Twilight of the Triangles
Winner of the Hugo Award
The right hand of Tri-056 shakes with anticipation, intricate calculations flowing from the pointed tip of the pen it clutches. Finally, the nearly incomprehensible sea of symbols is complete, punctuated with a single number triumphantly enclosed in a furiously etched triangle of ink. The pen is cast aside, revealing the deep, red imprints on the hand formed from the pressure of its sharp, tetrahedral edges.
A look of self-satisfied triumph quickly dissolves into one of horror, weeks of delicate manouevring through new frontiers of stochastic analysis yielding a result at once mathematically beautiful and personally terrifying.
If only he were not sworn to the truth. They will surely have his head for this, another blasphemous sphere to be purged from this world.
Three quiet knocks, followed by a barely audible fourth, signal the moment he has been dreading. In reflection, their clandestine protocol was an unnecessary risk, but such matters were undoubtedly irrelevant now. With a heavy sigh, Tri-045 rises from his tripodic chair and opens the door.
A haggard man, head held low, sheaf of papers clutched in one hand, enters the room. He quickly glances behind him into the darkness outside and closes the door gently. Tri-056 has not slept well in weeks, at first because of the torments of his research and more recently the implications of its results. He places the papers onto a nearby table and slouches into the nearest chair.
Tri-045 takes a seat at an adjacent face, perusing the notes without understanding much. There isn't any need to look, since the conclusion is obvious enough from 56's state.
"I take it that you've completed the analysis?" Tri-045 stares into 56's balding head, his face now buried into the table.
"Yes - the projection is another 100 years at most. The least sustainable population is at least 1000 - not even close," 56 mumbles gloomily.
There is a long pause as Tri-045 considers this dire news. "So there is no way to rescue our people gradually?"
"No. We would have to abandon our principles entirely for... generations."
"And then, " their voices in unison now, in a mocking drone, "we would become impure, no better than the sideless circles."
Tri-045 shakes his head, placing the papers neatly on the table. He'd like to cast them theatrically, but disrespect to the mathematics wasn't worth it. "There must be something that I can suggest, perhaps an increase in the tolerances, or-"
56 looks up suddenly, glaringly hollowly in the direction of his colleague's face. "I said, no. We have proceeded to far, and now we are to be consumed by our own traditions." With that burst of desperate anger fading, he once again lays down his head and continues, now in a leaden whisper. "Ironic that our trajectory is to a point... ever triangular, except for the eternity of nothingness that awaits."
Tri-045 sits in silence for several minutes, reluctant to say the inevitable. "I have to report this."
"I know. I'm sorry. I wish I could will the mathematics to say otherwise."
"They won't remove you as they will me. Your role in this is only technical."
56 slouches deeper in his chair. "And if I survive, what can I do? Now that I have seen the end, my existence is pointless. I don't want to watch our civilization die."
"There are others." Consoling 56 is an impossible task, but 45 understands it to be important. A plan begins to form in his mind... "If we cannot be incremental, there is one other option."
This gets the attention of 56, who stands and looks directly at 45 for the first time. "Revolution is impossible. That much the Elders have right."
"No, not that." 45 shakes his head, anticipating the response. "Not in the sense of our glorious war against the circular oppressors," an ironic smile is forced by 45 to acknowledge that he too, finds such tales no more than myth. "But if we look to the rest of the world... perhaps with the help of others, we can reform."
"Do they exist?" A skeptical raise of an eyebrow indicates that 56 is now curious, a brief respite from the deep depression of the previous moment.
"I believe so. We have some evidence," 45 replies, emphasizing the conspiratorial "we."
Probabilities materialize in 56's mind, a reflexive and futile attempt to determine what the odds might be of success. But there is only a clutter of algebraic gibberish. He sweeps these thoughts from his mind, repeating to himself that they are irrelevant. "I do not share your optimism. But I respect your conviction - I will sleep. Tomorrow you will have your official report."
With that, 56 collects his papers and leaves. Could this path to reform actually work, wonders 45 as the door closes. His plan is only a single, preposterous idea, but perhaps there could be some way? Whatever it may be, one thing was certain: Once the Elders read his dreaded report, there would be no turning back, and so little time to act.