I thought of the inland divers who'd descended through every layer of the unnatural ecology which kept this island afloat, who'd witnessed the subterranean ocean ceaselessly corroding the rock from below.
They'd walked away—dazed, but exalted.
I could do the same.
I rose to my feet unsteadily. I thought it was over: I thought I'd come through the mixing, unscathed. Kaspar could not have become the Keystone—and yet somehow the Aleph moment must have passed safely, removing the distortion, banishing Distress. Maybe some mainstream AC had hacked into Mosala's account upon learning of her death and had grasped some crucial error in Kaspar's analysis before I'd read a word of it.
Akili was approaching—an indistinct figure in the distance, but I knew it could be no one else. I raised a hand tentatively, then waved in triumph. The figure waved back, stretching vis giant shadow west across the desert.
And everything I'd learned came together, like a thunderclap, like an ambush.
My parents, friends, lovers… Gina, Angelo, Lydia, Sarah, Violet Mosala, Bill Munroe, Adelle Vunibobo, Karin De Groot. Akili. Even the helpless bellowing strangers, victims of the same revelation, had only been mouthing distorted echoes of my own horror at the understanding that I'd created them all.
This was the solipsistic madness I'd seen reflected in that first poor woman's face.
—and now that I knew it, the breath of my own understanding would sweep them all away.
Nothing could have been created without the full knowledge of how it was done: without the unified TOE, physical and informational. No Keystone could have acted in innocence, forging the universe unaware.
But that knowledge was impossible to contain. Kaspar had been right. The moderates had been right. Everything which had breathed fire into the equations would now unravel into empty tautology.
I raised my face to the blank sky, ready to part the veil of the world and find nothing behind it.
Then Akili called my name, and I stopped dead. I looked down at ver—beautiful as ever, unreachable as ever.
Unknowable as ever.
I saw the flaw in Kaspar's reasoning which had kept it from becoming the Keystone: an unexamined assumption—an unasked question, not yet true or false.
The TOE equation said nothing. The canonical experiments said nothing. There was nowhere to look for the answer but my own memories, my own life.
And all I had to do to tear myself out of the center of the universe—all I had to do to prevent the unraveling—was give up one last illusion.
As the plane touches down, I begin recording. Witness confirms:
"Cape Town, Wednesday April 15, 2105. 7:12:10 GMT."
Karin De Groot has come to the airport to meet me. She looks astonishingly healthy, much more so in the flesh—though, as with all of us ancients, the losses are etched deep. We exchange greetings, then I glance around trying to take in the profusion of styles in anatomy and dress—no more than anywhere else, but every place has a different mix, a different set of fashions. Imposing retractable cowls full of dark violet photosynthetic symbionts seem to be popular throughout Southern Africa. Back home, sleek amphibian adaptions for underwater breathing and feeding are common.
After the Aleph moment, people had feared that the mixing would impose uniformity. It had never happened—any more than, in the Age of Ignorance, the brutal, inescapable truths that water was wet and the sky was blue had forced everyone on the planet to think and act identically. There are infinitely many ways to respond to the single truth of the TOE. What's become impossible is maintaining the pretense that every culture could ever have created its own separate reality—while we all breathed the same air and walked the same ground.
De Groot checks some schedule in her mind's eye. "So you didn't come straight from Stateless?"
"No. Malawi. There was someone I had to see. I wanted to say goodbye."