Deviation from a
Theme
By
Steven Utley
Teacher Payeph wagged her wattles in exasperation as she
surveyed the shambles I had made of my first continuum.
"How many times must I tell you?" she demanded. "The
smaller, the better! Random factors produce effects
which spread outward in waves in all directions!
Subtlety, Ellease! Subtlety is called for in order to
have a smoothly running continuum."
I bent a spine into the apologetic position and said, "I
am abjectly sorry, Teacher."
"I'm certain the fact that you're sorry will console all
the life-forms suffering in your continuum." She settled
at my side and became solicitous, stroking my frill with
her whiskers. That egg-gummer Myosa looked up from her
continuum and snickered on my private frequency.
Payeph always feels warmth for the retards.
Expel it from your nether vents, I told Myosa and shut
her off.
Payeph punched MAXIMUM REDUCTION on my console slate and
picked up my continuum. It hung in her pincers like a
punctured bagaloon. I colored and clamped the lids shut
on my dorsal vents, lest my embarrassment offend.
"What is wrong?" Payeph asked as she returned my limp
creation to its mount. "Are you having trouble with your
vision? Can't you perceive fine details? Or is it that
you simply don't care?"
"Oh, no. It's just … I'm clumsy, Teacher. I try to work
on a small scale, but every time I attempt to manipulate
my life-forms, I accidentally gouge the side off a
mountain or punch a hole clean through the planet. Once,
I missed altogether and ruptured the sun."
Payeph looked sad. "I think you need more practice,
Ellease, before I turn you loose on another continuum of
your own. Come over to mine."
I risked a glance at Myosa. She was smoking with envy.
It was no secret that Payeph's continuum was the best in
existence. Her decision to let me practice there was an
undeniable show of favor. I rose and followed my teacher
past Myosa, at whom I surreptitiously twitched a nipple.
When we came to her continuum, Payeph punched MINIMUM
REDUCTION. Everything became gray shading into black or
white.
"Of course," said Payeph, "I can't simply turn you loose
on my pride and joy."
"Of course, Teacher." My hearts sank.
"But I am going to allot you control of a quasi-world."
I cocked a spine at her. "A quasi-world, Teacher?"
"A sort of alternate reality which the life-forms in
this sector have erected and preserved on
light-sensitive film. The absence of color disconcerts
you, Ellease? You'll soon become accustomed to it. The
process by which images are preserved is rather
primitive at this point in my life-forms' development as
a technological race. But they learn quickly. They're
imaginative, after a fashion. Now I want you to review
everything here, and then I'll let you practice handling
the random factors."
"Yes, Teacher."
I reviewed the material. Payeph's creations' creations
were two-dimensional in addition to being monochromatic,
but I nevertheless found them fascinating. My teacher's
five-pointed life-forms had grasped the rudiments of
continuum-building and, while keeping within the
limitations of their technology, had constructed neat,
succinct worlds wherein everything contrived to move
itself to this point to that. It was rather like a
primer in construction.
"I think I have it now," I finally told Payeph.
"You may begin. Just remember to be subtle when
selecting your variables."
And I began.
#
Time was running in circles now, doubling back and
catching up with itself, enfolding Ann Darrow in a
scramble of images. A skull-shaped mountain rising
through the fog. Black hands lashing her between the
weathered stone pillars. Monsters crashing through the
jungle, blundering into one another in their eagerness
to get at her.
It had been a harrowing night for Ann, a night of bad
dreams come true, of fearful childhood imaginings
spilling over into reality. She had no way of telling
how long or how far she had been carried in her
monstrous abductor's paw. She could no longer scream.
Her throat was raw. She had lost and regained
consciousness more times than she could number, and,
always, the awakening had been the same
In the limbo separating nightmare-filled consciousness
and total awakening, she tramped the sidewalks of New
York City, moving mindlessly, mechanically, like a
zombie. She was tired and hungry, but she had no money,
no job, no place to go, and it was cold, so very cold.
But the fetid stench in the air was that of decaying
vegetation, not automobile-exhaust fumes and ripening
garbage. Her clothes were pasted to her skin with
perspiration. And a far greater horror than exhaustion
or hunger bore her in its hand as though she were a
doll.
In the limbo between unconsciousness and awakening, Ann
prayed for deliverance.
Make the bad dream go away!
Don't let me wake up to that thing again!
Please, somebody, save me! Save me!
But the awakening was always the same.
#
"Ah," said Teacher Payeph. "I'm impressed, Ellease. You
reveal a distinct talent for subjectivity."
I retracted my mandibles, a sign of profound thanks, and
then, carefully, nervously, started restructuring events
in the quasi-world.
#
Tyrannosaurus sniffed the hot, damp air and began to
move through the jungle. The sky was just beginning to
lighten, but a thick mist was rising, keeping visibility
to a minimum. The dinosaur ploughed through the gloom
unconcernedly, letting his acute sense of smell guide
him.
Prey-scent was abundant. He crossed the cooling spoor of
a nocturnal stegosaurus at one point and, further on,
followed the trail of a swamp-dwelling giant until the
ground fell off sharply into a bog. Unable to proceed
into the swamp, Tyrannosaurus roared out his frustration
and swung his twenty-meter length about to seek food
elsewhere.
He was aptly named, this Tyrant Lizard; a striding maw
of a creature, with teeth like carving knives and jaw
muscles like steel cable. He walked on his splayed,
talon-tipped toes and held his small forearms close to
his scaly chest. He hardly needed the forearms. He did
his killing with his jaws and the weight behind those
jaws.
He was aptly named, this Tyrannosaurus, and the other
denizens of his world feared and respected him
accordingly. In their marshes, the thunder lizards
headed for deeper water when he approached on the shore.
The pterodactyls climbed into the sky. The stegosaurs
crouched under their rows of dorsal plates and flicked
their spiked tails in alarm.
Tyrannosaurus paused abruptly and listened. He heard a
muffled roar in the distance, followed by a series of
thin shrieks and a dull crash. There was a sound of
large branches snapping. Then the slowly moving air of
the jungle brought a faint scent which evoked a fleeting
impression, a dim flash of recognition, in the
dinosaur's mind: ape.
The Tyrant Lizard began to move again, uprooting
saplings and tearing up great clumps of sodden earth as
he walked. A lesser scent, intermingled with that of the
ape, impinged upon his nostrils. It was a completely
unfamiliar odor. Vaguely perplexed, the carnivore slowed
his advance. He came to the edge of a clearing and
tensed for the attack, for the ape-scent was thick
there.
But there was no ape in sight.
A high, plaintive screech brought Tyrannosaurus' head
around. His glistening eye fastened upon a strange white
thing wedged into the fork of a lightning-blasted tree
at the far side of the clearing.
It seemed hardly more than a mouthful, hardly worth the
trouble, but its noise was annoying. He hissed and
strode forward, and he was almost upon the walling thing
when an enormous ape burst into the clearing like a
black mountain on legs.
Tyrannosaurus immediately forgot about the irritating
white creature as he wheeled to meet the ape's attack.
The simian was as tall as the dinosaur and, though
considerably less heavy, very powerfully built. Jaws
distended, the reptile lunged. His opponent ducked under
his bead and clamped its shaggy arms around his neck. He
raked his teeth across the beast's broad back, shredding
flesh.
Back and forth across the clearing they raged, biting,
tearing, kicking, clawing. Locked together, they crashed
against the dead tree, felling it. The ape lost its hold
on the dinosaur and went down on top of the tree.
Before the mammal could rise, Tyrannosaurus planted an
enormous foot upon its stomach, bent down and bit out
its throat.
#
Payeph fluttered her wattles approvingly. "Very good,"
she said, "but don't forget that the alterations you've
made will have a direct bearing on everything which
follows."
"Of course. Teacher."
#
She awoke with a splitting headache. She was pinned
beneath the fallen bole, with only a short, thick nub of
branch holding it away from her. For several seconds,
she could not remember where she was. Through a rift in
the jungle canopy, she could see that the stars had
faded from the sky, but the effort required to keep her
eyes open and focused served only to worsen the agony
behind them. She closed her eyes and pressed her cheek
into the warm mud.
Then a basso profoundo grunt shook her out of her daze.
She twisted around as best she could and gave a short,
sharp scream.
Her erstwhile captor's inert mass was sprawled across
the trunk.
The giant ape was dead. Looming over it was the monster
to end all monsters.
Blood dripping from his jaws and dewlap, Tyrannosaurus
looked up from his meal when he heard the scream. He
peered down at the strange white creature. A growl
started to rumble up from his long, deep chest.
It had been a bad night for Ann Darrow. A worse day was
dawning.
#
"Not at all bad, Ellease. See how simple it is?"
"Yes, Teacher."
"All you have to do is exercise the same meticulous care
on a cosmic scale. Take your time. Pay attention to
details." She clacked her mandibles. "And watch out for
your own elbows."
"Yes, Teacher."
"Do you think you've got the hang of it now? Or would
you like to practice with another alternate-reality?"
I turned to have another look at the gray quasi-world
and quite accidentally ground Tyrannosaurus to mush
underfoot just as he was about to nip off Ann Darrow's
head and shoulders. Payeph moaned.
I pulled my head down into my carapace. "Er, should I
fix it all back the way it was at first?"
"No! I mean, no, Ellease. Let's, uh, leave well enough
alone."
"Yes, Teacher." I backed out of the quasi-world as she
punched MEDIUM REDUCTION on her console slate. Several
of my feet became entangled in something. I gave a tug
and pulled free. "Teacher, won't the life-forms who
constructed that quasi-world notice the changes I made?"
Payeph made a hooting sound and inflated her wattles in
dismay. "I think they have more serious matters to
consider now."
I looked into her continuum and groaned. Pulling my feet
free, I had broken something else.
"Ellease," Payeph said, "perhaps you should try another
line of work."
I stared disconsolately at the mess I had created. Stars
were blossoming like variegated flowers. For a brief
moment, an entire galaxy flared up into a bouquet.
"Yes, Teacher," I said.
# # #
Steve Utley rose to prominence in the s-f field during
the 1970s, when he joined a group of science fiction
writers in Austin, Texas, which included Lisa Tuttle,
Howard Waldrop, and Bruce Sterling. The group was later
formalized as the Turkey City Writer's Workshop. Since
then he has published prolifically in and out of the
science-fiction field, and The Encyclopedia of Science
Fiction has called him "a figure of edgy salience."
Utley may be best known for his Silurian Tales series,
launched in Asimov's Science Fiction in 1993 and
continued in not only that magazine but also The
Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Analog Science
Fiction and Fact, and the e-zines Sci Fiction and
Revolution Science Fiction. The series describes the
adventures and misadventures of a scientific expedition
in the Paleozoic Era.
Since 1997, he has made his home in Tennessee.
"Deviatins from a Theme" was originally published in
Galaxy in 1976. Sentinel S-F is proud to print it again.
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