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03.02.2004
Oh, you future generations
who read these words in admiration or infamy: it is to you I
speak, for there is none today I can tell. Pity me, please, and
envy too: for I am the most luckless man on this lonely world,
and the most blessed. I am no one today, but by the time of your
reading I will be someone miraculous. My burden is this: I am
the man, the gentleman farmer, the semi-retired day trader, the
amateur astronomer isolated in these remote Dakota plains, who
has been granted the fortune of first making contact with life
beyond our globe.
At first I thought myself
fortunate -- but no, never as fortunate nor as cursed as time
would tell! -- in that I had seen through my modest lens the
approach of a semi-spectacular meteor. Watching it fall, my heart
fell with it: it described a trajectory directly towards my cold,
far patch of land, and its size proved rather disappointing,
its speed too slow, its descent erratic and clumsy. Perhaps I'd
simply be the receiver of a fallen Brazilian TV satellite, a
discovery that would reward me not with fame and respect but
merely headaches and lots of cleanup time. When it hit, the full
weight of what was happening descended like fire from heaven:
no electronics technician in Sao Paolo born had forged this celestial
blade. What had crashed in my back forty was nothing more or
less than a spacecraft: a vehicle, there could be no doubt, not
of this world, there could be no doubt, designed by a thinking
mind, there could be no doubt.
I have so far called no
one, told no one, done nothing. The realization that I might
be he who saves the world or he who dooms it paralyzes me. Its
door -- and here I am the arrogant man, naming it as if I knew
its purpose -- is cracked and half-open, and behind there may
lie the secrets of the ages. But oh, God, I am afraid.
***
I am no child, but I have
seen enough movies to sense the truth beneath. I may have shirked
my responsibilities as a citizen of this country in deciding
to breach the hull of the alien craft without alerting the authorities
of my discovery, but I felt as if I were doing my job as a citizen
of the universe. I musn't become a name in a trivia book, or
worse, the first victim of a massive cover-up: I must at least
know what I was reporting. I decided that I would at least see
what lay behind that forbidding door before scientists and researchers
more able than I were brought in.
The discovery (after a
great deal of clumsy fumbling about) that what was behind was
the pilot's chamber was shock enough to my system, but the further
discovery that said pilot was a small custard topped with caramel
proved quite beyond my ability to cope. I threw a tarp over the
craft that I use to cover the garden during winter and went inside
to think. If I sat on this discovery, I might learn all sorts
of incredible truths: if only I could communicate with what appeared
to be a still-tenable custard, I might know secrets never before
guessed by the mind of man. Or I might enrage, endanger or destroy
the custard. Then again, what might happen if I were to turn
it over to the authorities? They had more resources, more expertise
and more equipment than I, its humble discoverer; surely they
might succeed where I would surely fail. On the other hand, they
might guard the custard too jealously, or they might fear it
so much that they would destroy it.
It was all too much to
process. Lacking any other ideas, I refrigerated it.
***
May God forgive me. I
have done harm, though none was intended. I offer in my defense
-- and pray that it is not a defense against dooming my entire
wonderful species -- that I was motivated only by scientific
zeal. But I have breached a trust, destroyed a perfect symmetry,
and perhaps destroyed a world.
Of late I have been obsessed
with the alien custard. All thoughts of examining the ship and
tinkering with its miraculous technology fell aside as I became
consumed with learning more about what kind of dessert could
possibly have built an interstellar starship. At first I was
convinced that it was some sort of prank; you must admit that
the scenario is unlikely in the extreme. But in the end, I rejected
the possibility. It seemed a rather massive expenditure of time
and resources to build and launch a spacecraft simply for the
purposes of convincing a stranger that it was piloted by a custard,
even one on such a lovely floral-pattern saucer. So, tormented
thus by my spotless but undeniable thirst for knowledge, I removed
a tiny bit of it and sent it off to a laboratory in Minneapolis
for analysis.
No matter what the result,
I have done a horrible disservice to both our species. How, after
all, would I have liked it if, upon landing on an alien world,
I were seized by some ham-footed weekend scientist who then proceeded
to take a chunk out of me and run it through a chromatograph?
And goodness knows what I have done to the poor creature's health.
That bit may have been a lung, a kidney, even its brain. I seem
to see it quiver slightly, especially when I open the refrigerator
door, and I afford myself the hope that it is still alive, but
this may be wishful thinking on my part. How much damage I have
done may be incalculable. And yet I can hardly wait until I get
the results back from the lab. I hope they come soon, because
I fear my little extraterrestrial is beginning to spoil.
***
Well, it's a custard.
***
Milk, vanilla, eggs, sugar.
Is this what the stars have to offer us? Was the secret to life
on our planet a simple matter of boiling, whisking and placing
in a bain-marie? Are we simply ingredients in some weird god's
cosmic souffle? I am tortured and anguished, and consumed by
another sentiment that is achingly familiar but which I cannot
quite identify. I am so disturbed that I have even stopped looking
for mathematical sequences in the floral pattern on its saucer.
Last night I thought it spoke to me, in some gibbering tongue
that burrowed directly into my mind as I fetched the salad dressing
from the door of the fridge. I could not understand the words,
only the desperation and helplessness of the tone -- it was the
voice of something billions of miles from home, with no one to
aid it or even understand it. But then, earlier, I thought I
heard that same voice coming from a fruit pie I got at the gas
station. Oh, creature, what have you done to me?
***
You know, this isn't half
bad.
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