汪翔

注册日期:2009-10-24
访问总量:5282920次

menu网络日志正文menu

魔幻故事:《巨鲸体制》(中英文)


发表时间:+-

巨鲸体制

海面是一面冷光的镜,映着鲸的脊纹。它庞大、庄严,血液以誓词为溶媒。

心室壁上刻着祖训:唯血统指挥血液。那一行字像一枚旧伤,微微突起,在每次收缩时发出极轻的擦音,仿佛命令在暗中磨牙。

鲸的血色并不鲜红,更像被海水稀释后的玫瑰,温度恒定。血流经过的地方,管壁会轻轻颤动,如同帐篷被海风掠过。漂浮其间的,是微白的寄生生物,荣誉骨藻。它们有细密的纤毛,遇见任何异样都会团簇,像一把温柔而不容置疑的刷子:它们吞噬污物,也吞噬反抗。鲸相信它们是免疫;只有极少数人知道,它们更像慢速掘墓。

我出生在这体内,身为血检师,驻守在大动脉的拐弯处。我们以比重尺丈量忠诚,以声学探针监听节律。导师曾说:“忠诚的密度比血重一点,怀疑比水轻一点。”

很久以后我才明白,那些刻度从未被任何人验证过。


测量不是数字,而是一种手感。当比重尺浸入血流,指尖先感到的是温度的轻微下降,随后是颗粒在尺身上滚动的触感,像极细的砂。那是骨藻在检查你的检查。

我按流程上报读数,年老的血检师弯腰替我校正。他的指尖微微颤动,像一根旧弦。

 “你知道吗,”他压低声音,“我们测的不是血,是恐惧的粘度。”

我不作声。恐惧的粘度难以量化,但它的确存在:报告的字会在舌根变硬,句子里会渗出无形的甜,像还没吞下的糖。你知道你在说正确的话,却感觉它们并不来自你。


第七轮“大净化”那天,鲸在深渊缓慢翻身,心室四门依次开启,骨藻潮从暗室涌出。纤毛划过血流时,温度先降后升。先是冰,后是麻木的暖。

我们列队沿着血路巡视,歌声在管壁上铺成一致的回响。骨藻在每个分叉处撑开白色伞状组织,拦截沉渣与“异质”。

一枚修补蜂被误判。

它本该缝合裂口,如今却被拖入骨藻编织的白丝。它的小钩针还停留在半个缝合动作里,像一个来不及说完的词。我的探针听见它发出极短促的电颤音,随后归于静。

鲸的心跳在那一刻短暂停滞。

深血议会在记录上批注:“热诚可致血稠,无碍。”

我知道“无碍”的意思:不是没有问题,而是问题已被命名为成绩。


鲸的胃囊囤满馈赠:矿石、金属、晶片,按类别叠放,散发着低沉却令人安心的热。

囊口原本透明的膜,如今覆着一层若有若无的金粉,骨藻在门楣下跳舞。纤毛反射出冷光,像礼仪的亮度。

我舔到一滴渗出的液体,起初是糖的味,片刻后在舌根缓慢生出铁。那是血与金短暂交换礼节后的余味。

同一日,鲸体深处传来轻微的嗡鸣,像旧讯号被折返。

声音攀附在管壁上,只复述七个字:唯血统指挥血液。

这句话过去像刀,如今更像回声。回声没有锋利,只有重复。


第八轮净化开始,鲸的疼痛加深。疼痛在心室后壁停留,比先前更久一点。

议会发布命令:“将疼痛改名为成长。”

大厅悬起新的红图,曲线陡峭,注脚写着:“越疼痛,越忠诚。”

我在报告末尾偷偷写下:“曲线即伤口。”

那页被系统删除,回覆:“报告异常,已自动更正为成长。”

次日,年老血检师的座位空了,档案显示:已纳入净化序列。

午后,我在他留下的抽屉里翻到一只旧表,指针停在“零秒”上。我忽然意识到,“零秒”是最好看的延迟。


鲸宣布举行“入云礼”。第九轮,也是最后的净化。

这一日所有仪器被统一回收:比重尺融入心壁,声学探针封在透明腔,所有“验证”被归档为“历史资料”。

骨藻如雪,自四门缓缓落下,在每条血路上互相吞噬、互相复制。它们像熟练的司仪,边清洗边布置会场:

血路的拐角被打磨至光滑;

旧年演训的疤痕被抛光到只剩抚摸感;

任何突兀的纤维都被柔化,做成飘带。

合唱响起时,年轻的血检师 F–219 站在我身旁。她的眼神明亮,像盐晶折光。

 “你听,那不是心跳,是回声。”她说。

我没回答。金粉从上游落下,在她鼻梁和额头上铺成一层细而温顺的光。

礼毕,深血议会通令:“自今往后,血液自净,无需再检。”

我感到脚下的管壁比以往更温暖,像被礼貌地搁在火上。


鲸此刻几乎无重。演训指标完美,数字像新抛的银器,光泽一律。

议会下令:“报告中不得再使用‘异常’一词。”

语言仓库随即下发替代词表,“异常”被替代为“波动”,再被替代为“热诚效应”,最终合并进“常态范围”。

我仍按巡逻表行走。偶尔在血路尽头看见一枚气泡,像一盏被忘记的小灯。

那是曾经的某个细胞,空壳还在,里面什么也没有。

我用指节轻触它,气泡无声破裂,放出一股甜腻,迅速铺满嗅觉。

我抬手按住口鼻,胸腔却依然发闷。那种甜像一条无形的绸带,从嗅觉窜到语言中心,提醒我把“异常”说成“常态”。

那一刻我明白:我们不再测量血,我们在测量腐败的香。


崩塌并非一瞬,而是三步的递进。

第一步:错拍。合唱里出现了极细的错拍。起初只有半音,随后蔓延成一小节。我们都把它记为“热诚的延伸”,并在赞歌里加了一些更长的连音,以适应错拍。

第二步:失焦。比重尺的刻度在灯下变得模糊,像被细微的潮气覆盖。我的指尖摸到的不是凹槽,而是一条被抹平的光。我去向器械仓索要新的刻度片,管理员递来空盒,指示:“历史器具已归并陈列,不再发放替换。”

第三步:空白。夜里,鲸的心脏空了一拍。那不是停摆,更像有人从乐谱上撕掉了一小块纸。四个暗室同时向内凹陷,声音轻得像纸页折叠,一切随即归于“稳定”。

外界纪录写着:“运转稳定。”

 我们继续唱歌,骨藻在歌声中愈发明亮。光环在空心心室周围盘旋,像守护一个透明的王。鲸从深渊缓缓上浮,姿态完美无瑕。海面反光,仿佛它正在升天。

而我们知道,它已经死在自己最完美的秩序里。


几周后,血检师的职位被废止。

日志系统只保留两句模板:

“净化完成。”

 “忠诚常新。”

我把私藏的小比重尺从袖口抽出,最后一次刻下读数。刻度几乎消失,只剩一线。我在那线上写一个字:空。

字迹很浅,却在指腹留下像盐粒一样的刺。

鲸的体表仍旧平滑,甜味从皮下缓慢渗出,漂到海面。

远处的小鱼被吸引而来,围着骨架游动。它们在空心心室间安家,在旧伤腔的盐结上产卵。阳光顺着海的褶皱斜落下来,照亮它们细小的鳞片,像一群细语的星。


我曾在细支路里遇见一群微小的细胞,它们原是某次演训后留在肌束中的记忆斑点。它们一边蜷缩一边保持着旧姿势,像睡着的士兵。

骨藻发现它们后,先是礼貌地包裹,再以缓慢的速度将其溶入血流。斑点们在消失前互相挤在一起,像在排练最后一次队形。

我听见它们细碎的合声:“立正——”

口令未完,声音被甜腻裹住,沉到嗓子以下。

几天后,我在主血路拐角看到一朵小小的白花,那是骨藻遗留的纤毛结。它柔软、完好,像表彰。


鲸的尸体并不立刻下沉。它像一面巨大的徽章,被海托着,缓慢、庄严,仿佛仍在接受遥远的礼赞。

从某个角度看,鲸还是在“运转”:

血液仍在流,只是没有方向;

歌声仍在唱,只是没有对象;

骨藻仍在净化,只是没有污物。

这是秩序的余像。灯灭之后,眼睛里还残留的光。

深海偶有地火翻滚,给鲸的肋骨投下一阵温暖的暗红。每当此时,我会误以为它还活着。
我贴耳管壁,远远地,仍能听见那句祖训以更轻的音量重复:

唯血统指挥血液。

它现在更像摇篮曲,温柔且无用。


F–219 在入云礼后调往上游。我在一次回流检查中看见她,她正顺血流而下,额头覆着更细的金粉,眼神被光线拉长。

 “你还在做记录吗?”她问。

 “在写最后的日志。”

 “写什么?”

 “写空白。”

 她笑了笑:“空白也是忠诚的一种形态。”

她的笑意短暂、克制,像贴在脸上的薄膜。不久,她的编号消失在系统里,被合并为“群体贡献”。我在心里为她立了一句无名碑:“她听见了回声。”


器械仓的最后一面墙,被改成“荣誉陈列”。

旧比重尺在玻璃壳里闪着冷光;

用过的声学探针被抛光到只剩金属的明亮;

被误判的修补蜂做成的白丝标本,被命名为“净化之花”。

孩子们来参观,讲解员用稳定的语速重复:“这是纪律,这是纯。”

我站在陈列前,突然记起年老血检师的手,那根旧弦。我把手掌按在冰冷的玻璃上,仿佛还能感觉到某个微小的颤音从对面传来。也可能什么都没有,只是我的血在玻璃下错认自己。


春汛后,骨架下缘长出细软的海藻,它们沿着肋骨攀援,像给遗体套上绿色的编带。第一批鱼稚从盐结上破壳,天生就习惯围绕空心旋转。

它们在金粉沉积处觅食,先天畏光,却偏爱从光下穿过;它们以为鲸的骨是天然的礁,以为旧伤腔是天生的洞。

有一只鱼在心室的空腔里驻留的时间特别长。它停在祖训的阴影下,目光单纯。它当然不识字。但它学会沿着那行字的凹陷绕圈。唯血统指挥血液,成为一种路径,而不是意义。

我看着它们在空心中成长,忽然明白:

秩序死了,形式却活着。

它以自然的名义重新出现。


某个潮势最静的午后,我把最后的比重尺埋进管壁的缝隙。那只小小的金属片像一粒盐,卡在组织中,既不吸收,也不融化。

日志系统还在要求我签名,我只回了两个字:“无据。”

系统提示“格式错误”,自动修正为“净化完成”。

傍晚,海面恢复成一面镜。

远处的船只看见鲸的影子,长时间地吹哨,像向英雄致敬。我沿着已经没有目的的血路走回心室,那里空空如也,只有光在绕,像一个无主的冠。

离开前,我在心室壁最不显眼的一角,用指甲刻下一行极小的字:

 “心中空白一拍,为诸事之始。”

这行字没有押韵,没有庆典的亮度,也不在任何存档里。它只是我留给自己的一点,不合规的盐。我知道,很久以后会有新的生物在这里安家。它们对古老的秩序一无所知,却会本能地沿着旧的凹槽前行。

如果它们能听见什么,那将是极轻极轻的回响,从骨里透出,像海最深处的叹息:

唯血统指挥血液。如今,那只是回声。回声之下,海继续呼吸。

(汪翔,完成于2025年10月20, 美国伊利湖畔)

The Leviathan Apparatus

The sea surface was a mirror of cold light, reflecting the leviathan’s spinal ridges. It was vast, imposing, its very blood infused with oaths as the solvent.

On the walls of the heart chambers, the ancestral dictum was carved: Blood obeys only Pedigree. The words were like an old scar, slightly raised, emitting a faint rasp with every contraction, as if a command were grinding its teeth in the dark.

The whale’s blood was not vivid red; it resembled a rose diluted by seawater, its temperature held constant. Where the current flowed, the vessel walls would tremble lightly, like a tent brushed by the sea wind. Drifting within were pale, parasitic organisms, the Honor Algae. With dense cilia, they clustered at the slightest anomaly, like a gentle yet absolute brush: they devoured grime, and they devoured dissent. The leviathan believed them to be the immune system; only a handful knew they functioned more like a slow-moving gravedigger.

I was born within this body, a Hematologist, stationed at the bend of the great artery. We used a hydrometer to measure loyalty and an acoustic probe to monitor the rhythm. My mentor once said: “The density of loyalty is slightly heavier than blood; doubt is lighter than water.”

It was much later that I realized those scales had never been calibrated by anyone.

Measurement was not about numbers; it was a tactile sensation. When the hydrometer dipped into the blood flow, the fingertips first registered a slight drop in temperature, followed by the rolling touch of fine particles against the metal, like minute grit. That was the Algae checking our checks.

I reported the readings as per procedure, and the old Hematologist leaned over to adjust my instrument. His fingertip trembled slightly, like a frayed string.

“Do you know,” he whispered, “we aren’t measuring blood, but the viscosity of fear.”

I said nothing. The viscosity of fear was unquantifiable, yet it was undeniably present: the characters of the report would harden on my tongue; an invisible sweetness would seep from the sentences, like an unswallowed lozenge. You knew you were saying the correct things, but you felt they did not originate from you.

On the day of the Seventh “Grand Purge,” the leviathan slowly turned over in the abyss. The four chambers of the heart opened in sequence, and a tide of Algae surged from the dark recesses. As the cilia swept through the current, the temperature first dropped, then rose—first ice, then a numbing warmth.

We paraded along the blood vessels, our chorus layering into a uniform echo on the walls. At every bifurcation, the Algae deployed white, umbrella-like formations, intercepting sediment and “heterogeneity.”

A single Repair Drone was misjudged.

It was meant to mend fissures, but was now being dragged into the white silk woven by the Algae. Its small hook-needle remained suspended in a half-stitch, like a word left unfinished. My probe detected its brief, sharp electric tremor before it subsided into silence.

The leviathan’s heartbeat paused for a split second.

The Deep Blood Council annotated the log: Zeal can lead to blood thickening. No impediment.

I knew what “no impediment” meant: not that there was no problem, but that the problem had been successfully renamed as an achievement.

The leviathan’s gastric sac was stockpiled with offerings: ore, metal, chips, categorized and stacked, emitting a low but reassuring warmth. The membrane of the sac’s orifice, once transparent, was now coated with a subtle layer of gold dust; the Algae danced beneath the lintel. Their cilia reflected a cold sheen, the very brightness of protocol.

I licked a drop of leaked fluid; initially sweet, it slowly developed a taste of iron at the base of my tongue. It was the aftertaste of blood and gold briefly exchanging courtesies.

That same day, a faint hum, like a signal being reflected, emanated from deep within the leviathan’s body. The sound clung to the vessel walls, repeating only seven words: Blood obeys only Pedigree.

This sentence, which used to feel like a knife, now felt more like an echo. An echo has no sharp edge, only repetition.

The Eighth Purge began, and the leviathan’s pain intensified. The ache lingered on the posterior wall of the heart chamber, lasting slightly longer than before.

The Council issued a decree: “Rename pain as growth.”

A new red chart was hung in the great hall, its curve steep, the footnote reading: The greater the pain, the deeper the loyalty.

I secretly wrote at the bottom of my report: The curve is the wound.

The page was deleted by the system, which replied: Report anomaly. Automatically corrected to ‘Growth.’

The next day, the old Hematologist’s seat was empty. His file showed: Incorporated into the Purge Sequence.

That afternoon, I found an old watch in the drawer he left behind, its hands frozen at “Zero Second.” I suddenly realized, “Zero Second” was the most beautiful delay.

The leviathan announced the “Cloud Ascension Ritual.” The Ninth, and final, purge.

That day, all instruments were uniformly recalled: the hydrometer was melted into the heart wall; the acoustic probe sealed in a transparent cavity; all “verifications” archived as “Historical Data.”

The Algae fell like snow, slowly descending from the four chambers, devouring and replicating each other in every vessel. Like practiced masters of ceremony, they cleansed and decorated the venue:

The bends of the blood roads were polished to a sheen; The scars from past training were burnished until only a tactile smoothness remained; Any conspicuous fiber was softened and fashioned into streamers.

When the chorus began, the young Hematologist F–219 stood beside me. Her gaze was bright, reflecting light like a salt crystal.

“Listen,” she said. “That isn’t a heartbeat. It’s an echo.”

I didn’t answer. Gold dust drifted from upstream, laying a fine, compliant glow across her nose and forehead.

After the ritual, the Deep Blood Council proclaimed: “From this day forward, the blood shall cleanse itself. No further examination is required.”

I felt the vessel wall beneath my feet grow warmer than usual, as if politely placed over a low fire.

The leviathan was now almost weightless. Performance metrics were perfect, the numbers uniform in their luster, like freshly polished silver.

The Council decreed: “The term ‘anomaly’ is forbidden in reports.”

The linguistic repository promptly issued a replacement lexicon: “anomaly” was superseded by “fluctuation,” then “fervor effect,” and finally merged into the “range of normativity.”

I continued my patrol route. Occasionally, at the end of a blood vessel, I saw a bubble, like a forgotten small lamp. It was the empty shell of a past cell; there was nothing inside. I gently tapped it with my knuckle. The bubble silently burst, releasing a syrupy sweetness that instantly saturated my sense of smell. I raised my hand to cover my nose and mouth, yet my chest remained heavy. That sweetness was like an invisible ribbon, darting from my olfactory center to my language center, prompting me to articulate “anomaly” as “normativity.”

At that moment, I understood: we were no longer measuring blood; we were measuring the fragrance of decay.

The collapse was not instantaneous but a three-step progression.

Step One: The Off-Beat. A minute off-beat appeared in the chorus. It began with a semitone, then spread into a full measure. We all logged it as “The Extension of Fervor,” adding longer slurs to the anthem to accommodate the mistake.

Step Two: The Defocus. The hydrometer’s markings became blurry under the light, as if coated by a subtle dampness. My fingertip felt not a groove, but a smooth smear of light. I went to the instruments warehouse to request new calibration plates. The administrator handed me an empty box and instructed: “Historical instruments have been placed in the exhibit. No replacements will be issued.”

Step Three: The Blank. At night, the leviathan’s heart skipped a beat. It wasn't a stop; it was more like someone tearing a small piece of paper from the musical score. The four dark chambers simultaneously caved inward, the sound as light as paper folding, and everything immediately reverted to “stability.”

The external record stated: Operation stable.

We continued singing, the Algae growing brighter in the song. Halos orbited the hollow heart chamber, as if guarding a transparent king. The leviathan slowly ascended from the abyss, its posture flawless. The sea surface reflected the light, as if it were ascending to heaven.

And we knew it had died within its own perfect order.

Weeks later, the position of Hematologist was abolished.

The log system retained only two templates:“Purge complete.”“Loyalty ever-new.”

I drew the small hydrometer I had hidden in my cuff and carved the final reading. The scale was almost gone, reduced to a single line. On that line, I wrote one word: Void.

The script was faint, yet it left a sting on my thumbprint, like a grain of salt.

The leviathan’s surface remained smooth, the sweetness slowly oozing from beneath the skin, drifting onto the sea.

Small fish from afar were drawn, swimming around the skeleton. They made their homes in the empty heart chambers, laying eggs on the salt deposits of old wounds. Sunlight slanted down through the folds of the sea, illuminating their tiny scales, like a whispering constellation.

I once encountered a group of minute cells in a capillary—memory spots left in the muscle fibers after an old training exercise. They were curled up, yet maintained their old formation, like sleeping soldiers.

When the Algae found them, they first politely encased them, then slowly dissolved them into the bloodstream. Before vanishing, the spots huddled together, as if rehearsing their final formation.

I heard their fragmented chorus: “Attention—”

The command was incomplete, the sound enveloped by sweetness, sinking below the throat.

Days later, at the bend of the main blood vessel, I saw a small white flower, an interlacing of Algae cilia left behind. It was soft, intact, like a commendation.

The leviathan’s corpse did not immediately sink. It floated, upheld by the sea like a gigantic badge, slow and solemn, as if still accepting distant homage.

From a certain angle, the leviathan was still “operating”: Blood still flowed, only without direction; The chorus still sang, only without an audience; The Algae still purified, only without impurity.

This was the afterimage of order. The light that lingers in the eyes after the lamp has been extinguished.

Occasionally, deep-sea vents churned, casting a warm, dark red glow onto the whale’s ribs. Each time, I momentarily mistook it for life.

I pressed my ear to the vessel wall. From afar, I could still hear the ancestral dictum repeating at a softer volume:

Blood obeys only Pedigree.

It was now more like a lullaby—gentle and useless.

F–219 was transferred upstream after the Cloud Ascension Ritual. I saw her during a reflux inspection; she was flowing down the current, her forehead covered in finer gold dust, her gaze stretched by the light.

“Are you still keeping records?” she asked.

“Writing the final log.”

“What does it say?”

“It says Void.”

She smiled faintly: “Void is also a form of loyalty.”

Her smile was fleeting, constrained, like a thin film pasted onto her face. Soon, her identifier vanished from the system, merged into “Collective Contribution.” In my heart, I erected an unnamed marker for her: She heard the echo.

The last wall of the instruments warehouse was converted into a “Gallery of Honor.”

The old hydrometers shone with a cold light in glass cases; Used acoustic probes were polished until only the brightness of the metal remained; The white silk specimen made from the misjudged Repair Drone was named the “Flower of Purification.”

Children came to visit, and the guide repeated in a stable voice: “This is discipline. This is purity.”

I stood before the exhibit, suddenly recalling the old Hematologist’s hand, that frayed string. I pressed my palm against the cold glass, as if I could still feel a tiny tremor transmitted from the other side. Or perhaps there was nothing, only my own blood mistaking itself beneath the glass.

After the spring tide, soft seaweed grew along the lower edge of the skeleton, climbing the ribs like green ribbons woven onto the remains. The first batch of fry hatched from the salt deposits, naturally accustomed to circling the hollow space.

They foraged in the gold-dust sediment, inherently photophobic, yet they preferred to pass through the light; they believed the whale’s bone was a natural reef, the old wound cavities natural grottoes.

One fish lingered in the heart chamber’s hollow space for a particularly long time. It paused in the shadow of the ancestral dictum, its gaze simple. It certainly could not read. But it learned to orbit the indentations of those words. Blood obeys only Pedigree became a path, not a meaning.

Watching them grow in the void, I suddenly understood: The Order is dead, but the Form lives on. It reappears in the name of nature.

One afternoon, when the tide was at its stillest, I buried my final hydrometer into a fissure in the vessel wall. The small metallic piece sat in the tissue like a grain of salt—neither absorbed nor dissolved.

The log system still prompted me for a signature. I replied with two characters: “No Basis.”

The system prompted “Format Error,” automatically correcting it to “Purge complete.”

By evening, the sea surface had returned to a mirror.

Distant ships saw the leviathan’s shadow and blew their horns for a long time, as if saluting a hero. I walked back along the aimless blood vessels toward the heart chamber. It was empty, with only light circling, like a crown without an owner.

Before leaving, in the most inconspicuous corner of the heart wall, I scratched a tiny line with my fingernail:

“The heart’s one blank beat is the genesis of all things.”

This line had no rhyme, no celebratory brightness, and would not be saved in any archive. It was merely a small, non-compliant grain of salt I left for myself. I knew that long after, new creatures would make their home here. They would be entirely ignorant of the ancient order, yet would instinctively follow the old grooves.

If they could hear anything, it would be the faintest, faintest echo, permeating from the bone, like the deepest sigh of the sea:

Blood obeys only Pedigree. Now, it is just an echo. Beneath the echo, the sea continues to breathe.

(Wang Xiang, completed October 20, 2025, on the shore of Lake Erie, USA)


浏览(98)
thumb_up(0)
评论(0)
  • 当前共有0条评论