Chapter 228: Sol Three Hundred and Thirty-Four, Waiting For Gold Hoe
Translator: CKtalon Editor: CKtalon
Measuring latitude in the day and measuring longitude at night.
Tang Yue sat on the tiny campstool and cocked his head as he watched Tomcat hold the sextant as it kept walking around. The latter looked up at the Sun, pulling a thin thread against the protractor, carefully measuring the Sunâs elevation angle.
A weak gust of wind swirled dust across Tang Yueâs feet. He moved his gaze away from Tomcat. Behind the latterâs back was the black, barren soil that exposed dark-colored base rocks.
Having never experienced such a moment, Tang Yue had a deep understanding of what it meant to be in âno manâs landâ as the three words seemed to inundate him. Mars was probably the biggest no manâs land in the human world. No matter which direction one took for ten thousand kilometers, one wouldnât bump into a second person.
This wasnât loneliness.
It was desolate.
âTomcat.â Tang Yue looked down at his feet as he kicked a rock around. âDo you know of a play named âWaiting for Gold Hoe?â
âWaiting for Gold Hoe?â Tomcat turned its head. âWhatâs that? Why would one wait for snot, even if itâs gold?â
âItâs a comedy thatâs very famous. Itâs about two people sitting under a tree waiting for something.â Tang Yue thought and said, âThey keep waiting and waiting, and in the end, the thing they were waiting for doesnât come.â
âThatâs Waiting for Godot, a tragicomedy play written by Samuel Beckett. It has great significance in the world of arts.â Tomcat shook its head in exasperation. âWhat do you mean Waiting for Gold Hoe?â
This wasnât the first time Tomcat was worried about Tang Yueâs lack of culture.
âAlright, alright. Godot then.â
Tang Yue felt that he and Tomcat were like two desert travelers waiting for a public bus. Just like Vladimir and Estragon in Waiting for Godot, they were sitting at a bus stop at the ends of the world. On one side was the road and on the other side was an endless desert. The bus stop indicated that the bus would pass by, but no one knew when the bus would come, or what kind of bus it was. People didnât even know if the bus existed.
The bus might appear across the horizon the next second, but equally, it might never appear.
The letter of unknown origins that Tang Yue was holding had prompted him to take this trip of no return. It was all for that speck of hope.
âThey say they can restore EarthâŠâ Tang Yue asked, âbut how are they going to do it?â
âPerhaps they will replicate Earth based on all its data,â Tomcat replied. âThere will always be such intelligence in the Universe that can perfectly record all the data of the fundamental particles on Earth and then replicate them in their original states.â
âBut wouldnât this violate the most basic principle of physics?â Tang Yue asked.
âWhich one?â
âHeisenbergâs uncertainty principle,â Tang Yue replied. âAn observer is unable to determine the location and speed of a fundamental particle at the same time.â
âUhâŠâ Tomcat pondered. âTo be honest, this question exceeds what I know. I have no idea what the most fundamental matters that line the Universe are. After Earth vanished, human physics came to a complete stop, but advanced intelligence might have gone further than humans had. They might have made even greater breakthroughs and had obtained the microscope God used when creating the world.â
âMicroscope used during the Creation?â
âA method unknown to humans, one that can peep into the deepest secrets of the Universe.â Tomcat shrugged. âI believe it will definitely be more advanced than a primitive tool that only relies on accelerating particles.â
âThereâs nothing stopping us from being bold in our imaginations. Perhaps they are completely in a dimension above us? If they have the ability to enter a higher dimension, then time is just a piece of paper they can easily manipulate.â Tomcat pointed at the letter in Tang Yueâs hand. âTowards such a civilization, we are like fixed frames on a table. They can casually take out one frame and change the instantaneous reality of a particular moment.â
âThey can rewrite history?â Tang Yue couldnât help but shiver.
âPerhaps they donât even have the concept of history.â
âUnimaginable.â
âDonât even bother trying.â Tomcat put away the sextant. âI donât suggest you try inferring that to the owner behind the letter. The human brain is unable to formulate something that exceeds your knowledge.â
Tang Yue was taken aback.
âNo matter how strange and odd an entity your imagination can produce, itâs still a result of the known elements in your brain. Think about all the monster and supernatural movies youâve watched; they are all modified and merged from Earthlings,â Tomcat said. âAncients say that the way a dragon is drawn is to have a camelâs head, deer horns, snakeâs neck, tortoise eyes, fish scales, tiger paws, eagle talons, and ox ears. Itâs the same rationale.
âTo date, extraterrestrial intelligence that humans can imagine and draw canât escape this framework. Regardless of you imagining that aliens have four heads and eight arms, whether a solar year is 480 days, whether they will circle around a mushroom god at the end of the year celebrating the rise of the third moon, they are just a projection and modification of human society,â Tomcat said.
Tang Yue widened his eyes as he slowly nodded. He wasnât sure what he could say.
It wasnât common for him to let his imagination go wild usually. In his mind, extraterrestrials were probably like James Cameronâs Avatar. They were tall with blue skin as they rode on chariots, using spears and arrows to fight battleships.
As such, Tang Yueâs imagination of the lawsuit was of the defendant sitting there aloneâa beautiful blue-skinned person with patterns drawn across its body in preparation for war. On its back were a bow and arrows.
âThatâs why I think that all works that try to caricature another lifeform are pointless,â Tomcat said. âWith the creator being human, it can never escape the human imagination. You can only use whatâs at your fingertips and try your best to make it look odd. But no matter what you do, itâs actually just another version of yourself.â
But Tomcat shattered Tang Yueâs imaginations.
It told Tang Yue that such poor imagination was too lacking.
âThis means⊠Iâll be fighting a lawsuit against a completely unknown existence?â
âYes.â
âIâm already going to engage in a battle with so little preparation, and now youâre telling me that the enemy is a completely unimaginable existence? What about know the enemy and know yourself?â Tang Yue widened his eyes. âWhatâs the point in fighting then? Even if I drew Mickey Mouse and get assistance, thereâs no way I can beat them. Weâre doomed.â
âDoom isnât necessary.â
Tomcat gently twirled its whisker.
It only had one whisker to twirl.
âSir Cat, do you still have any other wise strategies?â Tang Yue asked. âYou have to teach me how to defeat the enemy.â
âLean your ear over.â Tomcat beckoned with its paw.
Tang Yue leaned in.
âIf Mickey fails, draw Mario on the table,â Tomcat said. âThen, declare to all the living beings present that this cartoon imageâs intellectual property belongs to you.â
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