Chapter 20
Infinity America
A few days later they went home.
It was evening when they returned through the portal to Moody Blue, or synthetic evening, anyway.
It had been a quiet, understated affair when they came back through the portal. There had been no one there to greet them. They had stepped through into an empty cavern, their footsteps echoing off the distant walls.
There had been goodbyes, of course, though not very tearful. They would see each other again, after all. There was post-liberation paperwork to file, and they had to testify to the Hyper-Senate about Murtlebixâs involvement, and likely they would be called to do some interviews together once the documentary about their exploits hit the Omninet.
And, of course, Olyrean would have to report to SPECTRA. Veezeebub and Tordle had given her a call yesterday and made it clear that they would be wanting to talk to her about what she had found during her mission. They had also asked her if she knew which part of a Glubmixlubboâs body was the most sensitive. Then there had been some screaming and their call had ended.
Now Olyrean sat alone in her bubble-car as it whipped across the artificial landscape of Moody Blue back toward her home. She was full of exhaustion. Not of the body, not necessarily, but in spirit.
There was that little part of her psychology that she shared with humans and other bipedal species that says: Now things are at an end, and now it is time to rest at the end of a long journey, even if the journey mostly involved stepping through a portal and being immediately teleported halfway through reality.
But as her bubble-car toodled its way on down to her home, she saw that her yard was surrounded by a cluster of flashing lights and a crowd of dozens, perhaps even hundreds. Ah, yes. Libby had warned them about this. They were heroes, now, having liberated a particularly prickly planet, and they might get some media attention.
She preened as she stepped out of the bubble-car. âYes, yes, I am the Olyrean Teralelien,â she said. âIf youâd just help me with my bags, please, then Iâd be glad to give a quick interview. Just a few questions, though. Iâve just gotten back, and I am very tired.â
The cameraman she had been talking to, a bipedal lion with jaws large enough to fit her head in, looked at the bags she had just dumped at his feet.
âIâve got no idea who the hell you are,â he growled.
Olyrean gawked at him as he turned away. It quickly became apparent from the general disinterest of the other reporters that they werenât here for her. âWellâwhy are you all around my house? Whatâs going on? BAXTER!â
âHark!â she heard her butler cry. âI hear the dulcet tones of my mistress. Give way, give way, please, I must go to her. She and I are very close, yes, in every possible way you might imagine or write aboutââ Her robot pushed his way through the crowd and smiled at her. âWelcome home, mistress,â he said in a tone so sensual that the cameramen nearest to them grinned at each other. Lights flashed and glared.
At least heâs wearing clothes, Olyrean thought to herself. âBaxter, what is all this?â she asked as he swept up her bags and began pushing his way back through the crowd with her in tow. âWhy are all these reporters at my house? Whatâs happened?â
âItâs a breakthrough, mistress. Do you remember how you ordered me to optimize the laundry chute?â
All at once she remembered the last phone call she had with him. âPlease tell me you didnât blow up the house,â she begged. âI want to lie down so badly.â
âBlow upâ¦? Oh, please. You insult me.â Baxter frowned at her. âIâm afraid Iâve outdone myself, mistress. I managed to make the laundry chute so fast that your clothes now arrive before they even get dirty. Do you understand?â
As they talked, he pushed his way through the crowd. They stood on her doorstep now. Olyrean was relieved to see the house was, in fact, still standing. âNo,â she told him. âWhat are you talking about, before they get dirty? I donât see how thatâs possible.â
âTime travel!â Baxter declared, and a roar went up from the crowd as the reporters pressed in, screaming questions. âBack, back, please!â he cried. âMy mistress is back from a small business tripâI can talk to you later!â He pulled her inside and slammed the door in their faces.
âTime travel,â Olyrean said, bewildered. âBut thatâs not possible!â Then again, she thought to herself, what in the world would I know about it?
Baxter peered out the window and set her bags aside. He grabbed her hand and gave her a smile that made her shiver a little. âCome with me,â he said.
He led her through her house and down a set of stairs, to the basement, where the laundry was located. A mountain of clothes lay on the floor, far more than Olyrean had ever owned. âWhatâs this?â she asked. âThese arenât my clothes.â
âDirty laundry from other timelines,â Baxter told her.
Olyrean stared at the pile of clothes with a creeping dread worming its way into her stomach. She licked her suddenly dry lips. âAh,â she said, âAhâ¦whyâs there so much scuba gear?â She kicked aside a flipper.
âI donât know. Apparently in many alternate timelines, you get into snorkeling. Have you ever considered it?â
Olyrean shivered and said nothing.
âOkay, here we are.â Baxter led her past the clothing and stopped in front of the door to a closet. Though she noted that it didnât appear to be a closet any longer. It radiated cold, and a heavy mist seeped out along the floor from its edges. âFor this next part,â he told her, âdonât freak out.â
Baxter opened the door. Olyrean peered inside. She had been right; it wasnât a closet any longer. It had been converted into a spacious refrigeration unit.
And it was filled with mangled corpses.
Corpses with her face.
Olyrean screamed, then she shrieked, and then screamed again for good measure. After careful consideration of the facts as they lay before her, she screamed a third time.
âI told you not to freak out,â Baxter muttered when she was done.
âHow am I supposed to not freak out?! Why have you got a fridge full ofâ¦ofâ¦murdered me?â
âCalm down! Theyâre just copies of you from other timelines.â
âOh! Oh! Is that all!â
âAnd theyâre not dead. Just unconscious. I built this to store them until we could figure out what to do with them.â
âNot dead?!â Olyrean pointed. âThat one doesnât have a head!â
Baxter looked, then shrugged. âI think she must have been that way when she came through from her timeline.â
âWhat timeline would that be?!â Olyrean hooted. âThe one where people go about without any brains?!â
âI donât see how it would be all that different from this one.â Baxter squinted at her. âAre you sure youâre my Olyrean? I feel like my Olyrean wouldnât be freaking out this much.â
Olyrean threw her hands up in the air. âIâm taking a bath,â she announced. âGo talk to your reporters or whatever you need to do. Just have supper ready by the time Iâm out.â
She retreated to the bathroom and ordered the tub to fill itself. Not just with water, but with a variety of nice-smelling oils. The bathroom AI warned her twice about low oil supply, but she just kept demanding more. She dimmed the lights and sank into the water, though really by now it was viscous enough that it probably qualified as some sort of jelly. When she heard the reporters stomping about the house, she piped in beach sounds until they were drowned out entirely, and drifted off into a sort of relaxed half-sleep.
When Olyrean awoke hours later she was marinating in a cool soup, the auto-heater having switched itself off and all the oils having drifted their way back to the surface of the water. She clambered out of the tub. Wrapping a towel around herself, she peeked out cautiously into the hallway.
âBaxter?â she called.
Silence. She walked to the kitchen, dripping water, and found a note on the counter.
Some physicists wanted to talk to me. I tried to tell you, but you seemed very involved with your bath. Iâll be back tomorrow, possibly. Dinnerâs in the fridge.
Her little vacuum scuttered around her feet, slurping up the dirt that the crowd of reporters had left behind. âThey left about an hour ago,â it said, peering up at her. âBy the way, welcome home, miss.â
âAh,â Olyrean said. âWell, thank you, umâ¦vacuum.â
The bot stared at her.
âMy nameâs Brian,â it said. âSheesh, some people.â
She watched it trundle away.
No longer really hungry, Olyrean decided sheâd just go to bed. But when she turned on the light in her bedroom, she noticed that someone was already in it. She was too stupefied to even scream. That was alright, since the person in her bed did it for her, and even managed to sound exactly like she would.
In fact, the person in her bed looked almost exactly like she did, as well.
âWho are you?!â Olyrean snapped, once the screaming had stopped.
âIâm Olyrean,â said the person in her bed.
âNo, youâre not, I amââ said Olyrean.
âLetâs not get confused,â said Bed-Olyrean. âWeâre both Olyrean, which is ourselves. Iâm just you from an alternate timeline. Your Baxter tried to brain me when I came through. I escaped and hid in here.â
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âOh,â said Olyrean. âIâm sorry about that. He can be a real bastard.â
âYeah,â Bed-Olyrean sighed. âBut a fantastic lover.â
âWhat?â
âOh, have you notânever mind.â
Olyrean looked Bed-Olyrean up and down. They looked almost entirely the same, except that Bed-Olyrean was wearing a really garish sweater. It looked like someone had vomited up yarn of all the loudest colors they could imagine in no particular pattern whatsoever. And embroidered on the front was the lettering HONK IF YOU LOVE BUUGLUBIAN BUTTS, and a small figure of a Buuglubian waving several asses in the air.
âWhat timeline are you fromâ¦?â Olyrean asked.
âIâm from the one where Infinity America came and liberated our planet before anything bad ever happened,â said Bed-Olyrean.
âOh?â
âNo genocide, no slavery. My parents are still alive. Hell, UmâThamarr is still alive. He decided there was no point in fighting the Americans and now heâs opened up a spa. Heats the mud baths with his breath. Iâve been there twice; itâs really fantastic.â
âI see,â said Olyrean. âAndâ¦the sweater?â
âOh.â Bed-Olyrean glanced down at herself and grinned. âWell, see, when I came to America, I really got into some alternative fashion as a hobby.â
âItâs terrible. Really awful.â
âI know,â said Bed-Olyrean. âThatâs the point! Itâs sort of a folkish pastiche of space-lane Americana, where our more working-class species drive cargo ships where portals canât be opened and eat at lonely little asteroid-diners.â
âUh huh,â said Olyrean.
Bed-Olyrean warmed to her little lecture. âSome might say that wearing this sweater is a little mean, even mocking, but I find that thereâs value to be found in its mawkishness. Even if the intent was to mock, one can find this sort of sweater sold in the more backwater planets of the republic with all sincerity. This makes wearing it an advanced act of sincero-mockery genuinity hyper-inversion.â
Olyrean stared.
âI write for a fashion magazine,â said Bed-Olyrean. âWhat about you? I hear youâre a spy of some sort?â
âSure,â said Olyrean. âDo you mind looking at that?â She pointed.
Bed-Olyrean turned around and squinted at the wall. âWhat am I looking for?â
âYouâre not looking for anything. I just wanted you to turn around so I could club you in the back of the head with this lamp.â
Olyrean clubbed Bed-Olyrean in the back of the head with her bedside lamp.
Bed-Olyrean yelped, swayed. âWait,â she said woozily, âBut Iâm going snorkeling tomorrowââ
Then she fell over, unconscious.
Olyrean sighed and dropped the lamp. She frowned at the alternative version of her sprawled across the bed. She bent and seized Bed-Olyrean by the armpits. Her towel fell off. Just then, an Omni-Cola cargo ship cruised by her window.
The pilot stared at her, naked and bent over a concussed version of herself.
âWhatever,â said Olyrean.
She dragged Bed-Olyrean through the house, down the stairs, and tossed her in the freezer with the rest. Then she went back to her room, crawled between her sheets, closed her eyes and went to sleep.
***
Behind a news desk sat a seething mass of viscous purple tentacles, stuffed into a suit and jacket like spaghetti poured into a plastic bag by a child whose mother has told them that they can pack their own lunch for the very first time. It seemed to be constantly falling over itself, making a faint slopping, gurgling noise, its damp and sticky shirt bulging as if at any moment it would burst open and spew even more disgusting parts all over the desk. It flopped about wildly, dragging a sheaf of papers into itself, leaving behind a trail of slime.
A pretty young human woman strode confidently up to the desk. She wore a star-spangled jacket and blouse with just one more button undone than seemed proper, given the rest of her outfit. She paused upon seeing the goop that the pile of tentacles had left behind on it.
âHello, Mary,â said the tentacles.
âOh,â said Mary. âOh my. Youâve made a mess again, havenât you?â Her lips parted.
âUm,â said the tentacles bashfully, âyesâ¦â
âGet ready, you two!â called out an authoritative voice, one of those free-floating ones that seem to be everywhere on television sets. âWeâre going on-air, now!â
Mary slid behind the news desk next to her coworker. She stared at the goo on the desk with an odd expression and reached out to touch it with one finger. âA big, sticky mess,â she said, giggling to herself.
âMary, not now,â the tentacles pleaded with her.
âWeâre live in 3â¦2â¦1â¦â
âGood evening, Iâm Liguree Fardoop,â said the squirming pile of tentacles.
âAnd Iâm Mary Richmond,â said Mary, blushing and slightly breathless. âAnd this is Stellar Patriot News, brought to you by the Interdimensional Broadcasting Agency. And todayâs sponsor, Olâ Xubriqâs Classic Texan Hot Sauce. Xubriqâs: Now, We Are All Sons Of Bitches!â
âTodayâs top story,â said Liguree, âThe series documenting the liberation of Quizbar is the runaway hit of the season, pulling in well over nineteen trillion subscribers.â
âThatâs right, Lig-lig. Viewer feedback has been overwhelming, with polling of key demographics showing that they responded well to the seasonâs focus on high-impact action and themes ofâ¦â Mary paused, glanced toward the tentacles, and then said, very deliberately, âinterspecies romance.â
Liguree did his species equivalent of coughing uncomfortably, which meant that half of his tentacles flailed wildly and turned green. âUm, uh, yes. Well, with all the sword fights, exploding starships and with the season culminating with the sun of the Quizbar home system going supernova, some viewers are questioning: How realistic is this documentary? Joining us now is the seriesâ runaway star, the one and only Libbyââ
An explosion of sparks and fireworks, and Libby appeared sitting coquettishly on the edge of the news desk. She beamed and waved excitedly at the cameras. âHello! Hello everyone! Hi Mary, hi Liguree! Itâs so great to be here.â
âOf course, Libby.â Mary adopted a thoughtful tone, the sort that news anchors get when theyâre asking questions that they already know the answers to, often word for word. âNow, in this documentary, youâre portrayed as dueling multiple head members of the Quizbar Church to death in sword fights. Is this really how it happened?â
âOh, more or less,â said Libby. âSome of itâs, ah, I suppose you might say, symbolic? And edited to make things a bit more exciting. But itâs generally true to life! In the ballpark, at least. It gets the general sentiment across. Plus, donât I look cool with a sword?â Suddenly one was in her hand, and she stood up on the desk, swinging it wildly. She pretended to slice off Maryâs head. The live audience cheered.
âNow one of your major co-stars, Moyom of the Ixxariâshe, wellâshe had some very raunchy scenes, with both the High Priest of the Quizbarlings and her coworker Korak. Viewers really enjoyed the love triangle aspect,â said Liguree once Libby had jumped down off the desk.
âSure! Moyom is so pretty, sheâs such a heartthrob!â
âAnd were these relationships real?â asked Mary, interrupting. Her eyes were slightly glazed. âDid she really goâ¦all the way?â
Libby coughed awkwardly. âUm. Well, in a way. In other ways, it was symbolic, like the swordfights and all.â
âWell, we just want to know whether itâs true to life or not. Some of the more attentive viewers have pointed out that in some scenes, well, Ixxari biology justâ¦doesnât work like that, to put it delicately.â
âItâs as true as it can be,â Libby replied, clearly a little irritated. âLook, itâs the First Principle of Information Transfer over a Storytelling Channel. Youâre never going to capture the whole story, itâs impossible. Youâll leave out some little detail, or people will just gloss over it, and people will seize on other details to explain what was left out, and before you know it the story has ballooned and morphed and it can seem so different from what actually happened. But it still keeps the same general shape of it all. Itâs all mostly right, and thatâs what matters.â
The studio audience absorbed this in silence, glancing dubiously at each other.
âHey,â Libby said, âI got naked for the documentary too, you know! Why donât we talk about that?â
âWell, there you have it, Lig-lig,â Mary said, tapping her papers against the desk. âYou donât have to be perfectly biologically compatible for things to work out!â
âI never said you did, Mary. Only that some pairings are clearly more biologically incompatible than others.â
âYes, but I think they could definitely make it work, if they really wanted it to. Especially if one of them needed it so badly.â
âAnyway!â Liguree said loudly, âOur next guest is the former head of government on Quizbar, leader of their church and Supreme Divine Being. Please welcome none other than The Radiant One!â
A swelling glow of warm and gentle light, and The Radiant One appeared in a brilliant flash, sitting on the studioâs guest couch. He smiled at the audience as they applauded him, and smiled at Libby as she sat next to him, in a kind but very tired way. On his head was perched the living beret, smoking a cigarette and grumbling to itself.
âHello Mary, hello Liguree,â he said. âHello, Libby. Nice to see you again.â
âNow, ah, Radiant Oneâdo you mind if I just call you TRO? Well, TROâas I understand it, youâre a god.â Mary made a pretense of posing this question as if she had just learned this information and was considering it very deeply, when in fact she had known it for ages and never once thought about it much at all.
âYes.â The Radiant One nodded.
âAnd not just that, but you actually claim to have created the entire universe.â
âThatâs right.â
âOh, what god doesnât claim that?â Libby laughed. âOr well, at least someone in their pantheon claims it for them.â
âI suppose that thereâs lots of them out there that would like credit,â said The Radiant One. âBut in my case, it happens to be true.â
The audience let out a long Oooooooooooooooh.
âWell, if thatâs the case,â said Mary, âwhat do you think of your creation now? How are things going, would you say?â
âItâs going well enough,â said The Radiant One with that same long, tired smile. âNot quite how I had imagined it when I set out, I have to say.â He seemed about to say something more, but then he shrugged. âBut, well, I think it worked out well enough, in the end. Itâs out of my hands now, in any case.â
âReally?â said Mary. âSome would say weâre in ABSOLUTE CRISIS PANIC MODE. Several planets have had their local governments infiltrated and corrupted by the Gofoolister mob. Youth delinquency is at an all-time high. Omni-Cola just doesnât taste as good as it used to! And yet you think things are going well?â
The Radiant One smiled. âItâs just how you look at it, I suppose.â
âWell!â Liguree leaned over the desk, tapping several of his tentacles together, unaware of the ooze spreading beneath him. Mary bit her lip. âQuizbar has been incorporated as the latest world to join the UWA, and youâve abdicated as head of government. What made you decide to give it all up?â
âAh.â The Radiant One swept his beret off his head. âItâs these hats, you see. Theyâre the funniest thing Iâve ever seen. But Iâm afraid mine might be broken.â
âListen to me,â said the beret. âYou donât understand. This manâs head, it healed meâIâve got visions of my past lifeâmy name was PierreâOh, god, this universe is a nightmare! It wasnât meant to be like this!â
âWell, donât worry,â Mary said cheerfully. âSilCoMor stocks their Living Hats: The Hat that Smiles Back wherever fine goods are sold. We can get you a new one. But tell us more about you, what are you up to now?â
âWell, I am an American citizen now. Iâve set up a therapeutic service, you know. I am able to offer troubled souls peace and bliss.â
âOh! Oh! Iâve seen this!â Libby clapped her hands. âHe can do this trickâit doesnât work on me, but you biological types really go wild for it. Go ahead, show them, TRO!â
âWell, just a little bit, I suppose,â said The Radiant One, as the audience went wild. He closed his eyes and concentrated, and a holy light flowed forth from him, shining out across the studio. Mary and Liguree both fell silent first, then the audience, and for a few seconds there was no sound but that of waves against an ancient, timeless shore. Libby took advantage of the stillness to make bunny ears behind TROâs head.
âWow,â said Mary, after it had ended. âI donât know if you could feel that, folks at home, but that is some good stuff.â
âIt sure was, Mary,â agreed Liguree. âIf youâre interested in what you just saw, search the Omninet for Radiance and Relaxation, LLC., and look up the price for a glow job. Now weâve got to go to commercial, but after the break: Vice President Murtlebix under investigation for establishing secret back-channel communications lines that intercepted important military messages. Pressure mounts for him to resign, once SPECTRA hands back whatâs left of him! Also: Omni-Colaâs newest flavor is facing recall, under accusations that one of the secret ingredients is actually parasitic eggs! Could your favorite soft drink be putting a squirming alien in your guts?â
âI wish there was a squirming alien in my guts.â
âMary!â
âOh, were we still on air?â
âWait,â cried The Radiant One, âIâve got a message from my High Priest that I promised him Iâd read! He wants to say to Radiant Shell that he will always wait for her. But, in the meantime, if there were any other, uh, curvaceous and smooth-shelled Ixxari who wanted to help him out, it would be much appreciated. Heâs so new to this place, you see, and everythingâs so strange. He could really use a guide, someone to show him the sights of Infinity Americaâ¦.â