Star stuff, p.17

Star Stuff, page 17

 

Star Stuff
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  So ugly…

  She lay on the floor, hugging her knees, and sobbed.

  * * * * *

  Joe was sitting at his desk, reading an old western paperback, when he heard the scream.

  He leaped to his feet, keys jangling at his belt, and began to run.

  That was Eliana screaming, he thought.

  He had been working night security at the Agency for ten years now—ten years of long, quiet nights, escaping the unforgiving neon light into worlds of cowboys, sultry saloons, and the sweeping landscapes of eras long gone. The hours were long, the job dreary and dull, and in his books, Joe could become a hero—a younger, stronger man, battling bandits and saving damsels.

  Tonight he would have to be a true hero.

  His ample belly wobbled before him as he raced down the hall. Sweat dampened his uniform, and he was breathing raggedly by the time he reached the office doors.

  "Eliana?" he called, wheezing. "Eliana, are you all right?"

  His heart pounded as if trying to escape his rib cage. His shirt slipped out from his pants, and sweat dripped into his eyes, stinging. He stumbled into the office, wishing the Agency had given him a gun, a baton, at least a transmitter for calling for help.

  Oh God, don't let it be an intruder. Don't let me die. Please, God, I have a daughter. I have a daughter.

  The office spread before him, hundreds of monitors dark and lifeless. He saw nobody. One neon light flickered, and the headlights from the highway outside streamed across the walls like ghosts.

  "Eliana!" he called again, heart thumping.

  He heard no reply.

  Oh God. She's dead. Somebody killed her. Somebody is here, in the shadows, waiting.

  Joe wanted to turn around and flee. He wasn't a hero. He wasn't a cowboy like in his books. He was just Joe Benkowski, fifty-six years old, a hundred pounds overweight, a single father whose daughter was getting married next month.

  I have to run.

  He took a deep breath.

  No.

  Eliana needed him. She too was like a daughter to him. The others who worked here, the most brilliant minds of the country, rarely spoke to him; a few distracted hellos when he came into work, some years a Christmas card or two. But Eliana had always truly cared about him. Eliana always stayed late after the others left, and often she spoke to him, asked him about his daughter, even borrowed some of his paperbacks and talked to him about their stories.

  Eliana needs me. And I'm going to save her.

  Mustering courage he didn't know was in him, Joe stepped deeper into the office, feeling a little like a cowboy stepping into a rough saloon.

  "Eliana!"

  Still he heard no reply. He walked between the desks, the lights buzzing above, the highway humming outside. The rows of monitors stretched ahead on their desks, all of them dark but one. That one monitor cast an eerie, pale light like the moon. Joe walked closer, his heart beat increasing. His fingers tingled, that tingle his doctors had warned him about. The sweat tricked down his back.

  "Eliana?" he whispered.

  He gasped.

  He leaped forward.

  She lay on the floor, curled up into a ball.

  "Eliana, my god! Can you hear me?" He knelt beside her. "Are you all right?"

  She trembled. She panted. Her eyes were rimmed with red, and tears streamed down her cheeks. Those eyes flicked toward him, and she gasped, scurried back, and covered her face. She shook wildly.

  "What happened?" he asked her. He needed help. He needed to call an ambulance. With trembling fingers, he reached for his cellphone, only for the device to slip from his sweaty hand. He cursed.

  Eliana whispered.

  Joe caught his breath, leaning down to listen. "What is it, Eliana? What do you need?"

  "So …" she whispered, "… so ugly."

  Joe's heart felt ready to crack. His lungs felt ready to collapse. So ugly? What did she mean? Did she mean him? Herself?

  The glow of the monitor fell upon him, and Joe felt something. Felt eyes staring. Felt himself being watched. In the corner of his eye, he glimpsed something, a presence, a swirl of color, eyes staring.

  Slowly, he raised his eyes and looked at the image on the monitor.

  And Joe Benkowski began to scream.

  He collapsed onto the floor, agony stabbing his chest, knowing this was it, the long-awaited heart attack the doctors had warned of, and Joe didn't care, didn't want to live. He whispered through stiff lips.

  "So ugly."

  He closed his eyes and never wanted to open them again.

  * * * * *

  Dr. Robert Jensen's dented Corolla clunked along the highway, sounding like it might collapse at any moment, sending hubcaps, fenders, and gears flying into the desert. Even the radio sounded like some dying old beast, struggling to cough out "Moonshine Blues" by Bootstrap and the Shoeshine Kid before fading to static coughs.

  "God damn piece of junk." Jensen grunted and stubbed his cigarette into the ashtray.

  He was still miles away from the Agency. Miles away from that hub of scientists in the desert. Apparently, a bunch of them had finally gone completely mad—as if searching for alien life wasn't mad enough. And when your alien hunters become catatonic, who do you call? Dr. Robert Jensen, of course—the closest, cheapest psychiatrist around.

  The desert spread all around Jensen's car. The sun beat down, gleaming against the distant road, creating mirages of water he'd never reach. Nothing but that tarmac ahead, the dirt and rocks beyond, the cruel sun above. Heat and light and emptiness. Perhaps that's all that remained of his life.

  "That and this damned car."

  Jensen sighed. His wife had left him little more in the divorce. The house was hers. The kids were hers. The comfy Lexus with those lovely leather seats—hers. All Jensen had left was this clunker, this desert, and his work.

  "You'd think as a shrink, I'd figure out how to hold a marriage together."

  He reached for another cigarette. Those are two other things the divorce had left him with: a two-packs-a-day habit and a proclivity to talk to himself.

  Jensen adjusted the car mirror and stared at himself. If nothing else, he still had some good looks. At age forty-four, he stubbornly clung to a certain rugged handsomeness, he thought. A craggy, tanned face. Graying temples. With the cigarette in his lips, he thought he could be featured on one of the highway billboards, riding a horse somewhere in Montana and advertising his smokes.

  He coughed out a smoky laugh. As if the brand he smoked these days had money for advertising. He couldn't even afford the good stuff anymore, just these cheap sticks that left his throat burning and would probably kill his good looks even before they killed his lungs.

  He was tapping the radio again, trying to revive it, when he saw the Agency ahead.

  The complex sprawled across the desert. It would have looked like any other office plaza if not for the massive radio dishes that rose behind it, dwarfing even the three-story buildings before them—the great white ears of humanity, pointing ever into space.

  "And those ears picked up something." Jensen puffed on his cigarette. "Something they shouldn't have eavesdropped on."

  He rolled the clunker into the parking lot, surprised it had made it this far. He parked, stepped out, and stretched. His joints creaked. The sun still blazed down, white and blinding, but Jensen shaded his eyes with his palm and gazed skyward.

  They said they found something up there. A shiver ran through him. Something that's terrifying them more than a divorce or rattling cough.

  Jensen grunted. Aliens? He didn't believe in aliens. The isolation here was getting to people, that was all. Hell, if he had spent so long out here in the desert, he'd be imagining alien friends too. Jensen already felt this place seeping into him, this … this emptiness here in the desert, this isolation, those damn dishes that kept staring up there into the sky. It was enough to drive anyone mad, let alone kooky scientists who spent their lives stargazing and dreaming of little green men.

  Jensen cracked his neck and walked toward the main building. Perhaps he'd even find a kooky scientist who also happened to be female, single, and looking for companionship with a rugged psychiatrist who might just look a little like a billboard Marlboro Man. It had been too long since Jensen had spent time with a woman.

  Perhaps I'm lonely too. Perhaps I too am isolated.

  He shook his head wildly, banishing the thoughts. Today he would be a professional. Last he had heard, fifteen men and women had lost their minds in this place. He would have to treat them, to cure them. Their sanity—and his wallet—depended on it.

  He flicked down his cigarette butt and stepped into the front lobby. Rather than a receptionist, a white haired, harried-looking man in rumpled slacks greeted Jensen. The man held an ornate cane, its head carved into the shape of a planet. His buttoned down shirt still showed the folds from its original plastic packaging.

  "Doctor Jensen?" the old man said, rushing forth.

  He nodded. "The same."

  The man clasped his hand in a sweaty grip and shook it wildly, clinging to Jensen like a drowning man to a rope. "Thank goodness you're here. I'm Dr. Sullivan, chief of the Agency. We've spoken on the phone." He turned around. "Come, follow. Let us find a place to talk."

  The old scientist turned and began to walk down a corridor, his cane rapping. Jensen followed, staring around. They passed by several glass walls and doorways that peered into offices. Within, men and women huddled together. Some whispered. Some merely stared at their feet. Jensen didn't need his doctorate in psychiatry to sense the nervousness in the air, the fear. Oddly, he was reminded of his long walks through mental institutions; this felt more like a place of madness and terror than science.

  God above, what did they find up there?

  Dr. Sullivan led him into a small, cluttered office. Hundreds of books covered the shelves, a blend of science and science fiction. Scribbly drawings of unicorns and houses—presumably the masterpieces of Sullivan's grandchildren—plastered the walls around a poster showing the different constellations. In stark contrast to the crowded shelves and walls was Sullivan's desk; it was spotless, dustless, empty but for a single sheet of blank paper.

  "Sit down, please," Sullivan said, holding out a seat.

  Jensen sat down uneasily, and Sullivan took the seat across the table, joints creaking. Jensen stared at the paper on the tabletop. Vaguely he made out splotches of color showing through the opposite side. An upside down photo, he surmised.

  "Is this it?" he asked, reaching for it.

  Sullivan gasped. The man looked as if Jensen had just tried to pat a ravenous wolverine with gravy-coated fingers. The old scientist slammed his palm down onto Jensen's hand, nearly crushing his joints.

  "Do not lift it!" The scientist's lips trembled. His white hair stood on end. "Do not look! That photo …" Sweat beaded on Sullivan's brow. "It does things. It … Dr. Jensen, please, remove your hand from this photo while we speak."

  Jensen shook his head in wonder at the scientist's reaction, but he grunted and obeyed, placing his hand back in his lap. Sullivan leaned back, shaken and pale.

  "Dr. Sullivan," Jensen said, using his calmest voice, "surely a piece of paper cannot harm me."

  Sullivan pulled a handkerchief from his pocket and dabbed his brow. "You don't understand, Dr. Jensen. This is the first photograph ever taken of an alien life form."

  Jensen nodded. "So I've heard. I'd quite like to see it."

  "As would I." Sullivan gulped. "As did fourteen of my top scientists, the world's leading astrobiologists. As did our night security man. All fifteen are now catatonic. They cannot even tell me what they've seen. When they're not weeping or screaming, all they can utter is: 'So ugly.'"

  Jensen raised an eyebrow. "So E.T. isn't the best looking alien in the galaxy."

  "It's more than that, Doctor!" Sullivan gripped his cane and rose to his feet. "Whatever is in this photo—and I have dared not look myself—is so hideous, so monstrous, so terrifying, that all who see it go mad. My dear friend Eliana, our very top scientist, has lived through warfare and poverty, has seen things in her childhood you or I cannot imagine, and she overcame then. Since looking at this photo, all she can do is curl up in her hospital bed, repeating the same two words over and over, the same words they all say: 'So ugly.'" Sullivan shuddered. "We went searching for an alien. We found a monster."

  Jensen felt that nervousness, that icy hand that had been trailing down his spine all day, finally grip his heart and squeeze. Cold sweat trickled down his back.

  He swallowed the lump in his throat.

  Calm down, he told himself. You're a professional. You're a psychiatrist. You don't get spooked by this cosmological mumbo jumbo.

  Jensen rose to his feet and began to pace the cluttered office. He clasped his hands behind his back to hide their tremor. "Dr. Sullivan, what you have here must be some kind of optical illusion. Have you ever seen those optical illusions online, the ones that seem to swirl around, make you see colors that aren't there, make solid lines bend? Those happen because our brains don't know how to process every visual signal sent through our eyes." He stared at the upside down photo on the desk. "What you have here must be an optical illusion so powerful, so vivid, that it traumatizes the brain."

  "Dr. Jensen!" Sullivan's eyes widened. "You don't understand! This photo was taken by a rover sent to planet Kepler-62e in the Lyra constellation. The first planet where we detected clear signals of life. Our probe was programmed to focus on a living creature—an alien life form—and send us photographic evidence of its existence. This probe wasn't pointing at some … some book of optical illusions. There is a life form in this photo. A life form so hideous, so ugly, that its sheer monstrosity is enough to traumatize even the most robust minds."

  Jensen licked his dry lips. He needed another cigarette. "A photo of a monster …"

  The old scientist sank back into his seat, and tears filled his eyes. "You must help them, Dr. Jensen. You must help them tell us what they saw. You must help us all. Oh God … I've spent my life searching for this life form, Doctor. My life's work, here in this photo, and . . ." He covered his eyes, and tears trailed down his cheeks. "And now they're in the hospital, gone mad. Gone catatonic. Because of me." He looked up with pleading eyes. "Can you help us?"

  Jensen had seen hard cases in his day, but now he felt more shaken than he had felt in years. He sat down again and stared at the paper.

  "Dr. Sullivan," he said softly. "I have some experience dealing with trauma. I've helped veterans who've seen war. I've helped genocide survivors, people who've witnessed the very depths of human evil, find new meaning to their lives. I've treated survivors of abuse, of torture, and many have made much progress in their healing." He stared up from the paper at the old scientist. "With every patient, I work to fully understand what hurt them. To listen to their stories, even the most painful details. To help your people, I must understand what scared them. I must look at this photo."

  Sullivan gaped. His cheeks lost whatever color had remained in them.

  He looks as if I just asked him to run me over with his car, Jensen thought.

  "Dr. Jensen!" Sullivan covered his mouth, struggling to speak. "I cannot allow this! I … by God, first speak to the patients. First see how they tremble. Hear how they whisper of the ugliness. Whatever's in this photo would crush you! Haunt you!"

  Jensen's knees were shaking now, and his heart pounded, but he forced himself to smile thinly.

  These hermits have spent too many years in the desert, looking up to the sky, expecting to find a cute little Ewok. When they finally saw something unsettling, it fried their minds. He nodded. But I've dealt with trauma. I'm hardened.

  Jensen thought back to his most difficult cases. The victim of an acid attack. A survivor of torture. Refugees of war and carnage. He, Dr. Jensen, had not spent his life staring up at beautiful stars. He had spent his life staring ugliness in the face. He would stare at some ugliness again.

  "All my life," Jensen said, voice strained, "I've never shied away from terror. Not when it can help my patients. I've always stared at ugliness to help my patients recover. I will stare at this too."

  Before Sullivan could react, Jensen reached across the table, lifted the photo, and stared.

  * * * * *

  As the old scientist gasped, Jensen stared at the photograph in his hands—the first photograph of an alien life form.

  He narrowed his eyes.

  His breath died.

  My God …

  Tears filled Jensen's eyes, and his lips trembled.

  It's beautiful.

  It seemed unfair to call this an "alien life form." The term seemed too pedestrian. This was no mere creature. This was … a being. A deity. A paragon of purity.

  Tears flowed down Jensen's cheeks.

  The being in the photo seemed woven of starlight, woven of pure color, of colors Jensen had not even known existed. Eyes stared at him, endlessly wide, endlessly deep, endlessly knowing. They were the eyes of the cosmos. The eyes of angels, of gods, of souls. The being's face was the face of heaven, of wonder, of wisdom, painted with brushes dipped into liquid beauty.

  An angel, Jensen thought, weeping. They photographed an angel.

  She was the sky itself. She was the light of the stars, the dust of space, the soft embrace of night. She was a goddess. She was love. She was purity. She was the song of space, music taken form, solid and liquid, light and darkness, life. She was life. She was evolution stretched into heaven, a being of nirvana, a shining star pulsing, beaming out, knowing all. She was perfection.

  With a strangled yelp, Jensen noticed his own fingers holding the paper.

  Old, wrinkled fingers. The knuckles hairy. The joints knobby. They were profane things. They were an insult. They were blasphemous. They sullied this perfect being with their wretchedness.

 

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