"The Electron's Spin"
by Adhara Law

(c) 1998 Adhara Law. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced
without express written permission by the author.


Since the day she'd appeared in his class, legs crossed and blue eyes 
penetrating, the Greek alphabet could not help but walk drunkenly across the 
blackboard as he wrote, no doubt as spellbound as he.

Every semester he stood in some random room that looked like every other room 
in the building, preaching the laws of physics to dull-eyed collegiate 
neophytes, issuing them the commandment to go forth and integrate. His 
purpose on this earth, he felt, was to fill their cloudy heads with the 
wonders of the physical world. 

But not her. She stared at him from her front row desk with eyes that hinted 
at some sort of secret knowledge he didn't have, something that the base 
animal in him was clawing to get at. Something told him that she didn't need 
to be here, that she didn't just know physics, but commanded it. He was sure 
that where she walked, electrons forgot their spin.

Two weeks into the semester she'd come to his office. She needed some 
clarification on the frictional force, she'd said. With arms brushing and 
eyes locking, she sat beside him as he scrambled through books, equations 
spilling over the desk as he tried desperately to look at something other 
than her face. It was a face, he thought distantly, that couldn't be 
described as beautiful, and yet he'd never been held so willingly captive by 
any before hers. 

As the days wore on, he dove into the lectures like a madman, trying to 
forget that she was there in front of him every day. But of course, he 
couldn't. The lectures went on. Planetary motion. Kepler's laws. Nuclear 
fireballs that burned trillions of miles away. It was these that must have 
provoked her. These wonders of the universe that made her stop him under the 
dark shadow of the building as he left for home one evening after class.

_Come with me,_ she'd said to him. _Come with me and I will show you._
 
Light from a nearby street lamp trickled into her blue eyes as her voice, a 
voice like melted chocolate, held him there while her words caressed his face 
and kissed his lips and ran invisible fingers over illegal parts of him. He'd 
had no strength of will to say no.
	
Legs tried to buckle under him. His was the life of an electron, where 
deviation from the norm was not allowed. He had his orbit; she, hers. There 
were rules that were not meant to be broken. But she could break them, he 
knew. He knew that she commanded the stars.

And that was why he'd found himself here, on the chilled plateau of a nearby 
mountain, standing near the glistening dome that housed a looking glass to 
the stars. But they would not be going in. Her telescope required no 
machinery.

The cloudless sky afforded them a view to eternity, the Milky Way arcing 
lazily across the black ocean of night as the deafening silence of the 
mountain top enfolded them in its arms. As he stood in awe of the sight, she 
leaned her head back and threw her arms out with a tinkling laugh, almost as 
if to embrace the universe. He swallowed in nervousness and wonder. He opened 
his mouth to speak but before the words could come she placed a finger on his 
icy lips. _I will show you,_ she said. And then she stepped away from him.

Under the full moonlight she removed the burden of her clothing, letting the 
moon caress her bare skin with pale, hungry fingers, relishing its desire for 
her. The light seemed to him to drip from her body in a thousand shimmering 
rivers.
	
_There is a god,_ he thought. _And it is you._

Somehow his own clothes found their way to a nearby bush as she stood 
silently in front of him, running fingernails lightly over his skin. He felt 
like every star in the night sky was watching. 

They eased themselves to the ground, their bodies fusing together in mimicry 
of the nuclear force. She was the E to his mc^2. Lips melted with lips and 
skin with skin. As her lips grazed his neck, his chest, his stomach, he swore 
that he could feel electrons shifting in their orbits, not caring anymore if 
they obeyed the rules of the universe. She altered the laws of quantum
mechanics itself.

Theories slipped out of his mind as she moved to lay above him, her hips 
locking with his. He looked up to see stars fighting each other to be her 
halo, moonlight begging to be her blanket. He reveled in the disorder and the 
chaos as his body merged completely with hers. And in the final moments of it
all, when he felt his body take the leap into the unknown, he saw it all -- 
quarks to galaxies, atoms to universes. He knew at that moment that 
everything he'd learned, everything he'd been teaching, was only a thin layer 
of dry dust hiding the rich, fertile earth beneath. She showed him the rules 
and the laws and then shattered them with a gentle shudder of her hips and 
the small cries of ecstasy. The stars seemed to fall like rain onto their 
bodies and he worshipped it. And her.

And when she kissed him with a smile under the moonlight, he realized that, 
for a while, an electron can ignore its spin.
  
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write to me, Adhara Law, at adhara_law@hotmail.com and let me know what you
thought of this story.