Spark’l ~ Part
1 of 4
By Len Morgan
In a single instant, a being of pure
energy was created by a Supernova. She left her birthplace, at
the speed of light, never to return. Her journey through the
galaxy began, taking her through many star clusters, and planetary
systems. She travelled on a beam of light, feeding off the
energy from nearby stars, growing larger as she came closer to them and smaller
as she moved away. As the distance, she had travelled
increased her speed began to reduce. She was slowing down as
she approached a planetary system, orbiting a rather ordinary yellow star, way
out on a spiral arm of the Galaxy. She became aware of radio
waves; coming from the third planet out from the star. It was
then that she realised there was life on that
planet. She knew nothing of living creatures then; she
wondered what they would look like and if they would be able to communicate
with her, maybe she could visit their world, and learn about them.
She listened
in on the radio signals trying hard to make sense of them so that she would be
able to talk with them. She could pass through solid matter,
without causing harm, but would she prove harmful to living
creatures? She listened to and experienced feelings and
emotions. She learnt languages; the radio signals were very
informative. Then, as she drew nearer, she began to receive
television broadcasts and for the first time, she discovered what the creatures
looked like. Television was good; her favourite program was ‘I Love
Lucy’.
At this time she
did not have a name. She was a baby, feeding off stray
sunlight and slumbering when it grew dark. But, she had an
insatiable desire to learn which she realised would only be satisfied if she
were able to visit the inhabitants of that third planet. She
was very close now and soon discovered that she was able to read their
thoughts; she assumed that this was normal. She also found
that sometimes she was able to share their memories. This was
not always good because sometimes they were very sad.
.-…-.
Karen’s border
terrier growled and snarled at something and despite her soothing noises, he
wouldn't be quiet.
“What’s bothering you Scruffy?” she
asked. He shook his head and tail vigorously and seemed to be
pointing towards a large clump of deep red peonies at the end of the
garden. Karen went closer and knelt beside him to discover
what might be causing his agitation.
“Grrruf Ruf rururf yap!” said Scruffy
excitedly his tail wagging like a metronome.
“There’s nothing there
Scr…” Then she saw it, a pinpoint of light, shining out from
one of the mature blooms. Odd she thought, bending
closer; it was as if somebody inside was shining a tiny torch. She
sniffed, aware of the heavy perfume coming from the
flowers. Suddenly the tiny beam grew brighter, dazzling her,
she closed her eyes protectively. She felt calmness, and a
sense of wellbeing, as the light bathed her mind. Then she
heard a voice inside her head.
‘I came from an exploding
star. I have been very lonely. I came
here to find friends. I found Scruffy. He is
funny. All he thinks of is food, play, and being here with
you. He listens and he talks to you, all the time, but you do
not understand him.’
“Who are you, what are you?” Karen was suddenly fearful.
‘I am nothing you can feel or touch,
I just am,’ said the voice.
‘You can talk to
Scruffy?’ Karen thought.
‘Yes,’ came
the reply.
She opened her eyes and saw a
star-like ball of sparkling light, the size of a golf ball, just six inches
from her nose. “Spark’l!” She said at once, the word just
popped into her mind, “Spark’l is perfect. That is what we
should call you. Would you tell Scruffy one bark for yes, and
two for no please?”
“Yap ,”
said Scruffy.
She smiled, “Scruffy is clever, he’s a
linguist, he understands English even though I do not understand
dog-ish. Do you like her new name Scruffy?”
“Yap .”
“Then that’s settled,” ‘but only
if you like it,’ Karen thought, stroking Scruffy to calm him.
‘I have never had a
name. I do like it. Spark’l,’ she
thought, ‘it’s good to have friends, and it’s good to have a name
also.’
.-…-.
That evening Karen
lay in her bed, in the darkened room, with Scruffy beside her in his
basket. She closed her eyes and immediately a pattern of stars
appeared in her mind. As she watched a tiny insignificant
star, in the lower half of the constellation, grew rapidly brighter until all
the other stars were engulfed in its magnificence. Karen
remembered, a few months earlier, Dad had shown her a new Supernova that had
appeared near the Orion constellation.
‘That was your birth?’ Karen
asked.
She got out of bed and went to the
window, searching the sky for Orion. There it was, the
Supernova, much smaller but still the brightest object in that part of the sky.
“It happened more than ten thousand
years ago,” Karen whispered shaking her head, ‘ten with three zero’s. Were
you travelling all that time?’
‘What is time?’
“You have no family and no friends?”
‘Just me,’ said
Spark’l.
“Yap yap
yap.”
‘Me and Scruffy and now you…’ she added.
“One – Two – Three – Four – Five…”
‘What are you doing?'
“Counting seconds, a second is a
measure of time, sixty seconds is one minute, sixty minutes one hour,
twenty-four hours one day, 365 days in one year… Ten thousand
seconds would be…” she paused and thought long and hard “almost a week,” she
yawned and returned to her bed. Scruffy was already snoring.
‘What is wrong with Scruffy, he
is making such strange noises’ said Spark’l.
“He’s snoring in his sleep,” Karen
whispered in amusement.
‘Is it painful, snoring?’ Spark’l
displayed genuine concern.
“It doesn’t hurt him in the
slightest, he doesn’t even know he is doing it, but it hurts my ears and keeps
me awake,” said Karen with an expression of pain on her face.
Spark’l went closer to Scruffy until
she was almost touching his wet nose; his breathing became easier and he slept
on in silence.
“Shhh! He needs his
sleep,” Karen whispered. ‘Do you remember being part of a
star?’
‘Not at all, my first memory was
of being ejected from a warm comfortable place where I had been safe and
content. I recall passing planets where I detected life and
intelligence, but I was unable to stop, so my journey continued.’ Spark’l
moved towards Karen’s oversized teddy bear, Boris, disappearing inside his
head. The bear stood up and looked around
experimentally.
‘’Boris cannot see or speak, and he
has no brain,’ said Spark’l.
‘That is because he’s a toy, he isn’t
alive, he’s a pretend bear.’
‘Does he know that?’
‘No, he doesn’t because he’s not a
living creature. Only living things have feelings. If he
were a real bear he would be far too ferocious and dangerous to be allowed in
my room. Mum would never allow it! His eyes
are buttons, his fur is artificial and he is stuffed with pieces of foam.’
‘Why did you do that?’
'Foam makes him soft and cuddly; it’s
nice to pretend you can be friends with animals. Go to sleep,
we must be up early tomorrow,' she said turning out the light; a tiny spark
persisted where the light had been as Spark’l waited.
.-…-.
"Is everybody up?" Mum placed a bowl of Doggiebix on the floor, "here Scuff."
“Dad?” said Karen.
“Dad?” said Karen.
“Yes, Sweetheart.”
“Do you really think there’s life out
there?” she asked.
Dad turned the page and folded his
paper in half. “Life? Out
there? The garden is teeming with it,” he said from the other
side of his paper.
“No, I mean out there,” she said
pointing and waving her hand above her head.
“Like ET? On other
planets? In other star systems? I would
think it’s extremely likely,” he nodded.
“Then why have we not found
it? They’ve been searching the heavens forever, with radio
telescopes, but they’ve found nothing.”
“It’s true we’ve not found evidence
of life but that doesn’t mean it isn’t there. The Universe has
been around for thirteen plus billions of years, it's a vast place so the astronomers tell
us,” he said, putting his paper down.
“Maybe there is life but it
hasn’t yet invented the radio, or maybe they are an older race with a better
means of communication,” said Mum.
“Then again they could have existed
and died out before the dinosaurs roamed on earth,” said Dad.
“Maybe they had this same
conversation with their children,” said Mum.
“The size of the universe, and the
time scale involved, is beyond understanding; so we may never really know,”
he said.
“What if they were beings of energy
created by a Supernova,” Karen asked, “Born of a dying sun?”
“Mmm,” said Dad.
“Breakfast is ready, come and get
it,” Mum called.
“Beings of
energy? Created by a Supernova? Wherever did
you get that notion, Startrek?”
“Is that so ridiculous?” asked Mum. ”What
about life here on earth? We are told it was created in a
muddy soup, of volcanic ash, and stirred by bolts of lightning.”
“Mmm, not sure that’s the current
scientific line, we are living in the 1980s after all!” said Dad.
“I know which story I would believe
and it doesn’t sound so ridiculous to me,” Mum said.
“If there are beings of energy and
light spreading out from that Supernova near Orion they could
well be with us right now…” said Dad thinking aloud.
“Assuming they were travelling at or
near the speed of light, in that time, they could have developed intelligence,” Mum said. “You talk as though you’ve seen such a creature,”
she laughed.
“Yap ,”
said Scruffy.
“That means yes,” said Karen before
she thought to bite her tongue.
“Would that be one bark for yes and
two for no? Tell me you’re joking,” said Mum.
“Yap yap,”
said Scruffy.
“Oh my G.. what is it called?” asked
Mum.
“Spark’l,” said Karen, getting an
answer in at long last.
“Very apt,” said Dad, turning another
page.
“C-can we see it?” Mum asked nervously.
“Yap .”
Karen left the room returning with an
eerily glowing yoghurt carton. She placed it on the table and
removed the lid. There was a small mirror inside and a
one-inch ball of light.
“It feeds on sunlight,” Karen
explained as it expanded slightly.
The ball rose slowly into the air,
keeping its distance.
“Can it communicate?,” asked Mum,
pushing her wooden spoon gingerly towards it. The ball edged
away, maintaining the gap.
“Heavens to Milligoon!” said Dad jumping
to his feet knocking over his chair and spilling tea down the front of his
shirt.
“It’s alright Dad, it won’t hurt you,
just close your eyes,” Karen warned them. They did so, more
from surprise than belief.
“Mmm,” said Dad, a secret smile
forming on his face.
“Utterly amazing, just like
meditation class,” said Mum.
The light receded and they opened
their eyes again.
“I had no idea Scruffy was so
intelligent. I now know his favourite food is my vegetarian
sausage, I must make him a special batch,” said Mum.
“Yap !”
“Is she staying here with us or just
visiting?” asked Dad nervously.
‘What difference would that make,’ Spark’l
asked. ‘You measure life in tens of your years’ then your
spark is extinguished. I have existed for many hundreds of
your lifetimes; I could visit until Karen’s children have children.’
“Mmm,” said Dad, “you’re the Trekkie
Mum…”
“I know what Dad means, we might lose
our anonymity. When people know where you are staying they
will be curious and want to visit you. We should be taking
steps to hide, or disguise you, and think of a way you can travel around
without being seen by too many curious people?”
‘You want me to
hide? Have I done something wrong? You wish me to
avoid people?’
“No, what Mum means is, that when
people know about you, we will be treated as curiosities. The newspaper and TV
journalists will be camping in our garden. We will be
prisoners in our own home.”
‘People can look at me if they wish
and if I decide not to cooperate I can leave.’
“Mmm,”
said Dad.
“What does that mean?” asked Karen.
“It means that when people know she
is here we will never be left in peace.”
‘Then they should not know that I am
here.’
“How could we prevent them
from knowing?” asked Dad.
‘I could contact your authorities and
cooperate with them until they lose interest.”
“Now that’s a good idea,” said Mum.
‘Don’t stay away too long
though’ Karen thought, wishing she had kept Spark’l’s existence
secret a while longer.
“Yap yap.”
‘Where should I go and who should I
speak to?’ asked Spark’l.
“Wait a moment,” said Mum. She
left the room and returned with a small silver trinket
box. “Could you fit into this?” she asked.
Spark’l shrank to the size of a pea,
whilst increasing in brightness, before slipping into the
box. Satisfying herself that the box was lightproof, Mum said,
“If it isn’t too uncomfortable it would be adequate for
travelling. Tomorrow we will visit the Jodrell Bank
observatory where the radio telescopes are. You could say you
were attracted by their radio dishes, and allow them to carry out whatever
tests they think necessary. Then, if you wish, you can come
back home to us; you would be very welcome.”
To be Continued/…