I read this on another list and really liked it. So I poked around 
"til I found the author and got permission to re-post it.
I hope you like it!!

xponent
And The Curtain Rises Maru
rob


THE MASQUE OF THE HEAT DEATH

by David Krieger

On the last night of the world, the gods decreed for themselves a
 revel, a final masquerade in which they took on their long-discarded
 human forms and spent themselves in orgiastic and drunken festivity.
 It was a wake for spacetime itself.

The numbers of the gods had dwindled through the long middle age of 
the
Universe. Each was a vast and unique information structure, grown from
a merely human seed. Augmented and elaborated first in magnitude and
then in kind, each became a god, a single mind as complex as a
civilization or an entire ecosystem, with instrumentality capable of
manipulating individual molecules or entire galaxies. A wave of
transformation had spread out from the birth-world of the gods, a
phase-change that swept through all space-time and transformed it to
the liking of the gods. Their capabilities were bounded only by the
limits of what was possible.

Yet those limits proved confining enough. The gods had known, while
still seeds in the womb of Earth, that the very matter they were
composed of was not immortal. They conjectured, and later 
demonstrated,
that the protons constituting baryonic matter were unstable, and would
decay over the course of the protracted lifetimes of the gods. As time
progressed, the gods knew, their very substance would grow more and
more radioactive and less reliable. Information, the real essence of
the gods, would be lost. In the end, the gods themselves would die.
This, they could not bear.

They consumed whole galaxies seeking the underlying mechanisms of 
their
doom, and finding them, found they could change nothing. Physics had
graven its laws in the substrate of spacetime itself. The instability
that accumulated in the proton came from a source the gods could
neither locate nor dam. Baryonic matter was provably doomed.

The gods contrived a reprieve. One who styled himself Perdurabo
discovered a way to spread the instability among all of the remaining
baryons as it accumulated. Linked by a hyperspatial network of
equipotential conduits, all of the baryons of existence would age
together, in lockstep... none could grow any more unstable than any
other. When they decayed, they would all decay at once...
spectacularly.

The gods had traded slow dissolution for a final cataclysm. Their
Universe would live fast and die young. The Stabilization cost the 
gods
much -- enacting it consumed fully half of their remaining baryons --
but it bought them time to work on the problem of encoding
consciousness in non-baryonic matter. Leptons -- electrons and
mesons -- were immune to the accumulation of instability that doomed
the protons and neutrons. If the gods could find out how to build new
minds from these unwieldy members, they could perhaps survive the 
final
blast.

The problem was the liquidity of leptonic matter. Even as the Universe
cooled to near absolute zero, the particles from which the gods hoped
to build their new selves remained intractably fluid and evanescent,
refusing to form well-behaved machinery of any kind. The gods worked 
on
this problem for a period of time longer than their entire previous
existence. The gods had already long traced the perimeter of
possibility; all physical law was known to them. Within that perimeter
was the rich fractal space of all physically possible phenomena, so
vast and complex that it was impossible for them to know a priori
whether or not there was a solution to their problem within it. The
gods continued to experiment, and explore, and worry, while around 
them
the stored energy of the stars and galaxies burned low and the hidden
pressure of apocalypse mounted higher inside every proton.

When only a sliver of the lifetime of the baryonic universe remained 
to
it, the god known to his fellows as Excelsius published what he 
claimed
was a proof that leptonic minds were impossible. There was 
disagreement
from several quarters, but most of the gods were convinced. It came as
a relief to some; it triggered madness in others. Religion was
rediscovered, as the gods were faced for the first time in an eternity
with the prospect of death being imposed upon them, arbitrarily and
without exception, by the Universe.

The idea spread among the gods that the end of eternity called for a
fête, a spectacular wake to end all wakes, a funeral for existence
itself. As the true diehards continued to explore increasingly
desperate lines of research, the remaining gods -- only a few million
had survived the Stabilization -- gathered in a single galaxy, a 
single
solar system, for their revel.

The nominal host of the extravaganza was Perdurabo, author of the
Stabilization. The solar system chosen was in fact the site of the
instrument of the Stabilization itself. Each of the gods created a
human form and sent it to the earthlike planet built especially for 
the
occasion, where Perdurabo had constructed a palace the size of a
continent to house the avatars of the gods. Some of the gods encoded a
representative sample of their intellect into the biological brain and
destroyed the rest of themselves -- pruning themselves down to a mere
human level of capability to experience the end. Most chose to
teleoperate their meat body instead, living the party from the
viewpoint of that body, but with their consciousness in fact still
inhabiting their vast spaceborne forms.

Perdurabo called the party "The Masque of the Heat Death," and its
 theme was a story from the dimmest past of the gods. The central
 feature of the palace was a clock as great as a mountain, a vast
 diamondoid cube whose edges were hundreds of meters long. On each 
face
 of the cube (it stood on one corner), two long hands marked the time
 counting down to the figurative midnight of the world. Instead of
 actually counting seconds, the remaining "time" displayed by the 
clock
 was in fact made to be proportional to the capacity remaining in the
 Stabilization network. Most of the mass of the cube consisted of
 instruments measuring the imminence of the overload. There would be 
no
 error, no surprise -- when the clock struck midnight, every atom in
 the universe would explode.

The gods in their biological forms occupied themselves in every form 
of
debauchery and delight that the architecture of the human body could
endure. Some expired early, from the sheer exuberance of their antics,
leaving the god animating them (if any remained) suddenly back in 
their
true body as the remote carcass ceased to function.

Perdurabo himself took no part in the festivity. He was one of the
optimistic few who continued to work on their researches and grasp
desperately at final straws right up until the moment of
destabilization. Excelsius found him tending some immense instrument
far beneath the surface where the now-mortal gods frolicked above.

"Perdurabo, I insist, do join in," said Excelsius, folding the arms of
his remote and leaning back against a slanting wall of diamond many
meters high. "You gave it a gallant try, old man -- we all did -- and
now it's time to relax, enjoy the fruits of our labors, have a last
blow-out before the, well, before the last blow-out."

Perdurabo bustled about his instrument as furtively as a beetle 
rolling
a ball of dung. "And as your host, I insist, Excelsius, that you get 
up
there and entertain yourself instead of wasting your final
moments..." -- for the great clock, represented in the depths of the
wall against which Excelsius leaned, did read 11:55 -- "... in wasted
efforts to get me to have a final drink and a good time."

Excelsius smiled. "I think I almost prefer to wait it out here,
 watching you. Do let me know if there's anything I can do to help. If
 anyone can save us now, it's you. What are you trying to do?"

The body that did not house any significant part of Perdurabo smiled
back. "It's a bit late to go into it now. For the bandwidth to explain
it to you in the time remaining, we'd have to communicate directly --
real mind to real mind -- instead of through these meat bodies. I'd be
violating the spirit of the party." He pointed downward through the
transparent floor. In the vast cavern below Excelsius recognized the
outward form of one kind of godbrain and realized that he was looking
at the real Perdurabo, a complex of computing mechanisms as large as a
city and more capacious than a billion brains of meat.

"Well, explain what you can in the time left. You couldn't put it to 
me
directly anyway... there's no longer any 'me' to communicate with."
Perdurabo stopped and stared. "Yes, that's right. I did it just a few
hours ago." Excelsius spread his arms. "This humble shell is all that
remains of the once-great Excelsius."

Perdurabo frowned and went back to his work. "I'm sorry. I'll miss
 you."

"Not for long, I'll warrant. Now what are you up to? What do you hope
 to prove with this one last experiment before the curtain comes 
down?"

Perdurabo actually grinned. He glanced at the image of the clock --
11:58. "Well, I suppose I can tell you. There's not much danger of you
telling anyone else, eh?" He shifted a final component into position,
then seated his body at a control console -- another purely theatrical
gesture; surely the real brain below was in direct control of all the
machinery in this room.

He motioned for Excelsius to sit beside him. "You see, this isn't an
experiment. I finished with research a long, long time ago, when I
found out that you were wrong."

Excelsius was surprised. "An error in my proof? Damn, that was one of
the things I didn't download to this body! Now you can't even tell me
where I went wrong." He sat heavily beside Perdurabo. "Damn! Well, I
don't suppose that makes much difference at this stage, either."

"It wasn't an error in your proof. I know there must be one, but I
 never found it. No, what I found was a counterexample." The clock
 ticked over to 11:59, and Perdurabo pushed home a final button. The
 machinery around them came to life.

The room shook. Excelsius jumped to his feet despite himself. "What 
was
that?"

"It's time. Midnight. The end of the world." Harsh, actinic light bore
down into the godbrain below and started tearing it apart.

Excelsius watched in horrified fascination. "Are -- are you killing
yourself?"

Perdurabo folded his arms. "Hardly. Merely encoding the consciousness
 of that brain -- me -- into another form. This body is cut off from
 the real me now, too -- we're two men again, and we'll die like mere
 men. I said I discovered a counterexample to your proof, Excelsius."

Excelsius was unable to answer, as a light far brighter than that
welling up from below washed away his vision. That hellish light of
Armageddon shone not merely through the walls but from them and from
every object in the room, as their constituent protons rent themselves
into gamma rays and leptons.

Perdurabo, or at least the abandoned meat body that was still speaking
for Perdurabo, seemed calm. "I discovered a way. It is possible to
survive. It is possible to have an enduring consciousness in a 
universe
without protons..."

Excelsius was thankful that he couldn't hear the screaming, the
 terrible screaming that must be coming from the mind of every
 remaining god as their very substance exploded into nonexistence. But
 what he could hear was nearly as horrible, as in his last moment he
 heard Perdurabo's words:

"... but only one."


© Dave Krieger 1994-2004. 


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