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Dark Matters (standard:science fiction, 5612 words) | |||
Author: Eutychus | Added: May 25 2005 | Views/Reads: 3537/2383 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Alien wholesalers, intriguing gadgets, and a few items that seem too good to be true. Would humanity walk down this road a second time? Thoughts welcome. Am I just too obvious with this effort? | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story “Yes it is. Thanks.” I was ushered into a very plain office a few minutes later and introductions were made. The regional sales manager introduced me to the practice of addressing a Trid by both first and last name to show respect for both the individual and their family. Because of my limited abilities, he suggested that I simply use the first syllables of each name. When I explained that this would have me calling him Grendel, the monster from the Beowulf epic, he seemed pleased to be thusly associated with a human piece of literature. To differentiate, I placed the emphasis on the second syllable. “Grendel, just how am I expected to be of service to you?” “Though I have studied your world and its many cultures for some time now, I do not always know when which customs might apply. I flustered a member of the Sony corporation last week by calling for medical aid when he bowed to me. That is a difficult posture for my species, and I assumed a need where there was none. I need someone to help me put forth a comfortable persona, one with whom people might feel at ease. Your background in cultural anthropology should help me present myself that way. You know not only the customs, but the reasons for them as well.” “I see. Wouldn't a book have done the same thing at a lower cost?” “I think the word is ‘nuances'. A book would never be able to explain the nuances of your cultures like a human with experience in the cultures. Then I also need someone to bounce ideas off when approaching how best to market something. You will tell me when something I propose offends kosher sensibilities, agitates some group sensitive to a point of view, or crosses ethical boundaries I may not know about.” “Then this is a full time position. You would be surprised by how easily some humans take offense.” “Yes, full time and then some, once we get into a routine. But I will not make demands that will detract from your family obligations. Those are very important. I want you to understand that I take such things very seriously and that I appreciate the way your species, overall, shares this passion. I have decided that I like humans and will enjoy doing business with them.” I wondered if I was a cultural liaison or a pet. He explained the benefits package and associated minutiae and then acquiesced to some of my technical questions. “May I ask how your species manages the mind boggling distances you travel?” “I am not well-versed in these things, but I know that it involves a transfer of matter. At the edge of every star system, there is a point at which the gravity of the local group and the primary star of the system reach equilibrium. In your system, that point is close to half a billion miles beyond Pluto. At that point, certain aspects of quantum physics may be bent. The method of travel we use requires that a mass of matter at this end of the trip equal to the mass of the ship and its cargo must take the place of the ship at our end of the trip. Because it is at this point of equal attractions that comets linger between trips around your sun, there is always something available for the exchange. Once the exchange takes place, fusion motors or chemical engines provide propulsion within your solar system.” “And on the return trip, the comet returns to its place at the edge of the solar system?” “Or some portion of it. As I said, equal masses. If we delivered several tons of a particular mineral, we would try and return home with perhaps an equal quantity of chicken wings. This accomplishes three things. It gives my race a taste of your world's protein, it discourages establishing a trade deficit so that all worlds may continue to benefit from our activities, and it keeps us from having to dissect a comet because of a change in mass. The last thing we need is more garbage cluttering up our space lanes.” I left the discussion at that. While I hadn't the aptitude to grasp the physics behind the Trid mode of travel, it was still good to know the basics. For the next few weeks, Grendel had me analyzing transcripts of phone, video, and email discussions he had with various people in the course of his work. I pointed out a few social blunders, but none that would cause major damage to anyone's bottom line. I read up on a lot of the technology they offered and was truly impressed. I expect the fuel cell the size of a roll of quarters capable of producing enough electricity to run a car for five years at a stretch to become a hot ticket item and will anticipate a company discount when they become available. Because he wanted to understand the dynamics of human relationships, he soon became a frequent dinner guest at my place. He commented that the brother and sister animosity displayed by my ten and twelve year olds was not unique to Earth. He was impressed that my wife and I took it in stride and dealt with it well. “Are we making a good impression?” Kate asked as we prepared some coffee and dessert for the post-meal calm in the den after our children had taken off to play with some of the other neighborhood kids. “I really don't think this is about making an impression. I get the feeling that Grendel misses his own family. And on that point, I need to ask him something.” Grendel monopolized the after dinner discussion and my family structure question never got asked. He brought out what I thought was his version of a PDA, but it turned out to be a photo album that reminded me of the old HP commercials that used the Kinks' tune “Picture book” for inspiration. Curiously, the photo array only showed a single family unit. There was no evidence of the Trid multiple-adult blended family I had learned about in my research. “I feel that this sampling of protein was good for me,” Grendel said, reflecting on the meatloaf we had eaten earlier. “Do you really mean ‘good for me' or just ‘good'?” Kate asked. “Good for me. I carry a gene that makes it necessary for me to ingest a lot of protein, and I think this particular sampling was good for the condition I have.” Unsure if it would be uncomfortable for him if I pried, I chose not to. Instead, I invited him to a neighborhood barbecue that was planned for the coming weekend where he would be able to sample ribs, burgers, chicken, and hot dogs. Early in the week, I checked in with my ex-student to report on upcoming offerings to various companies. There was more information for sale this week than anything else, and sometimes that worried the Committee more than some new gadget. “I understand that you entered this arrangement with the Committee as a passive operative, meaning that you would be reporting on things you happen across. I'd like to push the definition of that agreement by asking you to research something particular,” Palmer said after the initial exchange of knowledge. “We have been working with a mineral of Trid origin in the lab for several weeks now and are really impressed with it. I'd like you to get any details regarding the mineral that doesn't come out in the PowerPoint presentation.” “I'll give it my all. What's it called?” “The trade name is tenebrium, spelled just like it sounds. It forms in the presence of tectonic activity on the Trid home world. Heat and pressure force several elements into an interesting compound that has industrial applications in solid, liquid, and gaseous states. The most interesting I have run across is the fact that the mineral, in its liquid form, will undergo polymerization. We have created an alloy with it and some of our home grown polymers that the computer models tell us would quadruple the output of a standard fuel cell.” “We may be able to come up with a fuel cell that would make the Trid fuel cell seem like a pale knockoff?” “Perhaps. Everything we have done with this mineral gives us every indication that it is just too good a thing to be true. You know what they say about something that seems too good to be true, right?” For the rest of the week I tried means subtle, discrete, blatant and obvious, and learned nothing more about tenebrium than what was available from the marketing arm of the Trid Corporate Expeditionary Force, which told me there was more to be learned. Saturday morning before the barbecue, I spent an hour changing the brakes on our car. I considered the respirator lying in the bottom drawer of what had been my dad's tool chest and wondered why it was in with his tools for working on his car. I had memories of him wearing the thing when the wheels were on the floor of the garage with the lug nuts carefully placed in the hubcaps. Those memories came hand in hand with memories of him chasing me out of the garage until he was finished with his work. Until that morning, I had never thought to ask him why. I had always assumed he simply did not want a kid under foot. After I finished my brake job, I did a little research on the Net. The P-100 filter cartridge in Dad's respirator was specified for use around paints, solvents, and asbestos. Hmm. That led to another hour of Internet searching. “Good morning, Kyle Valendar,” Grendel said as he exited his car and approached Kate and myself by the tomato plants next to the front porch. “ 'Morning, Grendel,” Kate said with a little wave. Grendel did not seem to be in a mood for small talk. For some odd reason, he seemed intent on discussing the ethical problems human governments might have with the Trid peddling their cloning technology on Earth. Though our own dubious flirtation with cloned livestock and animals on the endangered species list had been ongoing since twenty fifty, the United Nations ban on human cloning remained in force a century after it had gone into effect. There were no signs of changes to that mandate happening any time in the near future. “What is this fear your species seems to have regarding growing replacement parts?” Grendel asked. “I don't think there is an organized resistance to therapeutic cloning, and we got over the problem of using frozen embryos when they perfected a means of using adult stem cells in this research. But growing healthy organs is not yet commercially viable.” “I'm sure we can provide you with the means to benefit your citizens while still maintaining the integrity of your legal mandates regarding replacement technology.” “If you are meeting with resistance to your overtures, it may be more a matter of pride than ethics. We are a very self-deterministic sort, we humans. We have never had outside help available before and you are probably experiencing the bruised ego of human ingenuity. Of course, just knowing that replacement organs can be grown may be all our researchers need to find the answers they need on their own. I hope you'll forgive our tendency to want to do things on our own.” “I understand perfectly. But a big part of joining the much larger community that we represent will be learning to appreciate the benefits you can derive from species other than your own. I will be unashamedly deriving both pleasure and benefits from this afternoon's meal with no emotions involved other than appreciation.” “Yes, we'll have to do some growing in short order, I can see that. But if I may broach the subject of your medical situation, is there nothing that all this replacement technology can do for you?” I asked, knowing that the question would either force out the details I had been unwilling to look for when he first mentioned a genetic problem or change the subject entirely. “The genetic disorder that I mentioned last weekend keeps me from being able to take advantage of these technologies. My body does not recognize its own genetic code in the event of a transplant. This is the case with five percent of the population of my world and the only recourse for me is to ingest massive quantities of the proper kinds of protein. This is another reason why I have a passion about sharing our technology with your world. You have made strides with anti-rejection drugs that my world never explored because we developed our replacement technology before experimenting with transplants. I was hoping we might trade the one for the other.” “Then there is something else in your makeup that would make anti-rejection drugs useful?” Kate wondered. “Yes. In addition to the genetic disorder I mentioned, I am also subject to a disorder that effects fifty percent of the adult males of my world.” “Genetic?” I asked. “No, environmental. The damage was done by the time I was a teenager but has not shown up until recently, which is the reason for my passion vis-à-vis protein rich food sources.” “Pardon my surprise, but shouldn't a society as advanced as yours be able to eliminate an environmental problem that causes a quarter of the population serious medical problems?” “The situation is . . . complicated. There are circumstances both economic and political that keep us from effectively dealing with the problem.” “Then you know the cause of the contamination?” “Yes, but the contaminant in question is so widespread in both its natural distribution on the planet and in its uses that any process that might remove it from contact with people would be formidably complex.” “Well then you just stop using it. You find something else that does the same thing and use it instead,” I told him and explained how we had used lead in the past and how the heavy metal had affected people who internalized the element via ingestion from lead pipes, pewter eating utensils, or lead based paints. “In theory, yes, that is the best course of action. But we Trid have a stubborn streak in us that rivals the one found in humans. When the gains are so great that it becomes easy to turn a deaf ear and blind eye to the problem, the problem is easily ignored. And the folks who process the mineral did just that for many decades even when they knew about the problems it would cause.” “Were they ever held accountable for this knowledge that went unshared?” “Attempts both through the courts and the legislatures of most of our nations were tried and eventually found wanting.” “What is the nature of the problems caused by this mineral?” I asked, realizing that I might have found my source for information on tenebrium. “It creates something similar to what your doctors call sclera derma. The skin around the torso thickens and hardens in response to the irritation the mineral causes. The chest becomes unable to expand and the subject eventually dies from being unable to breathe. It is not a way of dying that any of my people would choose if given the choice. Though replacement technologies give the affected new skin, there is that small percentage of us who cannot take advantage of that option. Hence my interest in your anti-rejection drugs.” “And consuming the right kinds of proteins slows down the process?” “Precisely. It is a stop gap measure that will not prolong life indefinitely, but I will do whatever I can to remain alive.” “As would we all. There is nothing to be done for you?” “The companies that mine the mineral funded the development of our replacement technology and therefore own many of the process patents. They profit from selling the mineral and from treating the disease it causes. I think they feel that their obligation is at an end. “Some of us brought legal action against the companies responsible. In enough of the cases, we won the judgment and forced them to promise they would pursue other forms of treating the disorder. But unseen legal maneuvering on the part of these companies allowed them to put off dealing with the situation until they felt it was to their best advantage, regardless of what became of the people in circumstances similar to my own. Medical options remain unexplored; the responsible parties have adopted a practice of throwing small sums of money at the victims hoping this will solve something. Feeling somewhat disenfranchised, I decided to search other worlds for possible cures.” “Best of luck in your search. Hope there is something that can be worked out as per the anti-rejection drugs. Could you explain something to me about Trid marital relationships?” “I can explain the relationship but can never fully explain Trid females.” “Another thing our species have in common. What is the idea with the blended marriages? Two males and two females in a union together strikes me as just a little complicated.” “Oh, you are referring to another outcome of our experience with the mineral.” “That worked its way into defining what constitutes a family?” “Not really. You have a misunderstanding of our family relationships. We have what you call a nuclear family and then there is an extended family group that is arranged by the government. There is no relationship per se between the other family I and my spouse are coupled with. In the event of the death of either spouse in either family, the surviving spouse and children become the legal responsibility of the extended family. There are no sexual obligations, if that is what concerns you regarding the arrangement. It is just a means our governments have worked out to minimize the financial and emotional burdens of the loss of a spouse.” “I see. It is amazing that you would allow a commodity to redefine such basic relationships in life.” “As I said earlier, the dynamic of this mineral in our society is a complicated one.” “This mineral wouldn't be the tenebrium that I was reading about this week, would it?” I asked, feeling a little like someone at the base of a mountain looking up at a precarious snow mass poised to let go if someone sneezed. “Yes it is. You sound concerned.” “Only because humanity has its own version of the same story to tell and I'm nervous about perhaps having to deal with another chapter. Do you know what mals are?” “Mal- is a Latin prefix indicating something bad. Malodorous, malevolent, maladjusted.” “Malfeasance, of the corporate variety such as you encountered with your mineral. On Earth, mals is also an acronym. It stands for Magnesium ALuminum Silicates. On the surface this does not sound threatening. They sell magnesium tablets to older folks to help them metabolize calcium. Aluminum can still be found on the outside of some houses. Silicates sound a lot like sand. Nothing dangerous there, so who is going to pay attention when the list of ingredients includes mals?” “I take it magnesium aluminum silicates have consequences?” Grendel asked. “Indeed they do. Or did. They were finally phased out of the marketplace some ten years ago, but not before exacting a tremendous toll. Mind you, I researched this topic this morning so my knowledge, while fresh in my mind, is not likely to be complete. The first thing I learned is that mals is the most recent name for a mineral that has been used off and on for two thousand years. Its more familiar trade name used to be asbestos. When certain facts became known and ‘asbestos' became harder to sell, they renamed it. Rather than come up with a solution, they gave the problem a different name.” “This is interesting because the story has such a familiar feel to it. Were the producers of this product familiar with its effects?” “They knew that it was associated with respiratory problems and they even funded studies to see just how dangerous it was. When they learned how bad bad could get, they did the prudent thing and told no one. They continued to develop more and more products that exposed more and more people to asbestos and then had the nerve to act surprised when people started suing them. When it became obvious that there were tens of thousands of people affected, most of whom were going to die and the companies began to reap what they had sown, they declared bankruptcy. Not that they were anywhere near insolvency. By restructuring under the bankruptcy laws, any awards won by plaintiffs in lawsuits were paid in pennies on the dollar. A million dollar award became a ten thousand dollar award.” “How long term is the disease associated with asbestos?” “The incubation period can be as long as fifty years, but when a person became aware they were even sick, they were usually already in the final stages of the disease. Very few who filed suit ever learned what the outcome of their attempt at justice was.” “Are humans so shallow that they think money can make up for the loss of a loved one?” “Of course not. Humans, even from a very young age, have a hard-wired sense of right and wrong. When someone is wronged, it is understood that the one who did the wrong should be held accountable. Because this situation was fostered by incremental decisions made over a period of many decades, it is difficult to place the blame on an individual or even an individual company. So the company is punished, and the only kind of punishment appropriate to an entity that exists to turn a profit is a monetary penalty.” “That doesn't seem much like justice.” “I and the families of the affected agree. It must be a universal formula for this state of affairs. Someone realizes they made the wrong decision at some point in the past, decide to throw money at the resulting problem hoping it will go away, and then blame the legal system for doing its best to make the punishment fit the crime.” “You said nothing about developing treatments for the disease they caused. They did, of course, fund the cure, did they not?” “What cure? Any treatment options seem to have come from individuals who won fractional settlements and donated sizeable chunks to research organizations who wanted to see a cure happen. Back when our legislators got themselves embroiled in the melee and were attempting to solve the ‘asbestos problem' by setting up a trust fund to compensate the afflicted and negate any liability for the companies who killed tens of thousands over the course of a century, there was a chorus of disapproval by victims of asbestos disease. They wanted someone to find a cure rather than compensate the dying, and who can blame them? Would you rather be around to meet your grandchildren or know that the grandchildren would be able to go to college because you died from a disease that was entirely preventable?” “Obviously I'd like to meet my grandchildren. Why wouldn't this problem be a priority for the companies and the governments who enact legislation to protect workers? I've had dealings with your EPA and OSHA and know that there is a conscious concern for the safety of workers in your nation.” “Remember that the incubation period is measured in decades. By the time the disease reached the point of actually killing anyone, we are talking about old men. Old men die. No one is surprised. And if the old man happened to smoke, the lung cancer that killed him might be thought understandable. Everyone will accept that he probably did it to himself and not look for another cause of death. In fact, it was only at the beginning of the 21st century that they even began tracking mesothelioma, the deadliest means of demise by asbestos, as a cause of death. Come on inside and I'll show you something.” After we relocated to the computer, I pulled up a number of pictures I had downloaded earlier that morning. I scrolled down to one in particular and used it to fill the screen. “What is this?” Grendel inquired. “This is a grave marker. I liked what it said on the back and thought you would appreciate it too. Can you make it out?” “I'm sorry, but I only learned the spoken languages of Earth. Writing is an entirely different set of Trid learning drugs.” “It says ‘This side of the headstone made necessary by W. R. Grace. Since I doubt they'll accept responsibility, I want to make damn sure they get the credit!' I thought that summed up the feelings of the afflicted nicely. They cannot get any satisfaction through the courts, no one in the government sees fit to fund research into effective treatment, and they die because no one had the sense to warn them about the dangers. Admittedly, it's a little like a mouse making an obscene gesture at the eagle swooping towards it, but I like the sentiment.” “I have obviously underestimated the resourcefulness of human corporate enterprise. For this kind of problem to be ignored for so long must have required a tremendous investment in public relations.” “I'm sure it did. Every time something surfaced about the carcinogenic nature of asbestos, someone would have to be there pumping misinformation to newspapers that discredited the reporter who broke the story, call into question the facts presented, blame the plaintiff lawyers for creating an ‘asbestos hysteria' that unfairly demonized well-meaning but misunderstood corporations, and contribute to the campaigns of lawmakers up for re-election who would be sympathetic to asbestos companies as a result. An ugly picture, to be sure, but since no one ever saw the entire landscape all at once, it didn't offend as it should have.” Grendel shook his head and sighed. “I suppose it's not going to work here either.” “ ‘Here' as in Earth? What won't work?” “There is a proviso in my contract with the Corporate Expeditionary Force which states they will resume funding to search for effective treatments for people with my genetic defect if I can provide them with a market for tenebrium that will offset the cost of the research. After hearing about your planet's experiences with one such mineral, I would not inflict another upon it. Tenebrium will not be offered among the items we would sell on your world.” “After learning what I have about it, I would do my best to discourage anyone from buying it anyway. I appreciate you taking the high road and will do what I can to see that you have access to some of our anti-rejection drugs.” “I am grateful. But yours is only the second world we have visited that was capable of making use of tenebrium. There may be other planets in the universe whose inhabitants would not be affected by the mineral as your race and mine would. Even if your anti-rejection drugs don't help us, there are other worlds that may allow me to fulfill that proviso.” “Then you will be moving on to the third world?” I asked and felt a shiver as I remembered how the asbestos companies had refocused their efforts after the ban on the use of asbestos took effect in the United States in 2110 to establish markets in developing nations. “I believe we will. It looks as though this will not be a full time position for you after all.” “I don't think it would have been even if you took a longer term interest in Earth. Explaining how not to offend people who for all I know deserve being offended is not a very fulfilling way of making a living. I have always been a teacher, and part of the satisfaction comes from seeing the student figure it out for himself. You have no desire to learn, but simply have a need to know. It's not the same.” “Understood. When the time comes, please remember to return your security badge.” Return my security badge? I had considered keeping it as a souvenir. It was a pretty impressive piece of technology in itself. A holographic photo, full medical profile on a magnetic strip and a DNA sample for use in accessing higher-level security areas of the Trid embassy. Wait a minute! “Grendel, how many other humans are working for you?” “You are the only one in this country.” “In that case, I'll be keeping the badge. With all the replacement technology you possess and your personal penchant for protein, you are not leaving here with a sample of my DNA. The last thing I want is to be associated with the slogan ‘billions and billions served' on the Trid home world.” “Kyle Valendar, why would you think such a thing?” “During our initial interview, something about the intonation of your voice when you said ‘I like humans' made me wonder. The later discussion about your protein needs made me suspicious. If I made an incorrect inference, I apologize.” “No need to apologize,” he said as I shut down the computer. I turned away from the screen just in time to see him mouth the word “damn”. “Well, it's about time for the barbecue. I think you should plan to be satisfied with the ribs.” For the remainder of his time on Earth, I would place the emphasis on the first syllable of his name. Tweet
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