother, who reclined in a bed of straw.
"Look closely," Stoney urged him. Jack peered into the nest, then cried out an obscenity and backed away.
One of the young was exactly what it seemed. The other was a machine, wrapped in ersatz skin, with a nozzle clamped to the warm teat.
"That's the most monstrous thing I've ever seen!" Jack's whole body was trembling. "What possible reason could you have to do that?"
Stoney laughed and made a rea.s.suring gesture, as if his guest was a nervous child recoiling from a harmless toy. "It's not hurting her! And the point is to discover what it takes for the mother to accept it.
To 'reproduce one's kind' means having some set of parameters as to what that is. Scent, and some aspects of appearance, are important cues in this case, but through trial and error I've also pinned down a set of behaviors that lets the simulacrum pa.s.s through every stage of the life cycle. An acceptable child, an acceptable sibling, an acceptable mate."
Jack stared at him, nauseated. "These animals f.u.c.k your machines?"
Stoney was apologetic. "Yes, but hamsters will f.u.c.k anything. I'll really have to s.h.i.+ft to a more discerning species, in order to test that properly."
Jack struggled to regain his composure. "What on Earth possessed you, to do this?"
"In the long run," Stoney said mildly, "I believe this is something we're going to need to understand far better than we do at present. Now that we can map the structures of the brain in fine detail, and match its raw complexity with our computers, it's only a matter of a decade or so before we build machines that think.
"That in itself will be a vast endeavor, but I want to ensure that it's not stillborn from the start.
There's not much point creating the most marvelous children in history, only to find that some awful mammalian instinct drives us to strangle them at birth."
Jack sat in his study drinking whisky. He'd telephoned Joyce after dinner, and they'd chatted for a while, but it wasn't the same as being with her. The weekends never came soon enough, and by Tuesday or Wednesday any sense of rea.s.surance he'd gained from seeing her had slipped away entirely.
It was almost midnight now. After speaking to Joyce, he'd spent three more hours on the telephone, finding out what he could about Stoney. Milking his connections, such as they were; Jack had only been at Cambridge for five years, so he was still very much an outsider. Not that he'd ever been admitted into any inner circles back at Oxford: he'd always belonged to a small, quiet group of dissenters against the tide of fas.h.i.+on. Whatever else might be said about the Tiddly-winks, they'd never had their hands on the levers of academic power.
A year ago, while on sabbatical in Germany, Stoney had resigned suddenly from a position he'd held at Manchester for a decade. He'd returned to Cambridge, despite having no official posting to take up.
He'd started collaborating informally with various people at the Cavendish, until the head of the place, Mott, had invented a job description for him, and given him a modest salary, the three rooms Jack had seen, and some students to a.s.sist him.
Stoney's colleagues were uniformly amazed by his spate of successful inventions. Though none of his gadgets were based on entirely new science, his skill at seeing straight to the heart of existing theories and plucking some practical consequence from them was unprecedented. Jack had expected some jealous back-stabbing, but no one seemed to have a bad word to say about Stoney. He was willing to turn his scientific Midas touch to the service of anyone who approached him, and it sounded to Jack as if every would-be skeptic or enemy had been bought off with some rewarding insight into their own field.
Stoney's personal life was rather murkier. Half of Jack's informants were convinced that the man was a confirmed pansy, but others spoke of a beautiful, mysterious woman named Helen, with whom hewas plainly on intimate terms.
Jack emptied his gla.s.s and stared out across the courtyard. Was it pride, to wonder if he might have received some kind of prophetic vision? Fifteen years earlier, when he'd written The Broken Planet, he'd imagined that he'd merely been satirising the hubris of modern science. His portrait of the evil forces behind the sardonically named Laboratory Overseeing Various Experiments had been intended as a deadly serious metaphor, but he'd never expected to find himself wondering if real fallen angels were whispering secrets in the ears of a Cambridge don.
How many times, though, had he told his readers that the devil's greatest victory had been convincing the world that he did not exist? The devil was not a metaphor, a mere symbol of human weakness: he was a real, scheming presence, acting in time, acting in the world, as much as G.o.d Himself.
And hadn't Faustus's d.a.m.nation been sealed by the most beautiful woman of all time: Helen of Troy?
Jack's skin crawled. He'd once written a humorous newspaper column called "Letters from a Demon," in which a Senior Tempter offered advice to a less experienced colleague on the best means to lead the faithful astray. Even that had been an exhausting, almost corrupting experience; adopting the necessary point of view, however whimsically, had made him feel that he was withering inside. The thought that a cross between the Faustbuch and The Broken Planet might be coming to life around him was too terrifying to contemplate. He was no hero out of his own fiction-not even a mild-mannered Cedric Duffy, let alone a modern Pendragon. And he did not believe that Merlin would rise from the woods to bring chaos to that hubristic Tower of Babel, the Cavendish Laboratory.
Nevertheless, if he was the only person in England who suspected Stoney's true source of inspiration, who else would act?
Jack poured himself another gla.s.s. There was nothing to be gained by procrastinating. He would not be able to rest until he knew what he was facing: a vain, foolish overgrown boy who was having a run of good luck-or a vain, foolish overgrown boy who had sold his soul and imperiled all humanity.
"A Satanist? You're accusing me of being a Satanist?"
Stoney tugged angrily at his dressing gown; he'd been in bed when Jack had pounded on the door.
Given the hour, it had been remarkably civil of him to accept a visitor at all, and he appeared so genuinely affronted now that Jack was almost prepared to apologize and slink away. He said, "I had to ask you-"
"You have to be doubly foolish to be a Satanist," Stoney muttered.
"Doubly?"
"Not only do you need to believe all the nonsense of Christian theology, you then have to turn around and back the preordained, guaranteed-to-fail, absolutely futile losing side." He held up his hand, as if he believed he'd antic.i.p.ated the only possible objection to this remark, and wished to spare Jack the trouble of was.h.i.+ng his breath by uttering it. "I know, some people claim it's all really about some pre-Christian deity: Mercury, or Pan-guff like that. But a.s.suming that we're not talking about some complicated mislabelling of objects of wors.h.i.+p, I really can't think of anything more insulting. You're comparing me to someone like Huysmans, who was basically just a very dim Catholic."
Stoney folded his arms and settled back on the couch, waiting for Jack's response.
Jack's head was thick from the whisky; he wasn't at all sure how to take this. It was the kind of smart-a.r.s.ed undergraduate drivel he might have expected from any smug atheist-but then, short of a confession, exactly what kind of reply would have const.i.tuted evidence of guilt? If you'd sold your soul to the devil, what lie would you tell in place of the truth? Had he seriously believed that Stoney would claim to be a devout churchgoer, as if that were the best possible answer to put Jack off the scent?
He had to concentrate on things he'd seen with his own eyes, facts that could not be denied.
"You're plotting to overthrow nature, bending the world to the will of man."
Stoney sighed. "Not at all. More refined technology will help us tread more lightly. We have to cut back on pollution and pesticides as rapidly as possible. Or do you want to live in a world where all the animals are born as hermaphrodites, and half the Pacific islands disappear in storms?"
"Don't try telling me that you're some kind of guardian of the animal kingdom. You want to replace us all with machines!""Does every Zulu or Tibetan who gives birth to a child, and wants the best for it, threaten you in the same way?"
Jack bristled. "I'm not a racist. A Zulu or Tibetan has a soul."
Stoney groaned and put his head in his hands. "It's half past one in the morning! Can't we have this debate some other time?"
Someone banged on the door. Stoney looked up, disbelieving. "What is this? Grand Central Station?"
He crossed to the door and opened it. A disheveled, unshaven man pushed his way into the room.
"Quint? What a pleasant-"
The intruder grabbed Stoney and slammed him against the wall. Jack exhaled with surprise. Quint turned bloodshot eyes on him.
"Who the f.u.c.k are you?"
"John Hamilton. Who the f.u.c.k are you?"