Eyes Do More Than See by Isaac Asimov is a really good story and this Ebook is totally free here.
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After hundreds of billions of years, he suddenly thought of himself as Ames. Not the wavelength combination which, through all the universe was now the equivalent of Ames – but the sound itself. A faint memory came back of the sound waves he no longer heard and no longer could hear.
The new project
was sharpening his memory for so many more of the old, old, eons-old
things. He flattened the energy vortex
that made up the total of his individuality and its lines of force stretched
beyond the stars.
Brock’s
answering signal came.
Surely, Ames
thought, he could tell Brock. Surely he
could tell somebody.
Brock’s
shifting energy pattern communed, “Aren’t you coming, Ames?”
“Of course.”
“Will you take
part in the contest?”
“Yes!” Ames’s lines of force pulsed
erratically. “Most certainly. I have thought of a whole new art form. Something really unusual.”
“What a waste
of effort! How can you think a new
variation can be thought of after two hundred billion years? There can be nothing new.”
For a moment
Brock shifted out of phase and out of communion so that Ames had to hurry to
adjust his lines of force. He caught the drift of other thoughts as he did so, the view of the powdered galaxies against
the velvet of nothingness, and the lines of force pulsing in endless multitudes
of energy-life, lying between the galaxies.
Ames said,
“Please absorb my thoughts, Brock. Don’t
closeout. I’ve thought of manipulating
Matter. Imagine! A symphony of Matter. Why bother with Energy? Of course, there’s nothing new in Energy; how
can there be? Doesn’t that show that we
must deal with Matter?”
“Matter!”
Ames
interpreted Brock’s energy vibrations as those of disgust.
He said, “Why
not? We were once Matter ourselves back
– back – Oh, a trillion years ago
anyway! Why not build up objects in a
Matter medium, or abstract forms or – listen, Brock – why not build up an
imitation of ourselves in Matter, ourselves as we used to be?”
Brock said, “I
don’t remember how that was. No one
does.”
“I do,” said
Ames with energy. “I’ve been thinking of
nothing else and I am beginning to remember.
Brock, let me show you. Tell me
if I’m right. Tell me.”
“No. This is silly. It’s – repulsive.”
“Let me try,
Brock. We’ve been friends; we’ve pulsed
energy together from the beginning – from the moment we became what we
are. Brock, please!”
“Then,
quickly.”
Ames had not
felt such a tremor along his own lines of force in – well, in how long? If he tried it now for Brock and it worked,
he could dare manipulate Matter before the assembled Energy-beings who had so
drearily waited over the eons for something new.
The Matter was
thin out there between the galaxies, but Ames gathered it, scraping it together
over the cubic light-years, choosing the atoms, achieving a clayey consistency, and forcing matter into an ovoid form that spread out below.
“Don’t you
remember, Brock?” he asked softly.
“Wasn’t it something like this?”
Brock’s vortex
trembled in phase. “Don’t make me
remember. I don’t remember.”
“That was the
head. They called it the head. I remember it so clearly, I want to say
it. I mean with sound.” He waited, then said, “Look, do you remember
that?”
On the upper
front of the ovoid appeared HEAD.
“What is that?”
asked Brock.
“That’s the word
for head. The symbols that meant the
word in sound. Tell me you remember,
Brock!”
“There was
something,” said Brock hesitantly, “something in the middle.” A vertical bulge formed.
Ames said,
“Yes! Nose, that’s it!” And NOSE appeared upon it. “And those are eyes on either side,” LEFT EYE
– RIGHT EYE.
Ames regarded
what he had formed, his lines of force pulsing slowly. Was he sure he liked this?
“Mouth,” he
said, in small quiverings, “and chin and Adam’s apple, and the
collarbones. How the words come back to
me.” They appeared on the form.
Brock said, “I
haven’t thought of them for hundreds of billions of years. Why have you reminded me? Why?”
Ames was
momentarily lost in his thoughts.
“Something else. Organs to hear
with; something for the sound waves.
Ears! Where do they go? I don’t remember where to put them.”
Brock cried
out, “Leave it alone! Ears and all
else! Don’t remember!”
Ames said,
uncertainly, “What is wrong with remembering?”
“Because the
outside wasn’t rough and cold like that, but smooth and warm. Because the eyes were tender and alive and
the lips of the mouth trembled and were soft on mine.” Brock’s lines of force beat and wavered, beat
and wavered.
Ames said, “I’m
sorry! I’m sorry!”
“You’re
reminding me that once I was a woman and knew love; that eyes do more than see
and I have none to do it for me.”
With violence,
she added matter to the rough-hewn head and said, “Then let them do it!” and turned and fled.
And Ames saw and remembered, too, that once
he had been a man. The force of his
vortex split the head in two and he fled back across the galaxies on the energy track of Brock – back to the endless doom of life.
And the eyes of the shattered head of Matter
still glistened with the moisture that Brock had placed there to represent
tears. The head of Matter did that which
the energy-beings could do no longer and it wept for all humanity, and for the fragile beauty of the bodies they had once given up, a trillion years ago.
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