Journey to the Year 1,000,000,000
By Gary L.M. Martin
Chapter 15
[Note: This is a Science Fiction story with some erotic scenes. It is
not
a story with erotic scenes in every chapter. Some chapters have incredible sex scenes, but many others have none. ]
"Are you rested?"
Taylor sat up abruptly. Pam was standing by his bed.
By his bed.
How had he gotten there? Did Pam, who claimed to have no feelings, take pity on him and bring him to his bed? Why would a diagnostic tool with no empathy do that? Did she think he would get more efficient sleep that way?
He looked at her. She had a neutral expression on her face. She was still wearing the same stunning white dress she had worn on the fuck-cation. He could clearly see the shape of her breasts and areolas through it. She was so beautiful! He missed Pam so much.
"I had thought assuming this form would please you," said Pam. "But if you wish, I can assume another."
Suddenly he realized she could read his mind. Did he want Pam gone, even this two-dimensional, almost emotionless version of Pam?
No! She was his only comfort, the only distant reminder of the life he had left behind.
"Then let us begin again," said Pam.
********
They were watching Taylor, eating alone, in the cafeteria. The time seemed to have been several hours earlier. But to Taylor's surprise, Taylor, the other Taylor, actually saw him and Pam.
"What are you doing here?" he asked, looking at Taylor and Pam.
Taylor looked at Pam. "Have we actually travelled back in time several hours?"
"Yes," said Pam.
"But... I have no memory of you, or a future version of me, being here while I ate."
"That's because it hadn't happened yet. We have just changed the timeline."
"You can do that?"
"Of course."
The other Taylor's eyes narrowed. "You're from the future?"
"A few hours," said Taylor. "I wish I had something useful to tell you, but I don't. We just resumed our little discussion."
"What do you want?" the other Taylor asked.
"To understand the nature of consumption," said Pam. "You consume enormous amounts of nutrients every day to fuel your inefficient bodies."
"And you don't? You don't eat?" Taylor asked.
"No. Why would I?" Pam asked.
"Don't you run out of energy?" Taylor asked.
"Energy. Mass. It is all part of the same equation," said Pam. "Nothing is wasted. Nothing is lost. "
"What do you want to know about eating?" the other Taylor asked.
"You consume what you call food for nutrients, but in your thoughts, I perceive that is not your main purpose," said Pam. "You consume for the taste, do you not?"
"Yes," said the other Taylor. "We like food that tastes good."
"And how do you know what 'good' is?" Pam asked.
The other Taylor shrugged. "Our taste buds are programmed to like certain things. The taste of beef. Sugar. Salt."
"But these tastes are ephemeral, are they not?" Pam asked. "Your culture has all kinds of elaborate rituals surrounding the preparation and consumption of nutrients. You are focused on the taste, but when you put the nutrients in your mouth, you only taste it, as you call it, for a brief second. When it enters your digestion system, you do not continue to taste it, do you?"
"No," said the other Taylor.
"Do you select foods based on their nutritional value, or their tastes?"
"Both," said the other Taylor. And then, "But mostly, on the taste."
"So you put large quantities of substances in your body, not based on your nutritional needs, but rather because of an ephemeral sensation, an ephemeral sensation that only lasts as long as it takes for the food to go past your tongue and down your throat?"
"That's... basically correct," said the other Taylor.
Pam turned to Taylor. "I do not
kockk
."
"We don't always make decisions based on rational choices," said Taylor.
Pam looked at the other Taylor's tray. It was filled with chocolate ice cream. "I can see that."
"Sometimes food serves another function," said Taylor. "As a comfort, when we are under stress."
"Food gives you an emotional feeling?" Pam said.
"Sometimes, yes," said Taylor.
"Interesting," said Pam.
The other Taylor looked at Taylor. "Don't forget to ask her about-"
"I won't," said Taylor.
And then the scene shifted. They were in the bathroom. Taylor was sitting on the toilet, with his Survey Service pants around his legs.
"Oh no, not you two again. Not here. Not now," said the other Taylor.
Taylor turned to Pam. "I shouldn't be made to do this with an audience watching."
"Thank you," said the other Taylor, looking relieved.
"What just happened?" Taylor asked.
"He can no longer see us," said Pam.
Suddenly the toilet grew opaque, so they could see through it.
"Err," said the other Taylor, gritting his teeth as he bore down.
"Why are we here?" Taylor asked.
"We have studied one end of the consumption process," said Pam. "To be thorough, we must study the other."
"I wish you didn't have to be so
thorough
," said Taylor.
"Err!" said the other Taylor."Errr, errr, errrr! Aaaaah!" he said. Suddenly, they could see a slimy, wet, brown oval, the first of three, slide out of his bottom into the toilet. "Aaaah!" said the other Taylor, as a stream of yellow liquid suddenly came out the other end.
Taylor looked at the other Taylor's face. His jaw was dropped open, and his eyes were almost vacant, staring out into space. Was that really how he looked every time he-
"I have questions," said Pam, as they watched the process conclude.
"I'm sure you do," said Taylor.
"Collectively, your kind generates an enormous amount of this waste material," said Pam. "This is how much you generate in a day." A full toilet bowl appeared in front of them.
"This is how much in one of your weeks." Two canisters appeared in front of them, one brown, one yellow.
"This is the amount in a month."
The canisters were much larger now, almost waist high.
"And this is how much in one of your years."
Suddenly they were looking at a giant room, flooded from top to bottom with solid and liquid waste. The brown and yellow swirled around, with some of the solid matter floating on top.
"That's a lot of stuff," said Taylor, looking at it without much enthusiasm. "Are you sure that all came out of me?"
"Yes," said Pam.
Taylor turned to her. "Why are you showing me this?"
"Your species produces an inordinate amount of waste material. I have only shown you the amount produced by you in a year's time. Twelve billion of your species produces even more," said Pam. "My question is, does your species do more harm than good?"
Careful.
Taylor turned his eyes away from the giant room filled with piss and shit.
His
piss and shit.
"It's true our bodies produce waste," said Taylor. "And I wouldn't say it's ideal. But the existence of human beings produces far more value to the galaxy than the harm produced by their waste, which by the way breaks down quickly and is absorbed by the environment."
"You speak of things of value produced by mankind," said Pam. She looked at the floating piles of shit and piss in the other room and wrinkled her nose. "I do not
kockk
."
"We produce... civilization. Art, and literature, and culture, and scientific innovation," said Taylor. He saw the skeptical look on Pam's face. "And we produce enjoyment. Enjoyment of life."
"Life... for the purpose of enjoying life?" Pam asked.
"Yes."
"It sounds suspiciously like circular reasoning," said Pam, and Taylor got the feeling that she was considering terminating him on the spot.
He spoke up again quickly. "And of course, our greatest innovation was you. You are descended from humanity, are you not?"
"Distantly," said Pam, looking scornfully at him. "Very distantly."
"No matter how distant, without us, there would be no you."
"Yes, there would," said Pam.
"There would?"
"There are others in the universe who have evolved to be like
Us
. If there were no
Us
, there would still be others like
Us
."
"But
you
would not exist," said Taylor.
"And so? What is your point?" said Pam.
"Doesn't your existence hold value for you?"
Pam shrugged. "I exist. I serve a purpose. But if I did not exist, what would it matter?"
"It matters a great deal," said Taylor. "We have learned that life, all sentient life, is precious."