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Authors: Andrew Busey

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BOOK: Accidental Gods
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The view outside Thomas’s office and in the hallway leading back to the elevators had shifted to orange. The vultures were gone, but whether they had circled down homing in on some carrion or given up and flown away, Mike had no idea. He was having a hard time wrapping his head around the last few hours.

Chapter 25

Week 3: Friday

 

Painting is not for me either decorative amusement, or the plastic invention of felt reality; it must be every time: invention, discovery, revelation.

—Max Ernst

 

 

He was floating in a sea of pillows when the phone rang. It caught him off guard. He didn’t have a phone, not an old-fashioned, plugged-into-the-wall, loud-ringer one, anyway. Yet it was going off. He looked around for the phone, finally zeroing in on the obnoxious ringing.

A female voice said over the phone, “Hello, Mr. Wilson, this is your wake-up call. Would you like another call in ten minutes?”

Mike glanced at a clock. It read 8:02 a.m., but given how he felt, it could simply have read, “Too early,” and still have been correct.

“Yes, please.”

“Thank you. We’ll call you again in ten minutes.”

He fell back into the sheets as it came back to him. He and Thomas had gone out and eaten a huge, top-notch dinner at Eddie V’s, a steak and seafood restaurant. It had quite the wine selection, and both of them had partaken liberally. He might have had a whole bottle himself.

His head was pounding.

He closed his eyes and was finally drifting into that perfect, almost-sleeping state when the phone rang again.

“Yeah, I’m up.”

“Have a great day, Mr. Wilson. Thank you for staying at the W Austin.”

It took a minor effort to hang up the phone and a major one to pull himself out of bed. He threw open the drapes to a panoramic view of Lake Austin…and way too much light. He slammed his eyes shut for a few minutes while they adjusted.

His bag was in the closet, and his computer bag was next to the desk. He didn’t remember bringing them up. He wondered if Thomas did this to all of his potential recruits.

He took a quick shower and headed to the lobby, where, he discovered, Bob was already waiting for him.

“Good morning, Dr. Wilson. Your car is waiting.”

And just like that, he was heading back to IACP.

 

***

 

By the time they arrived, Mike was mostly awake. Jules was waiting for him in the lobby. Mike was amazed at how smoothly they seemed to handle all this stuff. He knew Thomas wasn’t this organized, so he figured Jules must be a master at juggling and keeping things on track.

“Good morning,” she said with a smile that Mike thought was just a bit too chipper for this early in the morning.

“Morning. Thanks for getting me here.” He grinned.

“No problem,” she said as they walked to the elevator.

She handed him an ID badge with his picture on it.

Wow these guys move fast,
he thought.
I didn’t really think I’d committed, and I already have an ID badge.
He also didn’t remember getting his picture taken, but the picture was from yesterday. A mild shimmer of paranoia touched his spine, but he quickly ignored it.

They didn’t head to Thomas’s office as Mike expected but to another room, Rendering Room 1.

“Rendering Room 1?” he asked. “Is that where we go into the other universe?”

“Yep, but I’ll be leaving you with the gang.”

Mike went into the room, Jules closing the door behind him, and Thomas asked him with a knowing grin, “How are you doing this morning?”

“Great!” Mike said, implying more gumption than he actually had.

“Let’s get going, then. This is Stephen Eggleton. He’s in charge of technology—software, computers, all that stuff.”

“Hey,” Stephen said as he shook Mike’s hand.

“Nice to meet you,” Mike said.

Thomas proceeded around the room, introducing Ajay, Lisa, Don, Jenn, and Ross.

“So that’s most of the core group,” Thomas wrapped up the introductions. “OK, on to the main event.”

Ajay, Lisa, Don, Jenn, and Ross bowed out to do other work, leaving Thomas, Stephen, and Mike in the rendering room.

“Given our discussion yesterday, I think you’ll be working a lot with Stephen to crack the language. Plus, he never turns down a chance to hang out in the SU.”

 

SU-N11 Time: 338 PC [+13,508,915,556 Years]

 

Thomas started them outside the universe this time, to give Mike the full experience, beginning with that strange moment of entering the expanding forward edge of the universe from outside—from nothing. The vista of galaxies came into focus as they continued their rapid flight.

Mike was awestruck. It was like being in a science fiction movie, navigating through space. The spiral galaxies and cloudy nebulas painted the wall with an amazing cosmic beauty. He couldn’t find words to describe it.

Then they plunged into one of the spirals, things slowed, and after a few minutes, he saw planets orbiting a large star that looked like the sun.

“This is the Alpha system,” Thomas said. “Life has developed on the second planet.”

Mike watched in silent awe.

They slowly approached the planet and descended. It was both eerie and amazing. Mike just shook his head.

Then he saw the town. It had already grown well past the village it had been when they had originally found the writing, but it still wasn’t quite a city. It bustled with activity, especially in what was clearly a large town square, which contained a massive market. A palace marked the north edge of the town. He noticed three large pyramids on the other side of the river.

“Wow!” Mike finally said.

“They are evolving fast,” Stephen said, “although time continues to slow.”

Stephen was surprised by the numbers at the base of the screen. About three hundred years had passed since they had found the first village. He felt like he should be paying closer attention to that.

“So?” Thomas asked Mike, clearly with a deeper meaning.

“I’m in,” Mike said with a smile.

“Sweet. Welcome aboard.”

Chapter 26

Week 5: Monday

 

To handle a language skillfully is to practice a kind of evocative sorcery.

—Charles Baudelaire

 

 

Someone had brought in breakfast tacos, and the smell had drawn Mike out of his office and into the office kitchenette area. He had never had a breakfast taco in Illinois but had quickly become addicted to them here. As he walked into the room, he found Stephen rummaging around in one of the refrigerators, probably looking for yet another Red Bull.

Stephen looked up. “You getting settled in?”

“Yeah. I haven’t really moved yet, but Jules got me a temporary place.”

“That’s good, I guess.”

“It’s not too bad. Thomas is really gung ho on my spending all my time on the language work, so I guess I won’t have much time to move for a while.”

“Speaking of that, you have any thoughts on how we crack this language yet?”

“I do, in fact.”

“OK, hit me,” he said. “Ah!” he exclaimed, pulled his head out of the refrigerator, closed the door, popped the top of the Red Bull he’d found, and took a sip.

The breakfast tacos were from Taco Shack, and there were still some bacon, egg, and cheese ones left.

“Awesome!” Mike said.

He grabbed two of the tacos and two of the small salsa containers and headed to one of the tables. Stephen followed him and sat down. Mike carefully unrolled one of the tacos and poured the entire contents of one of the salsa containers onto it.

“I love these,” Mike said with a big smile before biting into it. He mumbled as he chewed, “Almost makes up for the heat.”

“The language?”

“Right.” Mike swallowed. “Three things are key to figuring out this language: its lexicon, its syntax, and its system of graphemes.”

Stephen scowled at Mike. “Speak English, will you?”

“Those three things roughly equate to vocabulary, grammar, and an alphabet.”

“Why is alphabet last, not first?”

“Because we can understand the oral language with the first two. Obviously, we have to crack their system of graphemes to understand the written language.”

“Graphemes are letters? The alphabet?”

“Basically.”

“So what do you want to do?”

Thomas walked into the room and rummaged through the breakfast tacos until he found the kind he wanted.

“Aha!” he said, grabbing the taco, and then focused his attention more on Mike and Stephen. “What are you guys talking about?”

“We’re talking about talking,” Mike said with a chuckle.

Stephen said, “We’re trying to figure out how to translate everything.”

Thomas sat at the table with them and began his own breakfast taco ritual.

Mike said to Stephen, “So I have this idea. Tell me if we can do it.”

“OK.”

“We set up a bunch of video feeds. There are two types of these. The first is easiest. We just record conversations. The computer incrementally builds five lists,” he said, “which should quickly turn into two or three. First, it records every phone; second, morphemes; third—”

“What are morphemes?” Stephen asked.

“The smallest unit of meaning.”

“You mean words?”

“Sort of, but it’s more basic than that. For example, ‘daylight’ is one word, but it’s made of two morphemes, which also happen to be words: ‘day’ and ‘light.’ We’ll eventually need to record all words, but ‘day’ and ‘light’ separately will suffice at level two.”

“What was level one again?”

“Phones are the individual sounds, consonants and vowels, basically. They differ from phonemes by—”

“OK, OK,” Stephen said with a dismissive waving motion. Then he nodded, smiling. “So phones are like bits. Morphemes are like bytes. What comes after morphemes?”

“Words, phrases—”

“Like individual lines of code…”

Mike imitated Stephen’s pacing, grinning. “Sentences…”

“Subroutines.”

“Entire conversations and political and religious theory.”

“Entire functional programs. Got it.”

Thomas shook his head. “Bizarre combination, you two.”

Stephen said, “Language and programming? Not really, I guess.”

“No,” Thomas said, “
you two
.” He pointed at each of them. “You and you. Bizarre.”

“Well,
you
put us together.”

“And I’m glad I did. This is super-high priority.” He waved them on. “Don’t let me interrupt. I’m just hanging out for a bit.”

Stephen turned back to Mike. “OK. So do we distinguish morphemes based on pauses? That wouldn’t work for ‘daylight.’”

Mike raised his forefinger. “But pauses are a big help. Pauses will give us ‘daytime’ and ‘daylight,’ and once the computer—or we—figure out the correlation, we deduce morphemes—”

“Got it. And we tell phrases and sentences by what?”

“Changes in pitch, stress, pacing—any kind of oral or visual hint of a division greater than a pause…or when someone else speaks.”

“Oh, that’s pretty clever. So we’ll probably want to link the database to the video clips, too, for the visual clues.”

“You can do that?”

“Easy. Well…” Stephen blinked twice. “…in theory.” He pursed his lips. “No, it’ll be easy.”

Mike smiled widely. “Over time, maybe we can match common phrases and that will help us crack the syntax and whether they rely more on inflection or word order, differences between things like ‘man bites dog’ and ‘dog bites man.’”

“That’s simple enough. Depends on which one comes first.”

“But what about ‘him I hit’ and ‘I hit him’?”

“OK, not so simple.”

“But doable, especially with huge databases and superfast processing.” He looked at Thomas. “Much easier than the Rosetta Stone, especially with a speaking, writing, learning population. And with time travel, basically. We can go back in time and double-check our work.”

Stephen nodded. “It looks like we’ll be able to get a lot of leverage from our technology.”

“Once we figure out how we’re going to do it.”

Stephen asked, “Do you only want all the phones, morphemes, words, and phrases recorded, or do you want them counted, too?”

“Absolutely! Count them. Yes. Most languages depend on a tiny portion of their lexicon for the majority of their communication. But this tiny pool includes body parts and names for parents, core words like ‘Mother’ and ‘Father.’ Absolutely key.”

“Hmm, we’re going to have to tokenize them to do that. And there will be clusters that we’ll have to separate ourselves.”

“Yeah. We’ll certainly have to do some manual sorting. But that will be fun, too. Imagine what we’ll discover from children’s mnemonic poetry. Intentional rhyme, assonance, alliteration, and meter can all be huge helps in separating words.”

“What about the written language?”

“We’re going to need to find scribes or laborers who are inscribing things and attempt to match up the spoken words or combinations of words with the graphemes. This will probably be the hardest part. We might be able to use a human Rosetta Stone to do this as well.”

“What do you mean?”

“Well, if we can find someone learning their graphemes, then—”

Thomas laughed.

“What?” Mike asked.

“I’m sorry. It’s just…” He waved them on. “It sounds like ‘eat your veggies.’” He affected a stern parent’s voice. “Learn your graphemes.” He snickered again.

Mike continued, “If we can find that, we can translate them.” He glanced at Thomas, who had settled down, and then turned back to Stephen. “Especially if we see them voicing words as they write.”

“Ah,” Stephen said.

Mike scratched his ear. “But that’s going to depend on whether their graphemes are actually an alphabet or if they’re a syllabary, logograms, or—”

“Oh, good God,” Stephen said, “cut it out!”

“I think they’re at least ideographs, from what we’ve already seen. But I guess that distinction and analyzing its repercussions will be my job.”

“That will definitely require human intervention,” Stephen said and turned to Thomas. “We’re going to need to retask a lot of people to this.”

Thomas said, “Just let me know how you want to do it.”

“I think for the next two weeks we should have everyone mapping speech to language.”

Mike nodded.

Stephen went on, “That will be what requires human matching. Mike and I will focus on finding his so-called ‘human Rosetta Stone,’ and he’ll have to spend some time priming people on what to look for.”

Thomas asked, “Mike, you’re going to train people on that, right? Who will set the video feeds to build the spoken words and phrases glossary?”

“I’d say Mike and I, along with Jenn and Ross.”

“Done. I’ll call a meeting to get everyone teed up. This needs to be our top priority.”

BOOK: Accidental Gods
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