Pushing aside the knotted pairs of running socks, I lift
the journal from my dresser drawer. I unfasten the delicate
lock, turn to a fresh page, and ready my ballpoint pen. Click.
Dear Diary, let me say at the outset that I once counted
myself among the luckiest of women. Dennis had a lucrative job
as a software engineer at Micromega. Our daughter, Angela,
loved school and always brought home top grades. Thanks to the
saltwater fish fad, my little pet shop—Carlotta's Critturs in
Copley Square—was turning a tidy profit.
The first signs of trouble were subtle. I'm thinking
especially of Dennis's decision to become a Boston Bruins fan
and a Philadelphia Flyers fan simultaneously, an allegiance
that served no evident purpose beyond allowing him to watch
twice as much hockey as before. I also recall his insistence
on replacing our coffee cups and drink tumblers with ceramic
mugs bearing the New England Patriots logo. Then there was
Dennis's baseball-card collection, featuring the 1986 Red Sox
starting lineup. Wasn't that a hobby more suited to a
ten-year-old?
It soon became clear that Dennis was battling a full-blown
addiction. The instant he got home from work, he plunked
himself in front of the tube and started watching ESPN, ESPN2,
or ESPN3. Dozens of teams enlisted his loyalty, not merely the
Boston franchises. He followed the NFL, the NHL, the NBA, and
Major League Baseball. Our erotic encounters were short and
perfunctory, bounded by the seventh inning stretch. Whenever
we went on vacation, Dennis brought his portable Sony along.
Our trips to Martha's Vineyard were keyed to the All-Star
Game. Our winter sojourns in Florida centered around the
Stanley Cup.
"What do you get out of it?" I asked. The edge in my
voice could nick a hockey puck.
"A great deal," he replied.
"What does it matter?" I wailed.
"I can't explain."
After much pleading, hectoring, and finagling, I convinced
Dennis that we needed a marriage counselor. He insisted that
we employ Dr. Robert Lezzer in Framingham. I acquiesced. A
male therapist was better than none.
The instant I entered Dr. Lezzer's presence, I began
feeling better. He was a small, perky, beaming gnome in a
white cotton shirt and a red bow-tie. He said to call him Bob.
It took me half an hour to make my case. The lonely
dinners. The one-way conversations. The chronic vacancy in our
bed. As far as I was concerned, ESPN stood for Expect Sex
Probably Never.
No sooner had I offered my story than Dennis and Bob traded
significant glances, exchanged semantically freighted winks,
and favored each other with identical nods.
"Should I tell her?" asked Dennis.
"Depends on whether you trust her," Bob replied.
"I do."
"Then let her in. It's the only way to save your marriage."
Dennis bent back his left ear to reveal a miniscule radio
receiver, no bigger than a pinhead, embedded in the fleshy
lobe. The implantation had occurred on his eighteenth
birthday, he explained, as part of an arcane initiation rite.
Every adult male in North America had one.
"Throughout the long history of Western civilization," said
Dennis, "no secret has been better kept."
"But what is it for?" I asked.
"If he gave you the short answer, you wouldn't believe
him," said Bob, bending close so I could see his transceiver.
"Luckily, we're only four hours from New York City," said
Dennis, stroking me affectionately on the knee.
Bob recommended that we leave as soon as possible. We
arranged for Angela to spend the night at a friend's house,
then took off at two o'clock. By dinner time we were zooming
south down the West Side Highway, heading toward the heart of
Manhattan.
We left our Volvo in the Park & Lock on 42nd
Street near Tenth Avenue, hiked four blocks east, and entered
the subway system. Although I'd often walked through the Times
Square station during my undergraduate days at NYU, this was
the first time I'd noticed a narrow steel door beside the
stairwell leading to the N and R trains. Dennis retrieved his
wallet, pulled out a black plastic card, and swiped it though
a nearby magnetic reader, thereby causing the portal to open.
An elevator car awaited us. We entered. The car descended for
a full five minutes, carrying us a thousand feet into the
bedrock.
Disembarking, we entered a small foyer decorated with two
dozen full-figure portraits of men dressed in baseball
uniforms. I recognized Ty Cobb and Pete Rose. Dennis guided me
into an immense steel cavern dominated by a sparkling
three-dimensional map that, according to the caption, depicted
our spiral arm of the Milky Way. Five thousand tiny red lights
pulsed amid the flashing white stars. Five thousand planets
boasting intelligent life, Dennis explained. Five thousand
advanced civilizations.
So: We were not alone in the galaxy—nor were we alone in
the cavern. A dozen men wearing lime-green jumpsuits and
walkie-talkie headsets paced in nervous circles before the
great map, evidently receiving information from distant
locales and relaying it to a hidden but eager audience.
I must admit, dear Diary, I'd never been more confused in
my life.
Four other couples occupied the cavern. Each wife wore an
expression identical to my own: exasperation leavened by
perplexity. The husbands' faces all betrayed a peculiar
mixture of fearfulness and relief.
"The Milky Way is a strange place," said Dennis. "Stranger
than any of us can imagine. Some of its underlying laws may
remain forevermore obscure."
"It's chilly down here," I said, rubbing each shoulder with
the opposite hand.
"For reasons that scientists are just beginning to fathom,"
Dennis continued, "political events on these five thousand
worlds are intimately connected to particular athletic
contests on Earth. Before each such game, these dispatchers in
the jumpsuits switch on their mikes and inform us exactly
what's at stake."
"I don't understand."
"Women have difficulty with this. Bear with me. Here's how
the universe works. Because the Dallas Cowboys won Super Bowl
XII, the slave trade on 16 Cygni Beta ended after ten
centuries of misery and oppression. By contrast, it's
unfortunate that the Saint Louis Cardinals took home the
National League Pennant in 1987, for this sparked the
revocation of the Homosexual Toleration Act on 70 Virginis
Kappa. Physicists call it PROSPOCAP—the Professional Sports
Causality Principle. With me, darling?"
"I guess." I was so flabbergasted that my breath came only
with great effort, although the cavern's poor ventilation was
also to blame.
"Thanks to PROSPOCAP, we know that the advent of women's
suffrage on 14 Herculis Gamma traced directly to the Oakland
Raiders' emergence as the AFC Wild Card Team in 1980. We also
realize that the end of theocratic dictatorship throughout 79
Ceti Delta followed directly upon the New York Yankees'
trouncing of the Atlanta Braves in the 1999 World Series. On a
darker note, the most devastating nuclear war ever to occur on
Gliese 86 Omicron had its roots in the Boston Celtics'
domination of the 1963 NBA Playoffs, Eastern Conference."
I decided to ask the obvious question. "How could a sports
fan possibly cheer for his home team knowing that victory
means nuclear war on another planet?"
"A fan learns the implication of any given win or loss only
ex post facto. Until the moment of revelation, it makes
sense to assume that your team is on the side of the angels.
After all, even the most morally reprehensible outcome is
preferable to oblivion."
"Oblivion?"
"The instant any team's supporters stop caring
sufficiently, all the creatures on the affected planet become
comatose."
I looked into Dennis's eyes. For the first time in our
marriage, I understood my husband. "You care, don't you,
darling? You really care."
"I really care."
"If only I'd known—I never would've harassed you for
watching the Pro Bowl on my birthday. Do you forgive me?"
"Yes, Carlotta, I forgive you."
"Comatose? All of them?"
"Comatose. All of them. Death by dehydration follows in a
matter of days."
Dennis went on to disclose an equally well-established
fact. When it came to awareness of PROSPOCAP, a radical
numerical disparity between males and females was an
ontological necessity. Should the ratio ever exceed one
knowledgeable woman for every two hundred knowledgeable men,
the entire galaxy would implode, sucking all sentient
lifeforms into the resultant maelstrom.
So you see why I picked up my pen today, dear Diary. I
simply had to tell someone about this vast,
astonishing, and apparently benign conspiracy.
Earlier tonight Dennis and I watched the Denver Broncos
face the San Diego Chargers on Monday Night Football. The
Broncos won, 21 to 14. As a result, an airplane manufacturer
on Epsilon Eridani Prime managed to recall four hundred
defective jetliners before any fatal crashes occurred.
"I'm curious about something," I told Dennis as we trod the
stairs to our bedroom. "Do they have athletic events on other
planets?"
"Ball sports are a constant throughout the galaxy."
"And do these sports also have … consequences?"
"In Terran Year 1863 CE,
the Pegasi Secundus Juggernauts beat the Tau Bootes Berserkers
in the Pangalactic Plasmacock Playoffs. A few hours later,
three generals named Heth, Pender, and Pickett led the
disastrous Confederate charge at Gettysburg."
"I see."
"In the subsequent century, the Iota Horologii Leviathans
scored an upset over the Rho Cancri Demons in the Third Annual
Ursa Majoris Lava Hockey Tournament, whereupon Communism began
its rapid collapse in eastern Europe. Need I go on?"
"No, my sweet. You needn't."
As Dennis said when he first showed me the great map
beneath Manhattan, the Milky Way is a strange place—stranger
than any of us can imagine. But I am obligated to keep my
awareness of PROSPOCAP a secret, lest the galaxy evaporate.
Next Monday evening the Patriots will play the Pittsburgh
Steelers. I'll be there, oh yes, cheering my team on. You see,
dear Diary, I've finally learned to care.
The End
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