The Blasphemer: A Novel (32 page)

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Authors: Nigel Farndale

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical

BOOK: The Blasphemer: A Novel
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‘Professor Sang-mi has recently joined us on secondment from MIT. He is going to teach theoretical physics here for two terms. We are very lucky to have him …You were a research student at MIT, were you not, Daniel?’

‘What? …Yes … Sorry.’ He held out his hand. ‘Daniel Kennedy. Zoology.’

‘Hello.’ Sang-mi spoke with a gentle American accent infused with Korean. ‘I know all about you. I’ve seen your programmes. Most interesting.’

Daniel grimaced. ‘They have to be fairly simplistic. For a television audience, I mean.’

Wetherby indicated a table. ‘Do join us.’

The three men sat down together but the conversation was mostly between the professors of music and physics.

‘So have we read the mind of God yet?’ Wetherby said, gathering his eyebrows in mock seriousness, the extravagance of his
vowels giving an ironic connotation to his words. ‘Have we cracked that elusive theory of everything?’

Sang-mi had a lazy, sprawling voice – soft and mallowy, as if his mouth wanted to swallow all his words. It was a shy voice and an attention-seeking one at the same time. ‘We prefer the term “quantum gravity”,’ he said.

‘Well, we are all looking for the mind of God, in our own way,’ Wetherby continued. ‘And if we find it we hope that mind will be even rather than steep.
Aequam memento rebus in arduis servare mentem
.’ Wetherby gave a sideways glance at Daniel who, his own mind elsewhere, did not notice.

Sang-mi spoke through a smile. ‘I think the physics department will get there sooner than the music department. With respect.’

‘The day you are able to play some Bach on one of your particle accelerators will be the day you come closest to knowing the mind of God.’

‘You joke, but I have a doctoral student working on the beauty of equations at the moment. He has a whole chapter on Bach. Such a mathematical composer.’

‘Indeed. What do you think, Daniel?’

‘Huh? Oh definitely. Bach will do it. Or Miles Davis. It’s all good.’

The shape of Sang-mi’s smiling mouth did not change. ‘No, I think it would have to be Bach. There is even some discussion about whether Bach could help with string theory. You are familiar with string theory?’

Daniel nodded. ‘The stuff about the universe having eleven dimensions?’

‘Exactly. The vibrations on our tiny, one-dimensional strings can be interpreted as particles. String theory – you’ll like this, Wetherby – is just music, different harmonies you can play on the strings. This is the only candidate for a theory of everything that would be consistent with the beautiful symmetry of the universe.’

Wetherby leaned forward. ‘Perhaps I have this wrong, but I have heard that string theory is going to help simple, unimaginative
Christians like Dante, Milton and me prove the existence of God. That must be an annoying prospect for you.’

There was a bubble of laughter from Sang-mi. ‘Not at all! The mind of a scientist is open to all possibilities. Take the uncertainty of the subatomic world. It is supposedly full of fluctuations that apply to space-time as well. So up and down, left and right, even past, present and future are no longer predictable at the subatomic level. The past could walk in on the present. Your great-grandparents, Daniel, or yours,Wetherby, could walk into this room right now.’

Daniel was raising a spoonful of soup to his mouth but stopped in mid-air.

Sang-mi nodded at him. ‘I know! Sounds crazy, right? But as Einstein showed us, time is relative to space. There is no absolute
now,
and no absolute
then
. Not that any of this means that God created the world in seven days.’

‘Six,’ Wetherby corrected. ‘He rested on the seventh.’

‘Six then.’ Sang-mi’s knee was jiggling up and down. ‘Or six billion years. It doesn’t matter because there is no mathematics for your God. None. Certainly not for the personal God of intervention in people’s lives. I mean, how do you write the mathematics for it? You can’t. But if you define God as harmony, you might be on to something. Then you could say all your equations must be harmonious and unifying. That becomes a testable theory. Is there harmony and symmetry in the universe? If that is your idea of God then that is testable.’

Wetherby stared at the physics professor with the hollow eyes of an El Greco saint. ‘I personally would not presume to define God, other than to say He is indefinable.’

Professor Sang-mi laid down his knife and fork. His smile had gone, along with his slightly patronizing tone. ‘The point is, the fundamental particles of the known universe are not made of different material, but the same material. The reason they display different characteristics is because their internal strings are vibrating differently. If string theory is correct, and it is, the sum total of the unimaginably small vibrating strings equates to the
harmonic symphony of the universe we see around us. That is why if an equation is correct it will be beautiful. It will have harmony and symmetry and simplicity. If you look at a score by Bach it looks like chicken scratches, unless you can read music. But to a musician it resonates and has beauty. In a similar way equations resonate to a physicist. They speak to you. They jump out at you. Look at E = mc2. Beautiful.’

Daniel was staring in front of him, lost in his own thoughts.

‘Beautiful,’ he repeated distantly.

‘Oh, but biology is a much sexier subject than theoretical physics,’ Sang-mi said, trying to draw Daniel in.

Wetherby was studying Daniel’s face. ‘You have been doing some interesting things with worms, have you not? Did I not read that you have been playing God and reversing the ageing process?’

‘Huh? Oh. Yeah. Yes. Sorry.’ Daniel was aimlessly stirring his soup now. ‘We can double the life expectancy of the nematode to forty days, which is, you know …’ The sentence went unfinished. He was staring at the spoon in his hand. Eventually he looked at the physics professor and said, ‘Did you say the past could walk in on the present?’

Wetherby and Sang-mi exchanged a look.

‘Yes,’ Sang-mi said. ‘Are you OK? You seem …’

‘I’m sorry. I don’t mean to be rude. I’ve …’ Daniel closed his eyes in concentration. ‘Scientists are not as anti religion as you think,Wetherby. We just want evidence. One shred. It’s not so much to ask. Something testable. Something we can hold in our hands … I mean, you can say anything without evidence. Anything!
A Brief History of Time
tells of the lady who insisted that the Earth sat on a giant turtle. When challenged as to what held that creature up, she replied that the cosmos was “turtles all the way down”.’ Daniel blinked. The word turtle had produced some cognitive friction. He tried to repeat it but it clotted his tongue.

Wetherby touched his arm. ‘Daniel, are you unwell? You have not touched your soup.’

‘Soup?’ Daniel said. ‘Turtle soup … Mock turtle soup …’ He rose from his seat, muttered, ‘Excuse me,’ and left the refectory.

Sang-mi looked shocked. ‘Did I say something to upset him?’

‘Do not mind Daniel,’Wetherby said, playing with the cornelian intaglio ring on his finger. ‘He can be a bit territorial, that is all. He probably feels you are stepping on his turf. Also … I probably should not mention this …’

Sang-mi looked left and right. Leaned in closer.

‘His nerves have been a little strained lately. It has been a great worry to his colleagues.’

CHAPTER THIRTY

NANCY THREW HER FRONT DOOR KEYS ON THE SIDE, JOGGED UP
the stairs, opened her laptop and clicked on the file marked ‘diary’. It was empty. Good. She had remembered to delete its contents before leaving for work. It had been nagging her all day. She descended the stairs as quickly as she had gone up them, the heels of her boots clattering on the wood. She found Daniel waiting for her in the kitchen. ‘Why didn’t you ring and say you were going to be late?’ he said. ‘I was supposed to be going to a faculty meeting tonight. I’ve had to cancel it.’

‘My watch is still broken.’

‘Well, why don’t you get it repaired?’

‘I keep it like this to remind me of the crash.’There was hardness in her voice. She was surprised by it.

‘Why would you want to be reminded of the crash?’ No answer.

‘Oh,
obviously
you would want to be reminded of the crash.’ Daniel’s tone had a sarcastic edge that he must have known would provoke her. ‘Why would you
not
want to be reminded of the crash?’

She shifted her weight from one foot to another, her hands on her hips. It annoyed her that he was fixating on the watch. Bloody hell, he had nothing to get upset about. He had no right. She was the one who should be feeling irritated. ‘Just do, that’s all.’

‘Time frozen. I get it. Like you. Frozen.’

‘Let it go, Daniel.’

He moved a step closer to her, squaring up. ‘You’ve calcified and you can’t see it.’

‘Stop it.’

‘Anyway, you need to keep thinking about the crash so you can go on seeing your counsellor. How often do you see him?’

Nancy gathered her hair over one shoulder and teased two strands of a fringe down so that they hung dangerously over her eyes. ‘Most days. Why?’

‘What do you talk about?’

‘None of your business.’

‘Is that all you do? Talk?’

‘What are you saying?’

‘You tell me.’

‘Don’t be pathetic.’ Nancy’s nostrils were flaring, her eyes flashing in anger.

‘Well?’

‘I’m fucking him? You think I’m fucking him?’ Nancy shook her head in disbelief. Her expression hardened and she nodded. ‘Yes, I’m fucking him.’

‘You can’t be.’

‘Of course I’m not, you arsehole.’ She threw a can of deodorant at him, the closest thing to hand. It bounced off his arm. She threw a mug next; it broke against the wall behind him.

Daniel stared at the pieces in silence for a moment, then said, ‘It’s getting crowded in here,’ and left her standing on her own.

Neither spoke to the other while they made their own breakfasts the next morning, though each clatter of plates and cutlery felt like a reproach. When Nancy went upstairs to floss and gargle, Martha said to Daniel, ‘I heard shouting last night. What was happening?’

‘Mummy and Daddy were having an argument.’

Martha thought about this for a moment before saying, ‘Who won?’

‘Well, both sides did, in a way.’

‘So Mum did.’

The silence continued into the school run. Daniel was driving and, as usual, he dropped Martha off first, then Nancy at her dental surgery. Neither said goodbye. Trying to change the subject of his thoughts proved enervating and futile. Nancy kept seeping back, filling the mental space like a liquid: her face, her voice, her smell. Stop it. Think of something else. What had Wetherby and the new physics professor been talking about? It had sounded interesting. Something about the past walking in on the present. His mind furred around the conversation, unable to give it shape or substance.

In the evening, when Daniel came home from work, he got straight into the bath vacated by Nancy – as he always did, to save water, to save the planet – and began itching. He held up his arms. The skin was turning red and blotchy. His eyes were streaming and, when he wiped them, he felt a stinging sensation. It was now he noticed the smell coming from the bathwater: sodium hypochlorite. He lurched from the bath and reached for a towel. ‘Nancy!’ he shouted downstairs. ‘Have you put something in this bath?’

There was a pause. ‘Sorry. I’m cleaning it. I put some bleach in it.’

Ten minutes later Daniel stood in the doorway of the kitchen watching Nancy wiping the counter top with a damp cloth. He spoke first. ‘You did that on purpose.’

‘Did what?’

‘Put bleach in the bath.’

‘I know I did. I was cleaning it.’

‘You knew I’d get in it after you.’

‘Said I was sorry. I forgot.’

‘Of course you didn’t forget. I’ve been doing that for years.’ He was breathing loudly through his nose. ‘That was really
fucking
dangerous, Nancy. I’m still itching.’

‘Sorry. OK? I didn’t do it on purpose. You didn’t put your head under, did you?’

‘I might have done.’

‘You said you couldn’t put your head underwater since the crash.’

Daniel glared at her. ‘Unbelievable.’

Nancy stood her ground. ‘Are you going like that?’

They had been invited to a dinner party in Hampstead but Daniel was wearing jeans with a rip in the knee, plimsolls without laces, and a tight, navy blue crewneck jumper over a white T-shirt. He looked down at himself then up at Nancy, who was dressed smartly – knee-length suede boots and russet skirt, and a polo neck which served as a plain backdrop to a string of rough-cut amethyst stones. ‘Yep,’ he said. ‘You going like that?’

The couple managed to look cheerful as they kissed their host, Camilla, on both cheeks. She had been widowed six months earlier, her husband Mark, a don at Trinity, having died of a heart attack at the age of forty-seven. This was her first attempt at a formal dinner party since the funeral. Nancy and Daniel were introduced to another couple, an architect and his barrister wife, and made small talk with them for a few minutes before seeing, above the heads of the other guests,Wetherby’s lank frame in a three-piece suit and tie. He was talking to a dishevelled-looking Bruce and a young, Oriental-looking woman with a black fringe. Daniel led the way through the press of bodies and noticed that both men looked guilty and stopped talking when they turned and saw him. ‘Talking about me?’ he asked with a laugh, clinking his champagne glass with those held by Bruce and Wetherby.

‘There are other subjects,’ Bruce said.

‘Didn’t know you two knew each other.’

‘We both knew Mark,’ Wetherby said, revealing a thin track of metal across his front teeth, ‘and we have realized we both know you.’

‘So you
were
talking about me.’

‘Allow me to introduce my friend Hai-iki,’ Wetherby said, standing to one side. ‘A most gifted pianist.’

‘Hello,’ Daniel said, taking her small hand in his. ‘What sort of stuff do you play?’

Hai-iki’s full lips parted into a wide smile. ‘I’ve been working on some Ravel recitals lately. Debussy. Delius. The impressionists mostly. Do you play?’

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