Lyle had been up all through the sleep period. The satellite from the Sagittarian Dwarf
Galaxy had recommended that they sleep in real time before attempting to go
back through the fuzzynavel. There were
two reasons for this. You have to wait
at least 24 hours before returning through a fuzzynavel and usually you have to
stay over a Saturday night. Also, going
through a fuzzynavel requires a certain amount of stamina and following it up
with genocide requires a really good sleep.
Donny had suggested they sleep in pheely time, but the satellite said
that wasn't good enough because their bodies needed real down time and so did
their "cute tiny wittew brains" -- then he apologized.
So the lights were dimmed and Jules was monitoring what little he had
to monitor and everybody slept. Except
Lyle.
Lyle sat and glared at the golden robe. He bit his lip. He held his knees to his chest. He rubbed his forehead. Anyway he looked at it, he couldn't see
himself going through with it.
Inevitably Mickey pulled an eyelid half-open and spied his distraught
friend. He croaked "What's
up?"
Lyle didn't speak.
Mickey sat up. "You have
to do it. Otherwise everybody
dies."
"You remember Hamlet?" asked Lyle.
Mickey was a little too groggy to remember Danish princes in the
dark. "Uh, no, remind me."
"Hamlet, the play, you know," said Lyle.
"Oh, yeah," whispered Mickey. "I didn't know you knew."
"Yeah, sure, Hamlet," said Lyle. "You know? At the beginning? The whole reason he goes to all that trouble
to try and catch his uncle looking guilty?" Lyle looked into Mickey's eyes with great
seriousness and the intensity of the expression jolted Mickey awake.
"Yeah?" said Mickey.
"You know why he goes to all that trouble, even though the ghost
of his dad told him to kill his uncle?"
"I vaguely remem…"
"Because he didn't trust the ghost, Mickey," snapped
Lyle. "He thinks the ghost is
a… is a…" Lyle flexed his hand
desperate to clasp the word.
"A demon," said Jules.
"Yeah, that's it!" said Lyle, snapping his fingers at Jules'
display. "Hamlet thinks maybe the
ghost has been sent to destroy him and his family. That it's a demon."
"Well, isn't that what basically happens?" asked Mickey,
yawning.
"Yes, yes. That's the
thing. I can't do this. Something's terribly wrong here,
Mickey."
"I don't know. It's not as
if the Boomers don't deserve it," said Mickey.
"That's easy for you to say," said Lyle. "You don't have to do this."
"I'll be right there with you," said Mickey. "You're
just the guy wearing the coat.
Otherwise, you know we'll be right there with you. I won't let anything happen to you."
"You're not listening to me," whispered Lyle. "I don't want any part of this."
The quiet calm voice of the Visitor's satellite whispered over Jules
speaker system. "If you don't do
this, the planet Earth will die and the Milky Way Galaxy will become a huge
rotating monument to your species' stupidity."
"Oh, yeah?" said Lyle.
"Well, how do I know you're not a … a demon?"
"Shhh," shushed Mickey.
"You'll wake everybody up."
"We're up," said Verna.
"What's wrong, baby."
"I won't do it," said Lyle.
"Fine," said Verna.
"Come back to the blanket."
"I won't," said Lyle.
"Suit yourself," said Verna.
The satellite spoke again.
"You don't need any proof that I'm telling you the truth. Deep down you know it. Your generation has always known it -- it's
just you couldn't do anything about it.
My master came across the universe to give you that gift: the chance to
save your species, your planet, your galaxy, and your future. It's up to you what you do with it."
Lyle sat staring at the floor.
"It's up to me?"
"Yes," said the voice of the satellite.
"Then I know what to do," said Lyle.
"Good," said the satellite.
"Soon you will return through the fuzzynavel."
"The what?" asked Mickey.
"I tell you what," said the satellite. "I'll download a package of data to your
sapient and you can ask it everything I'm allowed to tell you. There's no time left for pleasantries, you
have to leave in a short time, I suggest you sleep."
"Ooooh," said Jules with excited revelation. "That tickles." Jules received data for about 2 seconds,
which is a vast quantity of data for a couple of computers like the Sagittarian
satellite and a metaquantum computer.
Mickey put his arm around Lyle as Lyle picked up the golden garment
and inspected it. He showed Mickey a
strange little label sewn into the inside seam.
Mickey smiled. The label
contained holographic writing, an unintelligible script from some very foreign
culture from a distant galaxy. Lyle put
the garment on, with the label and the seam on the outside.
"There," he said.
"Lyle, I don't think…"
Lyle interrupted Mickey by clasping his hand on Mickey's mouth. Lyle shook his head and pointed to the
speaker, indicating that the satellite was listening.
"It's my choice," said Lyle.
"That's what he said."
"Are you sure," said Mickey, deeply disturbed.
"It's the only way," said Lyle. He lay back down beside Verna and hugged her
from behind. She adjusted to accommodate
him and they spooned as he fell asleep for the first time during the rest
period.
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