Burstein, Michael A - Reality Check.txt

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Reality Check                                         Michael A. Burstein
"Reality Check" first appeared in the November 1999 issue.

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Life wasn�t exciting, perhaps, but for the moment it was very secure, and
David Strock preferred it that way. He stood up at his desk and stretched,
enjoying the comfort of the late morning sunlight coming through the window
of his spacious office. He looked around, taking in once more the size of
the room, the beautiful chairs, the overflowing bookcases, and the view of
Boston outside. Not bad for someone not even in his thirties yet.

He sat down again and hummed to himself as he shuffled the papers on his
desk. This one, another paper for peer review. That one, a proposal he was
writing with his experimental colleagues. Really, he thought, at some point
I need to get back to doing real physics. It had been at least a week since
he had grappled with a problem.

Just as the clock read noon, there was an expected knock on at the door.
"Come in!"

The door opened, and in walked Judith Pell. David smiled as she carefully
closed the door behind her, but left it slightly ajar. "Hello, David. What
do we have today?"

David got up and began walking over to the small refrigerator he kept in
his office, with a microwave oven on the shelf above. Since Judith and he
were the only ones nearby who kept kosher, David tended to bring lunch for
both of them every day. But their schedules meant that they usually only
ate together on Mondays and Wednesdays. "Sanbusaks. From Zaatar�s Oven."

"Mmm." Judith cut in front of David, opened the refrigerator door, and
pulled out the white paper bag which contained their lunch. "What kind did
you get me?"

"Your favorite. The mushrooms and shallots with cashkavel cheese. And an
Israeli salad."

"Good, I�m starving." Judith put the sanbusaks into the microwave and
turned it on. "Let�s eat."

They went out to the separate bathrooms for the ritual washing of the
hands. The men�s room was slightly closer, so David waited for Judith to
return before reciting the blessing over bread. They nibbled a little of
the sanbusaks afterwards, to complete the ritual, but then munched away on
their salads, using the plastic forks provided by the restaurant.

"Did you have a good shabbat?" Judith asked in between swallows of food.

"Yeah. Sarah�s still tired from caring for Yitzhak, so I made dinner."

"He�s what, four months old now?"

"Five months." David took another forkful of salad. "How was your shabbat?"

"Oh, pretty good. Seth and I stayed at home, hid under the bed." She
smiled.

David nodded. "I�ve had weeks like that."

"So what are you working on?" Judith asked.

"Nothing much," David said, immediately followed by, "Well, this is
interesting." He picked a reprint from a stack on his desk and passed it
over to Judith. "Just got these today from Physical Review Letters. I did
the work about nine months ago, but the paper just got published. Help
yourself to one."

Judith put her fork down on the paper plate and read the title and author
of the paper aloud. "�High-Energy Consequences of the Many-Worlds
Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics. By David R. Strock, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.�" She rolled her eyes at David. "Oh, yes, real
interesting."

David smiled back. "OK, I admit, it�s probably not going to shake the world
outside of my field. And I know it has no applications to your work on
car�carbo�"

"Carbosilane dendrimers." Judith smiled. It got a lot easier to pronounce
the name of a material when you worked with it all the time.

David smiled back. "Right. Come to think of it, it has no applications at
all from what I can tell. But it was fun to do."

"Fun. Well, that�s why we got into science in the first place, isn�t it,"
Judith said, more as a flat statement than a question. She put the paper
back on his desk and continued eating.

"Well, yeah, fun," David murmured. He took a good, long look at his friend.
"Judith, is something on your mind?"

She put her fork down and stared at her food. "I don�t know. It�s just
that�I don�t seem to be getting anywhere. Four years of grad school and my
project seems no nearer to completion than it did at the beginning. Dennis
is talking about lining up a job for me after I get my Ph.D., but then he
has me working on stuff for his projects, not for my own. The equipment he
has me working on is outmoded, and breaks down half the time, and when I
point this out to him, all he tells me to do is fix it. I just feel like
I�m treading water, going nowhere." She looked up at him and smiled weakly.
"I�m sorry to dump on you like this."

"No, it�s OK, that�s why I asked." David thought for a moment. "I wish I
could help. Do you want me to talk to Dennis?"

"No! I mean, better I should handle it myself. I don�t want him to think
I�ve been talking to other professors about this."

But you are, David thought, then retracted it. Judith wasn�t complaining to
another professor, she was confiding in a friend. "It�s not like we�re in
the same department. I don�t think he�d mind."

"I know, but still . . ." She trailed off.

David nodded. "I understand. Still, if there�s anything I can do for you�"

"You�ll be the first to know."

They finished eating their lunch in silence.

                                   * * *

David got most of his paperwork finished by the middle of the afternoon,
and decided to leave early. Still ruminating over what he might do to help
out Judith, he sighed audibly. Physics problems were so much easier to
solve than real ones. What was that quotation from his high school physics
teacher, Mr. Borten? Ah, yes. "Physics is easy. Life is hard."

Just as he was gathering up his papers and getting ready to go, the phone
rang. David stuffed the papers into his backpack and picked up the phone.

"Hello?"

"Hello," said a woman�s voice. "Is this David Strock?"

"Speaking."

"Dr. Strock, my name is Kristin Anderson. I�m a physicist working at the
SSC."

The Superconducting Supercollider. David knew a few people who worked on
projects there, of course, but he didn�t know anyone who worked there full
time. "Yes?"

The physicist on the other end of the line paused for a moment, then said,
"We�d like to invite you to come down to Waxahachie. We have a position we
think you might be interested in."

"Me?" David asked, puzzled. "I�m a theorist, not an experimentalist."

"We do have theoretical physicists on staff."

"But�but I�m not working on anything relevant to the SSC, as far as I
know." Most of his work dealt with interactions that took place at far
lower energies than that of the SSC.

"Actually, you are. Some of us here have become quite impressed with the
work you�re doing, and we want to meet you."

"Well, if that�s all, why not come up here to Boston?"

Another pause. "Isn�t there any way you can come down for�for a week or
so?"

"I�m really not interested in leaving MIT. What�s this all about, anyway?"

"I can�t tell you over the phone."

"You can�t tell me over the phone? Is this some sort of joke?"

"No, it�s not a joke," she said quickly. "I�m serious. We�re working on
something confidential here, and we could really use your help."

David thought for a moment. "I don�t have anything to do with weapons."

"Neither do we. We�re not Los Alamos, we�re the SSC."

"You�re not Fermilab, either."

"What?"

"I said you�re not Fermilab."

"I understood that, I just didn�t know what you meant."

"What I meant is that I already have an affiliation with one government
lab, Fermilab. And I�m content with those connections. Not to put too fine
a point on it, but when I do have to go visit a lab I�d rather have to go
to a large city like Chicago than a small town like Waxahachie." Easier to
find kosher food, he thought. "I know a lot of physicists would jump at the
chance to work on the SSC," he continued aloud, "but frankly, I�m not one
of them."

"I think you might jump at this."

"That�s your opinion, not mine. But I�m really not interested in doing any
work with the SSC. I�m sorry."

David thought that might end the phone call, but Dr. Anderson was still
persistent.

"Doctor Strock�trust me. This is big. And we�re not asking for any sort of
commitment yet. We just want you to see something that we think will
interest you. That we know will interest you."

The sincerity in her voice finally grabbed him. All things considered,
David wouldn�t mind seeing the SSC anyway, at least for a quick visit.
After all, it was the pinnacle of experimental apparatus in his field.

"No commitment?"

"None. Just come down and see what we have to show you."

David could live with that. "All right, look." David checked the calendar
on his wall; it was Monday, and he had a class to teach tomorrow and on
Thursday. But he could probably get someone to cover the second lecture. "I
can fly down Wednesday, but I have to get back to Boston well before
sundown on Friday."

"That shouldn�t be a problem. We�ll make arrangements for your tickets and
call you tomorrow."

                                   * * *

That night, David had a minor argument with his wife, Sarah. He had held
off mentioning the phone call until after they had eaten dinner and Yitzhak
was asleep in his crib. They sat down on the sofa and turned the television
onto cable news, as usual. Then he told her that he�d be going to Texas for
a few days, the day after tomorrow.

"Texas? They want you to go to Texas?"

"It�s only for a few days," he said.

"What�s in Texas?"

"The Superconducting Supercollider. You know, the SSC."

Sarah sighed. "David, it�s bad enough that you go out to Chicago every few
weeks. What�s this Texas trip all about?"

"I�m not ...
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