TAU ZERO
POUL ANDERSON

Contents
01 - 02 - 03 - 04 - 05 - 06 - 07 - 08 - 09 - 10 - 11 - 12 - 13
- 14 - 15 - 16 - 17 - 18 - 19 - 20 - 21 - 22 - 23
Chapter
1
"Look — there
— rising over the Hand of God. Is it?"
"Yes, I think so. Our ship."
They were the last to go as
Millesgarden was closed. Most of that afternoon they had wandered among
the sculptures, he awed and delighted by his first experience of them,
she bidding an unspoken farewell to what had been more a part of her
life than she had understood until now. They were lucky in the weather,
when summer was waning. This day on Earth had been sunlight, breezes
that made leaf shadows dance on the villa walls, a clear sound of
fountains.
But when the sun went down, the
garden seemed abruptly to come still more alive. It was as if the
dolphins were tumbling through their waters, Pegasus storming skyward,
Folke Filbyter peering after his lost grandson while his horse stumbled
in the ford, Orpheus listening, the young sisters embracing in their
resurrection — all unheard, because this was a single instant
perceived, but the time in which these figures actually moved was no
less real than the time which carried men.
"As if they were alive, bound
for the stars, and we must stay behind and grow old," Ingrid Lindgren
murmured.
Charles Reymont didn't hear
her. He stood on the flagstones under a birch tree, whose leaves
rustled and had begun very faintly to turn color, and looked toward Leonora
Christine. Atop its pillar, the Hand of God upbearing the
Genius of Man lifted in silhouette against a greenish-blue dusk. Behind
it, the tiny rapid star crossed and sank again.
"Are you sure that wasn't an
ordinary satellite?" Lindgren asked through quietness. "I never
expected we'd see —"
Reymont cocked a brow at her.
"You're the first officer, and you don't know where your own vessel is
or what she's doing?" His Swedish had a choppy accent, like most of the
languages he spoke, that underlined the sardonicism.
"I'm not the navigation
officer," she said, defensive. "Also, I put the whole matter out of my
mind as much as I can. You should do the same. We'll spend plenty of
years with it." She half reached toward him. Her tone gentled. "Please.
Don't spoil this evening."
Reymont shrugged. "Pardon me. I
didn't mean to."
An attendant neared, stopped,
and said deferentially: "I am sorry, we must shut the gates now."
"Oh!" Lindgren started, glanced
at her watch, looked over the terraces. They were empty of everything
except the life that Carl Milles had shaped into stone and metal, three
centuries ago. "Why, why, it's far past closing time. l hadn't
realized."
The attendant bowed. "Since my
lady and gentleman obviously wished it, I let them alone after the
other visitors left."
"You know us, then," Lindgren
said.
"Who does not?" The attendant's
gaze admired her. She was tall and well formed, regular of features,
blue eyes set wide, blond hair bobbed just under the ears. Her civilian
garments were more stylish than was common on a spacewoman; the rich
soft colors and flowing draperies of neomedieval suited her.
Reymont contrasted. He was a
stocky, dark, hard-countenanced man who had never bothered to have
removed the scar that seamed his brow. His plain tunic and trews might
as well have been a uniform.
"Thank you for not pestering
us," he said, more curt than cordial.
"I took for granted you wished
freedom from being a celebrity," the attendant replied. "No doubt many
others recognized you too but felt likewise."
"You'll find we Swedes are a
courteous people." Lindgren smiled at Reymont.
"I won't argue that," her
companion said. "Nobody can help running into it, when you're
everywhere in the Solar System." He paused. "But then, whoever steers
the world had better be polite. The Romans were in their day. Pilate,
for instance."
The attendant was taken aback
at the implied rebuff. Lindgren declared a little sharply, "I said älskvärdig,
not artig." ("Courteous," not "polite.") She
offered her hand. "Thank you, sir."
"My pleasure, Miss First
Officer Lindgren," the attendant answered. "May you have a fortunate
voyage and come home safe."
"If the voyage is really
fortunate," she reminded him, "we will never come home. If we do
—" She broke off. He would be in his grave. "Again I thank
you," she said to the little middle-aged man. "Good-by," she said to
the gardens.
Reymont exchanged a clasp too
and mumbled something. He and Lindgren went out.
High walls darkened the nearly
deserted pavement beyond. Footfalls sounded hollow. After a minute the
woman remarked, "I do wonder if that was our ship we saw. We're in a
high latitude. And not even a Bussard vessel is big and bright enough
to shine through sunset glow."
"She is when the scoopfield
webs are extended," Reymont told her. "And she was moved into a skewed
orbit yesterday, as part of her final tests. They'll take her back to
the ecliptic plane before we depart."
"Yes, of course, I've seen the
program. But I've no reason to remember exactly who is doing what with
her at which time. Especially when we aren't leaving for another two
months. Why should you keep track?"
"When I'm simply the
constable." Reymont's mouth bent into a grin. "Let's say that I'm
practicing to be a worrywart."
She glanced sideways at him.
The look became a scrutiny. They had emerged on an esplanade by the
water. Across it, Stockholm's lights were kindling, one by one, as
night grew upward among houses and trees. But the channel remained
almost mirrorlike, and as yet there were few sparks in heaven save
Jupiter. You could still see without help.
Reymont hunkered down and drew
their hired boat in. Bond anchors secured the lines to the concrete. He
had obtained a special license to park practically anywhere. An
interstellar expedition was that big an event. Lindgren and he had
spent the morning in a cruise around the Archipelago — a few
hours amidst greenness, homes like parts of the islands whereon they
grew, sails and gulls and sun-glitter across waves. Little of that
would exist at Beta Virginis, and none of it in the distances between.
"I am beginning to feel what a
stranger you are to me, Carl," she said slowly. "To everyone?"
"Eh? My biography's on record."
The boat bumped against the esplanade. Reymont sprang down into its
cockpit. Holding the line taut with one hand, he offered her the other.
She had no need to lean heavily on him as she descended, but did. His
arm scarcely stirred beneath her weight.
She sat down on a bench next
the wheel. He twisted the screw top of the anchor he grasped.
Intermolecular binding forces let go with a faint smacking noise that
answered the slap-slap of water on hull. His movements could not be
called graceful, as hers were, but they were quick and economical.
"Yes, I suppose we've all
memorized each other's official accounts." She nodded. "For you, the
absolute minimum you could get by with telling."
(Charles Jan Reymont.
Citizenship status, Interplanetarian. Thirty-five years old. Born in
the Antarctic, but not one of its better colonies; the sublevels of
Polyugorsk offered only poverty and turbulence to a boy whose father
had died early. The youth he became got to Mars by some unspecified
means and held a variety of jobs till the troubles broke out. Then he
fought with the Zebras, with such distinction that afterward the Lunar
Rescue Corps offered him a berth. There he completed his academic
education and rose fast in rank, until as colonel he had much to do
with improving the police branch. When he applied for this expedition,
the Control Authority was glad to accept him.)
"Nothing whatsoever of
yourself," Lindgren observed. "Did you even give that away in the
psychological testing?"
Reymont had gone forward and
cast off the bow line. He stowed both anchors neatly, took the wheel,
and started the motor. The magnetic drive was soundless and the
propeller made scant noise, but the boat slipped rapidly outward. He
kept his eyes straight ahead. "Why do you care?" he asked.
"We'll be together for a number
of years. Quite possibly for the rest of our lives."
"It makes me wonder why you
spent today with me, then."
"You invited me."
"After you gave me a call at my
hotel. You must have checked with the crew registry to find where I
was."
Millesgarden vanished in
swift-deepening darkness aft. Lights along the channel, and from the
inner city beyond, did not show whether she flushed. Her face turned
from him, though. "I did," she admitted. "I … thought you
might be lonely. You have no one, have you?"
"No relatives left. I'm only
touring the fleshpots of Earth. Won't be any where we are bound."
Her sight lifted again, toward
Jupiter this time, a steady tawny-white lamp. More stars were treading
forth. She shivered and drew her cloak tight around her, against the
autumnal air. "No," she said mutedly. "Everything alien. And when we've
hardly begun to map, to understand, that world yonder — our
neighbor, our sister — to cross thirty-two light-years
—"
"People are like that."
"Why are you going, Carl?"
His shoulders lifted and
dropped. "Restless, I suppose. And frankly, I made enemies in the
Corps. Rubbed them the wrong way, or outdistanced them for promotion. I
was at the point where I couldn't advance further without playing
office politics. Which I despise." His glance met hers. Both lingered a
moment. "You?"
She sighed. "Probably sheer
romanticism. Ever since I was a child, I thought I must go to the
stars, the way a prince in a fairy tale must go to Elf Land. At last,
by insisting to my parents, I got them to let me enroll in the Academy."
His smile held more warmth than
usual. "And you made an outstanding record in the interplanetary
service. They didn't hesitate to make you first officer of your first
extrasolar ship."
Her hands fluttered in her lap.
"No. Please. I'm not bad at my work. But it's easy for a woman to rise
fast in space. She's in demand. And my job on Leonora
Christine will be essentially executive. I'n have more to do
with … well, human relations … than astronautics."
He returned his vision forward.
The boat was rounding the land, headed into Saltsjön. Water
traffic thickened. Hydrofoils whirred past. A cargo submarine made her
stately way toward the Baltic. Overhead, air taxis flitted like
fireflies. Central Stockholm was a many-colored unrestful fire and a
thousand noises blent into one somehow harmonious growl.
"That brings me back to my
question." Reymont chuckled. "My counter-question, rather, since you
were pressing in on me. Don't think I haven't enjoyed your company. I
did, much, and if you'll have dinner with me I'll consider this day
among the better ones of my life. But most of our gang scattered like
drops of mercury the minute our training period ended. They're
deliberately avoiding fheir shipmates. Better spend the time with those
they'll never see again. You, now — you have roots. An old,
distinguished, well-to-do family; an affectionate one, I gather; father
and mother alive, brothers, sisters, cousins, surely anxious to do
everything they can for you in the few weeks that remain. Why did you
leave them today?"
She sat unspeaking.
"Your Swedish reserve," he said
after a while. "Appropriate to the rulers of mankind. I ought not to
have intruded. Just give me the same right of privacy, will you?"
And presently: "Would you like
to join me at dinner? I've found quite a decent little live-service
restaurant."
"Yes," she answered. "Thank
you. I would."
She rose to stand beside him,
laying one hand on his arm. The thick muscles stirred beneath her
fingers. "Don't call us rulers," she begged. "We aren't. That's what
the whole idea was behind the Covenant. After the nuclear war
… that close a brush with world death … something
had to be done."
"Uh-huh," he grunted. "I've
read an occasional history book myself. General disarmament; a world
police force to maintain it; sed quis custodiet ipsos
Custodes? Who can we trust with a monopoly of the planet
killer weapons and unlimited powers of inspection and arrest? Why, a
country big and modem enough to make peace-keeping a major industry;
but not big enough to conquer anyone else or force its will on anyone
without the support of a majority of nations; and reasonably well
thought of by everyone. In short, Sweden."
"You do understand, then," she
said happily.
"I do. Including the
consequences. Power feeds on itself, not by conspiracy, but by logical
necessity. The money the world pays, to underwrite the cost of the
Control Authority, passes through here; therefore you become the
richest country on Earth, with all that that implies. And the
diplomatic center, goes without saying. And when every reactor,
spaceship, laboratory is potentially dangerous and must be under the
Authority, that means some Swede has a voice in everything that
matters. And this leads to your being imitated, even by those who no
longer like you. Ingrid, my friend, your people can't help turning into
new Romans."
Her gladness drooped. "Don't you
like us, Carl?"
"As well as anybody,
considering. You've been humane masters to date. Too humane, I'd say.
In my own case, I ought to be grateful, since you allow me to be
essentially a stateless person, which I think I prefer. No, you've not
done badly." He gestured toward the towers down which radiance
cataracted, to right and left. "It won't last, anyhow."
"What do you mean?"
"I don't know. I'm only certain
that nothing is forever. No matter how carefully you design a system,
it will go bad and die."
Reymont stopped to choose
words. "In your case," he said, "I believe the end may come from this
very stability you take pride in. Has anything important changed, on
Earth at least, since the late twentieth century? Is that a desirable
state of affairs?
"I suppose," he added, "that's
one reason for planting colonies in the galaxy, if we can. Against
Ragnarok."
Her fists clenched. Her face
turned upward again. The night was now entire, but few stars could be
seen through the veil of light over the city. Elsewhere — in
Lapland, for instance, where her parents had a summer cottage
— they would shine unmercifully sharp and many.
"I'm being a poor escort,"
Reymont apologized. "Let's get off these schoolboy profundities and
discuss more interesting subjects. Like an apéritif."
Her laugh was uncertain.
He managed to keep the talk
inconsequential while he nosed into Strömmen, docked the boat,
and led her on foot across the bridge to Old Town. Beyond the royal
palace they found themselves under softer illumination, walking down
narrow streets between high golden-hued buildings that had stood much
as they were for several hundred years. Tourist season was past; of the
uncounted foreigners in the city, few had reason to visit this enclave;
except for an occasional pedestrian or electrocyclist, Reymont and
Lindgren were nearly alone.
"I shall miss this," she said.
"It's picturesque," he conceded.
"More than that, Carl. It's not
just an outdoor museum. Real human beings live here. And the ones who
were before them, they stay real too. In, oh, Birger Jarl's Tower, the
Riddarholm Church, the shields in the House of Nobles, the Golden Peace
where Bellman drank and sang — It's going to be lonely in
space, Carl, so far from our dead."
"Nevertheless you're leaving."
"Yes. Not easily. My mother who
bore me, my father who took me by the hand and led me out to teach me
constellations. Did he know what he was doing to me that night?" She
drew a breath. "That's partly why I got in touch with you. I had to
escape from what I'm doing to them. If only for a single day."
"You need a drink," he said,
"and here we are."
The restaurant fronted on the
Great Marketplace. Between the surrounding steep facades you could
imagine how knights had clattered merrily across the paving stones. You
did not remember how the gutters ran with blood and heads were stacked
high during a certain winter week, for that was long past and men
seldom dwell on the hurts that befell other men. Reymont conducted
Lindgren to a table in a candlelit room which they had to themselves,
and ordered akvavit with beer chasers.
She matched him drink for
drink, though she had less mass and less practice. The meal that
followed was lengthy even by Scandinavian standards, with considerable
wine during it and considerable cognac afterward. He let her do most of
the talking.
— of a house near
Drottningholm, whose park and gardens were almost her own; sunlight
through windows, gleaming over burnished wood floors and on silver that
had been passed down for ten generations; a sloop on the lake, heeled
to the wind, her father at the tiller with a pipe in his teeth, her
hair blowing loose; monstrous nights at wintertime, and in their middle
that warm cave named Christmas; the short light nights of summer, the
balefires kindled on St. John's Eve that had once been lit to welcome
Baldr home from the underworld; a walk in the rain with a first
sweetheart, the air cool, drenched with water and odor of lilacs;
travels around Earth, the Pyramids, the Parthenon, Paris at sunset from
the top of Montparnasse, the Taj Mahal, Angkor Wat, the Kremlin, the
Golden Gate Bridge, yes, and Fujiyama, the Grand Canyon, Victoria
Falls, the Great Barrier Reef —
— of love and
merriment at home but discipline too, order, gravity in the presence of
strangers; music around, Mozart the dearest; a fine school, where
teachers and classmates brought a complete new universe exploding into
her awareness; the Academy, harder work than she had known she could
do, and how pleased she was to discover she was able; cruises through
space, to the planets, oh, she had stood on the snows of Titan with
Saturn overhead, stunned by beauty; always, always her kindred to
return to —
— in a good world,
its people, their doings, their pleasures all good; yes, there remained
problems, outright cruelties, but those could be solved in time through
reason and good will; it would be a joy to believe in some kind of
religion, since that would perfect the world by giving it ultimate
purpose, but in the absence of convincing proof she could still do her
best to help supply that meaning, help mankind move toward something
loftier —
— but no, she wasn't
a prig, he mustn't believe that; in fact, she often wondered if she
wasn't too hedonistic, a bit more liberated than was best; however, she
did get fun out of life without hurting anyone else, as far as she
could tell; she lived with high hopes.
Reymont poured the last coffee
for her. The waiter had finally brought the bill, though he seemed in
no more hurry to collect than most of his kind in Stockholm. "I except
that in spite of the drawbacks," Reynont said, "you'll manage to enjoy
our voyage."
Her voice had gotten a bit
slurred. Her eyes, regarding him, stayed bright and level. "I plan to,"
she declared, "That's the main reason I called you. Remember, during
training I urged you to come here for part of your furlough." By now
they were using the intimate pronoun.
Reymont drew on his cigar.
Smoking would be prohibited in space, to avoid overloading the life
support systems, but tonight he could still put a blue cloud in front
of him.
She leaned forward, laying a
hand over his free one on the table. "I was thinking ahead," she told
him. "Twenty-five men and twenty-five women. Five years in a metal
shell. Another five years if we turn back immediately. Even with
antisenescence treatments, a decade is a big piece out of a life."
He nodded.
"And of course we'll stay to
explore," she went on. "If that third planet is habitable, we'll stay
to colonize — forever — and we'll start having
children. Whatever we do, there are going to be liaisons. We'll pair
off."
He said, low lest it seem too
blunt: "You think you and I might make a couple?"
"Yes." Her tone strengthened.
"It may seem immodest of me, whether or not I am a spacewoman. But I'll
be busier than most, the first several weeks of travel especially. I
won't have time for nuances and rituals. It could end with me in a
situation I don't want. Unless I think ahead and make preparations. As
I'm doing."
He lifted her hand to his lips.
"I am deeply honored, Ingrid. Though we may be too unlike."
"No, I suspect that's what
draws me." Her palm curved around his mouth and slid down his cheek. "I
want to know you. You are more a man than any I've met before."
He counted money onto the bill.
It was the first time that she had seen him move not entirely steadily.
He ground out his cigar, watching it as he did. "I'm staying at a hotel
over on Tyska Brinken," he said. "Rather shabby."
"I don't mind," she answered.
"I doubt if I'll notice."
Chapter
2
Seen from one of the shuttles that brought her crew to her, Leonora
Christine resembled a dagger pointed at the stars.
Her hull was a conoid, tapering toward the bow. Its burnished
smoothness seemed ornamented rather than broken by the exterior
fittings. These were locks and hatches; sensors for instruments;
housings for the two boats that would make the planetfalls for which
she herself was not designed; and the web of the Bussard drive, now
folded flat. The base of the conoid was quite broad, since it contained
the reaction mass among other things; but the length was too great for
this to be particularly noticeable.
At the top of the dagger blade, a structure fanned out which
you might have imagined to be the guard of a basket hilt. Its rim
supported eight skeletal cylinders pointing aft. These were the thrust
tubes, that accelerated the reaction mass backward when the ship moved
at merely interplanetary speeds. The "basket" enclosed their controls
and power plant.
Beyond this, darker in hue, extended the haft of the dagger,
ending finally in an intricate pommel. The latter was the Bussard
engine; the rest was shielding against its radiation when it should be
activated.
Thus Leonora Christine, seventh, and
youngest of her class. Her outward simplicity was required by the
nature of her mission and was as deceptive as a human skin; inside, she
was very nearly as complex and subtle. The time since the basic idea of
her was first conceived, in the middle twentieth century, had included
perhaps a million man-years of thought and work directed toward
achieving the reality; and some of those men had possessed intellects
equal to any that had ever existed. Though practical experience and
essential tools had already been gotten when construction was begun
upon her, and though technological civilization had reached its
fantastic flowering (and finally, for a while, was not burdened by war
or the threat of war) — nevertheless, her cost was by no
means negligible, had indeed provoked widespread complaint. All this,
to send fifty people to one practically next-door star?
Right. That's the size of the
universe.
It loomed behind her, around
her, where she circled Earth. Staring away from sun and planet, you saw
a crystal darkness huger than you dared comprehend. It did not appear
totally black; there were light reflections within your eyeballs, if
nowhere else; but it was the final night, that our kindly sky holds
from us. The stars thronged it, unwinking, their brilliance
winter-cold. Those sufficiently luminous to be seen from the ground
showed their colors clear in space: steel-blue Vega, golden Capella,
ember of Betelgeuse. And if you were not trained, the lesser members of
the galaxy that had become visible were so many as to drown the
familiar constellations. The night was wild with suns.
And the Milky Way belted heaven
with ice and silver; and the Magellanic Clouds were not vague shimmers
but roiling and glowing; and the Andromeda galaxy gleamed sharp across
more than a million light-years; and you felt your soul drowning in
those depths and hastily pulled your vision back to the snug cabin that
held you.
Ingrid Lindgren entered the
bridge, caught a handhold, and poised in mid-air. "Reporting for duty,
Mr. Captain," she announced formally.
Lars Telander turned about to
greet her. In free fall, his gaunt and gawky figure became lovely to
watch, like a fish in water or a hawk on the wing. Otherwise he could
have been any gray-haired man of fifty-odd. Neither of them had
bothered to put insignia of rank on the coveralls that were standard
shipboard working attire.
"Good day," he said. "I trust
you had a pleasant leave."
"I certainly did." The color
mounted in her cheeks. "And you?"
"Oh … it was all
right. Mostly I played tourist, from end to end of Earth. I was
surprised at how much I had not seen before."
Lindgren regarded him with some
compassion. He floated alone by his command seat, one of three
clustered around a control and communications console at the middle of
the circular room. The meters, readout screens, indicators, and other
gear that crowded the bulkheads, already blinking and quivering and
tracing out scrawls, only emphasized his isolation. Until she came, he
had not been listening to anything except the murmur of ventilators or
the infrequent click of a relay.
"You have nobody whatsoever
left?" she asked.
"Nobody close." Telander's long
features crinkled in a smile. "Don't forget, as far as the Solar System
is concerned, I have almost counted a century. When last I visited my
home village in Dalarna, my brother's grandson was the proud father of
two adolescents. It was not to be expected that they would consider me
a near relative."
(He was born three years before
the first manned expedition departed for Alpha Centauri. He entered
kindergarten two years before the first maser messages from it reached
Farside Station on Luna. That set the life of an introverted,
idealistic child on trajectory. At age twenty-five, an Academy graduate
with a notable performance in the interplanetary ships, he was allowed
on the first crew for Epsilon Eridani. They returned twenty-nine years
later; but because of the time dilation, they had experienced just
eleven, including the six spent at the goal planets. The discoveries
they had made covered them with glory. The Tau Ceti ship was outfitting
when they came back. Telander could be the first officer if he was
willing to leave in less than a year. He was. Thirteen years of his own
went by before he returned, commander in place of a captain who had
died on a world of peculiar savageries. On Earth, the interval had been
thirty-one years. Leonora Christine was being
assembled in orbit. Who better than him for her master? He hesitated.
She was to start in barely three years. If he accepted, most of those
thousand days would be spent planning and preparing…. But
not to accept was probably not thinkable; and too, he walked as a
stranger on an Earth grown strange to him.)
"Let's get busy," he said. "I
assume Boris Fedoroff and his engineers rode up with you?"
She nodded. "You'll hear him on
the intercom after he's organized, he told me."
"Hm. He might have observed the
courtesy of notifying me of his arrival."
"He's in a foul mood. Sulked
the whole way from ground. I don't know why. Does it matter?"
"We are going to be together in
this hull for quite a while, Ingrid," Telander remarked. "Our behavior
will indeed matter."
"Oh, Boris will get over his
fit. I suppose he has a hangover, or some girl said no to him last
night, or something. He struck me during training as s rather
soft-hearted person."
"The psychoprofile indicates
it. Still, there are things — potentialities — in
each of us that no testing shows. You have to be yonder —"
Telander gestured at the hood of the optical periscope, as if it were
the remoteness that it watched — "before those develop, for
good or bad. And they do. They always do." He cleared his throat.
"Well. The scientific personnel are on schedule also?"
"Yes. They'll arrive in two
ferries, first at 1340 hours, second at 1500." Telander noted agreement
with the program clamped to the desk part of the console. Lindgren
added: "I don't believe we need that much interval between them."
"Safety margin," Telander
replied absently. "Besides, training or no, we'll need time to get that
many groundlubbers to their berths, when they can't handle themselves
properly in weightlessness."
"Carl can handle them,"
Lindgren said. "If need be, he can carry them individually, faster than
you'd credit till you saw him."
"Reymont? Our constable?"
Telander studied her fluttering lashes. "I know he's skilled in free
fall, and he'll come on the first ferry, but is he that good?"
"We visited L'Etoile de
Plaisir."
"Where?"
"A resort satellite."
"Hm, yes, that one. And you
played null-gee games?" Lindgren nodded, not looking at the captain. He
smiled again. "Among other things, no doubt."
"He'll be staying with me."
"Um-m-m…." Telander
robbed his chin. "To be honest, I'd rather have him in the cabin
already agreed on, in case of trouble among the, um, passengers. That's
what he's for, en route."
"I could join him," Lindgren
offered.
Telander shook his head. "No.
Officers must live in officer country. The theoretical reason, having
them next to bridge level, isn't the real one. You'll find out how
important symbols are, Ingrid, in the next five years." He shrugged.
"Well, the other cabins are only one deck abaft ours. I daresay he can
get to them soon enough if need be. Assuming your arranged roommate
doesn't mind a swap, have your wish, then."
"Thank you," she said low.
"I can't help being a little
surprised," Telander confessed. "He doesn't appear to me as the sort
you'd choose. Do you think the relationship will last?"
"I hope it will. He say she
wants it to." She broke from her confusion with a teasing attack: "What
about you? Have you made any commitments yet?"
"No. In time, doubtless, in
time. I'll be too busy at first. At my age these matters aren't that
urgent." Telander laughed, then grew earnest. "A propos time, we've
none to waste. Please carry out your inspections and —"
The ferry made rendezvous and
docked. Bond anchors extended to hold its stubby hull against the
larger curve of Leonora Christine. Her robots
— sensor-computer-effector units — directing the
terminal maneuvers caused airlocks to join in an exact kiss. More than
that would be demanded of them later. Both chambers being exhausted,
their outer valves swung back, enabling a plastic tube to make an
airtight seal. The locks were repressurized and checked for a possible
leak. When none was found, the inner valves opened.
Reymont unharnessed himself.
Floating free of his seat, he glanced down the length of the passenger
section. The American chemist, Norbert Williams, was unbuckling too.
"Hold it," Reymont commanded in English. While everyone knew Swedish,
some did not know it well. For scientists, English and Russian remained
the chief international tongues. "Keep your places. I told you at the
port, I'll escort you singly to your cabins."
"You needn't bother with me,"
Williams answered. "I can get around weightless okay." He was short,
round-faced, sandy-haired, given to colorful garments and to speaking
rather loudly.
"You all had some drill in it,"
Reymont said. "But that's not the same thing as getting the right
reflexes built in through experience."
"So we flounder a bit. So what?"
"So an accident is possible.
Not probable, I agree, but possible. My duty is to help forestall such
possibilities. My judgment is that I should conduct you to your berths,
where you will remain until further notice."
Williams reddened, "See here,
Reymont —"
The constable's eyes, which
were gray, turned full upon him. "That's a direct order," Reymont said,
word by word. "I have the authority. Let us not begin this voyage with
a breach."
Williams resecured himself. His
motions were needlessly energetic, his lips clamped tight together. A
few drops of sweat broke off his forehead and bobbed in the aisles; the
overhead fluoro made them sparkle.
Reymont spoke by intercom to
the pilot. That man would not board the ship, but would boost off as
soon as his human cargo was discharged. "Do you mind if we unshutter?
Give our friends something to look at while they wait?"
"Go ahead," said the voice. "No
hazard indicated. And … they won't see Earth again for a
spell, will they?"
Reymont announced the
permission. Hands eagerly turned cranks on the spaceward side of the
boat, sliding back the plates that covered the glasyl viewpoints.
Reymont got busy with his shepherding.
Fourth in line was Chi-Yuen
Ai-Ling. She had twisted about in her safety webbing to face the port
entirely. Her fingers were pressed against its surface. "Now you,
please," Reymont said. She didn't respond. "Miss Chi-Yuen." He tapped
her shoulder. "You're next."
"Oh!" She might have been
shaken out of a dream. Tears stood in her eyes. "I, I beg your pardon.
I was lost —"
The linked spacecraft were
coming into another dawn. Light soared over Earth's immense horizon,
breaking in a thousand colors from maple-leaf scarlet to peacock blue.
Momentarily a wing of zodiacal radiance could be seen, like a halo over
the rising fire-disk. Beyond were the stars and a crescent moon. Below
was the planet, agleam with her oceans, her clouds where rain and
thunder walked, her green-brown-snowy continents and jewel-box dries.
You saw, you felt, that this world lived.
Chi-Yuen fumbled with her
buckles. Her hands looked too thin for them. "I hate to stop watching,"
she whispered in French. "Rest well there, Jacques."
"You'll be free to observe on
the ship screens, once we've commenced acceleration," Reymont told her
in the same language.
The fact that he spoke it
startled her back to ordinariness. "Then we will be going away," she
said, but with a smile. Her mood had evidently been more ecstatic than
elegiac.
She was small, frail-boned, her
figure seeming a boy's in the high-collared tunic and wide-cut slacks
of the newest Oriental mode. Men tended to agree, however, that she had
the most enchanting face aboard, coifed in shoulder-length blue-black
hair. When she spoke Swedish, the trace of Chinese intonation that she
gave its natural lilt made it a song.
Reymont helped her unstrap and
laid an arm around her waist. He didn't bother with shuffling along in
bondsole shoes. Instead, he pushed one foot against the chair and flew
down the aisle. At the lock he seized a handhold, swung through an arc,
gave himself a fresh shove, and was inside the starship. In general,
those whom he escorted relaxed; it was easier for him to carry them
passive than to contend with their clumsy efforts to help. But Chi-Yuen
was different. She knew how. Their movements turned into a swift,
swooping dance. After all, as a planetologist she had had a good deal
of experience with free fall.
Their flight was not less
exhilarating for being explainable.
The companionway from the
airlock ran through concentric layers of storage decks: extra shielding
and armor for the cylinder at the axis of the ship which housed
personnel. Elevators could be operated there, to carry heavy loads
forward or aft under acceleration. But probably the stairs which
spiraled through wells parallel to the elevator shafts would see more
use. Reymont and Chi-Yuen took one of these to get from the
center-of-mass deck devoted to electrical and gyroscopic machinery,
bow-ward to the living quarters. Weightless, they hauled themselves
along the stair rail never touching a step. At the speed they acquired,
centrifugal and Coriolis forces made them somewhat dizzy, like a mild
drunkenness bringing forth laughter. "And ay-round we go ay-gain
… whee!"
The cabins for those other than
officers opened on two corridors which flanked a row of bathrooms. Each
compartment was two meters high and four square; it had two doors, two
closets, two built-in dressers with shelves above, and two folding
beds. These last could be slid together on tracks to form one, or be
pushed apart. In the second case, it then became possible to lower a
screen from the overhead and thus turn the double room into two singles.
"That was a trip to write about
in my diary. Constable." Chi-Yuen clutched a handhold and leaned her
forehead against the cool metal. Mirth still trembled on her mouth.
"Who are you sharing this
with?" Reymont asked.
"For the present, Jane Sadler."
Chi-Yuen opened her eyes and let them glint at him. "Unless you have a
different idea?"
"Heh? Uh … I'm with
Ingrid Lindgren."
"Already?" The mood dropped
from her. "Forgive me. I should not pry."
"No, I'm the one who owes the
apology," he said. "Making you wait here with nothing to do, as if you
couldn't manage in free fall."
"You can't make exceptions."
Chi-Yuen was altogether serious again. She extended her bed, floated
onto it, and started harnessing in. "I want to lie awhile alone anyway
and think."
"About Earth?"
"About many things. We are
leaving more than most of us have yet understood, Charles Reymont. It
is a kind of death — followed by resurrection, perhaps, but
nonetheless a death."
Chapter
3
"— zero!"
The ion drive came to life. No man could have gone behind its
thick shielding to watch it and survived. Nor could he listen to it, or
feel any vibration of its power. It was too efficient for that. In the
so-called engine room, which was actually an electronic nerve center,
men did hear the faint throb of pumps feeding reaction mass from the
tanks. They hardly noticed, being intent on the meters, displays,
readouts, and code signals which monitored the system. Boris Fedoroff's
hand was never distant from the primary cutoff switch. Between him and
Captain Telander in the command bridge flowed a mutter of observations.
It was not necessary to Leonora Christine. Far
less sophisticated craft than she could operate themselves. And she was
in fact doing so. Her intermeshing built-in robots worked with more
speed and precision — more flexibility, even, within the
limits of their programming — than mortal flesh could hope
for. But to stand by was a necessity for the men themselves.
Elsewhere, the sole direct
proof of motion that those had who lay in their cabins was a return of
weight. It was not much, under one tenth gee, but it gave them an "up"
and "down" for which their bodies were grateful. They released
themselves from their beds. Reymont announced over the hall intercom:
"Constable to personnel off watch. You may move around ad
libitum — forward of your deck, that is."
Sarcastically: "You may recall that an official good-by ceremony,
complete with benediction, will be broadcast at Greenwich noon. We'll
screen it in the gymnasium for those who care to watch."
Reaction mass entered the fire
chamber. Thermonuclear generators energized the furious electric arcs
that stripped those atoms down to ions; the magnetic fields that
separated positive and negative particles; the forces that focused them
into beams; the pulses that lashed them to ever higher velocities as
they sped down the rings of the thrust tubes, until they emerged
scarcely less fast than light itself. Their blast was invisible. No
energy was wasted on flames. Instead, everything that the laws of
physics permitted was spent on driving Leonora Christine
outward.
A vessel her size could not
accelerate by this means like a Patrol cruiser. That would have
demanded more fuel than she could hold, who must carry half a hundred
people, and their necessities for ten or fifteen years, and their tools
for satisfying scientific curiosity after they arrived, and (if the
data beamed by the instrumented probe which had preceded her did
actually mean that the third planet of Beta Virginis was habitable) the
supplies and machines whereby man could begin to take a new world for
himself. She spiraled slowly out of Earth orbit. The dwellers within
her had ample chances to stand at her viewscreens and watch home
dwindle among the stars.
There was no space to spare in
space. Every cubic centimeter inside the hull must work. Yet persons
intelligent and sensitive enough to adventure out here would have gone
crazy in a "functional" environment. Thus far the bulkheads were bare
metal and plastic. But the artistically talented had plans. Reymont
noticed Emma Glassgold, molecular biologist, in a corridor, sketching
out a mural that would show forest around a sunlit lake. And from the
start, the residential and recreational decks were covered with a
material green and springy as grass. The air gusting from the
ventilators was more than purified by the plants of the hydroponic
section and the colloids of the Darrell balancer. It went through
changes of temperature, ionization, odor. At present it smelted like
fresh clover — with an appetizing whiff added if you passed
the galley, since gourmet food compensates for many deprivations.
Similarly, commons was a warren
occupying a whole deck. The gymnasium, which doubled as theater and
assembly room, was its largest unit. But even the mess was of a size to
let diners stretch their legs and relax. Nearby were hobby shops, a
clubroom for sedentary games, a swimming pool, tiny gardens and bowers.
Some of the ship's designers had argued against putting the dream boxes
on this level. Should folk come here for fun be reminded by the door of
that cabin that they must have ghostly substitutes for the realities
they had left behind them? But the process was, after all, a sort of
recreation too; having it in sick bay might be unpleasant, and that was
the sole alternative.
There was no immediate need for
that apparatus. The journey was still young. A slightly hysterical
gaiety filled the atmosphere. Men roughhoused, women chattered,
laughter was inordinate at mealtimes, and the frequent dances were
occasions of heavy flirtation. Passing the gym, which stood open,
Reymont saw a handball match in progress. At low gee, when you could
virtually walk up a wall, the action got spectacular.
He continued to the pool. In an
alcove off the principal corridor, it could hold several without
crowding; but at this hour, 2100, no one was using it. Jane Sadler
stood at the edge, frowning thoughtfully. She was a Canadian, a
biotechnician in the organocycle department. Physically she was a big
brunette, her features ordinary but the rest of her shown to high
advantage by shorts and tee shirt.
"Troubles?" Reymont asked.
"Oh, hullo. Constable," she
responded in English. "Nothing wrong, except I can't figure out how
best to decorate in here. I'm supposed to make recommendations to my
committee."
"Didn't they plan on a Roman
bath effect?"
"Uh-huh. That covers a lot of
ground, though. Nymphs and satyrs, or poplar groves, or temple
buildings, or what?" She laughed. "Hell with it. I'll suggest N
& S. ff the job gets botched, it can always be done over, till
we run out of paint. Give us something further to do."
"Who can keep going five years
— and five more, if we have to return — on
hobbies?" Reymont said slowly.
Sadler laughed again. "Nobody.
Don't fret. Everyone aboard has a full program of work lined up,
whether it be theoretical research or writing the Great Space Age Novel
or caching Greek in exchange for tenser calculus."
"Of course. I've seen the
proposals. Are they adequate?"
"Constable, do relax! The other
expeditions made it, more or less sanely. Why not us? Take your swim."
She grinned wider. "While you're at it, soak your head."
Reymont imitated a smile,
removed his clothes, and hung them on a rack. She whistled. "Hey," she
said, "I hadn't seen you before in less'n a coverall. That's some
collection of biceps and triceps and things you pack around.
Calisthenics?"
"In my job, I'd better keep
fit," he replied uncomfortably.
"Some offwatch when you've
nothing else to do," she suggested, "come around to my cabin and
exercise me."
"I'd enjoy that," he said,
looking her up and down, "but at present Ingrid and I —"
"Yeah, sure. I was kidding,
sort of, anyway. Seems like I'll be making a steady liaison soon
myself."
"Really? Who, if I may ask?"
"Elof Nilsson." She lifted a
hand. "No, don't say it. He's not exactly Adonis. His manners aren't
always the sweetest. But he's got a wonderful mind, the best in the
ship, I suspect. You don't get bored listening to him." Her gaze
shifted aside. "He's pretty lonely too."
Reymont stood quiet for a
moment. "And you're pretty fine, Jane," he said. "Ingrid's meeting me
here. Why don't you join us?"
She cocked her head. "By golly,
you do keep a human being hidden under that policeman. Don't worry, I
won't let out your secret. And I won't stay, either. Privacy's hard to
come by. You two use this while you've got it."
She waved and left. Reymont
peered after her and back down into the water. He was standing thus
when Lindgren arrived.
"Sorry I'm late," she said.
"Beamcast from Luna. Another idiotic inquiry about how things are going
for us. I'll be positively glad when we get out into the Big Deep." She
kissed him. He hardly responded. She stepped back, trouble clouding her
face. "What's the matter, darling?"
"Do you think I'm too stiff?"
he blurted.
She had no instant reply. The
fluorolight gleamed on her tawny hair, a ventilator's breeze ruffled it
a little, the noise of the ball game drifted through the entrance arch.
Finally: "What makes you wonder?"
"A remark. Well meant, but a
slight shock just the same."
Lindgren frowned. "I've told
you before, you've been heavier-handed than I quite liked, the few
times you've had to make somebody toe the line. No one aboard is a
fool, a malingerer, or a saboteur."
"Should I not have told Norbert
Williams to shut up the other day, when he started denouncing Sweden at
mess? Things like that can have a rather nasty end result." Reymont
laid a clenched fist in the other palm. "I know," he said.
"Military-type discipline isn't needed, isn't desirable …
yet. But I've seen so much death, Ingrid. The time could come when we
won't survive, unless we can act as one and jump to a command."
"Well, conceivably on Beta
Three," Lindgren admitted. "Though the robot didn't send any data
suggesting intelligent life. At most, we might encounter savages armed
with spears — who would probably not be hostile to us."
"I was dunking of hazards like
storms, landslips, diseases, God knows what on an entire world that
isn't Earth. Or a disaster before we get there. I'm not convinced
modern man knows everything about the universe."
"We've covered this ground too
often."
"Yes. It's old as space flight;
older. That doesn't make it less real." Reymont groped for sentences.
"What I'm trying to do is — I'm not sure. This situation is
not like any other I was ever in. I'm trying to … somehow
… keep alive some idea of authority. Beyond simple obedience
to the articles and the officers. Authority which has the right to
command anything, to command a man to death, if that's needful for
saving the rest —" He stared into her puzzlement. "No," he
sighed, "you don't understand. You can't. Your world was always good."
"Maybe you can explain it to
me, if you say it enough different ways." She spoke softly. "And maybe
I can make a few things clear to you. It won't be easy. You've never
taken off your armor, Carl. But we'll try, shall we?" She smiled and
slapped the hardness of his thigh. "Right now, though, silly, we're
supposed to be off duty. What about that swim?"
She slipped out of her
garments. He watched her approach him. She liked strenuous sports and
lying under a sun lamp afterward. It showed in full breasts and hips,
slim waist, long supple limbs, a tan against which her blondness stood
vivid. "Bozhe moi, you're beautiful!" he said low
in his throat.
She pirouetted. "At your
service, kind sir — if you can catch me!" She made four
low-gravity leaps to the end of the diving board and plunged cleanly
off it. Her descent was dreamlike slow, a chance for aerial ballet. The
splash when she struck made lingering lacy patterns.
Reymont entered directly from
the poolside. Swimming was hardly different under this acceleration.
The thrust of muscles, the cool silken flowing of water, would be the
same at the galaxy's rim, and beyond. Ingrid Lindgren had said once
that such truths made her doubt she would ever become really homesick.
Man's house was the whole cosmos.
Tonight she frolicked, ducking,
dodging, slipping from his grasp again and again. Their laughter echoed
between the walls. When at last he cornered her, she embraced his neck
in turn, laid her lips to his ear and whispered: "Well, you did catch
me."
"M-m-m-hm." Reymont kissed the
hollow between shoulder and throat. Through the wetness he smelled live
girlflesh. "Grab our clothes and we'll go."
He carried her six kilos easily
on one arm. When they were alone in the stairwell, he caressed her with
his free hand. She kicked her heels and giggled. "Sensualist!"
"We'll soon be back under a
whole gee," he reminded her, and started bounding down to officer level
at a speed that would have broken necks on Earth.
— Later she raised
herself on an elbow and met his eyes with hers. She had set the lights
dim. Shadows moved behind her, around her, making her doubly gold- and
amber-hued. With a finger she traced his profile.
"You're a wonderful lover,
Carl," she murmured. "I've never had a better."
"I'm fond of you too," he said.
A hint of pain touched brow and
voice. "But that's the only time you really give of yourself. And do
you, altogether, even then?"
"What is there to give?" His
tone roughened. "I've told you about things that happened to me in the
past."
"Anecdotes. Episodes. No
connection, no — There at die pool, for the first time, you
offered me a glimpse of what you are. The tiniest possible glimpse, and
you hid it away at once. Why? I wouldn't use the insight to hurt you,
Carl."
He sat up, scowling. "I don't
know what you mean. People learn about each other, living together. You
know I admire classical artists like Rembrandt and Bonestell, and don't
care for abstractions or chromodynamics. I'm not very musical. I have a
barrack-room sense of humor. My politics are conservative. I prefer
tournedos to filet mignon but wish the culture tanks could supply us
with either more often. I play a wicked game of poker, or would if
there were any point in it aboard this ship. I enjoy working with my
hands and am good at it, so I'll be helping build the laboratory
facilities once that project gets organized. I'm currently trying to
read War and Peace but keep falling asleep." He
smote the mattress. "What more do you need?"
"Everything," she answered
sadly. She gestured around the room. Her closet happened to stand open,
revealing me innocent vanity of her best gowns. The shelves were filled
with her private treasures, to the limit of her mass allowance
— a battered old copy of Bellman, a lute, a dozen pictures
waiting their turn to be hung, smaller portraits other kinfolk, a Hopi
kachina doll … "You brought nothing personal."
"I've traveled light through
life."
"On a hard road, I think. Maybe
someday you'll dare trust me." She drew close to him. "Never mind now,
Carl. I don't want to harass you. I want you in me again. You see, this
has stopped being a matter of friendship and convenience. I've fallen
in love with you."
When the appropriate speed was
reached, lining out of Earth's domain toward that sign of the zodiac
where the Virgin ruled, Leonora Christine went
free. Thrusters cold, she became another comet. Gravitation alone
worked upon her, bending her path, diminishing her haste.
It had been allowed for. But
the effect must be kept minimal. The uncertainties of interstellar
navigation were too large as was, without adding an extra factor. So
the crew — the professional spacemen, as distinguished from
the scientific and technical personnel — worked under a time
limit.
Boris Fedoroff led a gang
outside. Their job was tricky. You needed skill to labor in
weightlessness and not exhaust yourself trying to control tools and
body. The best of men could still let both bondsoles lose their grip on
the ship frame. You would float off, cursing, nauseated by spin forces,
until you brought up at the end of your lifeline and hauled yourself
back. Lighting was poor: unshielded glare in the sun, ink blackness in
shadow except for what puddles of undiffused radiance were cast by
helmet lamps. Hearing was no better. Words had trouble getting through
the sounds of harsh breath and muttering blood, when these were
confined in a spacesuit, and through the cosmic seething in radio
earplugs. For lack of air purification comparable to the ship's,
gaseous wastes were imperfectly removed. They accumulated over hours
until you toiled in a haze of sweat smell, water vapor, carbon dioxide,
hydrogen sulfide, acetone … and your undergarments clung
sodden to your skin … and you looked wearily through your
faceplate at the stars, with a band of headache behind your eyes.
Nevertheless, the Bussard
module, the hilt and pommel of the dagger, was detached. Maneuvering it
away from the vessel was tough, dangerous labor. Without friction or
weight, it kept every gram of its considerable inertial mass. It was as
hard to stop as to set in motion.
Finally it trailed aft on a
cable. Fedoroff checked the positioning himself. "Done," he grunted. "I
hope." His men clipped their lifelines to the cable. He did likewise,
spoke to Telander in the bridge, and cast off. The cable was reeled
back inboard, taking the engineers along.
They had need for haste. While
the module would follow the hull on more or less the same orbit,
differential influences were acting. They would soon cause an
undesirable shift in relative alignments. But everyone must be inside
before the next stage of the process. The forces about to be
established would not be kind to living organisms.
Leonora Christine
extended her scoopfield webs. They glistened in the sunlight, silver
across starry black. From afar she might have suggested a spider, one
of those adventurous little arachnids that went flying off with kites
made of dewy silk. She was not, after all, anything big or important in
the universe.
Yet what she did was awesome
enough on the human scale. Her interior power plant sent energy
coursing into the scoopfield generators. From their controlling webwork
sprang a field of magnetohydrodynamic forces — invisible but
reaching across thousands of kilometers; a dynamic interplay, not a
static configuration, but maintained and adjusted with nigh absolute
precision; enormously strong but even more enormously complex.
The forces siezed the trailing
Bussard unit, brought it into micrometrically exact position with
respect to the hull, locked it in place. Monitors verified that
everything was in order. Captain Telander made a final check with the
Patrol on Luna, received his go-ahead, and issued a command. From then
on, the robots took over.
Low acceleration on ion thrust
had built up a modest outward speed, measurable in tens of kilometers
per second. It sufficed to start the star-drive engine. The power
available increased by orders of magnitude. At a full one gravity, Leonora
Christine began to move!
Chapter
4
In one of the garden rooms stood a viewscreen tuned to
Outside. Sable and diamonds were startlingly framed by ferns, orchids,
overarching fuchsia and bougainvillea. A fountain tinkled and
glittered. The air was warmer here than in most places aboard, moist,
full of perfumes and greenness.
None of it quite did away with the underlying pulse of driving
energies. Bussard systems had not been developed to the smoothness of
electric rockets. Always, now, the ship whispered and shivered. The
vibration was faint, on the very edge of awareness, but it wove its way
through metal, bones, and maybe dreams.
Emma Glassgold and Chi-Yuen Ai-Ling sat on a bench among the
flowers. They had been walking about, feeling their way toward
friendship. Since entering the garden, however, they had fallen silent.
Abruptly Glassgold winced and pulled her vision from the
screen. "It was a mistake to come here," she said. "Let us go."
"Why, I find it charming," the planetologist answered,
surprised. "An escape from bare walls that we'll need years to make
sightly."
"No escape from that." Glassgold pointed at the screen. It
happened at the moment to be scanning aft and so held an image of the
sun, shrunken to the brightest of the stars.
Chi-Yuen regarded her narrowly. The molecular biologist was
likewise small and dark-haired, but her eyes were round and blue, her
face round and pink, her body a trifle on the dumpy side. She dressed
plainly whether working or not; and without snubbing social activities,
she had hitherto been observer rather than participant.
"In — how long? — a couple of weeks," she
continued, "we have reached the marches of the Solar System. Every day
— no, every twenty-four hours; ‘day' and
‘night' mean nothing any longer — each twenty-four
hours we gain 845 kilometers per second in speed."
"A shrimp like me is grateful to have full Earth weight,"
Chi-Yuen said with attempted lightness.
"Don't misunderstand me," Glassgold replied hastily. "I won't
scream, ‘Turn back! Turn back!'" She tried a joke of her own.
"That would be too disappointing to the psychologists who checked me
out." The joke dissipated. "It is only … I find I require
time … to get used, piece by piece, to this."
Chi-Yuen nodded. She, in her newest and most colorful
cheong-sam — among her hobbies was making over her clothes
— could almost have belonged to a different species from
Glassgold. But she patted the other woman's hand and said: "You are not
unique, Emma. It was expected. People begin to realize with more than
brains, in their whole beings, what it means to be on such a voyage."
"You don't seem bothered."
"No. Not since Earth
disappeared in the sun glare. And not unbearably before. It hurt to say
good-by. But I've had experience in that. One learns how to look
forward."
"I am ashamed," Glassgold said.
"When I have had so much more than you. Or has that made me soft in the
spirit?"
"Have you really?" Chi-Yuen's
question was muted.
"Why … yes. Haven't
I? Or don't you recall? My parents were always well-to-do. Father is an
engineer in a desalinization plant, Mother an agronomist. The Negev is
beautiful when the crops are growing and calm, friendly, not hectic
like Tel Aviv or Haifa. Though I did enjoy studying at the university.
I had chances to travel, with good companions. My work went fine. Yes,
I was lucky."
"Then why did you enlist for
Beta Three?"
"Scientific interest
… a whole new planetary evolution —"
"No, Emma." The raven's wing
tresses stirred as Chi-Yuen shook her head. "The earlier starships
brought back data to keep research going for a hundred years, right on
Earth. What are you running from?"
Glassgold bit her lip. "I
shouldn't have pried," Chi-Yuen apologized. "I was hoping to help."
"I will tell you," Glassgold
said. "I have a feeling you might indeed help. You are younger than me,
but you have seen more." Her fingers knitted together in her lap. "I'm
not quite sure, though, myself. How did the cities begin to seem vulgar
and empty? And when I went home to visit my people, the countryside
seemed smug and empty. I thought I might find … a purpose?
… out here. I don't know. I applied for the berth on
impulse. When I was called for serious testing, my parents made a fuss
till I could not back down. And yet we were always a close family. It
was such a pain leaving them. My big, confident father, he was suddenly
little and old."
"Was a man involved too?"
Chi-Yuen asked. "I'll tell you, because it's no secret — he
and I were engaged, and everything about this crew that was ever on
public record went into the dossiers — there was for me."
"A fellow student," Glassgold
said humbly. "I loved him. I still do. He hardly knew I existed."
"Not uncommon," Chi-Yuen
answered. "One gets over it, or else turns it into a sickness. You're
healthy in the head, Emma. What you need is to come out of your shell.
Mix with your shipmates. Care about them. Get out of your cabin for a
while and into a man's."
Glassgold flushed. "I don't
hold with those practices."
Chi-Yuen's brows lifted. "Are
you a virgin? We can't afford that, if we're to start a new race on
Beta Three. The genetic material is scarce at best."
"I want a decent marriage,"
Glassgold said with a flick of anger, "and as many children as God
gives me. But they will know who their father is. It doesn't hurt if I
don't play any ridiculous game of musical beds while we travel. We have
enough girls aboard who do."
"Like me." Chi-Yuen was
unruffled. "No doubt stable relationships will evolve. Meanwhile, now
and then, why not give and get a few moments of pleasure?"
"I'm sorry," Glassgold said. "I
shouldn't criticize private matters. Especially when lives have been as
different as yours and mine."
"True. I don't agree that mine
was less fortunate than yours. On the contrary."
"What?" Glassgold's mouth fell
open. "You can't be serious!"
Chi-Yuen smiled. "You have only
learned the surface of my past, Emma, if that. I can guess what you're
thinking. My country divided, impoverished, spastic from the aftermath
of revolutions and civil wars. My family cultured and tradition-minded
but poor with the desperate poverty that none except aristocrats fallen
on evil times know. Their sacrifices to keep me in the Sorbonne, when
the chance came. After I got my degree, the hard work and sacrifice I
made in return, helping them get back on their feet." She turned her
face to the ebbing light of Sol and added most quietly: "About my man.
We, too, were students together, in Paris. Later, as I said, I must
often be away from him because of work. Finally he went to visit my
parents in Peking, I was to join him as soon as possible, and we would
be married, in law and sacrament as well as in fact. A riot happened.
He was killed."
"Oh, my dear —"
Glassgold began.
"That's the surface," Chi-Yuen
interrupted. "The surface. Don't you see, I also had a loving home,
perhaps more than you did, because at the end they understood me so
well that they didn't resist my leaving them forever. I saw a lot of
the world, more than can be seen traveling carefully by first class. I had
my Jacques. And others, before, afterward, as he would have wanted. I'm
outward bound with no regrets and no pain that won't heal. The luck is
mine, Emma."
Glassgold did not respond with
words.
Chi-Yuen took her by the hand
and stood up. "You must break free of yourself," the planetologist
said. "In the long run, only you can teach you how to do that. But
maybe I can help a little. Come down to my cabin. We'll make you a gown
that does you justice. The Covenant Day party will be soon, and I
intend for you to have fun."
Consider: a single light-year
is an inconceivable abyss. Denumerable but inconceivable. At an
ordinary speed — say, a reasonable pace for a car in
megalopolitan traffic, two kilometers per minute — you would
consume almost nine million years in crossing it. And in Sol's
neighborhood, the stars averaged some nine light-years apart. Beta
Virginis was thirty-two distant.
Nevertheless, such spaces could
be conquered. A ship accelerating continuously at one gravity would
have traveled half a light-year in slightly less than one year of time.
And she would be moving very near the ultimate velocity, three hundred
thousand kilometers per second.
Practical problems arose. Where
was the mass-energy to do this coming from? Even in a Newtonian
universe, the thought of a rocket, carrying that much fuel along from
the start, would be ludicrous. Still more so was it in the true,
Einsteinian cosmos, where the mass of ship and payload increased with
speed, climbing toward infinity as that speed approached light's.
But fuel and reaction mass were
there in space! It was pervaded with hydrogen. Granted, the
concentration was not great by terrestrial standards: about one atom
per cubic centimeter in the galactic vicinity of Sol. Nevertheless,
this made thirty billion atoms per second, striking every square
centimeter of the ship's cross section, when she approximated light
velocity. (The figure was comparable at earlier stages of her voyage,
since the interstellar medium was denser close to a star.) The energies
were appalling. Megaroentgens of hard radiation would be released by
impact; and less than a thousand r within an hour are fatal. No
material shielding would help. Even supposing it impossibly thick to
start with, it would soon be eroded away.
However, in the days of Leonora
Christine non-material means were available:
magnetohydrodynamic fields, whose pulses reached forth across millions
of kilometers to seize atoms by their dipoles — no need for
ionization — and control their streaming. These fields did
not serve passively, as mere armor. They deflected dust, yes, and all
gases except the dominant hydrogen. But this latter was forced aft
— in long curves that avoided the hull by a safe margin
— until it entered a vortex of compressing, kindling
electromagnetism centered on the Bussard engine.
The ship was not small. Yet she
was the barest glint of metal in that vast web of forces which
surrounded her. She herself no longer generated them. She had initiated
the process when she attained minimum ramjet speed; but it became too
huge, too swift, until it could only be created and sustained by
itself. The primary thermonuclear reactors (a separate system would be
used to decelerate), the venturi tubes, the entire complex which thrust
her was not contained inboard. Most of it was not material at all, but
a resultant of cosmic-scale vectors. The ship's control devices, under
computer direction, were not remotely analogous to autopilots. They
were like catalysts which, judiciously used, could affect the course of
those monstrous reactions, could build them up, in time slow them down
and snuff them out … but not fast.
Starlike burned the hydrogen
fusion, aft of the Bussard module that focused the electromagnetism
which contained it. A titanic gas-laser effect aimed photons themselves
in a beam whose reaction pushed the ship forward — and which
would have vaporized any solid body it struck. The process was not 100
per cent efficient. But most of the stray energy went to ionize the
hydrogen which escaped nuclear combustion. These protons and electrons,
together with the fusion products, were also hurled backward by the
force fields, a gale of plasma adding its own increment of momentum.
The process was not steady.
Rather, it shared the instability of living metabolism and danced
always on the same edge of disaster. Unpredictable variations occurred
in the matter content of space. The extent, intensity, and
configuration of the force fields must be adjusted accordingly
— a problem in? million factors which only a computer could
solve fast enough. Incoming data and outgoing signals traveled at light
speed: finite speed, requiring a whole three and a third seconds to
cross a million kilometers. Response could be fatally slow. This danger
would increase as Leonora Christine got so close
to ultimate velocity that time rates began measurably changing.
Nonetheless, week by week,
month by month, she moved on outward.
The multiple cyclings of matter
that turned biological wastes back into breathable air, potable water,
edible food, usable fiber, went so far as to maintain an equilibrium in
the ethyl alcohol aboard. Wine and beer were produced in moderation,
mainly for the table. The hard liquor ration was meager. But certain
people had included bottles in their personal baggage. Furthermore,
they could trade for the share of abstemious friends and save their own
issue until it sufficed for a special occasion.
No official rule, but evolving
custom, said that drinking outside the cabins took place in the mess.
To promote sociability, this room held several small tables rather than
a single long one. Hence, between meals, it could double as a club.
Some of the men built a bar at one end to dispense ice and mixers.
Others made roll-down curtains for the bulkheads, so that the decorous
murals could be hidden during boozing hours behind scenes a little more
ribald. A taper generally kept background music going, cheerful stuff,
anything from sixteenth-century galliards to the latest asteroid ramble
received from Earth.
On a particular date at about
2000 hours, the club stood empty. A dance was scheduled in the gym.
Most off-duty personnel who wished to attend it — the
majority — were getting dressed. Garments, all ceremony, were
becoming terribly important. Machinist Johann Freiwald shone in a gilt
tunic and silvercloth trews that a lady had made for him. She wasn't
ready yet, nor was the orchestra, so he allowed Elof Nilsson to lead
him to the bar.
"Can we not talk business
tomorrow, though?" he asked. He was a large, amiable young man,
square-featured, his scalp shining pink through close-cropped blond
hair.
"I want to discuss this with
you at once, while it's new in my mind," said Nilsson's raspy voice,
"It came to me in a flash as I was changing clothes." His appearance
bore him out. "Before carrying my thought further, I wish to check the
practicality."
"Jawohl,
if you're supplying the drink and we can keep it short."
The astronomer found his
personal bottle on the shelf, picked up a couple of glasses, and
started for a table. "I take water —" Freiwald began. The
other man didn't hear. "That's Nilsson for you," Freiwald told the
overhead. He tapped a pitcherful and brought it along.
Nilsson sat down, got out a
note pad, and started sketching. He was short, fat, grizzled, and ugly.
It was known that an intellectually ambitious father, in the ancient
university town Uppsala, had forced him to become a prodigy at the
expense of everything else. It was surmised that his marriage had been
the result of mutual desperation and had turned into a prolonged
catastrophe, for despite a child it dissolved the moment he got a
chance to go on this ship. Yet when he talked, not about the humanities
he failed to understand and hence disdained, but about his own subject
… then you forgot his arrogance and flatulence, you
remembered his observations which had finally proven the oscillating
universe, and you saw him crowned with stars.
"— unparalleled
opportunity to get some worthwhile readings. Only think what a baseline
we'll have: ten parsecs! Plus the ability to examine gamma-ray spectra
with less uncertainty, high precision, when they're red-shifted down to
less energetic photons. And more and more. Still, I'm not satisfied.
"I don't believe it's really
necessary for me to peer at an electronic image of the sky —
narrow, blurred, and degraded by noise, not to mention the damned
optical changes. We should mount mirrors outside the hull. The images
they catch could be led along light conductors to eyepieces,
photomultipliers, cameras inboard.
"No, don't say it. I'm well
aware that previous attempts to do this failed. One could build a
machine to go out through an airlock, shape the plastic backing for
such an instrument, and aluminize it. But induction effects of the
Bussard fields would promptly make the mirror into something
appropriate for a fun house in Gröna Lund. Yes.
"Now my idea is to print sensor
and feedback circuits into the plastic, controlling flexors that'll
automatically compensate these distortions as they occur. I would like
your opinion as to the feasibility of designing, testing, and producing
those flexors, Mr. Freiwald. Here, this is a rough drawing of what I
have in mind —"
Nilsson was interrupted. "Hey,
there you are, ol' buddy!" He and the machinist looked up. Williams
lurched toward them. The chemist held a bottle in his right hand, a
half-full tumbler in the left. His face was redder than usual and he
breathed heavily.
"Was zum Teufel?"
Freiwald exclaimed.
"English, boy," Williams said.
"Talk English tonight. ‘Merican style." He reached the table,
set his burdens down, and rested on it so hard it almost tipped over. A
powerful whisky smell hung around him. "You 'specially, Nilsson." He
pointed with an oscillant finger. "You talk American tonight, you
Swede. Hear me?"
"Please go elsewhere," the
astronomer said.
Williams plumped himself onto a
chair. He leaned forward on both elbows. "You don't know what day this
is," he said. "Do you?"
"I doubt you do, in your
present condition," Nilsson snapped, remaining with Swedish. "The date
is the fourth of July."
"R-r-r-right! Y' know what
‘at means? No?" Williams turned to Freiwald. "You know,
Heinie?"
"An, uh, anniversary?" the
machinist ventured.
"Right. Anniversary. How'd yuh
guess?" Williams lifted his glass. "Drink wi' me, you two. Been
collectin' f' today. Drink!"
Freiwald gave him a sympathetic
glance and clinked rims. "Prosit." Nilsson started
to say, "Skal," but set his own liquor down again
and glared.
"Fourth July," Williams said.
"Independence Day. My country. Wanted throw party. Nobody cared. One
drink with me, two maybe, then gotta go their goddam dance." He
regarded Nilsson for a while. "Swede," he declared slowly, "you'll
drink wi' me 'r I'll bust y'r teeth in."
Freiwald laid a muscular hand
on Williams' arm. The chemist tried to rise. Freiwald held him where he
was. "Be calm, please, Dr. Williams," the machinist requested mildly.
"If you want to celebrate your national day, why, we'll be glad to
toast it. Won't we, sir?" he added to Nilsson.
The astronomer clipped: "I know
what the matter is. I was told before we left, by a man who knew.
Frustration. He couldn't cope with modern management procedures."
"Goddam welfare state
bureaucracy," Williams hiccuped.
"He started dreaming of his
country's sovereign, imperial era," Nilsson went on. "He fantasized
about a free enterprise system that I doubt ever existed. He dabbled in
reactionary politics. When the Control Authority had to arrest several
high American officials on charges of conspiracy to violate the
Covenant —"
"I'd had a bellyful." Williams'
tone rose toward a shout. "‘Nother star. New world. Chance t'
be free. Even if I do have to travel with a pack o' Swedes."
"You see?" Nilsson grinned at
Freiwald. "He's nothing but a victim of the romantic nationalism that
our too orderly world has been consoling itself with, this past
generation. Pity he couldn't be satisfied with historical fiction and
bad epic poetry."
"Romantic!" Williams yelled. He
struggled fruitlessly in Freiwald's grip. "You pot-gutted
spindle-shanked owl-eyed freak, wha'd'you think it did to you? How'd it
feel, being built like that, when the other kids were playing Viking?
Your marriage washed out worse'n mine! And I did cope, you son of a
bitch, I was meet'n' my payroll, something you never had to do, you
— Lemme go an' we'll see who's a man here!"
"Please," Freiwald said. "Bitte.
Gentlemen." He was standing, now, to keep Williams held in the chair.
His gaze nailed Nilsson across the table. "And you, sir," he continued
sharply. "You had no right to bait him. You might have shown the
courtesy to toast his national day."
Nilsson seemed about to pull
intellectual rank. He broke off when Jane Sadler appeared. She had been
in the door for a couple of minutes, watching. Her expression made her
formal gown pathetic.
"Johann's telling you truth,
Elof," she said. "Better come along."
"And dance?" Nilsson gobbled.
"After this?"
"Especially after this." She
tossed her head. "I've grown pretty tired of you on your high horse,
dear. Shall we try to start fresh, or drop everything as of now?"
Nilsson muttered but rose and
offered her his arm. She was a little taller than he. Williams sat
slumped, struggling not to weep.
"I'll stay here awhile, Jane,
and see if I can't cheer him up," Freiwald whispered to her.
She gave him a troubled smile.
"You would, Johann." They had been together a few times before she took
up with Nilsson. "Thanks." Their glances lingered, each on each.
Nilsson shuffled his feet and coughed. "I'll see you later," she said,
and left.
Chapter
5
When Leonora Christine attained a
substantial fraction of light speed, its optical effects became clear
to the unaided sight. Her velocity and that of the rays from a star
added "vectorially; the result was aberration. Except for whatever lay
dead aft or ahead, the apparent position changed. Constellations grew
lopsided, grew grotesque, and melted, as their members crawled across
the dark. More and more, the stars thinned out behind the ship and
crowded before her.
Doppler effect operated simultaneously. Because she was
fleeing the light waves that overtook her from astern, to her their
length was increased and their frequency lowered. In like manner, the
waves into which her bow plunged were shortened and quickened. Thus,
the suns aft looked ever redder, those forward bluer.
On the bridge stood a compensating viewscope: the single one
aboard, elaborate as it was. A computer figured out continuously how
the sky would appear if you were motionless at this point in space, and
projected a simulacrum of it. The device was not for amusement or
comfort; it was a valuable navigational aid.
Clearly, though, the computer needed data on where the ship
really was and how fast she was traveling with respect to objects in
heaven. This was no simple thing to find out. Velocity —
exact speed, exact direction — varied with variations in the
interstellar medium and with the necessarily imperfect feedback to the
Bussard controls, as well as with time under acceleration. The shifts
from her calulated path were comparatively petty; but over astronomical
distances, any imprecisions could add up to a fatal sum. They must be
eliminated as they occurred.
Hence that neat, stocky, dark-bearded man, Navigation Officer
Auguste Boudreau, was among the few who had a full-time job en route
that was concerned with operating the ship. It did not quite require
him to revolve in a logical circle — find your position and
velocity so you can correct for optical phenomena so you can check your
position and velocity. Distant galaxies were his primary beacons;
statistical analysis of observations made on closer individual stars
gave him further data; he used the mathematics of successive
approximations.
This made him a collaborator of Captain Telander, who computed
and ordered the needful course changes, and of Chief Engineer Fedoroff,
who put them into execution. The task was smoothly handled. No one
sensed the adjustments, except as an occasional minute temporary
increase in the liminal throbbing of the ship, a similarly small and
transitory change in the acceleration vector, which felt as if the
decks had tilted a few degrees.
In addition, Boudreau and
Fedoroff tried to maintain contact with Earth. Leonora
Christine was still detectable by space-borne instruments in
the Solar System. Despite the difficulties created by her drive fields,
the Lunar maser beam could still reach her with inquiries,
entertainment, news, and personal greetings. She could still reply on
her own transmitter. In fact, such talk back and forth was expected to
become regular, once she was well established at Beta Virginis. Her
unmannned precursor had had no problem with sending information. It was
doing so at the present moment, although the ship could not receive
that and the crew intended to read its tapes when they arrived.
The present trouble was this:
Suns and planets are big, staid objects. They move through space at
reasonable speeds, seldom above fifty kilometers per second. And they
do not zigzag, however slightly. It is simple to predict where they
will be centuries from now, and aim a message beam accordingly. A
starship is something else. Men don't last long; they must hurry.
Aberration and Doppler shift affect radio too. Eventually the
transmissions from Luna would enter on frequencies that nothing aboard
the vessel could receive. Well before then, however, through one
unforeseeable factor or another, when travel time between maser
projector and ship stretched into months, the beam was sure to lose her.
Fedoroff, who was also the
communications officer, tinkered with detectors and amplifiers. He
strengthened the signals which he punched Solward, hoping they would
give clues to his future location. Though days might go by without a
break in the silence, he persevered. He was rewarded with success. But
the quality of reception was always poorer, the interval of it shorter,
the time till the next longer as Leonora Christine
entered the Big Deep.
Ingrid Lindgren pushed the
buzzer button. The cabins were sufficiently soundproofed that a knock
would never pass. There was no response. She tried again, drawing
another blank. She hesitated, frowning, shifting from foot to foot. At
length she laid hand on catch. The door wasn't locked. She opened it a
crack. Not looking through, she called softly, "Boris. Are you all
right?"
Sounds reached her, a creak, a
rustle, slow heavy footsteps. Fedoroff threw the door wide. "Oh,"
hesaid. "Good day."
She regarded him. He was a
burly man of medium stature, face broad and high in the cheekbones,
brown hair salted with gray although his biological age was a mere
forty-two. He hadn't shaved for several watches and wore nothing except
a robe, obviously thrown on this minute. "May I come in?" she requested.
"If you wish." He waved her
past him and closed the door. His half of the unit had been screened
off from the part currently occupied by Biosystems Chief Pereira. An
unmade bed filled most of it. A vodka bottle stood on the dresser.
"Pardon the mess," he said
indifferently. Lumbering past her: "Would you like a drink? I didn't
bring tumblers, but you needn't fear a pull on this. Nobody has
anything contagious." He chuckled, or rather rattled. "Where would
germs come from, here?"
Lindgren sat down on the edge
of the bed. "No, thanks," she replied. "I'm on duty."
"And I'm supposed to be. Yes."
Fedoroff loomed over her, slumping. "I informed the bridge I feel
indisposed and had better take a rest."
"Shouldn't Dr. Latvala examine
you?"
"What for? I'm physically
well." Fedoroff paused. "You came to make sure of me."
"Part of my job. I'll respect
your privacy. But you are a key man."
Fedoroff smiled. The expression
was as forced as the prior noise had been. "Don't worry," he said. "I
am not breaking down in the brain either." He reached for the bottle,
then withdrew his arm. "I am not even glugging myself into a stupor. It
is nothing except a … what do the Americans call it?
… a glow."
"Glows are best in company,"
Lindgren declared. After a moment: "I believe I will accept that drink."
Fedoroff gave her the bottle
and joined her on the bedside. She raised it to him. "Skal."
A scant amount went down her throat. She returned the bottle, and he
gave her "Zdoroviye." They sat in silence,
Fedoroff gazing at the bulkhead, until he stirred and said:
"Very well. Since you must
know. I wouldn't tell anyone else, especially not a woman. But I have
come to learn something about you, Ingrid … Gunnar's
daughter, is that correct?"
"Yes, Boris Ilyitch."
He gave her a glance and a more
nearly genuine smile. She sat relaxed, body curving out her coverall, a
hint of warmth and human odor around her. "I believe —" his
tongue fumbled — "I hope you will understand, and not repeat
what I tell you."
"I promise the silence. For
understanding, I can try."
He put elbows on knees, hands
straining against each other. "It is personal, you see," he said slowly
and not quite evenly. "Yet no great matter. I will be over it soon. It
is simple … that final cast we received … upset
me."
"The music?"
"Yes. Music. Signal-to-noise
ratio too low for television. Almost too low for sound. The last we
will get, Ingrid Gunnar's daughter, before we reach goal and start
receiving messages a generation old. I am certain it was the last.
Those few minutes, wavering, fading in and out, scarcely to hear
through the fire-crackle of stars and cosmic rays — when we
lost that music, I knew we would get no more."
Fedoroff's voice trailed off.
Lindgren waited.
He shook himself. "It happened
to be a Russian cradle song," he said. "My mother sang me to sleep with
it."
She laid a hand on his shoulder
and let it rest, feather-light.
"Do not think I am off on an
orgy of self-pity," he added in haste. "For a short while I remember my
dead too well. It will pass."
"Maybe I do understand," she
murmured.
He was on his second
interstellar trip. He had gone to Delta Pavonis. Probe data indicated
an Earthlike planet, and the expedition left with flying hopes. The
reality was so nightmarish that the survivors showed rare heroism in
remaining and studying for the minimum planned time. On their return,
they had experienced twelve years; but Earth had aged forty-three.
‘"I doubt if you do,
really." Fedoroff turned to confront her. "We expected people would
have died when we came home. We expected change. If anything, I was
overjoyed at first that I could recognize parts of my city —
moonlight on canals and river, domes and towers on Kazan Cathedral,
Alexander and Bucephalus rearing over the bridge that carries Nevsky
Prospect, the treasures in the Hermitage —" He looked back
away and shook his head wearily. "But the life itself. That was too
different. Meeting it was like, like seeing a woman one loved become a
slut." He fleered. "Exactly so! I worked in space for five years, as
much as I was able, research and development on improving the Bussard
engine, as you may remember. My main purpose was to earn the post I
have. We can hope for a fresh beginning on Beta Three."
His words grew barely audible:
"Then my mother's little song reached me. For the last time." He tilted
the bottle to his lips.
Lindgren gave him a minute or
two of silence before:
"Now I can see, Boris, in part,
why it hurt you so. I've studied a bit of sociohistory. In your
boyhood, people were less, well, less relaxed. They'd repaired the war
damage in most countries and brought population growth and civil
disorder under control. Now they were going on to new things,
imagination-staggering projects, on Earth as well as in space. Nothing
seemed impossible. At the core of their élan
was a spirit of hard work, patriotism, dedication. I suppose you had
two gods you served with a whole heart. Father Technics and Mother
Russia." Her hand slipped down to lie upon his. "You returned," she
said, "and nobody cared."
He nodded. Teeth caught at his
lower lip.
"Is that why you despise
today's women?" she asked.
He started. "No! Never!"
"Why, then, have none of your
liaisons lasted beyond a week or two — mostly a single
offwatch at a time?" she challenged him. "Why are you only at ease and
merry among men? I believe you don't care to know our half of the human
race except as bodies. You don't think there's anything else worth
knowing. And what you said a minute ago, about sluts —"
"I came from Delta Pavonis
wishing for a true wife," he answered as if being strangled.
Lindgren sighed. "Boris, mores
change. From my viewpoint, you grew up in a period of unreasonable
puritanism. But it was a reaction to an earlier easiness that had
perhaps gone too far; and earlier yet — No matter." She chose
her words with care. "The fact is, man has never stayed by a single
ideal. The mass enthusiasm when you were young gave way to cool,
rationalistic classicism. Today that's being drowned in turn by a kind
of neoromanticism. God knows where that will lead. I probably won't
approve. Regardless, new generations grow up. We've no right to freeze
them into our own mold. The universe is too wide."
Fedoroff was unmoving for so
long that she started to rise and go. Suddenly he whirled, caught her
wrist, and pulled her back down beside him. His speech labored. "I
would like to know you, Ingrid, as a human being."
"I'm glad."
His mouth tightened. "You had
better leave now, though," he got out. "You are with Reymont. I don't
want to cause trouble."
"I want you for a friend too,
Boris," she said. "I've admired you since we first met. Courage,
competence, kindliness — what else is there to admire in a
man? I wish you could learn to show them to your shipmates that happen
to be female."
He opened his grasp on her. "I
warn you to go."
She considered him. "If I do,"
she asked, "and we get to talking another time, will you be at ease
with me?"
"I don't know," he said. "I
hope it, but I don't know."
She thought awhile further.
"Let us try to make sure of it," she suggested finally, gently. "I
don't have to be anywhere else for the rest of my watch."
Chapter
6
Every scientist aboard had planned at least one research
project to help fill the half decade of travel. Glassgold's was tracing
the chemical basis of the life on Epsilon Eridani Two. After setting up
her equipment, she began putting her protophytes and tissue cultures
through their experimental paces. In due course she got reaction
products and needed to know exactly what they were. Norbert Williams
was performing analyses for several different people.
One day late in the first year, he brought his report on her
most recent sample to her laboratory. He had taken to doing this in
person. The molecules were strange, exciting him as much as her, and
the two of them often discussed the findings for hours on end.
Increasingly, the conversation would veer toward other topics.
She gave him cheerful greeting as he entered. The workbench
behind which she stood was barricaded with test tubes, flasks, a pH
meter, a stirrer, a blender, and more. "Well," she said, "I'm quite
agog to learn what metabolites my pets have been making now."
"Damnedest mess I ever saw." He tossed down a couple of
clipped-together pages. "Sorry, Emma, but you're going to have to run
it over. And over and over, I'm afraid. I can't get by with micro
quantities. This wants every type of chromatography I've got, plus
X-ray diffractions, plus a series of enzyme tests I've listed here,
before I'd venture any guess at the structural formulas."
"I see," Glassgold replied. "I regret making more work for
you."
"Shucks, that's what I'm here for, till we reach Beta Three.
I'd go nuts without jobs to do, and yours is the most interesting of
the lot, I'll tell you." Williams ran a hand through his hair; the loud
shirt wrinkled across his shoulder. "Though to be frank, I don't
understand what's in it for you, other than a pastime. I mean, they're
tackling the same problems on Earth, with bigger staff and better
facilities. They ought to've cracked your riddles before we come to a
stop."
"No doubt," she said. "But will they beam the results to us?"
"I expect not, unless we inquire. And if we do, we'll be very
old, or dead, before the reply arrives." Williams leaned toward her
across the bench. "The thing is, why should we care? Whatever type of
biology we find at Beta Three, we know it won't resemble this. Are you
keeping your hand in?"
"Partly that," she admitted. "I do think it will be of
practical value. The broader a view I have of life in the universe, the
better I should be able to study the particular case where we are
going. And so we learn sooner, more certainly, whether we can build our
homes there and call others to follow us from Earth."
He rubbed his chin. "Yeah, I
guess you're right. Hadn't thought of that angle."
Awe dwelt beneath the prosaic
words. For the expedition was not merely going for a look: not at such
cost hi resources, labor, skill, dreams, and years. Nor could it hope
for anything as easy to subdue as America had been.
At a minimum, these people
would spend another half decade in the Beta Virginis System, exploring
its worlds in the ship's auxiliary craft, adding what little they could
to the little that the orbiting probe had garnered. And if the third
planet really was habitable, they would never come home, not even the
professional spacemen. They would live out their lives, and be like
their children and grandchildren too, exploring its manifold mysteries
and flashing their discoveries to the hungry minds on Earth. For
indeed, any planet is a world, infinitely varied,
infinitely secret. And this world appeared to be so terrestroid that
the strangenesses it must hold would be yet the more vivid and
enlightening.
The folk of Leonora
Christine were quite explicit in their ambition to establish
that kind of scientific base. Their further, largest hope was that
their descendants would find no reason ever to go back: that Beta Three
might evolve from base to colony to New Earth to jumping-off place for
the next starward leap. There was no other way by which men might
possess the galaxy.
As if shying away from vistas
that could overwhelm her, Glassgold said, reddening a trifle: "Besides,
I care about Eridanian life. It fascinates me. I want to know what
… makes it tick. And as you point out, if we do stay we
aren't likely to get the answers told us while we are alive."
He fell silent, fiddled with a
titration setup, until ship-drive and ventilator breath, sharp chemical
odors, bright colors on the reagent and dye shelves, shoved forward
into consciousness. At length he cleared his throat. "Uh, Emma."
"Yes?" She seemed to feel the
same diffidence.
"How about knocking off? Come
on down to the club with me for a drink before dinner. My ration."
She retreated behind her
instruments. "No, thank you," she said confusedly. "I, I do have a
great deal of work."
"You have time for it, too," he
pointed out, bolder. "Okay, if you don't want a cocktail, what about a
cup of coffee? Maybe a stroll through the gardens — Look, I
don't aim to make a pass. I'd just like to get better acquainted."
She swallowed before she
smiled, but then she gave him warmth. "Very well, Norbert. I would like
that myself."
A year after she started, Leonora
Christine was close to her ultimate velocity. It would take
her thirty-one years to cross interstellar space, and one year more to
decelerate as she approached her target sun.
But that is an incomplete
statement. It takes no account of relativity. Precisely because there
is an absolute limiting speed (at which light travels in
vacuo; likewise neutrinos) there is an interdependence of
space, time, matter, and energy. The tau factor enters the equations.
If v is the (uniform) velocity of a spaceship,
and c the velocity of light, then tau equals

The closer that v comes to c,
the closer tau comes to zero.
Suppose an outside observer
measures the mass of the spaceship. The result he gets is her rest mass
— i.e., the mass that she has when she is not moving with
respect to him — divided by tau. Thus, the faster she travels
the more massive she is, as regards the universe at large. She gets the
extra mass from the kinetic energy of motion; e=mc 2.
Furthermore, if the
"stationary" observer could compare the ship's clocks with his own, he
would notice a disagreement. The interlude between two events (such as
the birth and death of a man) measured aboard the ship where they take
place, is equal to the interlude which the observer measures
… multiplied by tau. One might say that time moves
proportionately slower on a starship.
Lengths shrink; the observer
sees the ship shortened in the direction of motion by the factor tau.
Now measurements made on
shipboard are every bit as valid as those made elsewhere. To a crewman,
looking forth at the universe, the stars are compressed and have gained
in mass; the distances between them have shriveled; they shine, they
evolve at a strangely reduced rate.
Yet the picture is more
complicated even than this. You must bear in mind that the ship has, in
fact, been accelerated and will be decelerated in relation to the total
background of the cosmos. This takes the whole problem out of special
and into general relativity. The star-and-ship situation is not really
symmetrical. The twin paradox does not arise. When velocities match
once more and reunion takes place, the star will have passed through a
longer time than the ship did.
If you ran tau down to one
one-hundredth and went into free fall, you would cross a light-century
in a single year of your own experience. (Though, of course, you could
never regain the century that had passed at home, during which your
friends grew old and died.) This would inevitably involve a hundredfold
increase of mass. A Bussard engine, drawing on the hydrogen of space,
could supply that. Indeed, it would be foolish to stop the engine and
coast when you could go right on decreasing your tau.
Therefore, to reach other suns
in a reasonable portion of your life expectancy: Accelerate
continuously, right up to the interstellar midpoint, at which point you
activate the decelerator system in the Bussard module and start slowing
down again. You are limited by the speed of light, which you can never
quite reach. But you are not limited in how close you can approach that
speed. And thus you have no limit on your inverse tau factor.
Throughout her year at one
gravity, the differences between Leonora Christine
and the slow-moving stars had accumulated imperceptibly. Now the curve
entered upon the steep part of its climb. Now, more and more, her folk
measured the distance to their goal as shrinking, not simply because
they traveled, but because, for them, the geometry of space was
changing. More and more, they perceived natural processes in the
outside universe as speeding up.
It was not yet spectacular.
Indeed, the minimum tau in her flight plan, at midpoint, was to be
somewhat above 0.015. But an instant came when a minute aboard her
corresponded to sixty-one seconds in the rest of the galaxy. A while
later, it corresponded to sixty-two. Then sixty-three …
sixty-four … the ship time between such counts grew
gradually but steadily less … sixty-five …
sixty-six … sixty-seven….
The first Christmas —
Chanukah, New Year's, solstice festival season — that the
crew spent together had come early in their voyage and was a feverish
carnival. The second was quieter. People were settling down to their
work and their fellows. Nevertheless, improvised ornaments glittered on
all decks. The hobby rooms resounded, the scissors and needles clicked,
the galley grew fragrant with spice, as everybody tried to make small
gifts for everybody else. The hydroponics division found it could spare
enough green vines and branches for an imitation tree in the gymnasium.
From the enormous microtape library came films of snow and sleighs,
recordings of carols. The thespian contingent rehearsed a pageant. Chef
Carducci planned banquets. Commons and cabins rollicked with parties.
By tacit agreement, no one mentioned that each second which passed laid
Earth three hundred thousand kilometers farther behind.
Reymont made his way through a
bustling recreation level. Some groups were stringing up the most newly
made decorations. Nothing could be wasted, but aluminum-foil chains,
blown-glass globes, wreaths twisted from bolts of cloth, were
reclaimable. Others played games, chattered, offered drinks around,
flirted, got boisterous. Through the chatter and laughter and
shuffling, hum and crackle and rustle, music floated out of a
loudspeaker:
Adeste, fideles,
Laeti, triumphantes,
Venite, venite, in Bethlehem.
Iwamoto Tetsuo, Hussein Sadek,
Yeshu ben-Zvi, Mohandas Chidambaran, Phra Takh, or Kato M'Botu seemed
to belong with it as much as Olga Sobieski or Johann Freiwald.
The machinist bellowed at
Reymont: "Guten Tag, mein lieber Schutzmann! Come
share my bottle!" He waved it in the air. His free arm was around
Margarita Jimenes. Suspended above them was a slip of paper on which
had been printed MISTLETOE.
Reymont halted. He got along
well with Freiwald. "Thank you, no," he said. "Have you seen Boris
Fedoroff? I expected him to come here when he got off work."
"N-no. I would expect it too,
as lively as things are tonight. He's become a lot happier lately for
some reason, hasn't he? What do you want of him?"
"Business matter."
"Business, forever business,"
Freiwald said. "I swear your personal amusement is fretting. Me, I've
got a better one." He hugged Jimenes to him. She snuggled. "Have you
called his cabin?"
"Naturally. No response. Still,
maybe —" Reymont turned. "I'll try there. Later I'll come
back for that schnapps," he added, already leaving.
He took the stairs down past
crew level to the officers' deck. The music followed. "— Iesu,
tibi sit gloria." The passageway was deserted. He pushed
Fedoroff's chime button.
The engineer opened the door.
He was clad in lounging pajamas. Behind him, a bottle of French wine,
two glasses, and some Danish-style sandwiches waited on the dresser
top. Surprise jarred him. He took a backward step. "Chto
— you?"
"Could I speak with you?"
"Um-m-m." Fedoroff's glance
flickered. "I expect a guest."
Reymont grinned. "That's
obvious. Don't worry, I won't linger. But this is rather urgent."
Fedoroff bridled. "It cannot
wait until I am on duty?"
"The thing is, it had better be
discussed confidentially," Reymont said. "Captain Telander agrees." He
slipped around Fedoroff, into the cabin. "An item was overlooked in the
plans," he went on, speaking fast. "Our schedule has us changing over
to high-acceleration mode on the seventh of January. You know better
than I how that takes two or three days of preliminary work by your
gang and considerable upsetting of everybody else's routine. Well,
somehow the flight planners forgot that the sixth is important in West
European tradition. Twelfth Night, the Eve of the Three Holy Kings,
call it what you will, it climaxes the merrymaking part of the
holidays. Last year celebrations were so riotous that nobody thought
about it. But I learn that this year a final feast and dance, with the
old rituals, is being talked of, as something that would be pleasant if
only it were possible. Think what such a reminder of our origins can do
to help morale. The skipper and I wish you'd check the feasibility of
postponing high acceleration a few days."
"Yes, yes, I will look into
it." Fedoroff urged Reymont toward the open door. "Tomorrow, please
—"
He was too late. Ingrid
Lindgren came around its edge. She was in uniform, having hurried up
from the bridge when her watch ended.
"Gud!"
broke from her. She stopped dead.
"Why, why, Lindgren," Fedoroff
said frantically, "what brings you here?"
Reymont had sucked in a single
breath. Every expression went out of his face. He stood moveless,
except that his fists clenched till nails dug into palms and skin
stretched white across knuckles.
A new carol began.
Lindgren looked back and forth,
between the men. Her own features were drained of blood. Abruptly,
though, she straightened and said: "No, Boris. We'll not lie."
"It wouldn't help any more,"
Reymont agreed without tone.
Fedoroff whirled on him. "All
right!" he cried. "All right! We have been together a few times. She's
not your wife."
"I never claimed she was,"
Reymont answered, his eyes on her. "I did intend to ask her to be, when
we arrived."
"Carl," she whispered. "I love
you."
"No doubt one partner gets
boring," Reymont said like winter. "You felt the need of refreshment.
Your privilege, of course. I did think you were above slinking behind
my back."
"Let her alone!" Fedoroff
grabbed blindly for him.
The constable flowed aside. His
hand chopped edge-on. The engineer gasped in anguish, collapsed to a
seat on the bed, and caught his injured wrist in the other hand.
"It's not broken," Reymont told
him. "However, if you don't stay where you are till I leave, I'll
disable you." He paused. Judiciously: "That's not a challenge to your
manhood. I know single combat the way you know nucleonics. Let's stay
civilized. She's yours anyway, I suppose."
"Carl." Lindgren took a step
and another toward him, reaching. Tears whipped down her cheeks. He
sketched a bow. "I will remove my things from your cabin as soon as I
have found a vacant berth."
"No, Carl, Carl." She clutched
his tunic. "I never imagined — Listen, Boris needed me. Yes,
I admit it, I enjoyed being with him, but it was never deeper than
friendship … help … while you —"
"Why didn't you tell me what
you were doing? Wasn't I entitled to know?"
"You were, you were, but I was
afraid — a few remarks you'd let drop — you are
jealous — and it's so unnecessary, because you're the only
one who counts."
"I've been poor my whole life,"
he said, "and I do have a poor man's primitive morality, as well as
some regard for privacy. On Earth there might be ways to make matters
— not right again, really, but tolerable. I could fight my
rival, or go away on a long trip, or you and I could both move
elsewhere. None of that is possible here."
"Can't you understand?" she
implored.
"Can't you?" He had closed his
fists anew. "No," he said, "you honestly — I'll assume
honestly — don't believe you did me any harm. The years will
be hard enough to get through without keeping up that kind of
relationship."
He disengaged her from him.
"Stop blubbering!" he barked.
She shuddered and grew rigid.
Fedoroff growled. He started to rise. She waved him back.
"That's better." Reymont went
to the door. There he stood and faced them. "We'll have no scenes, no
intrigues, no grudges," he stated. "When fifty people are locked into
one hull, everybody conducts himself right or everybody dies. Mister
Engineer Fedoroff, Captain Telander and I would like your report on the
subject I came to discuss as soon as can be managed. You might get the
opinion of Miss First Officer Lindgren, bearing in mind that secrecy is
desirable till we're ready to make an announcement one way or another."
For an instant, the pain and fury struck out of him. "Our duty is to
the ship, hell damn you!" Control clamped down. He clicked his heels.
"My apologies. Good evening."
He left.
Fedoroff got up behind Lindgren
and laid his arms around her. "I am very sorry," he said in his
awkwardness. "If I had guessed this might happen, I would never
—"
"Not your fault, Boris." She
didn't move.
"If you would share quarters
with me, I would be glad."
"No, thank you," she answered
dully. "I'm out of that game for the time being." She released herself.
"I'd better go. Good night." He stood alone with his sandwiches and
wine.
O holy child of
Bethlehem,
Descend to us, we pray.
The proper adjustments being
made, Leonora Christine raised her acceleration a
few days after Epiphany.
It would make no particular
difference to the cosmic duration of her passage. In either case, she
ran at the heels of light. But by decreasing tau faster, and reaching
lower values of it at midpoint, the higher thrust appreciably shortened
the shipboard time.
Extending her scoopfields more
widely, intensifying the thermonuclear fireball that trailed her
trailing Bussard engine, the ship shifted over to three gravities. This
would have added almost thirty meters per second per second to a low
velocity. To her present speed, it added tiny increments which grew
constantly tinier. That was in outside measurement. Inboard, she drove
ahead at three gee; and that measurement was equally real.
Her human payload could not
have taken it and lived long. The stress on heart, lungs, and
especially on body fluid balance would have been too great. Drugs might
have helped. Fortunately, there was a better way.
The forces that pushed her
nearer and nearer to ultimate c were not merely
enormous. Of necessity, they were precise. They were, indeed, so
precise that their interaction with the outside universe —
matter and its own force fields — could be held to a nearly
constant resultant in spite of changes in those exterior conditions.
Likewise, the driving energies could safely be coupled to similar, much
weaker fields when the latter were established within the hull.
This linkage could then operate
on the asymmetries of atoms and molecules to produce an acceleration
uniform with that of the inside generator itself. In practice, though,
the effect was left incomplete. One gravity was uncompensated.
Hence weight inboard remained
at a Steady Earth-surface value, no matter how high the rate at which
the ship gained speed.
Such cushioning was only
achievable at relativistic velocities. At an ordinary pace, their tau
large, atoms were insufficiently massive, too skittish to get a good
grip on. As they approached c, they grew heavier
— not to themselves, but to everything outside their vessel
— until the interplay of fields between cargo and cosmos
could establish a stable configuration.
Three gravities was not the
limit. With scoopfields fully extended, and in regions where matter
occurred more densely than hereabouts, such as a nebula, she could have
gone considerably higher. In this particular crossing, given the
tenuousness of the local hydrogen, any possible gain in time was not
enough — since the formula involves a hyperbolic function
— to be worth reducing her safety margin. Other
considerations, e.g., the optimization of mass intake versus the
minimization of path length, had also entered into computing her flight
pattern.
Thus, tau was no static
multiplying factor. It was dynamic. Its work on mass, space, and time
could be observed as a fundamental thing, creating a forever new
relationship between men and the universe through which they fared.
In a shipboard hour that the
calendar said was in April and the clock said was in morning, Reymont
awoke. He didn't stir, blink, yawn, and stretch like most men. He sat
up, immediately alert.
Chi-Yuen Ai-Ling had ended
sleep earlier. His suddenness caught her kneeling in Asian fashion at
the foot of the bed, regarding him with a seriousness altogether unlike
her playful mood of the night before.
"Is anything wrong?" he
demanded.
She had only shown startlement
in a widening of eyes. After a moment, her smile came to slow life. "I
knew a tame hawk once," she remarked. "That is, it wasn't tame in dog
fashion, but it hunted with its man and deigned to sit on his wrist.
You come awake the same way."
"Mph," he said. "I meant that
worried look of yours."
"Not worried, Charles.
Thoughtful."
He admired the sight of her.
Unclad, she could never be called boyish. The curves of breast and
flank were subtler than ordinary, but they were integral with the rest
of her — not stuccoed on, as with too many women —
and when she moved, they flowed. So did the light along her skin, which
had the hue of the hills around San Francisco Bay in their summer, and
the light in her hair, which had the smell of every summer day that
ever was on Earth.
They were in his crew-level
cabin half, screened off from his partner Foxe-Jameson. It made too
drab a setting for her. Her own quarters were filled with beauty.
"What about?" he inquired.
"You. Us."
"It was a gorgeous night." He
reached out to stroke her beneath the chin. She made purring noises.
"More?"
Her gravity returned.
‘"That's what I was wondering." He cocked his brows. "An
understanding between us. We've had our flings. At least, you have had,
in the past few months." His face darkened. She went doggedly on: "To
myself, it wasn't that important; an occasional thing. I don't want to
continue with it, really. If nothing else, those hints and attempts,
the whole courtship rite, over and over … they intefere with
my work. I'm developing some ideas about planetary cores. They need
concentration. A lasting liaison would help."
"I don't want to make any
contracts," he said grimly.
She caught his shoulders. "I
realize that. I'm not asking for one. Nor offering it. I have simply
come to like you better each time we have talked, or danced, or spent a
night. You are a quiet man, mostly; strong; courteous, to me at any
rate. I could live happily with you — nothing exclusive on
either side, only an alliance, for the whole ship to see — as
long as we both want to."
"Done!" he exclaimed, and
kissed her.
"That quickly?" she asked,
astonished.
"I'd given it some thought too.
I'm also tired of chasing. You should be easy to live with." He ran a
hand down her side and thigh. "Very easy."
"How much of your heart is in
that?" At once she laughed. "No, I apologize, such questions are
excluded…. Shall we move into my cabin? I know Maria
Toomajian won't mind trading places with you. She keeps her part closed
off anyway."
"Fine," he said. "Sweetheart,
we still have almost an hour before breakfast call —"
Leonora Christine
was nearing the third year of her journey, or the tenth year as the
stars counted time, when grief came upon her.
Chapter
7
An outside watcher, quiescent with respect to the stars, might
have seen the thing before she did; for at her speed she must needs run
half-blind. Even without better sensors than hers, he would have known
of the disaster a few weeks ahead. But he would have had no way to cry
his warning.
And there was no watcher anyhow: only night, bestrewn with
multitudinous remote suns, the frosty cataract of the Milky Way and the
rare phantom glimmer of a nebula or a sister galaxy. Nine light-years
from Sol, the ship was illimitably alone.
An automatic alarm roused Captain Telander. As he struggled
upward from sleep, Lindgren's voice followed on the intercom: "Kors
i Herrens namn!" The horror in it jerked him fully awake.
Not stopping to acknowledge, he ran from his cabin. Nor would he have
stopped to dress, had he been abed.
As it happened, he was clad. Lulled by the sameness of time,
he had been reading a novel projected from the library and had dozed
off in his chair. Then the jaws of the universe snapped shut.
He didn't notice the gaiety that now covered passageway
bulkheads, or the springiness underfoot or the scent of roses and
thundershowers. Loud in his awareness beat the engine vibrations. The
stairs made a metal clatter beneath his haste, which the well flung
back.
He emerged on the next level up and entered the bridge.
Lindgren stood near the viewscope. It was not what counted; at this
moment, it was almost a toy. What truth the ship could tell was in the
instruments which glittered across the entire forward panel. But her
eyes would not leave it.
The captain brushed past her. The warning which had caused him
to be summoned was still blazoned on a screen linked to the
astronomical computer. He read. The breath hissed between his teeth.
His gaze went across the surrounding meters and displays. A slot
clicked and extruded a printout. He snatched it. The letters and
figures represented a quantification: decimal-point detail, after more
data had come in and more calculation had been done. The basic Mene,
Mene stood unchanged on the panel.
He stabbed the general alert button. Sirens wailed; echoes
went ringing down the corridors. On the intercom he ordered all hands
not on duty to report to commons with the passengers. After a moment,
harshly, he added that channels would be open so that those people
standing watch could also take part in the meeting.
"What are we going to do?" Lindgren cried into a sudden
stillness.
"Very little, I fear." Telander went to the viewscope. "Is
anything visible in this?"
"Barely. I think. Fourth quadrant." She shut her eyes and
turned from him.
He took for granted that she meant the projection for dead
ahead, and peered into that. At high magnification, space leaped at
him. The scene was somewhat blurred and distorted. Optical circuits
were not able to compensate perfectly for speeds like this. But he saw
starpoints, diamond, amethyst, ruby, topaz, emerald, a Fafnir's hoard.
Near the center burned Beta Virginis. It should have looked very like
the sun of home, but something of spectral shift got by to tinge it ice
blue. And, yes, on the edge of perception … that wisp? That
smoky cloudlet, to wipe out this ship and these fifty human lives?
Noise broke in on his
concentration, shouts, footfalls, the sounds of fear. He straightened.
"I had better go aft," he said, flat-voiced. "I should consult Boris
Fedoroff before addressing the others." Lindgren moved to join him.
"No, keep the bridge."
"Why?" Her temper stretched
thin. "Regulations?"
He nodded. "Yes. You have not
been relieved." A smile of sorts touched his lean face. "Unless you
believe in God, regulations are now me only comfort we have."
In this moment, the drapes and
murals of the gymnasium-auditorium had no more significance than the
basketball goals or the bright casual clothes of the people. They had
not taken time to unfold chairs. Everyone stood. Every gaze locked onto
Telander while he mounted the stage. Nobody stirred save to breathe.
Sweat glistened on countenances and could be smelled. The ship muttered
around them.
Telander rested his fingers on
the lectern. "Ladies and gentlemen," he said into their silence, "I
have bad news." Quickly: "Let me say at once that our prospects of
survival are far from hopeless, judging by present information. We are
in trouble, though. The risk was not unforeseen, but by its nature is
one that cannot be provided against, at any rate not in our early stage
of Bussard drive technology —"
"Get to the point. God damn
it!" Norbert Williams shouted.
"Quiet, you," said Reymont.
Unlike most of them, who stood with male and female hands clutched
together, he held apart, near the stage. To a drab coverall he had
pinned his badge of authority.
"You can't —" Someone
must have nudged Williams, for he spluttered into silence.
Telander's frame grew visibly
tenser. "Instruments have … have detected an obstacle. A
small nebula. Extremely small, a clot of dust and gas, no more than a
few billion kilometers across. It is traveling at an abnormal velocity.
Maybe it's a remnant of a larger thing cast out by a supernova, a
remnant still held together by hydromagnetic forces. Or maybe it's a
protostar. I do not know.
"The fact is, we are going to
strike it. In about twenty-four hours, ship's time. What will happen
then, I don't know either. With luck, we can ride out the impact and
not suffer serious damage. Otherwise … if the fields become
too overloaded to protect us … well, we knew this journey
would have its hazards."
He heard indrawn breaths, like
his own on the bridge, and saw eyes grow white-rimmed, lips flutter,
fingers trace signs in the air. He persisted: "We cannot do much to
prepare. A little battening down, yes; but in general, the ship is
already as taut as can be. When the moment approaches, we will be in
shock harness and space armor. So — The meeting is now open
for discussion." Williams' hand rocketed past the shoulder of tall
M'Botu. "Yes?"
The chemist's ruddiness showed
indignation rather than fear. "Mister Captain! The robot probe observed
no dangers on this route. At least, it beamed back no hint of them.
Right? Who's responsible for our blundering into this muck?"
Voices lifted toward a babble.
"Quiet!" Charles Reymont called. Though he didn't speak loud, he pushed
the sound from his lungs in such a way that it struck. Several
resentful glances were cast at him, but the talkers came to order.
"I thought I had explained,"
Telander said. "The cloud is minute by cosmic standards, nonluminous,
undetectable at any large distance. It has a high velocity, scores of
KPS. Thus, supposing the probe had taken our identical path, the
nebulina would have been well offside at the time — more than
fifty years ago, remember. Furthermore … we can be certain
the probe did not go exactly as we are going. Besides the relative
motion of Sol and Beta Virginis, consider the distance between.
Thirty-two light-years is more than our poor minds can picture. The
slightest variation in the curves taken from star to star means a
difference of many astronomical units in the middle."
"This thing couldn't have been
predicted," Reymont added. "The chances were big against our running
into it. Still, somebody has to draw the long odds now and then."
Telander stiffened. "I did not
recognize you. Constable," he said.
Reymont flushed. "Captain, I
was trying to expedite matters, so some snotbrains won't keep you here
explaining the obvious till we smash."
"No insults to shipmates.
Constable. And kindly wait to be recognized before you speak."
"I beg the captain's pardon."
Reymont folded his arms and blanked his features.
Telander said with care:
"Please do not be afraid to ask questions, however elementary they
seem. You are all educated in the theory of interstellar astronautics.
But I, whose profession this is, know how strange the paradoxes are,
how hard to keep straight in one's mind. Best if everyone understands
exactly what we are meeting…. Dr. Glassgold?"
The molecular biologist lowered
her hand and said timidly: "Can't we — I mean —
nebular objects like mat, they would count as hard vacuums on Earth.
Wouldn't they? And we, we are just under the speed of light, gaining
more every second. And so more mass. Our inverse tau is about fifteen
at the moment, I believe. That means our mass is enormous. So how can a
bit of dust and gas stop us?"
"A good point," Telander
replied. "If we are lucky, we will pass without too great hindrance.
Not entirely. Remember, that dust and gas is moving equally fast with
respect to us, with a corresponding increase of its mass.
"The force fields have to do
work on it, directing the hydrogen into the ramjet system and diverting
all matter from the hull. This action has its reaction on us. Moreover,
it will take place extremely rapidly. What the fields can do in, say,
an hour, they may not be able to do in a minute. We must hope that they
can, and that the material components of the ship can endure the
resultant stresses.
"I have spoken with Chief
Engineer Fedoroff at his post. He thinks probably we will not suffer
grave damage. He admits his opinion is a mere extrapolation. In a
pioneering era, one learns chiefly by experience. Mr. Iwamoto?"
"S-s-sst!
I presume we have no possibility of avoidance? One day ship's time is
about two weeks cosmic time, no? We have not a chance to go around this
nebu — nebulina?"
"No, I fear not. In our own
frame of reference, we are accelerating at approximately three
gravities. In terms of the outside universe, however, that acceleration
is not constant, but steadily decreasing. Therefore we cannot change
course fast. Even a full vector normal to our velocity would not get us
far enough aside before the encounter. Anyhow, we haven't the time to
make the preparations for such a drastic alteration of flight pattern.
Ah, Second Engineer M'Botu?"
"Might it help if we
decelerated? We must keep one or another mode operative at all times,
forward or backward thrust, to be sure. But I should think that
deceleration now would soften the collision."
"The computer has not made any
recommendations about that. Probably the information is insufficient.
At best, the percentage difference in speed would be slight. I fear
… I think we have no choice except to — ah
—"
"Bull through," Reymont said in
English. Telander cast him a look of annoyance. Reymont didn't seem to
mind.
As discussion progressed,
though, his glance darted from speaker to speaker and the lines between
mouth and nostrils deepened in his face. When at last Telander
pronounced, "Dismissed," the constable did not return to Chi-Yuen. He
pushed almost brutally through the uncertain milling of the rest and
plucked the captain's sleeve.
"I think we had better hold a
private talk, sir," he declared. The choppiness he had been losing was
back in his accent.
Telander said with a chill,
"Now is hardly the time to deny anyone access to facts. Constable."
"Oh, call it politeness, that
we go work by ourselves instead of bothering people," Reymont answered
impatiently.
Telander sighed. "Come with me
to the bridge, then. I'm too busy for special conferences."
A couple of others seemed to
feel differently, but Reymont drove them off with a glare and a bark.
Telander must perforce smile a bit as he went out the door. "You do
have your uses," he admitted.
"A parliamentary hatchet man?"
Reymont said. "I fear there'll be more call on me than that."
"Conceivably on Beta Three. A
specialist in rescue and disaster control might be welcome when
we get there."
"You're the one who's
concealing facts. Captain. You're pretty badly shaken by what we're
driving into. I suspect our chances are not quite as good as you
pretended. Right?"
Telander looked around and did
not reply until they were alone in the stairwell. He lowered his voice.
"I simply don't know. Nor does Fedoroff. No Bussard ship has been
tested under conditions like those ahead of us. Obviously! We'll either
get by in reasonable shape or we'll die. In the latter case, I don't
imagine it'll be from radiation sickness. If any of that material
penetrates the screens and hits us, it should wipe us out, a quick
clean death. I saw no reason to make worse what hours remain for our
people, by dwelling on that possibility."
Reymont scowled. "You overlook
a third chance. We may survive, but in bad shape."
"How the devil could we?"
"Hard to say. Perhaps we'll
take such a buffeting that personnel are killed. Key personnel, whom we
can ill afford to lose … not that fifty is any great
number." Reymont brooded. Footsteps thudded in the mumble of energies.
"They reacted well, on the whole," he said. "They were picked for
courage and coolness, along with health and intelligence. In a few
instances, the picking may not have been entirely successful. Suppose
we do find ourselves, let's say, disabled. What next? How long will
morale last, or sanity itself? I want to be ready to maintain
discipline."
"In that connection," Telander
responded, cold once more, "please remember that you act under my
orders and subject to the articles of the expedition."
"Damnation!" Reymont exploded.
"What do you take me for? A would-be Mao? I'm requesting your
authorization to deputize certain trustworthy men and prepare them
quietly for emergencies. I'll issue them weapons, stunner type only. If
nothing goes wrong — or if something does but everybody
behaves himself — what have we lost?"
"Mutual trust," the captain
said.
They had come to the bridge.
Reymont entered with his companion, arguing further. Telander made a
hacking gesture to shut him up and strode toward the control console.
"Anything new?" he asked.
"Yes. The instruments have
begun to draw a density map," Lindgren answered. She had flinched on
seeing Reymont and spoke mechanically, not looking at him. "It is
recommended —" She pointed to the screens and the latest
printout.
Telander studied them. "Hm. We
can pass through a slightly less thick region of the nebula, it seems,
if we generate a lateral vector by activating the Number Three and Four
decelerators in conjunction with the entire accelerator
system…. A procedure with hazards of its own. This calls for
discussion." He flipped the intercom controls and spoke briefly to
Fedoroff and Boudreau. "In the plotting room. On the double!"
He turned to go. "Captain
—" Reymont attempted.
"Not now," Telander said. His
legs scissored across the deck.
"But —"
"The answer is no." Telander
vanished out the door.
Reymont stood where he was,
head lowered and shoulders hunched as if to charge. But he had nowhere
to go. Ingrid Lindgren regarded him for a time that shivered
— a minute or more, ship's chronology, which was a quarter
hour in the lives of the stars and planets — before she said,
very softly, "What did you want of him?"
"Oh." Reymont fell into a
normal posture. "His order to recruit a police reserve. He gave me
something stupid about my not trusting my fellows."
Their eyes clashed. "And not
letting them alone in what may be their final hours," she said. It was
the first occasion since their breach that they had stopped addressing
each other with entire correctness.
"I know." Reymont spat out his
words. "There's little for them to do, they think, except wait. So
they'll spend the time … talking; reading favorite poems;
eating favorite foods, with an extra wine ration, Earthside bottles;
playing music, opera and ballet and theater tapes, or in some cases
something livelier, maybe bawdier; making love. Especially making love."
"Is that bad?" she asked. "If
we must go out, shouldn't we do so in a civilized, decent, life-loving
way?"
"By being a trifle less
civilized, et cetera, we might increase our chance of not going out."
"Are you that afraid to die?"
"No. I simply like to live."
"I wonder," she said. "I
suppose you can't help your crudeness. You have that kind of
background. What about your unwillingness to overcome it, though?"
"Frankly," he answered, "having
seen what education and culture make people into, I'm less and less
interested in acquiring them."
The spirit gave way in her. Her
eyes blurred, she reached out toward him and said, "Oh, Carl, are we
going to fight the same old fight over again, now in what's maybe our
last day alive?" He stood rigid. She went on, fast: "I loved you. I
wanted you for my life's partner, the father of my children, whether on
Beta Three or Earth. But we're so alone, all of us, here between the
stars. We have to give what kindness we can, and take it, or we're
worse than dead."
"Unless we can control our
emotions."
"Do you think there was any
emotion … anything but friendship, and wanting to help him
get over his hurt, and — and a wish to make sure he did not
fall seriously in love with me — with Boris? And the articles
state, in as many words, we can't have formal marriages en route,
because we're too constricted and deprived as is —"
"So you and I terminated a
relationship which had become unsatisfactory."
"You made plenty of others!"
she flared.
"For a while. Till I found
Ai-Ling. Whereas you've taken to sleeping around again."
"I have normal needs. I've not
settled down … committed myself" — she gulped
— "like you."
"Nor I, except that one does
not abandon a partner when the going gets bad." Reymont shrugged. "No
matter. As you implied, we're both free individuals. It wasn't easy,
but I've finally convinced myself it's not sensible or right to carry a
grudge because you and Fedoroff exercised that freedom. Don't let me
spoil your fun after you go off watch."
"Nor I yours." She brushed
violently at her eyes.
"As a matter of fact, I'll be
occupied till nearly the last minute. Since I wasn't allowed to
deputize, I'm going to ask for volunteers."
"You can't!"
"I wasn't actually forbidden.
I'll brace a few men, in private, who're likely to agree. We'll
constitute ourselves a stand-by force, alerted to do whatever we can
that's needed. Do you mean to tell the captain?"
She turned from him. "No," she
said. "Please go away."
His boots clacked off down the
corridor.
Chapter
8
Everything that could be done had been. Now, spacesuited,
strapped into safety cocoons that were anchored to the beds, the folk
of Leonora Christine waited for impact. Some left
their helmet radios on so they could-talk with their roommates; others
preferred solitude. With head secured, no one could see another, nor
anything except the bareness above his faceplate.
Reymont and Chi-Yuen's quarters
felt more cheerless than most. She had stowed away the silk draperies
that softened bulkheads and overhead, the low-legged table she had made
to hold a Han Dynasty bowl with water and a single stone, the scroll
with its serene mountainscape and her grandfather's calligraphy, the
clothes, the sewing kit, the bamboo flute. Fluorolight fell bleak on
unpainted surfaces.
They had been silent awhile,
though their sets were tuned. He listened to her breath and the slow
knocking of his own heart. "Charles," she said finally.
"Yes?" He spoke with the same
quietness.
"It has been good with you. I
wish I could touch you."
"Likewise."
"There is a way. Let me touch
your self." Taken aback, he had no ready reply. She continued: "You
have always held most of you hidden. I don't imagine I'm the first
woman to tell you so."
"You aren't." She could hear
the difficulty he had saying it.
"Are you certain you weren't
making a mistake?"
"What's to explain? I've scant
use for those types whose chief interest is their grubby little
personal neuroses. Not in a universe as rich as this."
"You never mentioned your
childhood, for instance," she said. "I shared mine with you."
He snorted out a kind of mirth.
"Consider yourself spared. The Polyugorsk low-levels weren't nice."
"I've heard about conditions
there. I never quite understood how they came about."
"The Control Authority couldn't
act. No danger to world peace. The local bosses were too useful in too
many ways to higher national figures to be thrown out. Like some of the
war lords in your country, I imagine, or the Leopards on Mars before
fighting got provoked. A lot of money to be had in the Antarctic, for
those who didn't mind gutting the last resources, killing the last
wildlife, raping the last white wilderness —" He stopped. His
voice had been rising. "Well, that's all behind us. I wonder if the
human race will do any better on Beta Three. I rather doubt it."
"How did you learn to care
about such things?" she asked mutedly.
"A teacher, to begin with. My
father was killed when I was young, and by the time I was twelve, my
mother had nearly finished going down the drain. We had this one man,
however, Mr. Melikot, an Abyssinian, I don't know how he ended up in
our hellhole of a school, but he lived for us and for what he taught,
we felt it and our brains came awake…. I'm not certain if he
did me a favor. I got to thinking and reading, and that got me into
talking and doing, and that got me into trouble till I had to skip for
Mars, never mind how…. Yes, I suppose it was a favor in the
long run."
"You see," she said, smiling in
her helmet, "it isn't hard to take off a mask."
"What do you mean?" he
demanded. "I'm trying to oblige you, no more."
"Because we may soon be dead.
That tells me something about you also, Charles. I begin to see the why
of things, the man behind them. Why they say you were honest but
tight-fisted with money in the Solar System, to name a trivial detail.
Why you're often gruff, and never try to dress well though it would
look good on you, and hide that possessiveness of yours behind a
‘Go your own way if you don't want to go mine' that can be
really freezing, and —"
"Hold on! A psychoanalysis,
from a few elementary facts about when I was a kid?"
"Oh no, no. That would be
ridiculous, I agree. But a bit of understanding, from the way you told
them. A wolf in search of a den."
"Enough!"
"Of course. I'm happy that you
— No further, not ever again, unless you want." Chi-Yuen's
figure of speech evidently lingered in her consciousness, for she
mused: "I miss animals. More than I expected. We had carp and songbirds
in my parents' house. Jacques and I had a cat in Paris. I never
realized till we traveled this far, how big a part of the world the
rest of the animal creation is. Crickets in summer nights, a butterfly,
a hummingbird, fish jumping in me water, sparrows in a street, horses
with velvet noses and warm smell — Do you think we will find
anything like Earth's animals on Beta Three?"
The ship struck.
It was too swiftly changing a
pattern of assault too great. The delicate dance of energies which
balanced out acceleration pressures could not be continued. Its
computer choreographers directed a circuit to break, shutting off that
particular system, before positive feedback wrecked it.
Those aboard felt weight shift
and change. A troll sat on each chest and choked each throat. Darkness
went ragged before eyes. Sweat burst forth, hearts slugged, pulses
brawled. That noise was answered by the ship, a metal groan, a rip and
a crash. She was not meant for stresses like these. Her safety factors
were small; mass was too precious. And she rammed hydrogen atoms
swollen to the heaviness of nitrogen or oxygen, dust particles bloated
into meteoroids. Velocity had flattened the cloud longitudinally, it
was thin, she tore through in minutes. But by that same token, the
nebulina was no longer a cloud to her. It was a well-nigh solid wall.
Her outside force-screens
absorbed the battering, flung matter aside in turbulent streams,
protected me hull from everything except slowdown drag. Reaction was
inevitable, on the fields themselves and hence on the devices which,
borne outside, produced and controlled them. Frameworks crumpled.
Electronic components fused. Cryogenic liquids boiled from shattered
containers.
So one of the thermonuclear
fires went out.
The stars saw the event
differently. They saw a tenuous murky mass struck by an object
incredibly swift and dense. Hydromagnetic forces snatched at atoms,
whirled them about, ionized them, cast them together. Radiation
flashed. The object was encompassed in a meteor blaze. During the hour
of its passage, it bored a tunnel through the nebulina. That tunnel was
wider than the drill, because a shock wave spread outward —
and outward and outward, destroying what stability there had been,
casting substance forth in gouts and tatters.
If a sun and planets had been
in embryo here, they would now never form.
The invader passed. It had not
lost much speed. Accelerating once more, it dwindled away toward
remoter stars.
Chapter
9
Reymont struggled back to wakefulness. He could not have been
darkened long. Could he? Sound had ceased. Was he deafened? Had the air
puffed out of some hole into space? Were the screens down, had
gamma-colored death already sleeted through him?
No. When he listened, he made out the familiar low beat of
power. The fluoropanel shone steadily in his vision. The shadow of his
cocoon fell on a bulkhead and had the blurred edges which betokened
ample atmosphere. Weight had returned to a single gee. Most of the
ship's automata, at least, must be functioning. "To hell with
melodrama," he heard himself say. His voice came as if from far off, a
stranger's. "We've got work."
He fumbled with his harness. Muscles throbbed and ached. A
trickle of blood ran over his mouth, tasting salty. Or was that sweat? Nichevo.
He was operational. He crawled free, opened his helmet, sniffed
— slight smell of scorch and ozone, nothing serious
— and gusted one deep sigh.
The cabin was a mare's nest. Dresser drawers had burst open
and scattered their contents. He didn't notice particularly. Chi-Yuen
hadn't answered his queries. He waded through strewn garments to the
slight form. Slipping off his gauntlets, he unlatched her faceplate.
Her breathing sounded normal, no wheeze or gurgle to suggest internal
injuries. When he peeled back an eyelid, the pupil was broad. Probably
she had just fainted. He shucked his armor, located his stun pistol,
and strapped it on. Others might need help worse. He went out.
Boris Fedoroff clattered down the stairs. "How goes it?"
Reymont hailed.
"I am on my way to see," the engineer tossed back, and
disappeared.
Reymont grinned sourly and pushed into Johann Freiwald's cabin
half. The German had removed his spacesuit too and sat slumped on his
bed. "Raus mit dir," Reymont said.
"I have a headache like carpenters in my skull," Freiwald
protested.
"You offered to be in our squad. I thought you were a man."
Freiwald gave Reymont a resentful glance but was stung into
motion.
The constable's recruits were busy for the next hour. The
regular spacemen were busier yet, inspecting, measuring, conferring in
hushed tones. That gave them little chance to feel pain or let terror
grow. The scientists and technicians had no such anodyne. From the fact
that they were alive and the ship apparently working as before, they
might have drawn happiness … only why didn't Telander make
an announcement? Reymont bullied them into commons, started some making
coffee and others attending to the most heavily bruised. At last he
felt free to head for the bridge.
He stopped to look in on Chi-Yuen, as he had done at
intervals. She was finally aware, had unharnessed but collapsed on her
mattress before getting all armor off. A tiny light kindled in her when
she saw him. "Charles," she susurrated.
"How are you?" he asked.
"I hurt, and I don't seem to have any strength, but
—"
He stripped away the rest of
her spacesuit. She winced at his roughness. "Without this load, you
should be able to get up to the gym," he said. "Dr. Latvala can check
you. No one else was too badly hammered, so it's unlikely you were." He
kissed her, a brief meaningless brush of lips. "Sorry to be this
unchivalrous. I'm in a hurry."
He went on. The bridge door was
closed. He knocked. Fedoroff boomed from within, "No admittance. Wait
for the captain to address you."
"This is the constable,"
Reymont answered.
"Well, go carry out your
duties."
"I've assembled the passengers.
They're getting over being stunned. They're beginning to realize
something isn't right. Not knowing what, in their present condition,
will crack them open. Maybe we won't be able to glue the pieces back
together."
"Tell them a report will be
issued shortly," Telander called without steadiness.
"Shouldn't you tell them, sir?
The intercom's working, isn't it? Tell them you're making exact
assessments of damage in order to lay out a program for prompt repair.
But I suggest, Mr. Captain, you first let me in to help you find words
for explaining the disaster."
The door flew wide. Fedoroff
grabbed Reymont's arm and tried to pull him through. Reymont yanked
free, a judo release. His hand lifted, ready to chop. "Don't ever do
that," he said. He stepped into the bridge and closed the door himself.
Fedoroff growled and doubled
his fists. Lindgren hurried to him. "No, Boris," she begged. "Please."
The Russian subsided, stiffly. They glared at Reymont in the thrumming
stillness: captain, first officer, chief engineer, navigation officer,
biosystems director. He glanced past them. The panels had suffered,
various meter needles twisted, screens broken, wiring torn loose.
"Is that the trouble?" he
asked, pointing.
"No," said Boudreau, the
navigator. "We have replacements."
Reymont sought the viewscope.
The compensator circuits were equally dead. He moved on to the
electronic periscope and put his face inside its hood.
A hemispheric simulacrum sprang
from the darkness at him, the distorted scene he would have witnessed
outside on the hull. The stars were crowded forward, streaming thinly
amidships; they shone steel blue, violet, X ray. Aft the patterns
approached what had once been familiar — but not very
closely, and those suns were reddened, like embers, as if time were
snuffing them out. Reymont shuddered a little and drew his head back
into the cozy smallness of the bridge.
"Well?" he said.
"The decelerator system
—" Telander braced himself, "We can't stop."
Reymont went expressionless.
"Go on."
Fedoroff spoke. His words fell
contemptuous. "You will recall, I trust, we had activated the
decelerator part of the Bussard module to produce and operate two
units. Their system is distinct from the accelerators, since to slow
down we do not push gas through a ramjet but reverse its momentum."
Reymont did not stir at the
insult. Lindgren caught her breath. After a moment Fedoroff sagged.
"Well," he said tiredly, "the
accelerators were also in use, at a much higher level of power.
Doubtless on that account, their field strength protected them. The
decelerators — Out. Wrecked."
"How?"
"We can only determine that
there has been material damage to their exterior controls and
generators, and that the thermonuclear reaction which energized them is
extinguished. Since the meters to the system aren't reporting
— must be smashed — we can't tell exactly what is
wrong."
Fedoroff looked at the deck.
His words ran on, more soliloquy than report. A desperate man will
rehearse obvious facts over and over. "In the nature of the case, the
decelerators must have been subjected to greater stress than the
accelerators. I would guess that those forces, reacting through the
hydromagnetic fields, broke the material assembly in that part of the
Bussard module.
"No doubt we could make repairs
if we could go outside. But we'd have to come too near the fireball of
the accelerator power core in its own magnetic bottle. The radiation
would kill us before we could do any useful work. The same is true for
any remote-control robot we might build. You know what radiation at
that level does to transistors, for instance. Not to mention inductive
effects of the force fields.
"And, of course, we can't shut
off the accelerators. That would mean shutting off the whole set of
fields, including the screens, which only an outside power core can
maintain. At our speed, hydrogen bombardment would release enough gamma
rays and ions to fry everybody aboard within a minute."
He fell silent, less like a man
ending a lecture than a machine running down.
"Have we no directional control
whatsoever?" Reymont asked, still toneless.
"Yes, yes, we do have that,"
Boudreau said. "The accelerator pattern can be varied. We can damp down
any of the four Venturis and boost up any others — get a
sidewise as well as a forward vector. But don't you see, no matter what
path we take, we must continue accelerating or we die."
"Accelerating forever,"
Telander said.
"At least," Lindgren whispered,
"we can stay in me galaxy. Swing around and around its heart." Her gaze
went to the periscope, and they knew what she thought of: behind that
curtain of strange blue stars, blackness, intergalactic void, an
ultimate exile. "At least … we can grow old …
with suns around us. Even if we can't ever touch a planet again."
Telander's features writhed.
"How do I tell our people?" he croaked.
"We have no hope," Reymont
said. It was hardly a question.
"None," Fedoroff replied.
"Oh, we can live out our lives
— reach a reasonable age, if not quite what antisenescence
would normally permit," said Pereira. "The biosystems and organocycle
apparatus are intact. We could actually increase their productivity. Do
not fear immediate hunger or thirst or suffocation. True, the closed
ecology, the reclamations, are not 100 per cent efficient. They will
suffer slow losses, slow degrading. A spaceship is not a world. Man is
not quite the clever designer and large-scale builder that God is." His
smile was ghastly. "I do not advise that we have children. They would
be trying to breathe things like acetone, while getting along without
things like phosphorus and smothering in things like earwax and
belly-button lint. But I imagine we can get fifty years out of our
gadgets. Under the circumstances, that seems ample to me."
Lindgren said from nightmare,
staring at a bulkhead as if she could see through: "When the last of us
dies — We must put in an automatic cutoff. The ship must not
keep on after our deaths. Let the radiation do what it will, let cosmic
friction break her to bits and let the bits drift off yonder."
"Why?" asked Reymont.
"Isn't it obvious? If we throw
ourselves into a circular path … consuming hydrogen, always
traveling faster, running tau down and down as the thousands of years
pass … we get more massive. We could end by devouring the
galaxy."
"No, not that," said Telander.
He retreated into pedantry. "I have seen calculations. Somebody did
worry once about a Bussard craft getting out of control. But as Mr.
Pereira remarked, any human work is insignificant out here. Tau would
have to become something like, shall we say, ten to the minus twentieth
power before the ship's mass was equal to that of a minor star. And the
odds are always literally astronomical against her colliding with
anything more important than a nebula. Besides, we know the universe is
finite in time as well as space. It would stop expanding and collapse
before our tau got that low. We are going to die. But the cosmos is
safe from us."
"How long can we live?"
Lindgren wondered. She cut Pereira off. "I don't mean potentially. If
you say half a century, I believe you. But I think in a year or two we
will stop eating, or cut our throats, or agree to turn the accelerators
off."
"Not if I can help it," Reymont
snapped.
She gave him a dreary look. "Do
you mean you would continue — not just barred from man, from
living Earth, but from the whole of creation?"
He regarded her steadily in
return. His right hand rested on his gun butt.
‘‘Don't you have that much guts?" he replied.
"Fifty years inside this flying
coffin!" she almost screamed. "How many will that be outside?"
"Easy," Fedoroff warned, and
took her around the waist. She clung to him and snatched after air.
Boudreau said, as carefully dry
as Telander: "The time relationship appears to be somewhat academic to
us, n'est-ce pas? It depends on what course we
take. If we let ourselves continue straight outwards, naturally we will
encounter a thinner medium. The rate of decrease of tau will grow
proportionately smaller as we enter intergalactic space. Contrariwise,
if we try for a cyclical path taking us through the densest hydrogen
concentrations, we could get a very large inverse tau. We might see
billions of years go by. That could be quite wonderful." His smile was
forced, a flash in the spade beard. "We have each other too. A goodly
company. I am with Charles. There are better ways to live but also
worse ones."
Lindgren hid against Fedoroff's
breast. He held her, patted her with a clumsy hand. After a while (an
hour or so in the history of the stars) she raised her face again.
"I'm sorry," she gulped.
"You're right. We do have each other." Her glance went among them,
ending at Reymont.
"How shall I tell them?" the
captain beseeched.
"I suggest you do not," Reymont
answered. "Have the first officer break the news."
"What?" Lindgren said.
"You are simpático,"
he answered. "I remember."
She moved from Fedoroff's
loosened grasp, a step toward Reymont.
Abruptly the constable
tautened. He stood for a second as if blind, before he whirled from her
and confronted the navigator.
"Hoy!" he exclaimed. "I've
gotten an idea. Do you know —"
"If you think I should
—" Lindgren had begun to say.
"Not now," Reymont told her.
"Auguste, come over to the desk. We have a bit of figuring to do
… fast!"
Chapter
10
The silence went on and on. Ingrid Lindgren stared from the
stage, where she stood with Lars Telander, down at her people. They
looked back at her. And not a one in that chamber could find words.
Hers had been well chosen. The truth was less savage in her
throat than in any man's. But when she came to her planned midpoint
—" We have lost Earth, lost Beta Three, lost the mankind we
belonged to. We have left to us courage, love, and and, yes, hope"
— she could not continue. She stood with lip caught between
teeth, fingers twisted together, and the slow tears flowed from her
eyes.
Telander stirred. "Ah … if you will," he tried.
"Kindly pay attention. A means does exist…." The ship jeered
at him in her tone of distant lightnings.
Glassgold broke. She did not weep loudly, but her struggle to
stop made the sound more dreadful. M'Botu, beside her, attempted
consolation. He, though, had clamped such stoicism on himself that he
might as well have been a robot. Iwamoto withdrew several paces from
them both, from them all; one could see how he pulled his soul into
some nirvana with a lock on its door. Williams shook his fist at the
overhead and cursed. Another voice, female, started to keen. A woman
considered the man with whom she had been keeping company, said, "You,
for my whole life?" and stalked from him. He tried to follow her and
bumped into a crewman who snarled and offered to fight if he didn't
apologize. A seething went through the entire human mass.
"Listen to me," Telander said. "Please listen."
Reymont shook loose the arm which Chi-Yuen Ai-Ling held, where
they stood in the first row, and jumped onto the stage. "You'll never
bring them around that way," he declared sotto voce.
"You're used to disciplined professionals. Let me handle these
civilians." He turned on them. "Quiet, there! "Echoes bounced around
his roar. "Shut your hatches. Act like adults for once. We haven't the
personnel to change your diapers for you."
Williams yelped with resentment. M'Botu bared teeth. Reymont
drew his stunner. "Hold your places!" He dropped his vocal volume, but
everyone heard him. "The first of you to move gets knocked out.
Afterward we'll court-martial him. I'm the constable of this
expedition, and I intend to maintain order and effective cooperation."
He leered. "If you feel I exceed my authority, you're welcome to file a
complaint with the appropriate bureau in Stockholm. For now, you'll
listen!"
His tongue-lashing activated
their adrenals. With heightened vigor came self-possession. They
glowered but waited alertly.
"Good." Reymont turned mild and
holstered his weapon. "We'll say no more about this. I realize you've
had a shock which none of you were prepared psychologically to meet.
Nevertheless, we've got a problem. And it has a solution, if we can
work together. I repeat: if."
Lindgren had swallowed her
weeping. "I think I was supposed to —" she said. He shook his
head at her and went on:
"We can't repair the
decelerators because we can't turn off the accelerators. The reason is,
as you've been told, at high speeds we must have the force fields of
one system or the other to shield us from interstellar gas. So it looks
as if we're bottled in this hull. Well, I don't like the prospect
either, though I believe we could endure it. Medieval monks accepted
worse.
"Discussing it in the bridge,
however, we got a thought. A possibility of escape, if we have the
nerve and determination. Navigation Officer Boudreau ran a preliminary
check for me. Afterward we called in Professor Nilsson for an expert
opinion."
The astronomer harrumphed and
looked important. Jane Sadler seemed less impressed than others.
"We have a chance of success,"
Reymont informed them.
A sound like a wind passed
through the assembly. "Don't make us wait!" cried a young man's voice.
"I'm glad to see some spirit,"
Reymont said. "It'll have to be kept on a tight rein, though, or we're
finished. To make this as short as I can — afterward Captain
Telander and the specialists will go into detail — here's the
idea."
His delivery might have been
used to describe a new method of bookkeeping. "If we can find a region
where gas is practically nonexistent, we can safely shut down the
fields, and our engineers can go outside and repair the decelerator
system. Astronomical data are not as precise as we'd like. However,
apparently throughout the galaxy and even in nearby intergalactic
space, the medium is too dense. Much thinner out there than here, of
course; still, so thick, in terms of atoms struck per second, as to
kill us without our protection.
"Now galaxies generally occur
in clusters. Our galaxy, the Magellanic Clouds, M31 in Andromeda, and
thirteen others, large and small, make up one such group. The volume it
occupies is about six million light-years across. Beyond them is an
enormously greater distance to the next galactic family. By
coincidence, it's in Virgo too: forty million light-years from here.
"‘In that stretch, we
hope, the gas is thin enough for us not to need shielding."
Babble tried to break out
afresh. Reymont lifted both hands. He actually laughed. "Wait, wait!"
he called. "Don't bother. I know what you want to say. Forty million
light-years is impossible. We haven't the tau for it. A ratio of fifty,
or a hundred, or a thousand, does us no good. Agreed. But."
The last word stopped them. He
filled his lungs. "But remember," he said, "we have no limit on our
inverse tau. We can accelerate at a lot more than three gee, too, if we
widen our scoopfields and choose a path through sections of this galaxy
where matter is dense. The exact parameters we've been using were
determined by our course to Beta Virginis. The ship isn't restricted to
them. Navigator Bou-dreau and Professor Nilsson estimate we can travel
at an average of ten gee, quite likely more. Engineer Fedoroff is
reasonably sure the accelerator system can stand that, after certain
modifications he knows he can make.
"So. The gentlemen made rough
calculations. Their results indicate we can swing halfway around the
galaxy, spiraling inward till we plunge straight through its middle and
out again on this side. We'd be slow about any course change anyway. We
can't turn on a tea-öre coin at our
speed! And this'll enable us to acquire the necessary tau. Don't
forget, that'll decrease constantly. Our transit to Beta Vee would have
been a lot quicker if we hadn't meant to stop there: if, instead of
braking at mid-passage, we'd simply kept cramming on velocity.
"Navigator Boudreau estimates
— estimates, mind you; we'll have to gather data as we go;
but a good, informed guess — considering the speed we already
have, he thinks we can finish with this galaxy and head out beyond it
in a year or two."
"How long cosmic time?" sounded
from the gathering.
"Who cares?" Reymont retorted.
"You know the dimensions. The galactic disk is about a hundred thousand
light-years across. At present we're thirty thousand from the center.
One or two hundred millennia altogether? Who can tell? It'll depend on
what path we take, which in turn will depend on what long-range
observation can show us."
He stabbed a finger at them. "I
know. You wonder, what if we hit a cloud such as got us into this
miserable situation? I have two answers for that. First, we have to
take some risks. But second, as our tau gets less and less, we'll be
able to use regions which are denser and denser.
We'll have too much mass to be affected as we were this time. Do you
see? The more we have, the more we can get, and the faster we can get
it in ship's time. We may conceivably leave the galaxy with an inverse
tau on the order of a hundred million. In that case, by our clocks
we'll be outside this entire galactic family in days!"
"How do we get back?" Glassgold
said — but vigilant and interested.
"We don't," Reymont admitted.
"We keep on to the Virgo cluster. There we reverse the process,
decelerate, enter one of the member galaxies, bring our tau up to
something sensible, and start looking for a planet where we can live.
"Yes, yes, yes!" he rapped into
the renewed surf of their speech. "Millions of years in the future.
Millions of light-years hence. The human race most qwlikely extinct
… in this corner of the universe. Well, can't we start over,
in another place and time? Or would you rather sit in a metal shell
feeling sorry for yourselves, till you grow senile and die childless?
Unless you can't stand the gaff and blow out your brains. I'm for going
on as long as strength lasts. I think enough of this group to believe
you will agree. Will anyone who feels differently be so good as to get
out of our way?"
He stalked from the stage. "Ah
… Navigation Officer Boudreau, Chief Engineer Fedoroff,
Professor Nilsson," Telander said. "Will you come here? Ladies and
gentlemen, the meeting is open for general discussions —"
Chi-Yuen hugged Reymont. "You
were marvelous," she sobbed.
His mouth tightened. He looked
from her, from Lindgren, across the assemblage, to the enclosing
bulkheads. "Thanks," he replied curtly. "Wasn't much."
"Oh, but it was. You gave us
back hope. I am honored to live with you."
He didn't seen to hear.
"Anybody could have presented a shiny new idea," he said. "They'll
grasp at anything, right now. I only expedited matters. When they
accept the program, that's when the real trouble begins."
Chapter
11
Force fields shifted about. They were not static tubes and
walls. What formed them was the incessant interplay of electromagnetic
pulses, whose production, propagation, and heterodyning must be under
control at every nanosecond, from the quantum level to the cosmic. As
exterior conditions — matter density, radiation, impinging
field strengths, gravitational space-curvature — changed,
instant by instant, their reaction on the ship's immaterial web was
registered; data were fed into the computers; handling a thousand
simultaneous Fourier series as the smallest of their tasks, these
machines sent back their answers; the generating and controlling
devices, swimming aft of the hull in a vortex of their own output, made
their supple adjustments. Into this homeostasis, this tightrope walk
across the chance of a response that was improper or merely tardy
— which would mean distortion and collapse of the fields,
novalike destruction of the ship — entered a human command.
It became part of the data. A starboard intake widened, a port intake
throttled back: carefully, carefully. Leonora Christine
swung around onto her new course.
The stars saw the ponderous movement of a steadily larger and
more flattened mass, taking months and years before the deviation from
its original track was significant. Not that the object whereon they
shone was slow. It was a planet-sized shell of incandescence, where
atoms were seized by its outermost force-fringes and excited into
thermal, fluorescent, synchrotron radiation. And it came barely behind
the wave front which announced its march. But the ship's luminosity was
soon lost across light-years. Her passage crawled through abysses which
seemingly had no end.
In her own time, the story was another. She moved in a
universe increasingly foreign — more rapidly aging, more
massive, more compressed. Thus the rate at which she could gulp down
hydrogen, burn part of it to energy and hurl the rest off in a
million-kilometer jet flame … that rate kept waxing for her.
Each minute, as counted by her clocks, took a larger fraction off her
tau than the last minute had done.
Inboard, nothing changed. Air and metal still carried the
pulse of acceleration, whose net internal drag still stood at an even
one gravity. The interior power plant continued to give light,
electricity, equable temperatures. The biosystems and organocycles
reclaimed oxygen and water, processed waste, manufactured food,
supported life. Entropy increased. People grew older at the ancient
rate of sixty seconds per minute, sixty minutes per hour.
Yet those hours were always less related to the hours and
years which passed outside. Loneliness closed on the ship like fingers.
Jane Sadler executed a balestra. Johann Freiwald sought to
parry. Her foil rang against his in a beat. Immediately, she thrust. "Touché!"
he acknowledged. Laughing behind his mask: "That would have skewered my
left lung in a real duel. You have passed your examination."
"None too soon," she panted. "I'd … have
… been out of air … 'nother minute. Knees like
rubber."
"No more this evening," Freiwald decided.
They took off their head protection. Sweat gleamed on her face
and plastered hair to brow; her breath was noisy; but her eyes
sparkled. "Some workout!" She flopped onto a chair. Freiwald joined
her. This late in the ship's evening, they had the gymnasium to
themselves. It felt huge and hollow, making them sit close together.
"You will find it easier with
other women," Freiwald told her. "I think you had better start them
soon."
"Me? Instruct a female fencing
class at my stage?"
"I will continue to work out
with you," Freiwald said. "You can stay ahead of your pupils. Don't you
see, I must begin with the men. And if the sport draws as much interest
as I would like, it will take time to make the equipment. Besides more
masks and foils, we need épées and sabers. We
cannot delay."
Sadler's merriment faded. She
gave him a studying look. "You didn't propose this of your own accord?
I'd assumed, you being the only person who'd fenced back on Earth, you
wanted partners."
"It was Constable Reymont's
idea, when I happened to mention my wish. He arranged that stock be
issued me to produce the gear. You see, we must maintain physical
fitness —"
"And distract ourselves from
the bind we're in," she said harshly.
"A sound physique helps keep a
sound mind. If you go to bed tired, you don't lie awake brooding."
"Yes, I know. Elof —"
Sadler stopped.
"Professor Nilsson is perhaps
too engaged in his work," Freiwald dared say. His gaze left her, and he
flexed the blade between his hands.
"He'd better be! Unless he can
develop unproved astronomical instrumentation, we can't plot an
extragalactic trajectory on anything except guesswork."
"True. True. I would suggest,
Jane, your man might benefit, even in his profession, if he would take
exercise."
It was forced from her: "He's
getting harder to live with every day." She took the offensive. "So
Reymont's appointed you coach."
"Informally," Freiwald said.
"He urged me to take leadership, develop new, attractive sports
— Well, I am one of his unofficial
deputies."
"Uh-huh. And he himself can't.
They'd see his motives, they'd think of him as a drillmaster, the fun
would be gone, and they'd stay away by dozens." Sadler smiled. "Okay,
Johann. Count me in on your conspiracy."
She offered her hand. He took
it. The clasp continued.
"Let's get out of this wet
padding and into a wet swimming pool," she proposed.
He replied scratchily: "No,
thank you. Not tonight. We would be alone. I don't dare that any
longer, Jane."
Leonora Christine
encountered another region of increased matter density. It was more
tenuous than the nebulina which had caused her trouble, and she ran it
without difficulty. But it reached for many parsecs. Her tau shrank at
a pace which in her own chronology was stupefying. By the time she
emerged, she was going so fast that the normal one atom per cubic
centimeter counted for about as much as the cloud had done. Not only
did she keep the speed she had gained, she kept the acceleration.
Her folk continued regardless
to follow Earth's calendar, including observances for the tiny
congregations of different religions. Each seventh morning, Captain
Telander led his handful of Protestants in divine service.
On a particular Sunday, he had
asked Ingrid Lindgren to meet him in his cabin afterward. She was
waiting there when he entered. Her fairness and a short red gown cast
her vivid against books, desk, papers. Though he rated a double section
to himself, its austerity was relieved by little except a few pictures
of family and a half-built model of a clipper ship.
"Good morning," he said with
accustomed solemnity. He laid down his Bible and loosened the collar of
his dress uniform. "Won't you be seated?" The beds being up, there was
room for a couple of folding armchairs. "I'll send after coffee."
"How did it go?" she asked,
sitting down opposite him, nervously trying to make conversation. "Did
Malcolm attend?"
"Not today. I suspect our
friend Foxe-Jameson is not yet sure whether he wants to return to the
faith of his fathers or stay a loyal agnostic." Telander smiled a bit.
"He'll come, though, he'll come. He simply needs to get it through his
head that it's possible to be a Christian and an astrophysicist. When
are we going to lure you, Ingrid?"
"Probably never. If there is
any directing intelligence behind reality — and we've no
scientific evidence in favor of that — why should it care
about a chemical accident like man?"
"You quote Charles Reymont
almost precisely, did you know?" Telander said. Her features tensed. He
hurried on: "A being that concerns itself with everything from quanta
to quasars can spare attention for us. Rational proof — But I
don't want to repeat stale arguments. We've something else on hand." He
tuned his intercom to the galley: "A pot of coffee, cream and sugar,
two cups, in the captain's cabin, please."
"Cream!" Lindgren muttered.
"I don't think our food
technicians fake it badly," Telander said. "By the way, Carducci is
quite taken with Reymont's suggestion."
"What's that?"
"Working with the food team to
invent new dishes. Not a beefsteak put together out of algae and tissue
cultures, but stuff never experienced before. I'm glad he's found an
interest."
"Yes, as a chef he's been
slipping." Lindgren's garb of casualness fell off. She struck her chair
arm. "Why?" burst from her. "What's wrong? We've been under weigh
scarcely half as long as we planned on. Morale shouldn't rot this soon."
"We've lost every assurance
—"
"I know, I know. And shouldn't
people be stimulated by danger? As for the chance we won't ever end our
voyage, well, it hit me badly too, I admit, at first. But I think I've
rallied."
"You and I have an ongoing
purpose," Telander said. "We, the regular crew, we're responsible for
lives. It helps. And even for us —" He paused. "This is what
I wished to talk over with you, Ingrid. We're at a critical date. The
hundred-year mark on Earth since we departed."
"Nonsensical," she said. "You
can't speak of simultaneity under these conditions."
"It's far from psychologically
nonsensical," he answered. "At Beta Virginis we would have had a thread
of contact with home. We would have thought that the younger ones we
left behind, given longevity treatments, were still alive. If we must
return, surely enough continuity would have persisted that we didn't
come back as utter aliens. Now, though — the fact that in
some sense, whether a mathematical one or not — at best,
babies whom we saw in their cribs are nearing the end of life
— it reminds us too hard, we can never regain any trace of
what we once loved."
"M-m-m … I suppose.
Like watching somebody you care about die of a slow disease. You aren't
surprised when the end comes; nevertheless, it is the end." Lindgren
blinked. "Damn!"
"You must do what you can to
help them through this period," Telander said. "You know how better
than I."
"You could do a good deal
yourself."
The gaunt head shook. "Best
not. On the contrary, I'm going to withdraw."
"What do you mean?" she asked
with a touch of alarm.
"Nothing dramatic," he said.
"My work with the engineering and navigation departments, in these
unpredictable circumstances, does take most of my waking hours. It'll
provide a cover for my gradually ceasing to mix in shipboard society."
"Whatever for?"
"I've had several talks with
Charles Reymont. He has made an excellent point — a crucial
one, I do believe. When uncertainty surrounds us, when despair is
always waiting to break us … the average person aboard has
to feel his life is in competent hands. Of course, no one is going to
suppose consciously that the captain is infallible. But there's an
unconscious need for such an aura. And I — I have my share of
weakness and stupidity. My human-level judgments can't stand up to
daily testing under high stress."
Lindgren crouched in her seat.
"What does the constable want of you?"
"That I stop operating on an
informal, intimate basis. The excuse will be that I mustn't be
distracted by ordinary business, when my whole attention must go to
getting us safely through the galaxy's clouds and clusters. It's a
reasonable excuse, it will be accepted. In the end, I shall be dining
separately, in here, except on ceremonial occasions. I shall take my
exercise and recreation here too, alone. What personal visitors I have
will be the highest-ranking officers, like you. We will surround me
with official etiquette. Through his own assistants, Reymont will pass
the word that polite forms of address toward me are expected of
everyone.
"In short, your good gray
friend Lars Telander is about to change into the Old Man."
"It sounds like Reymont's kind
of scheme," she said bitterly.
"He's convinced me it's
desirable," the captain replied.
"With no thought for what it
can do to you!"
"I'n manage. I never was
hail-fellow-well-met. We have many books along in the microtapes that I
always wanted to read." Telander regarded her earnestly. Though the air
was nearing the warmest part of its cycle and was tinged with a smell
like new-mown hay, the fine hairs were standing erect on her arms. "You
have a role also, Ingrid. More than ever, you will handle the human
problems. Organization, mediation, alleviation … it won't be
easy."
"I can't do it alone." Her
words wavered.
"You can if you must," he told
her. "In practice you can delegate or divert much. That's a question of
proper planning. We'll work it out as we go."
He hesitated. Uneasiness came
upon him; color actually entered his cheeks. "Ah … a matter
in that connection —"
"Yes?" she said.
The door chime rescued him. He
accepted the coffee tray from the bull cook and made a performance of
carrying it to his desk and pouring. It enabled him to keep his back to
her.
"In your position," he said.
"That is, your new position. The necessity of giving officers a special
status — You needn't hold aloof like me, entirely —
but a certain limitation of, well, accessibility —"
He couldn't see if it was
actual amusement coloring her voice. "Poor Lars! You mean the first
officer should not change boy friends so often, don't you?"
"Well, I don't suggest, ah,
celibacy. I myself must, of course, ah, hold back from such things
hereafter. In your case — well, the experimental phase is
past for most of us. Stable relationships are forming. If you could
make one —"
"I can do better," she said. "I
can turn solitary."
He could delay no further
handing her a cup. "Th-that isn't required," he stammered.
"Thanks." She inhaled the
coffee's fragrance. Her eyes crinkled at him over the rim. "We don't
have to be absolutely abbot and nun, we two. The captain needs a
private conference once in a while with his first officer."
"Er — no. You are
sweet, Ingrid, but no." Telander paced the narrow width of the cabin,
back and forth. "In as little and cramped a community as this, how long
can any secret last? I dare not risk hypocrisy. And while I
… I would love to have you for a permanent partner
… it can't be. You have to be everyone else's liaison with
me: not my, my direct collaborator. Do you follow me? Reymont explained
it better."
Her humor died. "I don't
altogether like the way he's jockeyed you."
"He's had experience in crisis
situations. His arguments were sound. We can go over them in detail."
"We will. They might be logical
at that … whatever his motives." Lindgren took a sip of
coffee, set the cup down on her lap, and declared in a whetted voice:
"Regarding myself, all right.
I'm tired of the whole childish business anyway. You're correct,
monogamy is becoming fashionable, and a girl's choices are poxy
limited. I've already considered stopping. Olga Sobieski feels the
same. I'll tell Kato to trade cabin halves with her. Some calm and
coolness will be welcome, Lars, a chance to think about several things,
now that we really have gone by that hundred-year mark."
Leonora Christine
was aimed well away from the Virgin, but not yet at the Archer. Only
after she had swung almost halfway around the galaxy would the majestic
spiral of her path strike toward its heart. At present the Sagittarian
nebulae stood off her port bow. What lay beyond them was inferred, not
known. Astromoners expected a volume of clear space, with scant dust or
gas, housing a crowded population of ancient stars. But no telescope
had seen past the clouds which surrounded that realm, and no one had
yet gone to look.
"Unless an expedition went off
since we left," pilot Lenkei suggested. "It's been centuries on Earth.
I imagine they're doing marvelous things."
"Not dispatching probes to the
core, surely," cosmologist Chidambaran objected. "Thirty millennia to
get there, and as much to flash a message back? It does not make sense.
I expect man will spread slowly inward, colony by colony."
"Failing a faster-than-light
drive," Lenkei said.
Chidambaran's swarthy features
and small-boned body came as near registering scorn as had ever been
seen on him. "That fantasy! If you want to rewrite everything we have
learned since Einstein — no, since Aristotle, considering the
logical contradiction involved in a signal without a limiting velocity
— proceed."
"Not my line of work." Lenkei's
greyhound slenderness seemed abruptly haggard. "I don't want
faster-than-light, anyhow. The idea that others might be speeding from
star to star like birds — like me from town to town when I
was home — while we're caged here … that would be
too cruel."
"Our fate would not be changed
by their fortune," Chidambaran replied. "Indeed, irony would add
another dimension to it, another challenge if you will."
"I've more challenge than I
want," Lenkei said.
Their footfalls resounded on
the winding stairs and up the well. They had come together from a
low-level shop where Nilsson had been consulting Foxe-Jameson and
Chidambaran about the design of a large crystal diffraction grating.
"It's easier for you," exploded
from the pilot. "You've got a real use. We depend on your team. If you
can't produce new instruments for us — Me, till we reach a
planet where they need space ferries and aircraft, what am I?"
"You are helping build those
instruments, or will be when we have plans drawn up," Chidambaran said.
"Yes, I apprenticed myself to
Sadek. To pass this bloody empty time." Lenkei collected his wits. "I'm
sorry. An attitude we've get to steer clear of, I know. Mohandas, may I
ask you something?"
"Certainly."
"Why did you sign on? You're
important today. But if we hadn't had the accident — couldn't
you have gone further toward understanding the universe back on Earth?
You're a theoretician, I'm told. Why not leave the fact gathering to
men like Nilsson?"
"I would scarcely have lived to
do much with reports from Beta Virginis. It seemed of possible value
that a scientist of my sort expose himself to wholly new experiences
and impressions. I might have gained insights that would never come
otherwise. If I didn't, the loss would not be large, and at a minimum I
would have continued thinking approximately as well as at home."
Lenkei tugged his chin. "Do you
know," he said, "I suspect you don't need dream-box sessions."
"It may be. I confess I find
the process undignified."
"Then for heaven's sake, why?"
"Regulations. We must all
receive the treatment. I did request exemption. Constable Reymont
persuaded First Officer Lindgren that special privilege, albeit
justified, would set a bad precedent."
"Reymont! That bastard again!"
"He may be correct,"
Chidambaran said. "It does me no harm, unless one counts the
interruption of a train of thought, and that happens too seldom to be a
major handicap."
"Huh! You're more patient than
I'd be."
"I suspect Reymont must force
himself into the box," Chidambaran remarked. "He, too, goes as
infrequently as allowed. Have you observed, similarly, that he will
take a drink but will never get tipsy? I believe he is under a
compulsion, arising perhaps from a buried fear, to stay in control."
"He is that. Do you know what
he said to me last week? I'd only borrowed some sheet copper, it'd have
gone right back by way of the furnace and the rolling mill, soon as I
was through with it, so I hadn't bothered to check it out. That bastard
said —"
"Forget it," Chidambaran
advised. "He had a point. We are not on a planet. Whatever we lose is
lost for good. Best not to take chances; and surely we have time for
bureaucratic procedures." The entrance to commons appeared. "Here we
are."
They headed toward the
hypnotherapeutic room. "I trust your experience will be pleasant,
Matyas," Chidambaran said.
"Me too." Lenkei winced. "I've
had a few terrible nightmares in there." Brightening: "And a wild lot
of fun!"
Stars grew scattered. Leonora
Christine was not crossing from one spiral arm of the galaxy
to another — not yet; she was just in a lane of comparative
emptiness. For lack of much intake mass, her acceleration diminished.
That condition was very temporary, so shrunken was her tau: a few
hundred cosmic years. But for some time inboard, the viewscreens to
starboard opened mainly on black night.
A number of the crew found it
preferable to the eldritch shapes and colors blazing to port.
Another Covenant Day arrived.
The ceremonies and the subsequent party were less forlorn than might
have been expected. Shock and grief had gotten eroded by ordinariness.
At present, the dominant mood was of defiance.
Not everybody attended. Elof
Nilsson, for one, stayed in the cabin he and Jane Sadler shared. He
spent a lengthy while making sketches and estimates for his exterior
telescope. When his brain wearied, he dialed the library index for
fiction. The novel he selected, at random out of thousands, proved
absorbing. He hadn't finished it when she returned.
He raised eyes that were
bloodshot with fatigue. Except for the scanner screen, the room was
unlighted. She stood, big, gaudy, not altogether steady, in shadow.
"Good Lord!" he exclaimed.
"It's five in the morning!"
"Have you finally noticed?" She
grinned. The whisky haze around her reached his nostrils, together with
a muski-ness. He took a pinch of snuff, a luxury that occupied a large
part of his baggage allowance.
"I'm not
due at work in three hours," he said.
"Nor I. I told my boss I wanted
a week's leave. He agreed. He'd better. Who else has he got?"
"What attitude is that? Suppose
others on whom the ship depends behaved thus."
"Tetso Iwamoto …
Iwamoto Tetsuo, really; Japanese put last name first, like Chinese
… like Hungarians, did you know? — 'cept when
they're being polite to us ignorant Westerners —" Sadler
captured her thought. "He's a nice man to work for. He can manage a
spell 'thout me. So why not?"
"Nevertheless —"
She lifted a finger. "I will
not be scolded, Elof. You hear? I've borne with that o-ver-com-pensated
inferiority complex of yours more'n I should've. And a lot else.
Thinking maybe the rest of you'd grow up to match that IQ of yours.
Enough's enough. Gather ye roses while ye may."
"You're drunk."
"Sort of." Wistfully: "You
should've come along."
"What for? Why not confess how
weary I am of the same faces, the same actions, the same inane
conversations? I'm far from unique in that."
Her voice dropped. "Are you
tired of me?"
"Why —" Nilsson's
Kewpie-doll form clambered erect. "What's the matter, my dear?"
"You haven't exactly bowled me
over with attention, these past months."
"No? No, perhaps not." He
drummed a dresser top. "I've been preoccupied."
She drew a breath. "I'll say it
straight. I was with Johann tonight."
"Frewald? The machinist?"
Nilsson stood speechless for a humming minute. She waited. Soberness
had come upon her. He said at length, with difficulty, watching the
tattoo of his fingers: "Well, you have the legal and doubtless the
moral right. I am no handsome young animal. I am … was
… more proud and happy than I knew how to express when you
agreed to be my partner. I let you teach me a number of things I did
not understand before. Probably I was not the most adept pupil anyone
ever had."
"Oh, Elof!"
"You are leaving me, aren't
you?"
"We're in love, he and I." Her
vision blurred. "I thought it'd be easier than this to tell you. I
didn't figure you cared a lot."
"You wouldn't consider a
discreet — No, discretion isn't feasible. Besides, you
couldn't bring yourself to it. And I have my own pride." Nilsson sat
down again and reached for his snuffbox. "You had better go. You can
remove your things later."
"That quick?"
"Get out!" he shrieked.
She fled, weeping but on eager
feet.
Leonora Christine
re-entered populated country. Passing within fifty light-years of a
giant new-born sun, she transited the gas envelope that surrounded it.
Being ionized, the atoms were seizable with maximum efficiency. Her tau
plummeted close to asymptotic zero: and with it, her time rate.
Chapter
12
Reymont paused at the entrance to commons. The deck lay empty
and quiet. After an initial surge of interest, athletics and other
hobbies had become increasingly less popular. Aside from meals, the
tendency was for scientists and crew-folk to form minute cliques or
retreat altogether into reading, watching taped shows, sleeping as much
as possible. He could force them to get a prescribed amount of
exercise. But he had not found a way to restore what the months were
grinding out of the spirit. He was the more helpless in that respect
because his inflexible enforcement of basic rules had made him enemies.
A propos rules — He strode down the corridor to the
dream room and opened its door. A light above each of the three boxes
within said it was occupied. He fished a master key from his pocket and
unlocked the lids, which passed air but not light, one by one. Two he
closed again. At the third, he swore. The stretched-out body, the face
under the somnohelmet, belonged to Emma Glassgold.
For a space he stood looking down at the small woman. Peace
dwelt in her smile. Doubtless she, like most aboard, owed her continued
sanity to this apparatus. Despite every effort at decoration, at actual
interior construction of desired facilities, the ship was too sterile
an environment. Total sensory deprivation quickly causes the human mind
to lose its hold on reality. Deprived of the data-flow with which it is
meant to deal, the brain spews forth hallucinations, goes irrational,
and finally collapses into lunacy. The effects of prolonged sensory
impoverishment are slower, subtler, but in many ways more destructive.
Direct electronic stimulation of the appropriate encephalic centers
becomes necessary. That is speaking in neurological terms. In terms of
immediate emotion, the extraordinarily intense and lengthy dreams
generated by the stimulus — whether pleasurable or not
— become a substitute for real experience.
Nevertheless….
Glassgold's skin was loose and unhealthy in hue. The EEG
screen behind the helmet said she was in a soothed condition. That
meant she could be roused fast without danger. Reymont snapped down the
override switch on the timer. The oscilloscopic trace of the inductive
pulses that had been going through her head flattened and darkened.
She stirred. "Shalom,
Moshe," he heard her whisper. There was nobody along of that name. He
slid the helmet off. She squeezed her eyes tighter shut, knuckled them,
and tried to turn around on the padding.
"Wake up." Reymont gave her a
shake.
She blinked at him. The breath
snapped into her. She sat straight. He could almost see the dream fade
away behind those eyes. "Come on," he said, offering his hand to
assist. "Out of that damned coffin."
"Ach, no, no," she slurred. "I
was with Moshe."
"I'm sorry, but —"
She crumpled into sobbing.
Reymont slapped the box, a crack across the ship's murmur. "All right,"
he said. "I'll make that a direct order. Out! And report to Dr.
Latvala."
"What the devil's going on
here?"
Reymont turned. Norbert
Williams must have heard them, the door being ajar, and come in from
the pool, because the chemist was nude and wet. He was also furious.
"You've gotten to bullying women, huh?" he said. "Not even big women.
Scram."
Reymont stood where he was. "We
have regulations about these boxes," he said. "If a person hasn't the
self-discipline to obey them, I have to compel."
"Yah! Snooping, peering,
shoving your nose up our privacy — by God, I'm not going to
stand for it any longer!"
"Don't," Glassgold implored.
"Don't fight. I'm sorry. I will go."
"Like hell you will," the
American answered, "Stay. Insist on your rights." His features burned
crimson. "I've had a bellyful of this little tin Jesus, and now's the
time to do something about him."
Reymont said, spacing his
words: "The regulation limiting use wasn't written for fun, Dr.
Williams. Too much is worse than none. It becomes addictive. The end
result is insanity."
"Listen." The chemist made an
obvious effort to curb his wrath. "People aren't identical. You
may think we can be stretched and trimmed to fit your pattern
— you and your dragooning us into calisthenics, your
arranging work details that a baby could see aren't for anything except
to keep us busy a few hours a day, your smashing the still that Pedro
Barrios built — your whole petty dictatorship, ever since we
veered off on this Flying Dutchman chase —" He lowered his
volume. "Listen," he said. "Those regulations. Like here. They're
written to make sure nobody gets an overdose. Of course. But how do you
know that some of us are getting enough? We've all got to spend time in
the boxes. You too, Constable Iron Man. You too."
"Certainly —" Reymont
was interrupted:
"How can you tell how much
another guy may need? You don't have the sensitivity God gave a
cockroach. Do you know one mucking thing about Emma? I do. I know she's
a fine, courageous woman … perfectly well able to judge her
own necessities and guide herself … she doesn't need you to
run her life for her." Williams pointed. "There's the door. Use it."
"Norbert, don't." Glassgold
climbed from the casket and tried to go between the men. Reymont eased
her aside and answered Williams:
"If exceptions are to be made,
the ship's physician is the person to determine them. Not you. She has
to see Dr. Latvala anyway, after this. She can ask him for a medical
authorization."
"I know how far she'll get with
him. That louse won't even issue tranquilizers."
"We've years ahead of us.
Unforeseeable troubles to outlive. If we start getting dependent on
pacifiers —"
"Did you ever think without
some such help, we'll go crazy and die? We'll decide for ourselves,
thank you. Get out, I said!"
Glassgold sought again to
intervene. Reymont had to seize her by the arms to move her.
"Take your hands off
her, you swine!" Williams charged with both fists flailing.
Reymont released Glassgold and
drifted back, into the hall where room for maneuvering was available.
Williams yelped and followed. Reymont guarded himself against the
inexpert blows until, after a minute, he sprang. A karate flurry and
two strokes sent Williams to the deck. He huddled, retching. Blood
dripped from his nose.
Glassgold wailed and ran to
him. She knelt, pulled him close, glared up at Reymont. "Aren't you
brave?" she spat.
The constable spread his palms.
"Was I supposed to let him hit me?"
"You c-c-could have left."
"Impossible. My duty is to
maintain order on board. Until Captain Telander relieves me, I'll
continue to do so."
"Very well," Glassgold said
between her teeth. "We are going to him. I am lodging a formal
complaint."
Reymont shook his head. "It was
explained and agreed on when this situation developed, the skipper
mustn't be bothered with our bickerings. He has to think of the ship."
Williams groaned his way back
toward full consciousness.
"We will see First Officer
Lindgren," Reymont said. "I have to file charges against both of you."
Glassgold compressed her lips.
"As you wish."
"Not Lin'gren," Williams
mouthed. "Lin'gren an' him, they was —"
"No longer," Glassgold said.
"She couldn't stand any more of him, even before the accident. She will
be fair." With her help, Williams got dressed and limped to the command
deck.
Several people saw the group
pass and started to ask what had happened. Reymont snapped them into
silence. The looks they returned were sullen. At the first intercom
call box, he dialed Lindgren and requested her to be in the interview
room.
It was minuscule but
soundproof, a place for confidential hearings and necessary
humiliations. Lindgren sat behind the desk. She had donned a uniform.
The fluoropanel spilled light onto her frost-blond hair; the voice in
which she bade Reymont commence, after they were all seated, was
equally cold.
He gave a terse account of the
incident. "I charge Dr. Glassgold with violation of a hygienic rule,"
he finished, "and Dr. Williams with assault on a peace officer."
"Mutiny?" Lindgren inquired.
Dismay sprang forth on Williams.
"No, madame. Assault will
suffice," Reymont said. To the chemist: "Consider yourself lucky. We
can't psychologically afford a trial, which a charge of mutiny would
bring. Not unless you persist in this kind of behavior."
"That will do, Constable,"
Lindgren clipped. "Dr. Glassgold, will you give me your version?"
Anger still upbore the
biologist. "I plead guilty to the violation as alleged," she declared
firmly, "but I am asking for a review of my case — of
everybody's case — as provided by the articles. Not Dr.
Latvala's sole judgment; a board of officers and my colleagues. As for
the fight, Norbert was intolerably provoked, and he was made the victim
of sheer viciousness."
"Your statement, Dr. Williams?"
"I don't know how I stand under
your fool reg —" The American checked himself. "Pardon me,
ma'm," he said, a trifle thickly through his puffed lips. "I never did
memorize space law. I thought common sense and good will would see us
through. Reymont may be technically in the right, but I've had about my
limit of his brass-headed interference."
"Then, Dr. Glassgold, Dr.
Williams, are you willing to abide by my sentence? You are entitled to
a trial if you desire it."
Williams achieved a lopsided
smile. "Matters are bad enough already, ma'm. I suppose this has to go
in the log, but maybe it doesn't have to go in the whole crew's ears."
"Oh yes," Glassgold breathed.
She caught Williams' hand.
Reymont opened his mouth. "You
are under my authority, Constable," Lindgren intercepted him. "You may,
of course, appeal to the captain."
"No, madame," Reymont answered.
"Well, then." Lindgren leaned
back. Her countenance thawed. "I order accusations on every side of
this case dropped — or, rather, never be filed. This is not
to be entered on any record. Let us talk the problem out as among human
beings who are all in, shall I say, the same boat."
"Him too?" Williams jerked a
thumb at Reymont.
"We must have law and
discipline, you know," Lindgren said mildly. "Without them, we die.
Perhaps Constable Reymont gets overzealous. Or perhaps not. In any
event, he is the single police and military specialist we have. If you
dissent from him … that's what I'm here for. Do relax. I'll
send for coffee."
"If the first officer pleases,"
Reymont said, "I'll excuse myself."
"No, we have things to say to
you," Glassgold snapped.
Reymont kept his eyes on
Lindgren's. It was as if sparks flew between. "As you explained,
madame," he said, "my job is to preserve the rules of the ship. No
more, no less. This has become something else: a personal counseling
session. I'm sure the lady and gentleman will talk easier without me."
"I believe you are right.
Constable." She nodded. "Dismissed."
He rose, saluted, and left. On
his way upstairs he encountered Freiwald, who greeted him. He had kept
some approximation of cordiality with his half dozen deputies.
He entered his cabin. The beds
were down, joined into one. Chi-Yuen sat on it. She wore a light,
frilly peignoir which made her resemble a little girl, a sad one.
"Hello," she said tonelessly. "You have thunder in your face. What
happened?"
Reymont settled beside her and
related it.
"Well," she asked, "can you
blame them very much?"
"No. I suppose not. Though
— I don't know. This band was intended to be the best Earth
could offer. Intelligence, education, stable personality, health,
dedication. And they knew they'd likely never come home again. At a
minimum, they'd return to countries older than the ones they left by
the better part of a century." Reymont ran fingers through his
wire-brush hair. "So things have changed," he sighed. "We're off to an
unknown destiny, maybe to death, certainly to complete isolation. But
is it that different from what we were planning on from the start?
Should it make us go to pieces?"
"It does," Chi-Yuen said.
"You too. I've been meaning to
take that up with you." He gave her a ferocious look. "You were busy at
first, your amusements, your theoretical work, your programming the
studies you wanted to carry out in the Beta Vee System. And when the
trouble hit us, you responded well."
A ghostly smile crossed her.
She patted his cheek. "You inspired me."
"Since then, however
… more and more, you sit doing nothing. We had the
beginnings of something real, you and I; but you don't often make
meaningful contact with me of late. You're seldom interested in talk or
sex or anything, including other people. No more work. No more big
daydreams. Not even crying into your pillow after lights out
… oh yes, I'd lie awake and hear you. Why, Ai-Ling? What's
happening to you? To them?"
"I imagine we have not quite
your raw will to survive at any cost," she said, almost inaudibly.
"I'd consider some prices for
life too high myself. Here, though — We have what we need. A
certain amount of comfort to boot. An adventure like nothing ever
before. What's wrong?"
"Do you know what the year is
on Earth?" she countered.
"No. I was the one who got
Captain Telander to order that particular clock removed. Too morbid an
attitude was developing around it."
"Most of us can make our own
estimates anyway." She spoke in a level, indifferent voice. "At
present, I believe it is about anno Domini 10,000 at home. Give or take
several centuries. And yes, I learned in school about the concept of
simultaneity breaking down under relativistic conditions. And I
remember that the century mark was expected to be the great
psychological hurdle. In spite of that, these mounting dates have
meaning. They make us absolute exiles.
Already. Irrevocably. No longer
simply our kinfolk must be extinct. Our civilization must be. What has
happened on Earth? Throughout the galaxy? What have men done? What have
they become? We will never share in it. We cannot."
He tried to break her apathy
with sharpness: "What of that? On Beta Three, the maser would have
brought us words a generation old. Nothing else. And our individual
deaths would have closed us off from the universe. The common fate of
man. Why should we whine if ours takes an unexpected shape?"
She regarded him gravely before
she told him, "You don't really want an answer for yourself. You want
to pull one out of me."
Startled, he said, "Well
… yes."
"You understand people better
than you let on. Your business, no doubt. You tell me what our trouble
is."
"Loss of control over life," he
replied at once. "The crew aren't in such bad condition yet. They have
their jobs. But the scientists, like you, had vowed themselves to Beta
Virginis. They had heroic, exciting work to look forward to, and
meanwhile their preparations to make. Now they've no idea what will
happen. They know just that it'll be something altogether
unpredictable. That it may be death — because we are taking
frightful risks — and they can do nothing to help, only sit
passive and be carried. Of course their morale cracks."
"What do you think we should
do, Charles?"
"Well, in your case, for
instance, why not continue your work? Eventually we'll be searching for
a world to settle on. Planetology will be vital to us."
"You're aware what the odds are
against that. We are going to keep on this devil's hunt until we die."
"Damnation, we can improve the
odds!"
"How?"
"That's one of the things you
ought to be working on."
She smiled again, a little more
alive. "Charles, you make me want to. If for no other reason than to
make you stop flogging at me. Is that why you are so tough with the
others?"
He considered her. "You've
borne up better than most thus far," he said. "It might help you get
back your purpose if I share what I'm doing with you. Can you keep a
trade secret?"
Her glance actually danced.
"You should know me that well by now." One bare foot rubbed across his
thigh.
He patted it and chuckled. "An
old principle," he said. "Works in military and paramilitary
organizations. I've been applying it here. The human animal wants a
father-mother image but, at the same time, resents being disciplined.
You can get stability like this: The ultimate authority-source is kept
remote, godlike, practically unapproachable. Your immediate superior is
a mean son of a bitch who makes you toe the mark and whom you therefore
detest. But his own superior is as kind and sympathetic as rank allows.
Do you follow me?"
She laid a finger to her
temple. "Not really."
"Take our present situation.
You'd never guess how I juggled, those first few months after we hit
the nebulina. I don't claim credit for the whole development. A lot of
it was natural, almost inevitable. The logic of our problem brought it
about, given some nursing by me. The end result is that Captain
Telander's been isolated. His infallibility doesn't have to cope with
essentially unfixable human messes like the one today."
"Poor man." Chi-Yuen looked
closely at Reymont. "Lindgren is his surrogate for those?"
He nodded. "I'm the traditional
top sergeant. Hard, harsh, demanding, overbearing, inconsiderate,
brutal. Not so bad as to start a petition for my removal. But enough to
irritate, to be disliked, although respected. That's good for the
troops. It's healthier to be mad at me than to dwell on personal woes
… as you, my love, have been doing.
"Lindgren smooths things out.
As first officer, she sustains my power. But she overrules me from time
to time. She exercises her rank to bend regulations in favor of mercy.
Therefore she adds benignity to the attributes of Ultimate Authority."
Reymont frowned. "The system's
carried us this far," he finished. "It's beginning to fail. We'll have
to add a new factor."
Chi-Yuen went on gazing at him
until he shifted uncomfortably on the mattress. At last she asked, "Did
you plan this with Ingrid?"
"Eh? Oh no. Her role demands
she not be a Machiavelli type who'd play a part
deliberately."
"You understand her so well
… from past acquaintance?"
"Yes." He reddened. "What of
it? These days we keep it purely formal. For obvious reasons."
"I think you find ways to
continue rebuffing her, Charles."
"M-m-m … blast it,
leave me alone. What I'm trying to do is help you get back some real
wish to live."
"So that I, in turn, can help
you keep going?"
"Well, uh, yes. I'm no
superman. It's been too long since anybody lent me a shoulder to cry
on."
"Are you saying that because
you mean it, or because it serves your purpose?" Chi-Yuen tossed back
her locks. "Never mind. Don't answer. We will do what we can for each
other. Afterward, if we survive — We will settle that when we
have survived."
His dark, scarred features
softened. "You are for a fact regaining your balance," he said.
"Excellent."
She laughed. Her arms went
about his neck. "Come here, you."
Chapter
13
The speed of light can be approached, but no body possessing
rest mass can quite attain it. Smaller and smaller grew the increments
of velocity by which Leonora Christine neared
that impossible ultimate. Thus it might have seemed that the universe
which her crew observed could not be distorted further. Aberration
could, at most, displace a star 45°; Doppler effect might
infinitely redden the photons from astern but only double the
frequencies from ahead.
However, there was no limit on
inverse tau, and that was the measure of changes in perceived space and
experienced time. Accordingly, there was no limit to optical changes
either; and the cosmos fore and aft could shrink toward a zero
thickness wherein all the galaxies were crowded.
Thus, as she made her great
swing half around the Milky Way and turned for a plunge through its
heart, the ship's periscope revealed a weird demesne. The nearer stars
streamed past ever faster, until at last the eye saw them marching
across the field of view: because by that time, years went by outside
while minutes ticked away within. The sky was no longer black; it was a
shimmering purple, which deepened and brightened as interior months
went by: because the interaction of force fields and interstellar
medium — eventually, interstellar magnetism — was
releasing quanta. The farther stars were coalescing into two globes,
fiery blue ahead, deep crimson aft. But gradually those globes
contracted toward points and dimmed: because well-nigh the whole of
their radiation had been shifted out of the visible spectrum, toward
gamma rays and radio waves.
The viewscope had been repaired
but was increasingly less able to compensate. The circuits simply could
not distinguish individual suns any longer at more than a few parsecs'
remove. The technicians took the instrument apart and rebuilt it for
heightened capacity, lest men fly altogether sightless.
That project, and various other
remodelings, were probably of more use to those able to do the work
than they were in themselves. Such persons did not withdraw into their
own shells as did too many of their shipmates.
Boris Fedoroff found Luis
Pereira on the hydroponics deck. An alga tank was being harvested. The
biosystems chief worked with his men, stripped like them, dripping the
same water and green slime, filling the crocks that stood on a cart.
"Phew!" said the engineer.
Teeth gleamed under Pereira's
mustache. "Do not deprecate my crop that loudly," he replied. "You will
be eating it in due course."
"I wondered how the imitation
Limburger cheese got so realistic," Fedoroff said. "Can you come for a
discussion with me?"
"Could it not be later? We
can't stop until we are through. If spoilage set in, you would be
tightening your belt for a while."
"I don't have time to waste
either," Fedoroff said, turning astringent. "I believe we'd rather be
hungry than wrecked."
"Carry on, then," Pereira told
his gang. He hopped from the tank and went to a shower stall where he
washed quickly. Not bothering to dry or dress himself, on this warmest
level in the ship, he led Fedoroff toward his office. "Confidentially,"
he admitted, "I'm delighted at an excuse to knock off that chore."
"You will be less delighted
when you hear the reason. It means hard work."
"Better yet. I was wondering
how to keep my team from coming apart. This isn't the sort of
occupation that generates spontaneous esprit de corps.
The boys will grumble, but they will be happier with something besides
routine."
They passed through a section
of green plants. Leaves lined every passageway, filling the air with
odor, rustling when brushed. Fruits hung among them like lanterns. You
could understand why a degree of serenity remained in those who labored
here.
"I've been alerted by
Foxe-Jameson," Fedoroff explained. "We're near enough to the central
galactic nebulae that he can use the new instruments that have been
developed to get accurate values for the mass densities there."
"He? I thought Nilsson was the
observations man."
"He was supposed to be."
Fedoroff's mouth set in hard lines. "He's going to pot. Hasn't
contributed a thing lately except quibbles and quarrels. The rest of
his group, even a couple of men from the shop making their stuff, like
Lenkei … they have to do what he should, as best they can."
"That is bad," Pereira said,
lighthearted no more. "We were relying on Nilsson to design instruments
for intergalactic navigation at ultra-low tau, were we not?"
Fedoroff nodded. "He'd better
pull out of his funk. But that isn't the problem today. We're going to
encounter the thickest stretch so far when we hit those clouds, because
of relativity and because they are in fact thick. I feel reasonably
confident we can pass through safely. Nevertheless, I want to reinforce
parts of the hull to make sure." He laughed like a wolf.
"‘Make sure' — on such a flight! At any rate, I'll
have a construction gang in here. You'll have to move installations out
of their way. I want to discuss the general requirements with you and
start you thinking, so you can plan how to minimize the disturbance to
your operations."
"Indeed. Indeed. Here we are."
Pereira waned Fedoroff into a cubbyhole with a desk and a filing
cabinet. "I will show you a schematic of our layout."
They talked business for half
an hour. (Centuries passed beyond the hull.) The trace of geniality he
had shown at first, which was once the usual face he turned to the
world, had vanished from Fedoroff. He was short-spoken to the point of
rudeness.
When he had stowed the drawings
and notes, Pereira said quietly: "You do not sleep well these nights,
do you?"
"Busy," the engineer grunted.
"Old friend, you thrive on
work. That is not what drew those smudges beneath your eyes. It is
Margarita, no?"
Fedoroff jerked in his chair.
"What about her?" He and Jimenes had lived steadily together for
several months.
"In our village, no one can
help noticing she has a grief."
Fedoroff stared out the
entrance, into the greenness. "I wish I could leave her without feeling
like a deserter," he said.
"M-m-m … you recall
I was often with her before she settled down. Perhaps I have an insight
you don't. You are not insensitive, Boris, but you seldom resonate with
the feminine mind. I wish you two well. Can I help?"
"The thing is, she refuses to
take antisenescence. Neither Urho Latvala nor I can budge her. No doubt
I tried too hard and made her think I was browbeating. She'll scarcely
speak to me."
Fedoroff's tone harshened. He
continued to watch the leaves outside. "I was never in love
… with her. Nor she with me. But we became fond. I want to
do anything I can for her. What, though?"
"She is a young woman," Pereira
said. "If our circumstances have made her, how shall I put it,
overwrought, she might react irrationally to any reminder of age and
death."
Fedoroff swung about. "She's
not ignorant! She's perfectly aware the treatment has to be periodic
through a whole adulthood — or menopause will hit her fifty
years before it needs to. She says that's what she wants!"
"Why?"
"She wants to be dead before
the chemical and ecological systems break down. You predicted five
decades for that, didn't you?"
"Yes. A slow, nasty way to go
out. If we haven't found a planet by then —"
"She remains Christian.
Prejudices about suicide." Fedoroff winced. "I don't like the prospect
either. Who does? She won't believe it isn't inevitable."
"I suspect," Pereira said, "the
idea of dying childless is to her the true horror. She used to make a
game of deciding on names for the large family she wants."
"Do you mean — Wait.
Let me think. Damn him, Nilsson was right the other day, about the
unlikelihood of our ever finding a home. I have to agree, life in that
case seems pretty futile."
"To her especially. Facing that
emptiness, she retreats — unconsciously, no doubt —
toward a permissible form of suicide."
"What can we do,
Luis?" Fedoroff asked in anguish.
"If the captain was persuaded
to make the treatments mandatory — He could justify that.
Supposing we do reach a planet in spite of everything, the community
will need each woman's childbearing span at a maximum."
The engineer flared up.
"Another regulation? Reymont dragging her off the doctor? No!"
"You should not hate Reymont,"
Pereira reproached. "You two are alike. Neither is a quitter."
"Someday I'll kill him."
"Now you display your romantic
streak," Pereira said, attempting to ease the atmosphere. "He is
pragmatism personified."
"What would he do about
Margarita, then?" Fedoroff gibed.
"Oh … I don't know.
Something unsentimental. For instance, he might co-opt a research and
development team to improve the biosystems and organocycles —
make the ship indefinitely habitable — so she could be
allowed two children, at least —"
His words trailed off. The men
stared gape-mouthed at each other. It blazed between them:
Why not?
Maria Toomajian ran into the
gym and found Johann Freiwald working out on the trapezes. "Deputy!"
she cried. Dismay shivered in her. "At the game room, a fight!"
He bounced to the deck and
pelted down the corridor. The noise reached him first, an excited
babble. A dozen off-duty persons crowded in a circle. Freiwald shoved
through. At the middle, second pilot Pedro Barrios and bull cook
Michael O'donnell panted and threw bare-knuckled blows. Slight harm had
been done, but the sight was ugly.
"Stop that!" Freiwald bellowed.
They did, glaring. Folk had
seen ere now the tricks that Reymont had drilled into his recruits.
"What is this farce?" Freiwald demanded. He turned his contempt on the
watchers. "Why didn't any of you take action? Are you too stupid to
understand what this kind of behavior can lead to?"
"Nobody accuses me of cheating
at cards," O'donnell said.
"You did," Barrios retorted.
They lunged afresh. Freiwald's
hands shot out. He got a grip on the collar of either tunic and
twisted, pressing into the Adam's apples behind. The men flailed and
kicked. He delivered a couple of fumikomi. They
wheezed their pain and yielded.
"You could have used boxing
gloves or kendo sticks in the ring," Freiwald said. "Now you're going
before the first officer."
"Er, pardon me." A slim, dapper
newcomer eased past the embarrassed witnesses and tapped Freiwald's
shoulder: cartographer Phra Takh. "I don't believe that's necessary."
"Mind your own business,"
Freiwald growled.
"It is my business," Takh said.
"Our unity is essential to our very lives. It won't be helped by
official penalties. I am a friend of both these men. I believe I can
mediate their disagreement."
"We must have respect for the
law, or we're done," Freiwald replied. "I'm taking them in."
Takh reached a decision. "May I
talk privately with you first? For a minute?" His tone held urgency.
"Well … all right,"
Freiwald agreed. "You two stay here."
He entered the game room with
Takh and shut the door. "I can't let them get away with resisting me,"
he said. "Ever since Captain Telander gave us deputies official status,
we've acted for the ship." Being clad in shorts, he lowered a sock to
show the contusions on an ankle.
"You could ignore that," Takh
suggested. "Pretend you didn't notice. They aren't bad fellows. They're
simply driven wild by monotony, purposelessness, the tension of
wondering if we will get through what's ahead of us or crash into a
star."
"If we let anybody escape the
consequences of starting violence —"
"Suppose I took them aside.
Suppose I got them to compose their differences and apologize to you.
Wouldn't that serve the cause better than an arrest and a summary
punishment?"
"It might," Freiwald said
skeptically. "But why should I believe you can do it?"
"I am a deputy too," Takh told
him.
"What?" Freiwald goggled.
"Ask Reymont, when you can get
him alone. I am not supposed to reveal that he recruited me, except to
a regular deputy in an emergency situation. Which I judge this is."
"Aber
… why — ?"
"He meets a good deal of
resentment, resistance, and evasion himself," Takh said. "His overt
part-time agents, like you, have less trouble of that sort. You seldom
have to do any dirty work. Still, a degree of opposition to you exists,
and certainly no one will confide anything if he thinks Reymont might
object. I am not a … a fink. We face no real crime problem.
I am supposed to be a leaven, to the best of what abilities I have. As
in this case today."
"I thought you didn't like
Reymont," Freiwald said weakly.
"I cannot say I do," Takh
answered. "Even so, he took me aside and convinced me I could perform a
service for the ship. I assume you won't let out the secret."
"Oh no. Certainly not. Not even
to Jane. What a surprise!"
"Will you let me handle Pedro
and Michael?"
"Yes, do." Freiwald spoke
absently. "How many more of your kind are there?"
"I haven't the faintest idea,"
Takh said, "but I suspect that he hopes eventually to include
everybody." He went out.
Chapter
14
The nebular masses which walled in the galaxy's core loomed
thunderhead black and betowered. Already Leonora Christine
traversed their outer edge. No suns were visible forward; elsewhere,
each hour, they shone fewer and fainter.
In this concentration of star stuff, she moved according to an
eerie sort of aerodynamics. Her inverse tau was now so enormous that
space density did not much trouble her. Rather, she swallowed matter
still more greedily than before and was no longer confined to hydrogen
atoms. Her readjusted selectors turned everything they met, gas or dust
or meteoroids, into fuel and reaction mass. Her kinetic energy and time
differential mounted at a dizzying rate. She flew as if through a wind
blowing between the sun clusters.
Nonetheless, Reymont haled Nilsson to the interview room.
Ingrid Lindgren took her place behind its desk, in uniform.
She had lost weight, and her eyes were shadowed. The cabin thrummed
abnormally loud, and frequent shocks went through bulkheads and deck.
The ship felt irregularities in the clouds as gusts, currents, vortices
of an ongoing creation of worlds.
"Can this not wait till we have made our passage, Constable?"
she asked, alike in anger and weariness.
"I don't think so, madame," Reymont replied. "Should an
emergency arise, we need people convinced it's worth coping with."
"You accuse Professor Nilsson of spreading disaffection. The
articles provide for free speech."
His chair creaked beneath the
astromoner's shifting weight. "I am a scientist," he declared
waspishly. "I have not only the right but the obligation to state what
is true."
Lindgren regarded him with
disfavor. He was letting a scraggly beard grow on his chins, had not
bathed of late, and was in grimy coveralls.
"You don't have the right to
spread horror stories," Reymont said. "Didn't you notice what you were
doing to some of the women, especially, when you talked the way you did
at mess? That's what decided me to intervene; but you'd been building
up the trouble for quite a while before, Nilsson."
"I merely brought out into the
open what has been common knowledge from the start," the fat man
retorted. "They hadn't the courage to discuss it in detail. I do."
"They hadn't the meanness. You
do."
"No personalities," Lindgren
said. "Tell me what happened." She had recently been taking her meals
alone in her cabin, pleading busyness, and was not seen much off watch.
"You know," Nilsson said.
"We've raised the subject on occasion."
"What subject?" she asked.
"We've talked about many."
"Talked, yes, like reasonable
people," Reymont snapped. "Not lectured a tableful of shipmates, most
of them feeling low already."
"Please, Constable. Proceed,
Professor Nilsson."
The astronomer puffed himself
up. "An elementary thing. I cannot comprehend why the rest of you have
been such idiots as not to give it serious consideration. You blandly
assume we will come to rest in a Virgo galaxy and find a habitable
planet. But tell me how. Think of the requirements. Mass, temperature,
irradiation, atmosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere … the best
estimate is that 1 per cent of the stars may have planets which are any
approximation to Earth."
"That," Lindgren said. "Why,
certainly —"
Nilsson was not to be deprived
of his platform. Perhaps he didn't bother to hear her. He ticked points
off on his fingers. "If 1 per cent of the stars are suitable, do you
realize how many we will have to examine in order to have an even
chance of finding what we seek? Fifty! I should have thought anyone
aboard would be capable of that calculation. It is conceivable that we
will be lucky and come upon our Nova Terra at the first star we try.
But the odds against this are ninety-nine to one. Doubtless we must try
many. Now the examination of each involves almost a year of
deceleration. To depart from it, in search elsewhere, requires another
year of acceleration. Those are years of ship's time, remember, because
nearly the whole period is spent at velocities which are small compared
to light's and thus involve a tau factor near unity: which, in
addition, prevents our going above one gravity.
"Hence we must allow a minimum
of two years per star. The even chance of which I spoke — and
mind you, it is only even — the odds are as good that we will
not find Nova Terra in the first fifty stars as they are that we will
— this chance requires a hundred years of search. Actually it
requires more, because we shall have to stop from time to time and
laboriously replenish the reaction mass for the ion drive.
Antisenescence or no, we will not live that long.
"Therefore our whole endeavor,
the risks we take in this fantastic dive straight through the galaxy
and out into intergalactic space, it is all an exercise in futility. Quod
erat demonstrandum."
"Among your many loathsome
characteristics, Nilsson," Reymont said, "is your habit of droning the
obvious through your nose."
"Madame!" the astronomer
gasped. "I protest! I shall file charges of personal abuse!"
"Cut back," Lindgren ordered.
"Both of you. I must admit your conduct offers provocation, Professor
Nilsson. On the other hand, Constable, may I remind you that Professor
Nilsson is one of the most distinguished men in his vocation that Earth
has … Earth had. He deserves respect."
"Not the way he behaves,"
Reymont said. "Or smells."
"Be polite, Constable, or I'll
charge you myself." Lindgren drew breath. "You don't seem to make
allowance for humanness. We are adrift in space and time; the world we
knew is a hundred thousand years in its grave; we are rushing nearly
blind into the most crowded part of the galaxy; we may at any minute
strike something that will destroy us; at best, we must look forward to
years in a cramped and barren environment. Don't you expect people to
react to that?"
"Yes, madame, I do," Reymont
said. "I do not expect them to behave so as to make matters worse."
"There is some truth in that,"
Lindgren conceded.
Nilsson squirmed and looked
sulky. "I was trying to spare them disappointment at the end of this
flight," he muttered.
"Are you absolutely certain you
weren't indulging your ego?" Lindgren sighed. "Never mind. Your
standpoint is legitimate."
"No, it isn't," Reymont
contradicted. "He gets his 1 per cent by counting every star. But
obviously we aren't going to bother with red dwarfs — the
vast majority — or blue giants or anything outside a fairly
narrow spectral range. Which reduces the field of search by a whopping
factor."
"Make the factor ten," Nilsson
said. "I don't really believe that, but let's postulate we have a 10
per cent probability of finding Nova Terra at any one of the Sol-type
stars we try. That nevertheless requires us to hunt among five to get
our even chance. Ten years? More like twenty, all things considered.
The youngest among us will be getting past his youth. The loss of so
many reproductive opportunities means a corresponding loss of heredity;
and our gene pool is minimal to start with. If we wait several decades
to beget children, we can't beget enough. Few will be grown to
self-sufficiency by the time their parents start becoming helpless with
advancing age. And in any case, the human stock will die out in three
or four generations. I know something about genetic drift, you see."
His expression grew smug. "I
didn't wish to hurt feelings," he said. "My desire was to help, by
showing your concept of a bold pioneer community, planting humankind
afresh in a new galaxy … showing that for the infantile
fantasy which it is."
"Have you an alternative?"
Lindgren inquired.
A tic began in Nilsson's face.
"Nothing but realism," he said. "Acceptance of the fact that we will
never leave this ship. Adjustment of our behavior to that fact."
"Is it the reason you've been
soldiering on the job?" Reymont demanded.
"I dislike your term, sir, but
it is true there is no point in building equipment for long-range
navigation. We are not going anywhere that makes any difference. I
cannot even get enthusiatic about Fedoroff's and Pereira's proposals
concerning the life support systems."
"You understand, I suppose,"
Reymont said, "that for maybe half the people aboard, the logical thing
to do once they've decided you're right, is to commit suicide."
"Possibly." Nilsson shrugged.
"Do you hate life so much
yourself?" Lindgren asked.
Nilsson half got up and fell
down again. He gobbled. Reymont surprised both his listeners by turning
soft-mannered:
"I didn't fetch you here only
to get your gloom-peddling stopped. I'd rather know why you haven't
been thinking how to improve our chances."
"How can they be?"
"That's what I want to learn
from you. You're the observational expert. As I recall, you were in
charge of programs back home which located something like fifty
planetary systems. You actually identified individual planets, and
typed them, across light-years. Why can't you do the same for us?"
Nilsson pounced. "Ridiculous! I
see that I must explain the topic in kindergarten terms. Will you bear
with me, First Officer? Pay attention, Constable.
"Granted, an extremely large
space-borne instrument can pick out an object the size of Jupiter at a
distance of several parsecs. This is provided the object gets good
illumination without becoming lost in the glare of its sun. Granted, by
mathematical analysis of perturbation data gathered over a period of
years, some idea can be obtained about companion planets which are too
small to photograph. Ambiguities in the equations can, to a degree, be
resolved by close interferometric study of flare-type phenomena on the
star; planets do exert a minor influence upon those cycles.
"But" — his finger
prodded Reymont's chest — "you do not realize how uncertain
those results are. Journalists delighted in trumpeting that another
Earthlike world had been discovered. The fact always was, however, that
this was one possible interpretation of our data. Only one among
numerous possible size and orbit distributions. And subject to a gross
probable error. And this, mind you, with the largest, finest
instruments which could be constructed. Instruments such as we do not
have with us here, nor have room for if we could somehow build them.
"No, even at home, me sole way
to get detailed information about extrasolar planets was to send a
probe and later a manned expedition. In our case, the sole way is to
decelerate for a close survey. And thereafter, I am convinced, to go
on. Because you must be aware that a planet which otherwise seems ideal
can be sterile or can have a native biochemistry that is useless or
outright deadly to us.
"I implore you, Constable, to
learn a little science, a little logic, and a bare touch of realism.
Eh?" Nilsson ended with a crow of triumph.
"Professor —"
Lindgren tried.
Reymont smiled crookedly.
"Don't worry, madame," he said. "No fight will come of it. His words
don't diminish me."
He inspected the other man.
"Believe it or not," he went on, "I knew what you've told us. I also
knew you are, or were, an able fellow. You made innovations, designed
gadgets, that were responsible for a lot of discoveries. You were doing
a fine job for us till you quit. Why not put your brain to work on the
problems we have?"
"Will you be so good as to
condescend to suggest a procedure?" Nilsson sneered.
"I'm no scientist, nor much of
a technician," Reymont said. "Still, a few things look obvious to me.
Let's suppose we have entered our target galaxy. We've shed the
ultra-low tau we needed to get there, but we have one yet of
… oh, whatever is convenient. Ten to the minus third, maybe?
Well, that gives you a terrifically long baseline and cosmic-time
period to make your observations. In the course of weeks or months,
ship's time, you can collect more data on a given star than you had on
any of Sol's neighbors. I should think you could find ways to use
relativity effects to give you information that wasn't available at
home. And naturally, you can observe a large number of Sol-type stars
simultaneously. So you're bound to find some you can prove —
prove with exact figures that leave no reasonable doubt —
have planets with masses and orbits about like Earth's."
"Assuming that, the question of
atmosphere, biosphere, will remain. We need a short-range look."
"Yes, yes. Must we stop to take
it, though? Suppose, instead, we lay out a course which brings us hard
by the most promising suns, in sequence, while we continue to travel
near light-speed. In cosmic time, we'll have hours or days to check
whatever planet interests us. Spectroscopic, thermoscopic,
photographic, magnetic, write your own list of clues. We can get a fair
idea of conditions on the surface. Biological conditions too. We could
look for items like thermodynamic disequilibrium, chlorophyl-reflection
spectra, polarization by microbe populations based on L-amino acids
… yes, I imagine we can get an excellent notion of whether
that planet is suitable. At low tau, we can examine any number in a
small stretch of our own time. We'll have to use automation and
electronics, in fact; we ourselves couldn't work fast enough. Then,
when we've identified the right world, we can return to it. That will
take a couple of years, agreed. But they'll be endurable years. We'll
know, with high probability, that we have a home waiting for us."
Color mounted in Lindgren's
features. Her eyes grew less dull. "Good'Lord," she said, "why didn't
you speak of this before?"
"I'd other problems on my
mind," Reymont answered. "Why didn't you, Professor Nilsson?"
"Because the whole thing is
absurd," the astronomer snorted. "You presuppose instrumentation we do
not have."
"Can't we build it? We have
tools, precision equipment, construction supplies, skilled workmen.
Your team has already made progress."
"You demand speed and
sensitivity increased by whole orders of magnitude over anything that
ever existed."
"Well?" Reymont said.
Nilsson and Lindgren stared at
him. The ship trembled.
"Well, why can't we develop
what we need?" Reymont asked in a puzzled voice. "We have some of the
most talented, highly trained, imaginative people our civilization
produced. They include every branch of science; what they don't know,
they can find in the microtapes; they're used to interdisciplinary work.
"Suppose, for instance, Emma
Glassgold and Norbert Williams got together to draw up the
specifications for a device to detect and analyze life at a distance.
They'd consult others as needed. Eventually they'd employ physicists,
electronicians, and the rest for the actual building and debugging.
Meanwhile, Professon Nilsson, you may have been in charge of a group
making tools for remote planetography. In fact, you're the logical man
to head up the entire program."
Hardness fell from him. He
exclaimed, eager as a boy: "Why, this is precisely what we've needed! A
fascinating, vital sort of job that demands everything everybody can
give. Those whose specialties aren't called for, they'll be in it too
— assistants, draftsmen, manual workers…. I
suppose we'll have to remodel a cargo deck to accommodate the
gear…. Ingrid, it's a way to save not just our lives but our
minds!"
He sprang to his feet. She did
too. Their hands clasped.
Suddenly they became aware of
Nilsson. He sat less than dwarfish, hunched, shivering, collapsed.
Lindgren went to him in alarm.
"What's wrong?"
His head did not lift.
"Impossible," he mumbled. "Impossible."
"Surely not," she urged. "I
mean, you wouldn't have to discover new laws of nature, would you? The
basic principles are known."
"They must be applied in
unheard-of ways." Nilsson covered his face. "God better me, I haven't
the brains any longer."
Lindgren and Reymont exchanged
a look above his bent back. She shaped unspoken words. Once he had
taught her the Rescue Corps trick of lip reading when spacesuit radios
were unusable. They had practiced it as something that made them more
private and more one. "Can we succeed without him?"
"I doubt it. He is
the best chief for that kind of project. At least, lacking him, our
chance is poor."
Lindgren squatted down beside
Nilsson. She laid an arm across his shoulders. "What's the trouble?"
she asked most softly.
"I have no hope," he snuffled.
"Nothing to live for."
"You do!"
"You know Jane …
deserted me … months ago. No other woman will —
Why should I care? What's left for me?"
Reymont's lips formed, "So
behind everything was self-pity." Lindgren frowned and shook her head.
"No, you're mistaken, Elof,"
she murmured. "We do care for you. Would we ask for your help if we
didn't honor you?."
"My mind." He sat straight and
glared at her out of swimming eyes. "You want my intelligence, right.
My advice. My knowledge and talent. To save yourselves. But do you want
me? Do you think of me as, as a human being? No! Dirty old Nilsson. One
is barely polite to him. When he starts to talk, one finds the earliest
possible excuse to leave. One does not invite him to one's cabin
parties. At most, if desperate, one asks him to be a fourth for bridge
or to start an instrument development effort. What do you expect him to
do? Thank you?"
"That isn't true!"
"Oh, I'm not as childish as
some," he said. "I'd help if I were able. But my mind is blank, I tell
you. I haven't had an original thought in weeks. Call it fear of death
paralyzing me. Call it a sort of impotence. I don't care what you call
it. Because you don't care either. No one has offered me friendship,
company, anything. I have been left alone in the dark and the cold. Do
you wonder that my mind is frozen?"
Lindgren looked away, hiding
what expressions chased across her. When she confronted Nilsson again,
she had put on calm.
"I can't say how sorry I am,
Elof," she told him. "You are partly to blame yourself. You acted so,
well, self-sufficient, we assumed you didn't want to be bothered. The
way Olga Sobieski, for instance, doesn't want to. That's why she moved
in with me. When you joined Hussein Sadek —"
"He keeps the panel closed
between our halves," Nilsson shrilled. "He never raises if. But the
soundproofing is imperfect. I hear him and his girls in there."
"Now we understand." Lindgren
smiled. "To be quite honest, Elof, I've grown bored with my current
existence."
Nilsson made a strangled noise.
"I believe we have some
personal business to discuss," Lindgren said. "Do … do you
mind. Constable?"
"No," said
Reymont. "Of course not." He left the cabin.
Chapter
15
Leonora Christine stormed through the
galactic nucleus in twenty thousand years. To those aboard, the time
was measured in hours. They were hours of dread, while the hull shook
and groaned from stress, and the outside view changed from total
darkness to a fog made blinding and blazing by crowded star clusters.
The chance of striking a sun was not negligible; hidden in a dust
cloud, it could be in front of the ship in one perceived instant. (No
one knew what would happen to the star. It might go nova. But certainly
the vessel would be destroyed, too swiftly for her crew to know they
were dead.) On the other hand, this was the region where inverse tau
mounted to values that could merely be estimated, not established with
precision, absolutely not comprehended.
She had a respite while she crossed the region of clear space
at the center, like passing through the eye of a hurricane.
Foxe-Jameson looked into the viewscope at thronged suns —
red, white and neutron dwarfs, two- and three-fold older than Sol or
its neighbors; others, glimpsed, unlike any ever seen or suspected in
the outer galaxy — and came near weeping. "Too bloody awful!
The answers to a million questions, right here, and not a single
instrument I can use!"
His shipmates grinned. "Where would you publish?" somebody
asked. Renascent hope was often expressing itself in a kind of gallows
humor.
But there was no joking when Boudreau called a conference with
Telander and Reymont. That was soon after the ship had emerged from the
nebulae on the far side of the nucleus and headed back through the
spiral arm whence she came. The scene behind was of a dwindling
fireball, ahead of a gathering darkness. Yet the reefs had been run,
the Journey to the Virgo galaxies would take only a few more months of
human life, the program of research and development on planet-finding
techniques had been announced with high optimism. A dance and slightly
drunken brawl was held in commons to celebrate. Its laughter, stamping,
lilt of Urho Latvala's accordion drifted faintly down to the bridge.
"I should perhaps have let you
enjoy yourselves like everybody else," Boudreau said. His skin was
shockingly sallow against hair and beard. "But Mohandas Chidambaran
gave me the results of his calculations from the latest readings after
we emerged from the core. He felt I was best qualified to gauge the
practical consequences … as if any rulebook existed for
intergalactic navigation! Now he sits alone in his cabin and meditates.
Me, when I got over being stunned, I thought I should notify you
immediately."
Captain Telander's visage drew
tight, readying for a new blow. "What is the result?" he asked.
"What is the subject?" Reymont
added.
"Matter density in space before
us," Boudreau said. "Within this galaxy, between galaxies, between
whole galactic clusters. Given our present tau, the frequency shift of
the neutral hydrogen radio emission, the instruments already built by
the astronomical team obtain unprecedented accuracy."
"What have they learned, then?"
Boudreau braced himself. "The
gas concentration drops off slower than we supposed. With the tau we
will probably have by the time we leave the Milky Way galaxy
… twenty million light-years out, halfway to the Virgo group
… as nearly as can be determined, we will still not dare
turn off the force fields."
Telander closed his eyes.
Reymont spoke jerkily: "We've
discussed that possibility in the past." The scar stood livid on his
brow. "That even between two clusters, we won't be able to make our
repair. It's part of the reason why Fedoroff and Pereira want to
improve the life support systems. You act as if you had a different
proposal."
"The one we talked about not
long ago, you and I," Boudreau said to the captain.
Reymont waited.
Boudreau told him in a voice
turned dispassionate: "Astronomers learned centuries' back, a cluster
or family of galaxies like our local group is not the highest form in
which stars are organized. These collections of one or two dozen
galaxies do, in turn, tend to occur in larger associations.
Superfamilies —"
Reymont made a rusty laugh.
"Call them clans," he suggested.
"Hein? Why
… all right, A clan is composed of several families. Now the
average distance between members of a family — individual
galaxies within a cluster — is, oh, say a million
light-years. The average distance between one family and the next is
greater, as you would expect: on the order of fifty million
light-years. Our plan was to leave this family and go to the nearest
beyond, the Virgo group. Both belong to the same clan."
‘‘Instead,
if we're to have any hope of stopping, we'll have to leave the entire
clan."
"Yes, I am afraid so."
"How far to the next one?"
"I can't say. I didn't take
journals along. They would be a bit obsolete by now, no?"
"Be careful," Telander warned.
Boudreau gulped. "I beg the
captain's pardon. That was a rather dangerous joke." He went back to
lecturing tone: "Chidambaran doesn't believe anyone was sure. The
concentration of galactic clusters drops off sharply at a distance of
about sixty million light-years from here. Beyond that, it is a long
way to other rich regions. Chidambaran guessed at a hundred million
light-years, or somewhat less. Else the hierarchical structure of the
universe would have been easier for astronomers to identify than it was.
"Surely, between clans, space
is so close to a perfect vacuum that we won't need protection."
"Can we navigate there?"
Reymont snapped. Sweat glistened on Boudreau's countenance. "You see
the hazard," he said. "We will be bound into the unknown more deeply
than we dreamed. Accurate sightings and placements will be
unobtainable. We shall need such a tau —"
"A minute," Reymont said. "Let
me outline the situation in my layman's language to make sure I
understand you." He paused, rubbing his chin with a sandpapery sound
(under the distant music), frowning, until his thoughts were marshalled.
"We must get … not
only into interfamily, but interclan space," he said. "We must do this
in a moderate shipboard time. Therefore we must run tau down to a value
of a billionth or less. Can we do it? Evidently, or you wouldn't talk
as you've done. I imagine the method is to lay a course within this
family that takes us through the nucleus of at least one other galaxy.
And then likewise through the next family — be it the Virgo
cluster or a different one determined by our new flight pattern
— through as many individual galaxies as possible, always
accelerating.
"Once the clan is well behind
us, we should be able to make our repair. Afterward we'll need a
similar period of deceleration. And because our tau will be so low, and
space so utterly empty, we'll be unable to steer. Not enough material
will be there for the jets to work on, nor enough navigational data to
guide us. We'll have to hope that we pass through another clan.
"We should do that. Eventually.
By sheer statistics. However, we may be out yonder a long while indeed."
"Correct," Telander said. "You
do understand." They had begun to sing upstairs.
— But me
and my true love will never meet again
On the bonnie, bonnie banks of Loch Lomond.
"Well," Reymont said, "there
doesn't appear to be any virtue in caution. In fact, for us it's become
a vice."
"What do you mean?" Boudreau
asked.
Reymont shrugged.
‘‘We need more than the tau for crossing space to
the next clan, a hundred million light-years or however far off it is.
We need the tau for a hunt which will take us past any number of them,
maybe through billions of light-years, until we find one we can enter.
I trust you can plot a course within this first clan that will give us
that kind of speed. Don't worry about possible collisions. We can't
afford worries. Send us through the densest gas and dust you can find."
"You … are taking
this … rather coolly," Telander said.
"What am I supposed to do?
Burst into tears?"
"That is why I thought you
should also hear the news first," Boudreau said. "You can break it to
the others."
Reymont considered both men for
a moment that stretched. "I'm not the captain, you know," he reminded
them.
Telander's smile was a spasm.
"In certain respects. Constable, you are."
Reymont went to the closest
instrument panel. He stood before its goblin eyes with head bent and
thumbs hooked in belt. "Well," he mumbled. "If you really want me to
take charge."
"I think you had better."
"Well, in that case. They're
good people. Morale is upward bound again, now that they see some
genuine accomplishment of their own. I think they'll be able to
realize, not just intellectually, but emotionally, that there's no
human difference between a million and a billion, or ten billion,
light-years. The exile is the same."
"The time involved, though
—" Telander said.
"Yes." Reymont looked at them
again. "I don't know how much more of our life spans we can devote to
this voyage. Not very much. The conditions are too unnatural. Some of
us can adapt, but I've learned that others can't. So we absolutely have
to push tau down as low as may be, no matter what the dangers. Not
simply to make the trip itself short enough for us to endure. But for
the psychological need to do our utmost."
"How is that?"
"Don't you see? It's our way of
fighting back at the universe. Vogue la galere. Go
for broke. Full steam ahead and damn the torpedoes. I think, if I can
put the matter to our people in those terms, they'll rally. For a
while, anyhow."
The wee birdies and
the wild flowers spring,
And in sunshine the waters are sleeping —
Chapter
16
The course out of the Milky Way was not straight; it zigzagged
a little, as much as several light-centuries, to pass through the
densest accessible nebulae and dust banks. Nevertheless, the time
aboard was counted in days until she was in the marches of the spiral
arm, outward bound into a nearly starless night.
Johann Freiwald brought Emma Glassgold a piece of equipment he
had made to her order. As had been proposed, she was joining forces
with Norbert Williams to devise long-range life detectors. The
machinist found her trotting about in her laboratory, hands busy,
humming to herself. The apparatus and glassware were esoteric, the
smells chemically. pungent, the background that endless murmur and
quiver which told how the ship plunged forward; and somehow she might
have been a new bride making her man a birthday cake.
"Thank you." She beamed as she
accepted the article.
"You look happy," Freiwald
said. "Why?"
"Why not?"
His arm swept in a violent
gesture. "Everything!"
"Well … a
disappointment about the Virgo cluster, naturally. Still, Norbert and I
—" She broke off, blushing. "We have a fascinating problem
here, a real challenge, and he's already made a brilliant suggestion
about it." She cocked her head at Freiwald. "I've never seen you in
this black a mood. What's become of that cheerful Nietzscheanism of
yours?"
"Today we leave the galaxy," he
said. "Forever."
"Why, you knew —"
"Yes. I also knew, know I must
die sometime, and Jane too, which is worse. That does not make it
easier." The big blond man exclaimed suddenly, imploringly: "Do you
believe we will ever stop?"
"I can't say," Glassgold
answered. She stood on tiptoe to pat his shoulder. "It was not easy to
resign myself to the possibility. I did, though, through God's mercy.
Now I can accept whatever comes to us, and feel how good most of it is.
Surely you can do the same, Johann."
"I try," he said. "It is so
dark out there. I never thought that I, grown up, would again be afraid
of the dark."
The great whirlpool of suns
contracted and paled astern. Another began slowly growing forward. In
the viewscope it was a thing of delicate, intricate beauty, jeweled
gossamer. Beyond it, around it, more appeared, tiny smudges and points
of radiance. Despite the Einsteinian shrinkage of space at Leonora
Christine's velocity, they showed monstrously remote and
isolated.
That speed continued to mount,
not as fast as in the regions left behind — here, the gas
concentration was perhaps a hundred thousandth of that near Sol
— but sufficiently to bring her to the next galaxy in some
weeks of her own time. Accurate observations were not to be had without
radical improvements in astronomical technology: a task into which
Nilsson and his team cast themselves with the eagerness of escapers.
Testing a photoconverter unit,
he personally made a discovery. A few stars existed out here. He didn't
know whether random perturbations had sent them drifting from their
parental galaxies, uncountable billions of years ago, or whether they
had actually formed in these deeps, in unknown fashion. By a
grotesquely improbable chance, the ship passed near enough to one that
he identified it — a dim, ancient red dwarf — and
could show that it must have planets, from the glimpse his apparatus
got before the system was swallowed anew by distance.
It was an eerie thought, those
icy shadowy worlds, manyfold older than Earth, perhaps one or two with
life upon them, and never a star to lighten their nights. When he told
Lindgren about it, she said not to pass the information any further.
Several days later, returning
home from work, he opened the door to their cabin and found her
present. She didn't notice him. She was seated on the bed, facing away,
her eyes on a picture of her family. The light was turned low, dusking
her but falling so coldly on her hair that it looked white. She
strummed her lute and sang … to herself? It was not the
merriment of her beloved Bellman. The language, in fact, was Danish.
After a moment, Nilsson recognized the lyrics, Jacobsen's Songs
of Gurre, and Schönberg's melodies for them.
The call of King Valdemar's
men, raised from their coffins to follow him on the spectral ride that
he was condemmed to lead, snarled forth.
Be greeted. King,
here by Gurre Lake!
Across the island our hunt we take,
From stringless bow let the arrow fly
That we have aimed with a sightless eye.
We chase and strike at the shadow hart,
And dew like blood from the wound will start.
Night raven swinging And darkly winging,
And leafage foaming where hoofs are ringing,
So shall we hunt ev'ry night, they say,
Until that hunt on the Judgment Day.
Holla, horse, and holla, hound,
Stop awhile upon this ground!
Here's the castle which erstwhile was.
Feed your horses on thistledown;
Man may eat of his own renown.
She started to go on with the
next stanza, Valdemar's cry to his lost darling; but she faltered and
went directly to his men's words as dawn breaks over them.
The cock lifts up his
head to crow,
Has the day within him,
And morning dew is running red
With rust, from off our swords.
Past is the moment!
Graves are calling with open mouths,
And
earth sucks down ev'ry light-shy horror.
Sink ye, sink ye!
Strong and radiant, life comes forth
With deeds and hammering pulses.
And we are death folk,
Sorrow and death folk,
Anguish and death folk.
To graves! To graves! To dream-bewildered sleep —
Oh, could we but rest peaceful!
For a little space there was
silence. Nilsson said. "That strikes too near home, my dear."
She looked about. Weariness had
laid a pallor on her face. "I wouldn't sing it in public," she answered.
Concerned, he went to her, sat
down by her side and asked: ‘‘Do you really think
of us as being on the Wild Hunt of the damned? I never knew."
"I try not to let on." She
stared straight before her. Her fingers plucked shivering chords from
the lute. "Sometimes — We are now at about the million-year
mark, you know."
He laid an arm around her
waist. "What can I do to help, Ingrid? Anything?"
She shook her head the least
bit.
"I owe you so much," he said.
"Your strength, your kindness, yourself. You made me back into a man."
With difficulty: "Not the best man alive, I admit. Not handsome or
charming or witty. I often forget even to try to be a good partner to
you. But I do want to."
"Of course, Elof."
"If you, well, have grown tired
of our arrangment … or simply want more, more variety
—"
"No. None of that." She put the
lute aside. "We have this ship to get to harbor, if ever we can. We
dare not let anything else count."
He gave her a stricken glance;
but before he could inquire just what she meant, she smiled, kissed
him, and said: "Still, we could use a rest. A forgetting. You can do
something for me, Elof. Draw our liquor ration. Help yourself to most
of it; you're sweet when you've dissolved your shyness. We'll invite
somebody young and ungloomy — Luis, I think, and Maria
— and laugh and play games and be foolish in this cabin and
empty a pitcher of water over anybody who says anything
serious…. Will you do that?"
"H I can," he said.
Leonora Christine
entered the next galaxy in its equatorial plane, to maximize the
distance she would traverse through its wealth of gas and star dust.
Already on the fringes, where the suns were as yet widely scattered,
she began to bound at high acceleration. The fury of that passage
vibrated ever more strongly and noisily through her.
Captain Telander kept the
bridge. Seemingly he had little control. The commitment was made; the
spiral arm curved ahead like a road shining blue and silver. Occasional
giant stars came sufficiently close to show in the now modified
screens, distorted with the speed effects that sent them whirling past
as if they were sparks blown by the wind that shouted against the ship.
Occasional dense nebulae enclosed her in night or in the fluorescence
of hot newbom stellar fires.
Lenkei and Barrios were the
men.who counted then, conning her manually through that fantastic
hundred-thousand-year plunge. The displays before them, the intercom
voices of Navigator Boudreau explaining what appeared to lie ahead or
Engineer Fedoroff warning of undue stresses, gave them some guidance.
But the vessel had gotten too swift, too massive for much veering; and
under these conditions, once-reliable instruments were turned into
Delphic oracles. Mostly the pilots flew on skill and instinct, perhaps
on prayer.
Captain Telander sat throughout
those shipboard hours, so unmoving that you might have thought him
dead. A few times he bestirred himself. ("Heavy concentration of stuff
identified, sir. Could be too thick for us. Shall we try to evade?")
Responses came from him. ("No, carry on, take every opportunity to
bring down tau, if you estimate even fifty-fifty odds in our favor.")
Their tone was calm and unhesitant.
The clouds around the nucleus
were thicker and made heavier weather than those in the home galaxy.
Thunders toned in the hull, which rocked and bucked to accelerations
that changed faster than could be compensated. Equipment broke from its
containers and smashed; lights flickered, went out, were somehow
rekindled by sweating, cursing men with flash beams; folk in darkened
cabins awaited their deaths. "Proceed on present course," Telander
ordered; and he was obeyed.
And the ship lived. She broke
through into starry space and started out the other side of the immense
Catherine wheel. In little more than an hour, she had re-entered
intergalactic regions. Telander announced it without fanfare. A few
people cheered.
Boudreau came before the
captain, trembling with reaction but his features altogether alive. "Mon
Dieu, sir, wedidit!! was not sure it would be possible. I
would not have had the courage, me, to issue the commands you did. You
were right! You won us everything we hoped for!"
"Not yet," said the seated man.
His inflection was unchanged. He looked past Boudreau. "Have you
corrected your navigational data? Will we be able to use any other
galaxies in this family?"
"Why … well, yes.
Several, although some are small elliptical systems, and we will
probably only manage to cut a corner across others. Too high a speed.
By the same token, however, we should have less trouble and hazard each
time, considering our mass. And we can certainly use at least two other
galactic families, maybe three, in similar fashion." Boudreau tugged
his beard. "I estimate we will be into, er, interclan space —
well into it, so we can make those repairs — in another
month."
"Good," Telander said.
Boudreau gave him a close
regard and was shocked. Beneath its careful expressionlessness, the
captain's countenance was that of a man drained empty.
Dark.
The absolute night.
Instruments, straining
magnification and amplification, reconverting wave lengths, identified
some glimmer in that pit. Human senses found nothing, nothing.
"We're dead." Fedoroff's words
echoed in earplugs and skulls.
"I feel alive," Reymont replied.
"What else is death but the
final cutting off? No sun, no stars, no sound, no weight, no shadow
—" Fedoroff's breath was ragged, too clear over a radio which
no longer carried the surf noise of cosmic interference. His head was
invisible against empty space. His suit lamp threw a dull puddle of
light onto the hull that was reflected and lost in horrible distances.
"Let's keep moving," Reymont
urged.
"Who're you to give orders?"
demanded another man. "What do you know about Bussard engines? Why are
you out with this work party anyhow?"
"I can manage myself in free
fall and armor," Reymont told him, "and so provide you an extra pair of
hands. I know we'd better get the job done fast. Which seems to be more
than you bagelbrains realize."
"What's the hurry?" Fedoroff
mocked. "We have eternity. We're dead, remember."
"We will indeed be dead if
we're caught, forceshields down, in anything like a real concentration
of matter," Reymont retorted. "It'd take less than one atom per cubic
meter to kill us with our present tau — which puts the next
galactic clan only weeks away."
"What of it?"
"Well, are you absolutely
certain, Fedoroff, that we won't strike an embryo galaxy, family, clan
… some enormous hydrogen cloud, still dark, still falling it
on itself … at any instant?"
"At any millennium, you mean,"
the chief engineer said. But, evidently stung out of his dauntedness,
he started aft from the main personnel lock. His gang followed.
It was, in truth, a flitting of
ghosts. No wonder he, never a coward, had briefly heard the wingbeats
of the Furies. One had thought of space as black. But now one
remembered that it had been full of stars. Any shape had been
silhouetted athwart suns, clusters, constellations, nebulae, sister
galaxies; oh, the cosmos was pervaded with light! The inner
cosmos. Here was worse than a dark background. Here was no background.
None whatsoever. The squat, unhuman forms of spacesuited men, the long
curve of the hull, were seen as gleams, disconnected and fugitive. With
acceleration ended, weight was ended also. Not even the slight
differential-gravity effects of being in orbit existed. A man moved as
if in an infinite dream of swimming, flying, falling. And yet
… he remembered that this weightless body of his bore the
mass of a mountain. Was there a real heaviness in his floating; or had
the constants of inertia subtly changed, out here where the metric of
Space-time was flattened to nearly a straight line; or was it an
illusion, spawned in the tomb stillness which engulfed him? What was
illusion? What was reality? Was reality?
Roped together, clinging with
frantic bondsoles to the ship's metal (curious, the horror one felt of
getting somehow pitched loose — extinction would be the same
as if that had happened in the lost little spaceways of the Solar
System — but the thought of blazing across gigayears as a
stellar-scale meteor was peculiarly lonely), the engineer detail made
their way along the hull, past the spidery framework of the
hy-dromagnetic generators. Those ribs seemed terribly frail.
"Suppose we can't fix the
decelerator half of the module," came a voice. "Do we go on? What
happens to us? I mean, won't the laws be different on me edge of the
universe? Won't we turn into something awful?"
"Space is isotropic," Reymont
barked into the blackness. "‘The edge of the universe' is
gibberish. And let's start by supposing we can fix the stupid machine."
He heard a few oaths and
grinned like a carnivore. When they halted and began to secure their
lifelines individually to the ion drive girders, Fedoroff laid his
helmet against Reymont's for a private talk carried by conduction.
"Thanks, Constable," he said.
"What for?"
"Being such a prosaic bastard."
‘‘Well, we
have a prosaic job of repair to do. We may have come a long way, we may
by now have outlived the race that produced us, but we haven't changed
from a variety of proboscis monkey. Why take ourselves so mucking
seriously?"
‘‘Hm. I see
why Lindgren insisted I let you come along." Fedoroff cleared his
throat. "About her."
"Yes."
"I … 1 was angry
… at your treatment of her. It was mainly that. Of course, I
was, uh, humiliated personally. But a man should be able to get over
that. I cared for her, though, very much."
"Forget it," Reymont said.
"I cannot do that. But maybe I
can understand a little better than I let myself do in the past. You
must have hurt too. And now, for her own reasons, she has gone from
both of us. Shall we shake hands and be friends once more, Charles?"
"Surely. I've wanted this
myself. Good men are hard to come by." Gauntlets groped to find each
other in the murk and clasp.
‘‘All
right." Fedoroff switched his transmitter back on and pushed clear of
the ship. "Let's get aft and have a look at the problem."
Chapter
17
Light began to glimmer ahead, a scattering of starlike points
which waxed, in numbers and brightness, toward glory. Their dominion
widened; presently the viewscope showed them occupying nearly half of
heaven; and still that area grew and brightened.
They were not stars forming those strange constellations. They
were, at first, entire families of galaxies making up a clan. Later, as
the ship advanced, they broke into clusters and then into separate
members.
The viewscope's reconstruction
of this stationary-observer sight was only approximate. From the
spectra received, a computer estimated what the Doppler shift, and thus
the aberration, must be, and made corresponding adjustments. But these
were nothing except estimates.
It was believed that the clan
lay about three hundred million light-years from home. But no charts
existed for these deeps, no standards of measurement. The probable
error in the derived value of tau was huge. Factors like absorption
simply were not in any reference work aboard.
Leonora Christine
might have sought a less remote destination, for which more reliable
data were tabulated. However — bearing in mind that at
ultra-low tau she was not very steerable — that route would
have taken her through less matter within the Milky Way-Andromeda-Virgo
clan. She would have gained less speed; and now she was running so
close to c that every increment made a
significant difference. Paradoxically, shipboard time to the nearest
possible target would have been more than to this one.
And it was not known, either,
how long her people could endure.
The cheer brought by the repair
of the decelerator was short-lived. For neither half of the Bussard
module could work in interclan space. Here the primordial gas had
finally gotten too thin. For weeks, therefore, the ship must go
powerless on a trajectory set by the eldritch ballistics of relativity.
Within her hull was weightlessness. There was some talk of using
lateral ion jets to put a spin on her and thus provide centrifugal
pseudo-gravity. Despite her size, it would have generated radial and
Coriolis effects that were too troublesome. She had not been designed
nor had her folk been trained for such.
They must bear the weeks, while
the geological epochs passed by outside.
Reymont opened the door to his
cabin. Weariness made him careless. Bracing himself a trifle too hard
against the bulkhead, he let go the handhold and was propelled away.
For a moment he cartwheeled in mid-air. Then he bumped into the
opposite side of the corridor, pushed, and darted back across. Once
within the cabin, he grabbed another bar before shutting the door
behind him.
At this hour, he had expected
Chi-Yuen Ai-Ling to be asleep. But she floated wakeful, a few
centimeters off their joined beds, a single line anchoring her. As he
entered, she switched off the library screen with a quickness that
showed she hadn't really been paying attention to the book projected on
it.
"Not you too?" Reymont's
question seemed loud. They had been so long accustomed to the engine
pulse as well as the force of acceleration that free fall still brimmed
the ship with silence.
"What?" Her smile was tentative
and troubled. They had had scant contact lately. He had too much work
under these changed conditions, organizing, ordering, cajoling,
arranging, planning. He would come here merely to snatch what slumber
he might.
"Have you also become unable to
rest in zero gee?" he asked.
"No. That is, I can. A strange,
light sort of sleep, filled with dreams, but I seem fairly refreshed
afterward."
"Good," he sighed. "Two more
cases have developed."
"Insomniac, you mean?"
"Yes. Verging on nervous
collapse. Every time they do drift off, you know, they wake again
screaming. Nightmares. I'm not sure whether weightlessness alone does
it to them, or if that's only the last thing needed for breaking
stress. Neither is Urho Latvala. I was just conferring with him. He
wanted my opinion on what to do, now that he's running short of
psychodrugs."
"What did you suggest?"
Reymont grimaced. "I told him
who I thought unconditionally had to have them, and who might survive
awhile without."
"The trouble isn't simply the
psychological effect, you realize," Chi-Yuen said. "It is the fatigue.
Pure physical tiredness, from trying to do things in a gravityless
environment."
"Of course." Reymont hooked one
leg around the bar to hold himself in place and started to unfasten his
coverall. "Quite unnecessary. The regular spacemen know how to cope,
and you and I and a few others. We don't get worn out trying to
coordinate our muscles. It's those groundlubber scientists who do."
"How much longer, Charles?"
‘‘Like
this? Who knows? They plan to reactivate the force fields, at minimum
strength off the interior power plant, tomorrow. A precaution, in case
we strike denser material sooner than expected. The last estimate I
heard for when we'll reach the fringes of the clan is a week."
She relaxed in relief. "We can
stand that. And then … we will be making for our new home."
"Hope so," Reymont grunted. He
stored his clothes, shivered a little though the air was warm, and took
out a pair of pajamas.
Chi-Yuen started. Her tether
jerked her to a stop. "What do you mean by that? Don't you know?"
"Look, Ai-Ling," he said in an
exhausted tone, "you've been briefed like everybody else on our
instrumentation problems. How in hell's flaming name can you expect an
exact answer to anything?"
"I'm sorry —"
"Are the officers to blame if
the passengers don't listen to their reports, won't understand?"
Reymont's voice lifted in anger. "Some of you are going to pieces
again. Some of you have barricaded yourselves with apathy, or religion,
or sex, or whatever, till nothing registers on your memories. Most of
you — well, it was healthy to work on
those R & D projects, but that's become a defense reaction in
its own right. Another way of narrowing your attention till you exclude
the big bad universe. And now, when free fall prevents you carrying on,
you likewise crawl into your nice hidey-holes." Lashingly: "Go ahead.
Do what you want. The whole wretched lot of you. Only don't come and
peck at me any longer. D'you hear?"
He yanked the pajamas on,
soared to the bed, and clipped the safety line around his waist.
Chi-Yuen moved to embrace him.
"Oh, love," she whispered. "I'm
sorry. You are so tired, are you not?"
"Been hard on us all," he said.
"Most on you." Her fingers
traced the cheekbones standing out under taut skin, the deep lines, the
sunken and bloodshot eyes. "Why don't you rest?"
"I'd like to."
She maneuvered his mass into a
stretched-out position and drew herself closer yet. Her hair floated
across his face, smelling of sunshine on Earth. "Do," she said. "You
can. For you, isn't it good not to be heavy?"
"M-m-m … yes, in a
way…. Ai-Ling, you know Iwasaki pretty well. Do you think he
can manage without tranquilizers? The doctor and I weren't sure."
"Hush." Her palm covered his
mouth. "None of that."
"But —"
"No, I will not have it. The
ship isn't going to fall apart if you get one decent night's sleep."
"Well … well
… maybe not."
"Close your eyes. Let me stroke
your forehead — there. Isn't that better already? Now think
of nice things."
"Like what?"
"Have you forgotten? Think of
home. No. Best not that, I suppose. Think of the home we are going to
find. Blue sky. Warm bright sun, light falling through leaves, dappling
the shade, blinking on a river; and the river flows, flows, flows,
singing you to sleep."
"Um-m-m."
She kissed him very lightly.
"Our own house. A garden. Strange colorful flowers. Oh, but we will
plant seeds from Earth too, roses, honeysuckle, apple, rosemary for
remembrance. Our children…."
He stirred. The fret returned
to him. "Wait a minute, we can't make personal commitments. Not yet.
You might not want, uh, any given man. I'mfondofyou, of course, but
—"
She brushed his lids shut again
before he saw the pain on her. "We are daydreaming, Charles," she
laughed low. "Stop being all solemn and literal-minded. Just think
about children, everyone's children, playing in a garden. Think about
the river. Forests. Mountains. Bird song. Peace."
He tightened an arm around her
slenderness. "You're a good person."
"You are yourself. A good
person who ought to be cuddled. Would you like me to sing you to sleep?"
"Yes." His words were becoming
indistinct. "Please. I like Chinese music."
She continued smoothing his
brow while she drew breath.
The intercom circuit clicked
shut. "Constable," said Telander's voice, "are you there?"
Reymont snapped awake. "Don't,"
Chi-Yuen begged.
"Yes," Reymont said, "here I
am."
"Would you come to the bridge?
Confidential."
"Aye, aye." Reymont undid his
lifeline and pulled the pajama top over his head.
"They could not give you five
minutes, could they?" Chi-Yuen said.
"Must be serious," he answered.
"Don't mention it around until you hear from me." In a few motions he
had resumed coverall and shoes and was on his way.
Telander and, surprisingly,
Nilsson awaited him. The captain looked as if he had been struck in the
belly. The astronomer was excited but had not wholly lost his
self-command of recent months. He clutched a bescribbled sheet of paper.
"Navigation difficulties, eh?"
Reymont deduced. "Where's Boudreau?"
"This doesn't concern him
immediately," Nilsson said. ‘‘I have been computing
the significance of observations I've made with the newest instruments.
I have reached a, ah, frustrating conclusion."
Reymont wrapped fingers around
a grip and hung in the stillness, regarding them. The fluorolight cast
the hollows of his face into shadow. The gray streaks which had lately
appeared in his hair stood forth sharp by contrast. "We can't make that
galactic clan ahead of us after all," he foretold.
"That's right." Telander
drooped.
"No, not right in a strict
sense," Nilsson declared fussily. ‘‘We will pass
through. In fact, we will pass through not only the general region, but
— if we choose — through a quite a fair number of
galaxies within certain of the families which comprise the clan."
"You can distinguish thatmuch
detail already?" Reymont wondered; "Boudreau couldn't."
"I told you I have new
equipment, with its balkiness now tinkered out," Nilsson said. "You
recollect that after Ingrid gave me some special lessons, I became able
to work in free fall with a degree of efficiency. The precision of my
data seems even more than hoped for when, ah, we instigated the
project. Yes, I have a reasonably accurate map of that part of the clan
which we might traverse. On such basis, I have calculated what options
are open to us."
"Get to the point. God damn
you!" Reymont yelled. At once he curbed himself, inhaled, and said:
"Apologies. I'm a little overwrought. Please go on. Once we get in
where the jets have a decent amount of matter to work on, why can't we
brake?"
"We can," Nilsson replied
quickly. "Certainly we can. But our inverse tau is immense. Remember,
we acquired it by passing through the densest attainable portions of
several galaxies, en route to interclan space. It was necessary. I
don't dispute the wisdom of the decision. Nevertheless, the result is
that we are limited in what paths we can take that intersect the space
occupied by this clan. The paths form a rather narrow conoidal volume,
as you might guess."
Reymont gnawed his lip. "And it
turns out there doesn't happen to be enough matter in that cone."
"Correct." Nilsson's head
bobbed. "Among other things, the difference in velocity between us and
these galaxies, due to the expansion of space, reduces the
effectiveness of our Bussard engine more than it reduces the amount of
deceleration required."
His professorial manner was
returning to him: "At best, we will emerge on the other side of the
clan — after an estimated six months of ship's time under
deceleration, mind you — with a tau that remains on the order
of ten to the minus third or fourth power. No further important change
of velocity can be made in the space beyond, interclan space. Hence it
would be impossible for us to reach another clan — given that
high a value of tau — before we die of old age."
The pompous voice cut off, the
beady eyes looked expectant. Reymont met them rather than Telander's
sick, gutted stare. "Why am I being told this, and not Lindgren?" he
asked.
A tenderness made Nilsson,
briefly, another man. "She works cruelly hard. What can she do here? I
thought I had best let her sleep."
"Well, what can I
do?"
"Give me … us
… your advice," Telander said.
"But sir, you're the captain!"
"We have been over this ground
before, Carl. I can, well, yes, I suppose I can make the decisions,
issue the commands, order the routines, which will take us crashing on
through space." Telander extended his hands. They trembled like autumn
leaves. "More than that I can no longer do, Carl. I have not the
strength left. You must tell our shipmates."
"Tell them we've failed?"
Reymont grated. "Tell them, in spite of everything we did, we're damned
to fly on till we go crazy and die? You don't want much of me, do you,
Captain?"
"The news may not be that bad,"
Nilsson said.
Reymont snatched at him, missed
and hung with a raw noise in his throat. "We have some hope?" he
managed finally.
The fat man spoke with a
briskness that turned his pedantry into a sort of bugle call:
"Perhaps. I have no worthwhile
data. The distances are too vast. We cannot choose another specific
galactic clan and aim for it. We would see it with too great an
inaccuracy, and across too many millions of years" of time. However, I
do believe we can base a hope on the laws of chance.
"Someplace, eventually, we
could meet the right configuration. Either an especially large clan
through whose galaxy-densest portions we can lay a course; or else two
or three clans, rather close to each other, more or less along a
straight line, so that we can pass through them in succession; or else
one whose velocity with respect to us happens to be favorable. Do you
see? If we could come upon something like that, we would be in
reasonable shape. We would be able to brake in a few years of ship's
time."
"What are the odds?" Reymont's
words clanked.
Now Nilsson shook his head. "I
cannot say. Perhaps not too bad. This is a big and varied cosmos. If we
continue sufficiently long, I should imagine we have a finite
probability of encountering what we need."
"How long is sufficiently
long?" Reymont made a gesture to halt. ‘‘don't
bother answering. I can tell. It's on the order of billions of years.
Tens of billions, maybe. That means we've got to have a lower tau yet.
A tau so low that we can actually circumnavigate the universe
… in years or in months. And that, in turn, means we can't
start slowing as we enter this clan up ahead. No. We accelerate again.
After we've passed through — well, we should have a shorter
period of ship's time in free fall than the current one has been, until
we strike another clan. Probably there, too, we'll find it advisable to
accelerate, running tau still lower. Yes, I know, that makes it still
harder to find a place where we can come to rest; but anything else
gives us no measurable chance at all, right?"
"I expect we'll be taking every
opportunity to accelerate that we come upon, till we see a journey's
end we can make use of, if we ever do. Agreed?"
Telander shuddered. "Can any of
us hold to it?" he said.
"We must," Reymont stated. Once
more he spoke crisply.'TU figure out a tactful way to announce your
news. It was among the possibilities that have been discussed by nearly
everyone. That helps. I'll have the few men I can trust ready
… no, not for violence. Ready with leadership, steadiness,
encouragement. And we'll embark on a general training program for
weightlessness. No reason why it has to cause trouble. We'll teach
every last one of those groundlub-bers how to handle himself in zero
gee. How to sleep. By God, how to hope!" He smote his palms together
with a pistol sound.
"Don't forget, we can depend on
some of the women too," Nilsson said.
"Yes. Certainly. Like Ingrid
Lindgren."
"Like her indeed."
"M-hm. I'm afraid you will have
to go rouse her, Elof. We've got to assemble our cadre — the
unbreakables; the people who understand people — assemble
them and plan this thing. Start suggesting names."
Chapter
18
The reaches of space-time cannot be numbered by man's familiar
integers; They cannot even be honestly counted by orders of magnitude.
To feel this fact, recapitulate:
Leonra Christine spent most of a year
getting within 1 per cent of light velocity. The time aboard was about
the same, because the value of tau only began to drop sharply when she
was quite near c. During that initial period, she
covered half a light-year of space, approximately five trillion
kilometers.
Thereafter the decrease became constantly more swift. Aided by
the higher acceleration now possible, she required somewhat under two
more years, in her own measure, to get about ten light-years from
Earth. That was where she met her grief.
The decision being made to seek the Virgo cluster of galaxies,
she must gain such a tau that she could bridge the distance in a
tolerable shipboard time. At maximum acceleration — a maximum
which increased as she traveled — she swung half around the
Milky Way and into its heart in a little more than one year. According
to the cosmos, it took better than a hundred millennia.
In the Sagittarian clouds, she won a tau which brought her out
of her native galaxy in days. Then her people discovered that the
vacuum between the family of star groups they were in and the Virgo
assemblage at which theirplans were aimed, was not hard enough. They
must go beyond the entire clan.
In intergalactic space, Leonora Christine
remained able to pile on speed. It took her weeks to fare a couple of
million light-years to a chosen neighbor galaxy. Spanning this in
hours, she filled herself so full of kinetic energy that she crossed a
similar distance in days … and presently she used a week or
so to depart from her original cluster and reach another one
… through which she passed quite rapidly…. She
coasted across the almost total emptiness of interclan space; meanwhile
her engineers fixed the damaged unit. Although without acceleration,
she needed only a pair of her own months to lay two or three hundred
million light-years behind her.
The accessible mass of the
whole galactic clan that was her goal proved inadequate to brake that
velocity.
Therefore she did not try.
Instead, she used what she swallowed to drive forward all the faster.
She traversed the domain of this second clan — with no
attempt at manual control, simply spearing through a number of its
member galaxies — in two days.
On the far side, again into
hollow space, she fell free. The stretch to the next attainable clan
was on the order of another hundred million light-years. She made the
passage in about a week.
When she arrived there, of
course, she spent the star stuff she found to force herself still
closer to the ultimate speed.
"No — don't
— look out!"
Margarita Jimenes missed the
handhold that would have checked her flight. Scrabbling for it, she
struck the bulkhead, caromed, and floundered in air.
"Ad i chawrti!"
Boris Fedoroff snorted.
He gauged vectors and launched
himself to intercept her. It was not a conscious calculation; that
would have been impossibly cumbersome. Like a hunter who aimed for a
moving target, he used the skills and multiple senses of his body
— angular diameters and shifts, muscle pressures and
tensions, kinesthesia, the unseen but exactly known configuration of
every joint, the several time derivatives of each of these factors and
many more — his organism, a machine created with
incomprehensible complexity and precision and, as it soared, beauty.
He had a ways to fly. They were
on Number Two deck, well aft near the engine rooms. It was devoted to
storage; but a major part of the materials it had held were now
fashioned into objects. Where the cargo had been was a cavernous,
echoing space, coldly lit, seldom visited. Fedoroff had brought his
woman there for some private instruction in free-fall techniques. She
was doing miserably in the classes that Lindgren had decreed for
groundlubbers.
She spun before him, head lost
among loose ringlets, arms and legs and breasts flopping. Sweat oiled
her bare skin and broke off in globules that glittered around her like
midges. "Relax, I tell you," Fedoroff called. "The first damn thing you
must learn is, ‘Relax.'"
He passed within reach and
grabbed her at the waist. Linked, the two of them formed a new system
that spun on a crazy axis as it drifted toward the opposite bulkhead.
Vestibular processes registered their outrage in giddiness and nausea.
He knew how to suppress that reaction; and he had given her an
antispacesickness pill before the lesson started.
Nevertheless she vomited.
He could do nothing except hold
her through their trajectory. The first upheaval caught him by surprise
and struck him in the face. Thereafter he clasped her back against
belly. His free hand swatted at stinking yellow liquid and gobbets.
Inhaled under these conditions, the stuff could choke a person.
When they hit metal, he
snatched the nearest support, an empty rack. Hooking an elbow joint in
it, he could use both arms to keep her and soothe her. Eventually the
dry phase passed too.
"Are you better?" he asked.
She shivered and mumbled, "I
want to be clean."
"Yes, yes, we'll find a bath.
Waithere. Hang on, don'tlet go. I'll come in a few minutes." Fedoroff
shoved free again.
He must close the ventilators
before the splashed foulness got drawn into the ship's general air
system. Afterward he could see about catching it with a vacuum cleaner.
He would do that himself. If he detailed another man to this mess, the
fellow might do more than resent it. He might start a rumor about
—
Fedoroff's teeth slammed
together. He finished his precautions and dove back to Jimenes.
Though still white-faced, she
appeared in command of her movements. "I'm dreadfully sorry, Boris."
Her speech came hoarse out of a larynx burned by stomach acid. "I
should never have agreed … to come this far …
from a suction toilet."
He poised in front of her and
asked grimly, "How long have you been puking?"
She shrank away. He caught her
before she drifted loose. His clasp was savage on her wrist. "When was
your last period?" he demanded.
"You saw —"
"I saw what could easily have
been a fake. Especially considering how busy I've been in my work. Give
me the truth!"
He shook her. Unanchored, her
body was twisted at the shoulder. She screamed. He let go as if she had
turned incandescent. "I didn't mean to hurt you," he gasped. She bobbed
from him. He got her just in time, hauled her back and held her tightly
against his besmeared breast.
"Th-th-three months," she
stammered through her weeping.
He let her cry while he stroked
the matted hair. When she was done, he helped her to a bathroom. They
sponged each other fairly clean. The organic liquid they used had a
pungency overriding the stench on them, but its volatilization was so
rapid and thorough that Jimenes shuddered with chill, Fedoroff chucked
the sponges into the chute of a laundry-bound conveyor and turned on a
hot-air blower. He and she basked for minutes.
"Do you know," he said after
much silence, "if we have solved the problem of hydroponics in zero
gravity, we should be able to design something that will give us a real
bath. Or even a shower."
She didn't smile, only huddled
near the grille. Her hair billowed backward.
Fedoroff stiffened. "All
right," he said, "how did it happen? Isn't the doctor supposed to keep
track of every woman's contraceptive schedule?"
She nodded, not looking at him.
Her reply was scarcely to be heard. "Yes. One shot a year, though, for
twenty-five of us … and he had, he has many things on his
mind other than routine …"
"You didn't both forget?"
‘‘No. I
went to his office on my usual date. It's embarrassing when he has to
remind a girl. He wasn't in. Out taking care of someone in trouble,
maybe. His chart for us lay on his desk. I looked at it. Jane had been
in for the same reason, I saw, this same day, probably an hour or two
earlier. Suddenly I snatched his pen and wrote ‘OK' after my
own name, in the space for this time. I scribbled it the way he does.
It happened before I really knew what I was doing. I ran."
"Why didn't you confess
afterward? He's seen battier impulses than that since this ship went
astray."
"He should have remembered,"
Jimenes said louder. "H he decided that he must have forgotten I was in
— why should I do his work for him?"
Fedoroff cursed and grabbed
after her. He stopped his hand short of the bruised wrist. "In the name
of sanity!" he protested. "Latvala's worked to death, trying to keep us
functional. And you ask why you should help him?"
Her defiance grew more open.
She faced him and said: "You promised we could have children."
"Why — well, yes,
true, we want as many as we can, once we have a planet —"
"And if we do not find a
planet? What then? Can't you improve the biosystems as you've been
bragging?"
"We've put that aside in favor
of the instrumentation project. It may take years."
"A few babies won't make that
much difference meanwhile … to the ship, the damned ship
… but the difference to us —"
He moved toward her. Her eyes
widened. She crawled from him, handhold to handhold. "No!" she yelled.
"I know what you're after! You'll never take my baby! He's yours too!
If you … you cut my baby out of me — I'll kill
you! I'll kill everyone aboard!"
"Quiet!" he bellowed. He backed
off a little. She clung whereshewas, sobbing and baring teeth. "I won't
do a thing myself," he said. "We'll see the constable." He went to the
exit. "Stay here. Pull yourself together. Think how you want to argue.
I'll fetch clothes for us."
On his errand, the sole words
he uttered were through the intercom, requesting a private talk with
Reymont. Nor did he speak to Jimenes, or she to him, on their way to
their cabin.
When they were inside, she
seized his arms. "Boris, your own child, you can't — and
Easter coming —"
He tethered her. "Calm down,"
he warned. "Here." He gave her a squeeze bottle with, some tequila in
it. "This may help. Don't drink much. You'll need your wits about you."
The door chimed. Fedoroff
admitted Reymont and closed it again. "Would you like a dram, Charles?"
the engineer asked.
The features he confronted
might have been a vizor on a war helmet. "We'd Setter discuss your
problem first," said the constable.
"Margarita is pregnant,"
Fedoroff told him.
Reymont floated quiet, lightly
gripping a bar. "Please —" Jimenes began.
Reymont waved her to silence.
"How did that happen?" he inquired, softly as the ship's breath from
the ventilators.
She tried to explain, and
couldn't. Fedoroff put it in a few words.
"I see." Reymont nodded. "About
seven months to go, hm? Why do you consult me? You should have gone
directly to the first officer. She'll be the one in any event who
disposes of the case. I have no power except to arrest you for a grave
breach of regulation."
"You — We are
friends, I thought, Charles," Fedoroff said.
"My duty is to the whole ship,"
Reymont answered in the same monotone as before. "I can't go along with
anyone's selfish action that threatens the lives of the rest."
"One tiny baby?" Jimenes cried.
"And how many more desired by
others?"
"Must we wait forever?"
"It would seem proper to wait
till you know what our future is likely to be. A child bom here could
have a short life and a grisly death."
Jimenes locked fingers over her
abdomen. "You won't murder him! You won't!"
"Be still," spat from Reymont.
She choked but obeyed. He turned his gaze on Fedoroff. "What are your
views, Boris?"
Slowly, the Russian retreated
until he was beside his woman. He drew her to him and said: "Abortion
is murder. This should not have happened, maybe, but I cannot believe
my shipmates are murderers. I will die before I permit it."
"We'd be in bad shape without
you."
"Exactly."
"Well —" Reymont
averted his eyes. "You haven't yet told me what you imagine I can do,"
he said.
‘‘I know
what you can," Fedoroff answered. "Ingrid will want to save this life.
She may not be able without your advice and backing."
"Hm. Hm. So." Reymont drummed
the bulkhead. "It isn't the worst thing for us, this," he said at
length, thoughtfully. "There might even be some gains to make. If we
can pass it off as an accident, an oversight, whatever, instead of a
deliberate infraction…. It was, at that, in a way. Margarita
acted insanely; still, how sane are any of us by now? … Hm.
Suppose we announce a consequent relaxation of the rules. A very
limited number of births will be authorized. We'll compute how many the
ecosystem can stand and let the women who want draw lots. I doubt that
many will … under present circumstances. The rivalry
shouldn't be great. Having infants to coo over and help take care of,
that might well relieve certain tensions."
Briefly, his voice rose. "Also,
by God, they're apledge of confidence. And a fresh reason to survive.
Yes!"
Jimenes tried to reach him and
embrace him. He warded her off. Above her weeping and laughter, he
ordered the engineer: "Get her calmed. I'll discuss this with the first
officer. In due course, we'll all confer together. Meanwhile, no word
or sign to anybody."
"You … take the
affair … coolly," Fedoroff said.
"How else?" Reymont's answer
was edged. "Been too bloody much emotion around." For another instant,
the vizor lifted. This time a death's head looked out. "Too bloody
clawing much!" he shouted. He flung the door wide andi whipped into the
corridor.
Boudreau peered through the
viewscope. The galaxy toward which Leonora Christine
rushed showed as a blue-white haze on a darkling visual field. When he
had finished, a scowl bent his brow. He walked to the main console. His
footfalls thudded in the restored weight of an intrafamilial passage.
"It is not right," he said. "I
have seen plenty of them; I know."
"Do you mean the color?"
Foxe-Jameson asked. The navigator had bidden the astrophysicist come to
the bridge. "Frequency seem too low for our speed? That's mainly due to
simple space expansion, Auguste. The Hubble constant. We're overhauling
galactic groups whose velocity gets higher and higher with respect to
our starting point, the farther we travel. Good thing too. Otherwise
the Doppler effect might present us with more gamma radiation than our
material shielding can handle. And, to be sure,.as you very well know,
we're counting heavily on the same space expansion to help us into a
situation where we can stop. Eventually the velocity changes in
themselves ought to overbalance their reduction of Bussard efficiency."
"That part is plain." Boudreau
leaned on the desk, shoulders hunched, brooding over the notes he had
made. "I tell you, however, I have watched each single galaxy we passed
through, or in observation distance of, these months. I have grown
familiar with their types. And gradually those types are changing." He
jerked his head at the viewscope. "That up ahead, for instance, it is
of the irregular sort, like the Magellanic Clouds at home —"
"I daresay, in these parts, the
Magellanic Clouds count as home," Foxe-Jameson murmured.
Boudreau chose to ignore the
aside. "It should have a high proportion of Population n stars," he
went on. "From here we should be able to see many individual blue
giants. Instead, we see none.
"All the spectra I take, to the
extent I can interpret them, they are becoming different from what is
normal for the types. No kind of galaxy looks right any more."
He raised his eyes. "Malcolm,
what is happening?"
Foxe-Jameson appeared
surprised. "Why'd you pick me to query?" he countered.
"I had only a vague impression
at first," Boudreau said. ‘‘I am not a real
astronomer. Besides, I could not get accurate navigational sights. To
obtain a value of tau, for instance, requires such a cat's cradle of
assumptions that — Bien, when I finally
felt sure the nature of space was altering, I approached Charles
Reymont. You know how he puts down panic-mongers, and he is correct in
that. He told me to call in one of your team, quietly, and report the
answer back to him."
Foxe-Jameson chortled. "Why,
you two pathetic beggars! Haven't you anything else to stew about?
Actually, I thought it'd be common knowledge. So common that none of us
pros happened to mention it, starved though everyone is for fresh
conversation. Makes a chap wonder what else he's overlooking, eh?"
"Qu'est-ce que c'est?"
"Consider," Foxe-Jameson said.
He settled one thigh and buttock on the desk. "Stars evolve. They build
heavier elements than hydrogen in thermonuclear reactions. If one is so
big that it explodes, a supernova, at the end of its life, it scatters
some of those atoms back into the interstellar medium. A more important
process, though, if less spectacular, is the shedding of mass by
smaller stars, the majority, in their red-giant stage on the way to
extinction. New generations of stars and planets condense out of this
enriched medium and add to it in their turn. Over the ages you get a
rising proportion of metal-rich suns. That affects the over-all
spectrum. But of course no star gives back more than a percentage of
the material which formed it. Most matter stays locked in dense bodies,
cooling toward absolute zero. So the interstellar medium becomes
depleted. Space within the galaxies grows more clear. The rate of star
formation declines."
He gestured bow-ward. "Finally
you reach a point where little or no further condensation is possible.
The energetic, short-lived blue giants bum themselves out and have no
successors. The galaxy's luminous members are entirely dwarfs
— at last nothing except cool, red, miserly Type Ms. Those
are good for almost a hundred gigayears.
"I'd judge this galaxy we're
aimed for isn't that far along yet. But it's getting there. It's
getting there."
Boudreau pondered. "Then we
won't gain as much speed per galaxy as we did before," he said. "Not if
the interstellar gas and dust are being used up."
"True," Foxe-Jameson said.
"Don't fret. I'm sure ample will remain for our purposes. Every bit
doesn't get collected in stars. Besides, we have the intergalactic
medium, the intercluster, the interfamilial — thin, that, but
usable at our present tau — and eventaully we should be
getting work out of the interclan gas itself."
He clapped the navigator's back
in friendly wise. "We've come about three hundred megaparsecs now,
remember," he said. ‘‘Which means about a thousand
million years of time. You've got to expect some changes."
Boudreau was less accustomed to
astronomical concepts. ‘‘You mean," he whispered,
"the whole universe is growing enough older for us to notice?" It was
the first time since his early youth that he had crossed himself.
The door to the interview room
was shut. Chi-Yuen hesitated before pressing the chime button. When
Lindgren let her in, she said timidly, "They told me you were here
alone."
"Writing." The first officer
stood somewhat slumped; nonetheless she topped the planetologist by a
head. "A private place."
"I hate to disturb you."
"What I'm for, Ai-Ling. Sit
down." Lindgren went back behind her desk, which was covered with
scrawled-on papers. The cabin hummed and trembled to irregular
acceleration. More than a day of weight remained. Leonora
Christine was bound through a clan of unprecedented size and
opulence.
For a while, hope had lived
that this might be the one where the ship could reach a halt within
some member galaxy. Closer observation showed otherwise. Inverse tau
had gotten too immense.
A faction had argued at general
assembly that there ought to be limited
deceleration anyhow, in order that requirements for stopping inside the
next clan be less rigorous. One could not prove the contention wrong;
not that much cosmography was known. One could only use statistics, as
Nilsson and Chidambaran did, to prove that the likelihood
of finding a resting place seemed greater if
acceleration continued. The theorem was too involved for most persons
to follow. The ship's officers elected to take it on faith and maintain
full forward thrust. Reymont had had to quell some individuals whose
objections approached mutiny.
Chi-Yuen perched herself on the
edge of a visitors' chair. She was small and neat in high-collared red
tunic, broad white slacks, hair brushed back with unwonted severity and
held by an ivory comb. Lindgren contrasted in more than size. Her shirt
was open at the neck, rolled up at the sleeves, smudged here and there;
her hair was tousled, her eyes haunted.
"What are you writing, if I may
ask?" Chi-Yuen ventured.
‘‘A
sermon," Lindgren said. ‘‘Not easy. I'm no writer."
"You, a sermon?"
The left corner of Lindgren's
mouth twitched slightly upward. "Actually the captain's address at our
Midsummer Day festivities. He can still conduct divine service, after a
fashion. But for this he requested me to, ah, inspirit the troops in
his name."
"He is not a well man, is he?"
Chi-Yuen inquired low.
The humor flickered out in
Lindgren. "No. I assume I can trust you not to blab that around. Even
if everybody does suspect it." She rested elbow on desk, forehead on
hand. "His responsibility is destroying him."
‘‘How can
he blame himself? What choice has he except to let the robots move us
onward?"
"He cares." Lindgren sighed.
"Also, mis latest dispute. In his condition, that was more than he
could take. He's not nervously prostrated, understand. Not quite. But
he's no longer able to buck people."
‘‘Are we
wise to hold a ceremony?" Chi-Yuen wondered.
"I don't know," Lindgren said
in a worn-out voice. "I simply don't. Now when — we aren't
announcing it, but we can't prevent computation and talk —
when we're somewhere around the five-or six-billion-year
mark…." Her head lifted, her hand fell. "To celebrate
something as purely Earth as Midsummer Day, now when we have
to start thinking of Earth as gone —"
She seized both arms of her
chair. For a moment the blue eyes were wild and blind. Then the
straining body eased, muscle by muscle; she leaned into the seat until
its swivel joint tilted with a creak; she said flatly: "The constable
persuaded me to go ahead with our rituals. Defiance. Reunification,
after the past quarrel. Rededication, especially to that unborn baby.
New Earth: We'll snatch it from God's grip yet. If God means anything,
even emotionally, any more. Maybe I should lay off religion altogether.
Carl didn't give me any details. Only the general idea. I'm supposed to
be its best spokesman. Me. That tells you a good deal about our
condition, doesn't it?"
She blinked, returning to
herself. "Apologies," she said. "I oughtn't to have dropped my problems
on you."
"They are everyone's problems.
First Officer," Chi-Yuen replied.
"Please. My name is Ingrid.
Thanks, though. If I haven't told you before, let me say now, in your
quiet way you're one of the key people aboard. A garden of calm
— Well." Lindgren bridged her fingers. "What can I do for
you?"
Chi-Yuen's glance fluttered to
the desk. "It's about Charles."
The ends of Lindgren's nails
whitened.
"He needs help," Chi-Yuen said.
"He has his deputies," Lindgren
answered tonelessly.
"Who keeps them going except
him? Who keeps us all going? You too, Ingrid. You depend on him."
"Certainly." Lindgren
intertwined her fingers and strained them. "You must realize
— perhaps he never mentioned it to you in words, any more
than to me or I to him; but it's obvious — there's no quarrel
left between him and me. We eroded that away, working together. I wish
him everything good."
"Can you give him some of it,
then?"
Lindgren's gaze sharpened.
"What do you mean?"
"He is tired. More tired than
you imagine, Ingrid. And more alone."
"His nature."
"Maybe. Still, that was never
any of the inhuman things he's had to be: afire, a whip, a weapon, an
engine. I've come to know him a little. I've watched him lately, how he
sleeps, what few times he can. His defenses are used up. I hear him
talk sometimes, in his dreams, when they aren't simply nightmares."
Lindgren closed her hands on
emptiness. "What can we do for him?"
"Give him back a part of his
strength. You can." Chi-Yuen raised her eyes. "You see, he loves you."
Lindgren got up, paced the
narrow stretch behind her desk, struck fist into palm. "I've assumed
obligations," she said. The words wrenched her gullet.
"I know —"
"Not to smash a man, especially
one we need. And not to … be promiscuous again. I have to be
an officer, in everything I do. So does Cari." Raw-voiced: "He'd
refuse!"
Chi-Yuen rose likewise. "Can
you spare this night?" she asked.
"What? What? No. Impossible, I
tell you. Oh, I've the time, but impossible all the same. You'd better
go."
"Come with me." Chi-Yuen took
Lindgren by the hand. "What scandal can there be if you visit the two
of us in our cabin?"
The big woman stumbled after
her. They went up the thrumming stairs to crew level. Chi-Yuen opened
her door, led Lindgren through, closed it again. They stood alone
amidst the ornaments and souvenirs of a country that died gigayears
before, and regarded each other. Lindgren breathed in deep, quick
draughts. Red pursued white across her face, down throat and bosom.
"He should be back soon,"
Chi-Yuen said. "He doesn't know. It is my gift to him. One night, at
least: to tell him and show him how you never stopped feeling."
She had separated the beds. Now
she lowered the dividing partition. She did not quite forestall her
tears.
Lindgren held her close for a
moment, kissed her, and finished sealing her off. Then Lindgren waited.
Chapter
19
"Please," Jane Sadler had implored. "Come help him."
"You can't?" Reymont asked.
She shook her head. "I've tried. And I think I make matters
worse. In his present condition. I being a woman." She flushed. "You
savvy?"
"Well, I'm no psychologist," Reymont said. "However, I'll see
what I can do."
He left the bower where she had caught him at rest. The
dwarfed trees, tumbling vines, moss and blossoms made it a place of
healing for him. But he noticed that comparatively few others went into
these rooms any longer. Did such things remind them of too much?
Certainly no plans were being made for celebration of the
autumnal equinox which impended on the ship's calendar — or
any other holidays, for that matter. The Midsummer festival had been
dishearteningly hushed.
In the gymnasium, a zero-gee handball game bounced from corner
to corner. They were spacemen who played, though, and doggedly rather
than gleefully. Most of the passengers came here for little except
their compulsory exercises. They weren't showing great interest in
meals, either: not that Carducci was doing an inspired job nowadays.
One or two passersby gave Reymont a listless hail.
Farther down the corridor, a door stood open on a hobby shop.
A lathe hummed, a cutting torch glowed blue, in the hands of Kato
M'Botu and Yeshu ben-Zvi. Apparently they were making something for the
recently resumed Fedoroff-Pereira ecological project, and had been
crowded out of the regular facilities on the lower decks.
That was good as far as it went, but it didn't go any real
distance. You had to be sure precisely what you were doing before you
overhauled the systems on which life rested. As yet, and doubtless for
years to come, matters were at the research stage. The undertaking
could only engage the full attention of a few specialists, until actual
construction began.
Nilsson's instrumental improvements had been an excellent work
maker. Now that was drawing to a close, unless the astronomers could
think up new inventions. Most of the labor was finished; cargo had been
shifted, Number Two deck converted to an electronic observatory, its
haywire tangle trimmed. The experts might tinker and refine, as well as
lose themselves in their prodigious studies of the outer universe. For
the bulk of the team, no task was left.
Nothing was left save to abide.
At each crisis, the folk had rallied. Yet each upsurge of hope
peaked lower than the last, each withdrawal to misery went deeper. You
would offhand have expected more reaction to the changed ruling on
children, for instance. Exactly two women had applied for motherhood,
and their last shots wouldn't wear off for months. The rest were
interested, no doubt, in a fashion —The ship quivered. Weight
grabbed at Reymont. He barely avoided falling to the deck. A metal
noise toned through the hull, like a basso profundo gong. It was soon
over. Free flight resumed. Leonora Christine had
gone through another galaxy.
Those passages were becoming
more frequent by the day. Would she never meet the right configuration
to stop? Ought she to start deceleration, if only to be doing something
different?
Could Nilsson, Chidambaran, and
Foxe-Jameson have miscalculated? Were they beginning to realize it? Was
that why they'd worked late hours in the observatory, these past few
weeks, and been so worried-looking and taciturn when they came out for
food or sleep?
Well, no doubt Lindgren would
get the information from Nilsson when it was confirmed, whatever it was.
Reymont floated along the
stairwell to the crew deck. After a pause at his own cabin, he found
the door he wanted, and chimed. Getting no response, he tried it.
Locked. Sadler's adjoining door wasn't. He entered her side. The
partition was down between her and her man. Reymont swung it out of the
way.
Johann Freiwald floated at the
end of his bedline. The husky shape was curled into an imitation of a
fetus. But the eyes held awareness.
Reymont grasped a handhold,
encountered that stare, and said noncommittally, "I wondered why you
haven't been around. Then I heard you aren't feeling well. Anything I
can do for you?"
Freiwald grunted.
"You can do considerable for
me," Reymont went on. "I need you pretty badly. You've been the best
deputy — policeman, counselor, work-party boss, idea man
— I've had through this whole thing. You can't be spared."
Freiwald spoke with an effort.
"I shall have to be spared."
"Why? What's the matter?"
"I can't go on any more. It's
that simple. I can't."
"Why not?" Reymont persisted.
"What jobs we have aren't hard, physically. Anyhow, you're tough.
Weightlessness never bothered you. You're a machine-era boy, a
practical chap, a lusty, earthy soul. Not one of those self-appointed
delicates who have to be coddled every minute because their tender
spirits can't bear a long voyage." He sneered.
"Or are you one?"
Freiwald stirred. His unshaven
cheeks darkened a trifle. "I am a man," he said. "Not a robot.
Eventually I start thinking."
"My friend, do you imagine we
would have survived this far if the officers, at any rate, did not
spend every waking hour thinking?"
"I don't mean your damned
measurements, computations, course adjustments, equipment
modifications. That's from nothing but the instinct to stay alive. A
lobster trying to climb out of a kettle has as much dignity. I ask
myself, why? What are we really doing? What does it mean?"
"Et tu. Brute,"
Reymont muttered.
Freiwald twisted about until
his gaze was straight into the constable's. "Because you are so
callous…. Do you know what year this is?"
"No. Neither do you. The data
are too uncertain. And if you wonder what the year would be at Sol,
that's meaningless."
"Be quiet! I know the whole
simultaneity quacking. We have come something like fifty billion
light-years. We are rounding me whole curve of space. If we returned
this instant to the Solar System, we would not find anything. Our sun
died long ago. It swelled and brightened till Earth was devoured; it
became a variable, guttering like a candle in the wind; it sank away to
a white dwarf, an ember, an ash. And the other stars followed. Nothing
can be left in our galaxy but waning red dwarfs, if that. Otherwise
clinkers. The Milky Way has gone out. Everything we knew, everything
that made us, is dead. Starting with the human race."
"Not necessarily."
"Then it's become something we
could not comprehend. We are ghosts." Freiwald's lips trembled. "We
hunt on and on, monomaniacs —" Again acceleration thundered
through the ship. "There. You heard. "His eyes were white-rimmed, as if
with fear. "We passed through another galaxy. Another hundred thousand
years. To us, part of a second."
"Oh, not quite," Reymontsaid.
"Our tau can't be that far down, can it? We probably quartered a spiral
arm."
"Destroying how many worlds? I
know the figures. We are not as massive as a star. But our energy
— I think we could pierce the heart of a sun and not notice."
"Perhaps."
"That's one section of our
hell. That we've become a menace to — to —"
"Don't say it." Reymont spoke
earnestly. "Don't think it. Because it isn't true. We're interacting
with dust and gas, nothing else. We do transit many galaxies. They lie
comparatively close together in terms of their own size. Within a
cluster, the members are about ten diameters apart, often less. Single
stars within a galaxy — that's another situation altogether.
Their diameters are such a microscopic fraction of a light-year. In a
nuclear region, the most crowded part … well, the separation
of two stars is still like the separation of two men, one at either end
of a continent. A big continent. Like Asia."
Friewald looked away. "There is
no more Asia," he said. "No more anything."
"There's us," Reymont answered.
"We're alive, we're real, we have hope. What else do you want? Some
grandiose philosophical significance? Forget it. That's a luxury. Our
descendants will invent it, along with tedious epics about our heroism.
We have the sweat, tears, blood" — his grinflashed
— "in short, the unglamorous bodily excretions. And what's
bad about that? Your trouble is, you think a combination of acrophobia,
sensory deprivation, and nervous strain is a metaphysical crisis.
Myself, I don't despise our lobsterish instinct to survive. I'm glad we
have one."
Freiwald floated motionless.
Reymont crossed to him and
squeezed his shoulder. "I'm not belittling your difficulties," he said.
"It is hard to keep going. Our worst enemy is despair; and it wrestles
every one of us to the deck, every now and then."
"Not you," Freiwald said.
"Oh yes," Reymont told him. "Me
too. I get my feet back, though. So will you. If you'll only stop
feeling worthless because of a disability that is a perfectly normal
temporary result of psychic exhaustion — as Jane understands
better than you, young fellow — why, the disability will soon
go away of itself. Afterward you'll see the rest of your problems in
perspective and start coping once more."
"Well —" Freiwald,
who had tensed while Reymont spoke, relaxed the barest bit. "Maybe."
"I know. Ask the doctor if you
don't believe me. If you want, I'll have him issue you some psychodrugs
to hasten your recovery. My reason is that I do need you, Johann."
The muscles beneath Reymont's
palm softened further. He smiled. "However," he continued, "I've got
with me the only psychodrug I expect is called for."
"What?" Freiwald looked "up."
Reymont reached under his tunic
and extracted a squeeze bottle with twin drinking tubes. "Here," he
said. "Rank has its privileges. Scotch. The genuine article, not that
witch's brew the Scandinavians think is an imitation. I prescribe a
hefty dose for you, and for myself too. I'd enjoy a leisurely talk.
Haven't had any for longer than I can remember."
They had been at it an hour,
and life was coming back in Freiwald's manner, when the intercom said
with Ingrid Lindgren's voice: "Is the constable there?"
"Uh, yes," Freiwald replied.
"Sadler told me," the first
officer explained. "Could you come to the bridge, Carl?"
"Urgent?" Reymont asked.
"N-n-not really, I guess. The
latest observations seem to indicate … further evolutionary
changes in space. We may have to modify our cruising plan. I thought
you might like to discuss it."
"All right." Reymont shrugged
at Freiwald. "Sorry."
"Me also." The other man
considered the flask, shook his head sadly, and offered it back.
"No, you may as well finish
it," Reymont said. "Not alone. Bad, drinking alone. I'll tell Jane."
"Well now." Freiwald genuinely
laughed. "That's kind of you."
Emerging, closing the door
behind him, Reymont glanced the length of the corridor. No one else was
in sight. He sagged, then, eyes covered, body shaking. After a minute
he filled his lungs and started for the bridge.
Norbert Williams happened to
come the other way along the stairs. "Hi," the chemist greeted.
"You're looking cheerier than
most," Reymont remarked.
"Yeah, I guess I am. Emma and
I, we got talking, and we may have hit on a new gimmick to check at a
distance whether a planet has our type of life. A plankton-type
population, you see, ought to impart certain thermal radiation
characteristics to ocean surfaces; and given Doppler effect, making
those frequencies something we can properly analyze —"
"Good. Do work on it. And if
you should co-opt others, I'll be glad."
"Sure, we thought of that."
"And would you pass the word
that wherever she is, Jane Sadler's dismissed from work for the day?
Her boy friend has something to take up with her."
Williams' guffaw followed
Reymont through the stairwell.
But the command deck was empty
and still; and in the bridge, Lindgren stood watch alone. Her hands
strained around the grips at the base of the viewscope. When she turned
about at his entry, he saw that her face was quite without color.
He closed the door. "What's
wrong?" he said hushedly.
"You didn't let on?"
"No, of course not, when the
business had to be fierce. What is it?"
She tried to speak and could
not.
"Are more people due at this
meeting?" Reymont asked.
She shook her head. He went to
her, anchored himself with a leg wrapped around a rail and the other
foot braced to the deck, and received her in his arms. She held him as
tightly as she had done on their single stolen night.
"No," she said against his
breast. "Elof and … Auguste Boudreau … they told
me. Otherwise, just Malcolm and Mohandas know. They asked me to tell
… the Old Man. They don't dare. Don't know how. I don't
either. How to tell anyone." Her nails bit through his tunic. "Carl,
what shall we do?"
He ruffled her hair awhile,
staring across her head, feeling her heartbeat quick and irregular.
Again the ship boomed and leaped; and soon again. The notes that rang
through her were noticeably higher pitched than before. The draft from
a ventilator blew cold. The metal around seemed to shrink inward.
"Go on," he said at last. "Tell
me, älskling."
"The universe — the
whole universe — it's dying."
He made a noise in his throat.
Otherwise he waited.
At length she was able to pull
far enough back from him that they could look into each other's eyes.
She related in a slurred, hurried voice:
"We've come farther man we
knew. In space and time. More than a hundred billion years. The
astronomers began suspecting it when — I don't know. I only
know what they've told me. Everybody's heard how the galaxies we see
are getting dimmer. Old stars fading, new ones not being born. We
didn't think it would affect us. All we were after was one little sun
not too different from Sol. There ought to be many left. The galaxies
have long lives. But now —
"The men weren't sure. The
observations are hard to make. But they started to wonder …
if we might not have underestimated the distance we've gone. They
checked Doppler shifts extra carefully. Especially of late, when we
seem to pass through more and more galaxies and the gas between them
seems to be growing denser.
"They found that what they
observed could not be explained in full by any tau we can possibly
have. Another factor had to be involved. The galaxies are crowding
together. The gas is being compressed. Space isn't expanding any
longer. It's reached its limit and is collapsing inward again. Elof
says the collapse will go on. And on. To the end."
"We?" he asked.
"Who can tell? Except the
figures show we can't stop. We could, I mean. But by the time we did,
nothing would be left … except blackness, burned-out suns,
absolute zero, death, death. Nothing."
"We don't want that," he said
stupidly.
"No. What do we want?" Strange
that she was not crying. "I think — Carl, shouldn't we say
good night? All of us, to each other? A last festival, with wine and
candlelight. And afterward go to our cabins. You and I to ours. And
love, if we can, and say good night. We have morphine for everyone. And
oh, Carl, we're so tired. It will be so good to sleep."
Reymont drew her close to him
again.
"Did you ever read Moby
Dick?" she whispered. "That's us. We've pursued the White
Whale. To the end of time. And now … that question. What
is man, that he should outlive his God?"
Reymont put her from him,
gently, and sought the view-scope. Looking forth, he saw, for a moment,
a galaxy pass. It must be only some ten thousands of parsecs distant,
for he saw it across the dark very large and clear. The form was
chaotic. Whatever structure it had once had was disintegrated. It was a
dull, vague, redness, deepening at the fringes to the hue of clotted
blood.
It drifted from his sight. The
ship went through another, storm-shaken by it, but of that one nothing
was visible.
Reymont hauled himself back to
the command deck. Teeth gleamed in his visage. "No!" he said.
Chapter
20
From the stage, he and she looked upon their assembled
shipmates.
The gathering was seated, safety-hamessed into chairs whose
legs were secured with bond grips to the gymnasium deck. Anything else
would have been dangerous. Not that weightlessness prevailed. The past
week had seen conditions change so rapidly that those who knew could
not have deferred an explanation longer had they wanted to.
Between the tau which interstellar atoms now had with respect
to Leonora Christine; and the compression of
lengths in her own measurement because of that tau; and the dwindling
radius of the cosmos itself: Her ramjets drove her at a goodly fraction
of one gee across the outermost abysses of interclan space. And oftener
and oftener came spurts of higher acceleration as she passed through
galaxies. They were too fast for the interior fields to compensate.
They felt like the buffeting of waves; and each time, the noise that
sang in the hull was more shrill and windy.
Four dozen bodies hurled together could have meant broken
bones or worse. But two people, trained and alert, could keep their
feet with the aid of a handrail. And it was needful that they do so. In
this hour, folk must have before their sight a man and a woman who
stood together unbowed.
Ingrid Lindgren completed her
account. "— that is what is happening. We will not be able to
stop before the death of the universe."
The muteness into which she had
spoken seemed to deepen. A few women wept, a few men shaped oaths or
prayers, but none was above a sough. In the front row, Captain Telander
bent his head and covered his face. The ship lurched in another squall.
Sound passed by, throbbing, groaning, whistling.
Lindgren's fingers momentarily
clasped Reymont's. "The constable has something to tell you," she said.
He trod forward. Sunken and
reddened, he eyes appeared to regard them in such ferocity that
Chi-Yuen herself dared make no gesture. His tunic was wolf-gray, and
besides his badge he wore his automatic pistol, the ultimate emblem. He
said, quietly though with none of the first officer's compassion:
"I know you think this is the
end. We've tried, and failed, and you should be left alone to make your
peace with yourselves or your God. Well, I don't say you shouldn't do
that. I have no firm idea what is going to become of us. I don't
believe anyone can predict any more. Nature is turning too alien for
that. In honesty, I agree that our chances look poor.
"But I don't think they are
zero, either. And by this I don't mean that we can survive in a dead
universe. That's the obvious thing to attempt. Slow down till our time
rate isn't extremely different from outside, while continuing to move
fast enough that we can collect hydrogen for fuel. Then spend what
years remain in our bodies aboard this ship, never glancing out into
the dark around us, never thinking about the fate of the child who'll
soon be born.
"Maybe that's physically
possible, if the thermodynamics of a collapsing space doesn't play
tricks on us. I don't imagine that it's psychologically possible,
however. Your expressions show you agree with me. Correct?
"What can we do?
"I think we have a duty
— to the race that begot us, to the children we might yet
bring forth ourselves — a duty to keep trying, right to the
finish.
"For most of you, that won't
involve more than continuing to live, continuing to stay sane. I'm well
aware that that could be as hard a task as human beings ever undertook.
The crew and the scientists who have relevant specialties will, in
addition, have to carry on the work of the ship and of preparing for
what's to come. It will be difficult.
"So make your peace. Interior
peace. That's the only kind which ever existed anyway. The exterior
fight goes on. I propose we wage it with no thought of surrender."
Abruptly his words rang loud:
"I propose we go on to the next cycle of me cosmos."
That snatched them to
attention. Above a collective gasp and inarticulate cries, a few
stridencies could be made out: "— No! Lunacy!" —
"Great!" — "Impossible!" — "Blasphemy!" Reymont
drew his gun and fired. The shot shocked them into quiet.
He grinned. "Blank cartridge,"
he said. "Better than a gavel. Naturally, I discussed this beforehand
with the officers and the astronomical experts. The officers, at least,
agree the gamble is worth taking, if only because we haven't much to
lose. But equally naturally, we want general accord. Let's discuss this
in regular fashion. Captain Telander, will you preside?"
"No," said the master faintly.
"You. Please."
"Very well. Comments
… ah, probably our senior physicist should begin."
Ben-Zvi declared, in an almost
indignant voice: "The universe took between one and two hundred billion
years to complete its expansion. It won't collapse in less time. Do you
seriously believe we can acquire a tau that lets us outlive the cycle?"
"I seriously believe we should
try," Reymont answered. The ship trembled and belled. "We gained a few
per cent right there, in that galactic cluster. As matter gets more
dense, we accelerate faster. Space itself is being pulled into a
tighter and tighter curve. We couldn't circumnavigate the universe
before, because it didn't last that long, in me form we knew it. But we
should be able to circle the shrinking universe repeatedly. That's the
opinion of Professor Chidambaran. Would you like to explain, Mohandas?"
"If you wish," the cosmologist
said. "Time as well as space must be taken into reckoning. The
characteristics of the whole continuum will change quite radically.
Conservative assumptions lead me to the conclusion that, in effect, our
present exponential decrease of the tau factor with respect to ship's
time, should itself increase to a higher order." He paused. "At a rough
estimate, I would say that the time we experience under those
circumstances, from now to the ultimate collapse, will be three months."
Into the hush that followed
another rustle of stupefaction, he added: "Nevertheless, as I told the
officers when they asked me to make this calculation, I do not see how
we can survive. Our present observations vindicate the empirical proofs
that Elof Nilsson found, these many eons ago in the Solar System, that
the universe does indeed oscillate. It will be reborn. But first all
matter and energy must be collected in a monobloc of the highest
possible density and temperature. We might pass through a star at our
current velocity and not be harmed. We can scarcely pass through the
primordial nucleon. My personal suggestion is that we cultivate
serenity." He folded his hands in his lap.
"Not a bad idea," Reymont said.
"But I don't think that's the sole thing we should do. We should keep
flying also. Let me tell you what I told the original discussion group.
Nobody disputed it.
"The fact is, nobody knows for
sure what's going to happen. My guess is that everything will not get
squeezed into a single zero-point Something. That's the kind of
oversimplification which helps our math along but never does tell a
whole story. I think the central core of mass is bound to have an
enormous hydrogen envelope, even before the explosion. The outer parts
of that envelope may not be too hot or radiant or dense for us. Space
will be small enough, though, that we can circle around and around the
monobloc as a kind of satellite. When it blows up and space starts to
expand again, we'll spiral out ourselves. I know this is a sloppy way
of phrasing, but it hints at what we can perhaps do….
Norbert?"
"I never thought of myself as a
religious man," Williams said. It was odd and disturbing to see him
humbled. "But this is too much. We're — well, what are we?
Animals. My God — very literally, my God — we can't
go on … having regular bowel movements … while
creation happens!"
Beside him, Emma Glassgold
looked startled, then determined. Her hand shot aloft. Reymont
recognized her.
"Speaking as a believer
myself," she announced, "I must say that that is sheer nonsense. I'm
sorry, Norbert, dear, but it is. God made us the way He wanted us to
be. There's nothing shameful about any part of His handiwork. I would
like to watch Him fashion new stars, and praise Him, as long as He sees
fit that I should."
"Good for you!" Ingrid Lindgren
called.
"I might add," Reymont said, "I
being a man with no poetry in his soul, and I suspect no soul to keep
the poetry in … I might suggest you people look into
yourselves and ask what psychological twists make you unwilling to live
through the moment when time begins over. Isn't there, down inside,
some identification with — your parents, maybe? You shouldn't
see your parents in bed, therefore you shouldn't see a new cosmos
begotten. Now that doesn't make sense." He drew breath. "We can't deny
what's about to happen is awesome. But so is everything else. Always. I
never thought stars were more mysterious, or had more magic, than
flowers."
Others wanted to talk.
Eventually everyone did. Their sentences threshed wearily around and
around the point. It was not to no purpose. They had to unburden
themselves. But by the time they could finally adjourn the meeting,
after a unanimous vote to proceed, Reymont and Lindgren were near a
collapse of their own.
They did seize a moment's
low-speaking privacy, as the people broke into groups and the ship
roared with the hollow noise of her passage. She took both his hands
and said: "How I want to be your woman again."
He stammered in gladness,
"Tomorrow? We, we'd have to move personal gear … and explain
to our partners…. Tomorrow, my Ingrid?"
"No," she answered. "You didn't
let me finish. All of me wants to, but I can't."
Stricken, he asked, "Why?"
"We mustn't risk it. The
emotional balance is too fragile. Anything might let hell loose in any
one of us. Elof and Ai-Ling would take it hard that we left —
when death is this near."
"She and he could —"
Reymont chopped off in mid-word. "No. He could. She would. But no."
"You wouldn't be the man I lie
awake nights wishing for, if you could ask that of her. She never let
you talk about those hours she gave us, did she?"
"No. How did you guess?"
"I didn't guess. I know her.
And I won't have her do it again for us, Carl. Once was right. It won
us back what we'd built together. Oftener, by stealth, is not any way
to treat that thing." Lindgren's speech stiffened into practicalities.
"Besides, Elof. He needs me. He blames himself, his advice, for letting
us run the ship too long — as if any mortal man could have
known! If he should learn that I — The desperation, maybe the
suicide of a single individual could bring the whole crew down in
hysteria."
She straightened, faced him
squarely, smiled, and said, her tone soft again: "Afterward, yes. When
we are safe. I'll never let you go then."
"We may never be safe," he
protested. "Chances are we won't. I want you back before I die."
"And I you. But we can't. We
mustn't. They depend on you. Absolutely. You're the only man who can
lead us through what lies ahead. You've given me courage till I can
help you a little. Nevertheless … Carl, it was never easy to
be a king."
She wheeled and walked from him.
He stood for a space, alone.
Somebody approached the stage with a question. He waved the somebody
aside. "Tomorrow," he said. Springing to the deck, he made his way to
Chi-Yuen, who awaited him at the door.
She told him in an almost
matter-of-fact voice: "If we die with the last stars, Charles, I will
still have had more from my life than I ever hoped, knowing you. What
can I do for you?"
He regarded her. The ship's
wild singing closed them off from the rest of humanity. "Come back to
our cabin with me," he said.
"Nothing else?"
"No, except to be what you
are." He ran fingers through his gray-shot hair. Awkward and puzzled,
he said: "I can't make fine phrases, Ai-Ling, and I'm not experienced
in fine emotions. Tell me, is it possible to love two different people
at once?"
She embraced him. "Of course it
is, silly." Her answer was muffled by his flesh and less steady than
before. But when she took his arm and they started for their quarters,
she was smiling.
"Do you know," she added at
length, "I wonder if the biggest surprise in these next months isn't
how stubbornly ordinary life will keep on being."
Chapter
21
Margarita's daughter was born in the night. No suns remained
visible. The ship rolled through gales and thunder. While the birth
took place, the father was bossing a work gang, and straining his own
muscles, to further strengthen the hull. The baby's first cry responded
to the noise of inward-falling worlds.
Things quieted down for a time afterward. The scientists had
observed and computed until they understood something about those
strange forces galloping through the light-years. Reprogrammed, the
robots got the ship to sailing with the winds and vortices more often
than across them.
Not everyone was in the mood to celebrate with a party, but
those were whom Johann Freiwald and Jane Sadler invited. By dimming
lights, she reduced the corner of the gym which they used to a room
small and warm. This brought into vivid relief the Halloween ornaments
she had hung up.
"Is that wise?" Reymont asked when he arrived with Chi-Yuen.
"We're not far off from the date by the calendar," Sadler
replied. "Why not combine the occasions? Me, I think the jack o'
lanterns add a touch of color we sure can use."
"They might be too reminding. Not of Earth, maybe —
I suppose we're getting over that — but of, uh —"
"Yeh, it crossed my mind. A shipful of witches, devils,
vampires, goblins, bogles, and spooks, screaming their way down the sky
toward the Black Sabbath. Well, aren't we?" Sadler grinned and snuggled
close to Freiwald. He laughed and hugged her. "I feel exactly like
doing that kind of nose thumbing."
The rest agreed. They drank more than they were used to and
got rowdy. At last they enthroned Boris Fedoroff on the stage, with a
garland and a lei and two girls to wait on his every wish. Several
other folk stood in a ring, arms linked, bawling out a song that had
been ancient when the vessel left home.
It makes no
diff'rence where I end up when I die.
It makes no diff'rence where I end up when I die.
Up to heaven or down to hell come,
I've got friends who'll make me welcome.
It makes no diff'rence where I end up when I die.
Michael O'Donnell, entering
late after his watch ended — there were live stand-bys at
every stress point, these days — pushed through the crowd.
"Hey, Boris!" he called. The racket drowned him out.
— Oh,
you've got no use for money when you die.
For St. Peter wants no ticket
When you stand at heaven's wicket.
Oh, you've got no use for money when you die.
He reached the stage. "Hey,
Boris! Congratulations!"
You shall have my old
bicycle when I die.
You shall have —
"Thank you," Fedoroff boomed.
"Mainly Margarita's work. She runs quite a shipyard, no?"
For the final
kilometer
Goes on tandem with St. Peter. —
"What will you name the kid?"
O'Donnell asked.
I'll shoot craps with
old St. Peter when I die. —
"Haven't decided yet," Fedoroff
said. He waved a bottle. "I can tell you, though, it won't be Eve."
If I shoot as I've
shot here —
"Embala?" Ingrid Lindgren
suggested. "The first woman in the Eddie story."
I can take him for a
beer.
"Not that either," Fedoroff
said.
I'll shoot craps with
old St. Peter when I die.
"Nor Leonora Christine," the
engineer went on. "She's not going to be any damned symbol. She's going
to be herself."
The singers began dancing in a
circle.
It's not certain
we'll get liquor when we die.
It's not certain we'll get liquor when we die.
Let us then drink hell for leather
Now tonight when we're together.
It's not certain we'll get liquor when we die.
Chidambaran and Foxe-Jameson
seemed dwarfed by the sprawling masses of the observatory apparatus,
and artless amidst its meters and controls and flickering indicator
lights, and loud and clumsy in the humming stillness that pervaded this
deck. They rose when Captain Telander appeared.
"You asked me to come?" he said
pointlessly. His wasted features set. "What news? We've had calm this
past month…."
"That won't last." Foxe-Jameson
spoke half in exultation. "Elof's gone in person to fetch Ingrid. We
couldn't do that for you, sir. The image is still very faint, might get
lost if we don't ride herd. You should be the first to know." He
returned to his chair before an electronic console. A screen above it
showed darkness.
Telander shuffled close. "What
have you found?"
Chidambaran took him by the
elbow and pointed at the screen. "There. Do you see?"
On the edge of perception
gleamed the dimmest and tiniest of sparks.
"A good ways off, naturally,"
Foxe-Jameson said into the silence. "We'll want to maintain a most
respectful distance."
"What is it?" Telander quavered.
"The germ of the monobloc,"
Dhidambaran answered. "The new beginning."
Telander stood long and long,
staring, before he went to his knees. The tears ran quietly down his
face. "Father, I thank Thee," he said.
Rising: "And I thank you,
gentlemen. Whatever happens next … we have come this far, we
have done this much. I think I can carry on again … after
what you have just shown me."
When he finally left to return
to the bridge, he walked with the stride of a commander.
Leonora Christine
shouted, shuddered, and leaped.
Space flamed around her, a
firestorm, hydrogen aglow from that supernal sun which was forming at
the heart of existence, which burned brighter and brighter as the
galaxies rained down into it. The gas hid the central travail behind
sheets, banners, and spears of radiance, aurora, flame, lightning.
Forces, immeasurably vast, tore through and through the atmosphere:
electric, magnetic, gravitational, nuclear fields; shock waves bursting
across megaparsecs; tides and currents and cataracts. On the fringes of
creation, through billion-year cycles which passed as moments, the ship
of man flew.
Flew.
There was no other word. As far
as humanity was concerned, or the most swiftly computing and reacting
of machines, she fought a hurricane — but such a hurricane as
had not been known since last the stars were melted together and
hammered afresh.
"Ya-a-ah-h-h!"
screamed Lenkei, and rode the ship down the trough of a wave whose
crest shook loose a foam of supemovae. The haggard men on the steering
bridge with him stared into the screen that had been built for this
hour. What raged in it was not reality — present reality
transcended any picturing or understanding — but a display of
exterior force fields. It burned and roiled and spewed great sparks and
globes. It bellowed in the metal of the ship, in flesh and skulls.
"Can't you stand any more?"
Reymont shouted from his own seat. "Barrios, relieve him."
The other jet man shook his
head. He was too stunned, too beaten from his previous watch.
"Okay." Reymont unharnessed
himself. "I'll try. I've handled a lot of different types of craft." No
one heard him through the fury around, but all saw him fight across the
pitching, whirling deck. He took the auxiliary control chair, on the
opposite side of Lenkei from Barrios, and laid his mouth close to the
pilot's ear. "Phase me in."
Lenkei nodded. Together their
hands moved across the board.
They must hold Leonora
Christine well away from the growing monobloc, whose
radiation would otherwise surely kill them; at the same time, they must
stay where the gas was so dense that tau could continue to decrease for
them, turning these final phoenix gigayears into hours; and they must
keep the ship riding safely through a chaos that, did it ever strike
her full on, would rip her into nuclear particles. No computers, no
instruments, no precedents might guide them, It must be done on
instinct and trained reflex.
Gradually Reymont entered the
pattern, until he could steer alone. The rhthms of rebirth were wild,
but they were there. Ease on starboard … vector at nine
o'clock low … now push that thrust!
… brake a little here … don't let her broach
… swing wide of that flame cloud if you can….
Thunder brawled. The air was sharp with ozone, and cold.
The screen blanked. An instant
later, every fluoropanel in the ship turned simultaneously ultraviolet
and infrared, and blackness plunged down. Those who lay harnessed
alone, throughout the hull, heard invisible lightnings walk the
corridors. Those in command bridge, pilot bridge, engine room, who
manned the ship, felt a heaviness greater than planets — they
could not move, nor stop a movement once begun — and then
felt a lightness such that their bodies began to shake asunder
— and this was a change in inertia itself, in every constant
of nature as space-time-matter-energy underwent its ultimate convulsion
— for a moment infinitesimal and infinite, men, women, child,
ship, and death were one.
It passed, so swiftly that they
could not tell if it had been. Light came back, and outside vision. The
storm grew fiercer. But now through it, seen distorted so that they
flew, fountaining off in two huge curving sheets, now came the nascent
galaxies.
The monobloc had exploded.
Creation had begun. Reymont went over to full deceleration. Leonora
Christine started slowly to slow; and she flew out into a
reborn light.
Chapter
22
Boudreau and Nilsson nodded at
each other. They grinned. "Yes, indeed," the astronomer said.
Reymont looked restlessly
around the observatory. "Yes, what?" he demanded. He jerked one thumb
at a visual screen. Space swarmed with little dancing incandescences.
"I can see for myself. The galactic groups are still close together.
Most of them are still nothing but hydrogen nebulae. And hydrogen atoms
are still thick between them, comparatively speaking. What of it?"
"Computation on the basis of
data," Boudreau said. "I have been consulting with the team leaders
here. We felt you deserved as well as needed to hear in confidence what
we have learned, so that you might make the decision."
Reymont stiffened. "Lars
Telander is the captain."
"Yes, yes. Nobody wants to go
behind his back, especially when he is once more doing a superb job
with the ship. The folk within the ship, though, they are another
matter. Be realistic, Charles. You know what you are to them."
Reymont folded his arms. "Well,
proceed, then."
Nilsson went into lecture gear.
"Never mind details," he said. "This result came out of the problem you
set us, to find in which directions the matter was headed, and which
the antimatter. You recall, we were able to do this by tracing the
paths of plasma masses through the magnetic fields of the universe as a
whole while its radius was small. And thereby the officers were enabled
to bring this vessel safely into the matter half of the plenum.
"Now in the course of making
those studies, we collected and processed an astonishing amount of
data. And here is what else we have come up with. The cosmos is new and
in some respects disordered. Things have not yet sorted themselves out.
Within a short range of us, compared to distances we have already
traversed, are material complexes — galaxies and
protogalaxies — with every possible velocity.
"We can use that fact to our
advantage. That is, we can pick the clan, family, cluster, and
individual galaxy we want to make our destination — pick one
at which we can arrive with zero relative speed at any point of its
evolution that we choose. Within fairly wide limits, anyhow. We
couldn't get to a galaxy which is more than about fifteen billion years
old by the time we reach it: not unless we wanted to approach it
circuitously. Nor can we overtake any before it is about one billion
years old. But otherwise we can choose what we like.
"And … whatever we
elect, the maximum shipboard time required to come there, braked, will
be no longer than weeks!"
Reymont said an amazed
obscenity.
"You see," Nilsson explained,
"we can select a target whose velocity will be almost identical with
ours when we fetch it."
"Oh yes," Reymont mumbled. "I
can see that. I'm just not used to having luck in our favor."
"Not luck," Nilsson said.
"Given an oscillating universe, this development was inevitable. Or so
we perceive by hindsight. We need merely use the fact."
"Best you decide on our goal,"
Boudreau urged. "Now. Those other idiots, they would wrangle for hours,
if you put it to a vote. And every hour means untold cosmic time lost,
which reduces our options. If you will tell us what you want, I'll plot
an appropriate course and the ship can start off on it very shortly.
The captain will take your recommendation. The rest of our people will
accept any fait accompli you hand them, and thank you for it. You know
that."
Reymont paced for some turns.
His boots clacked on the deck. He rubbed his brow, where the wrinkles
lay deep. Finally he confronted his interlocutors. "We want more than a
galaxy," he said. "We want a planet to live on."
"Understood," Nilsson agreed.
"May I speak for a planet — a system — of the same
approximate age as Earth had? Say, five billion years? It seems to take
about that long for a fair probability of the kind of biosphere we like
having evolved. We could live in a Mesozoic type of environment, I
imagine, but we would rather not."
"Seems reasonable," Reymont
nodded. "How about metals, though?"
"Ah, yes. We want a planet as
rich in heavy elements as Earth was. Not too much less, or an
industrial civilization will be hard to establish. Not too much more,
or we could find numerous areas where the soil is poisonous. Since
higher elements are formed in the earlier generations of stars, we
should look for a galaxy that will be as old, at rendezvous, as ours
was."
"No," Reymont said. "Younger."
"Hein?"
Boudreau blinked.
"We can probably find a planet
like Earth, also with respect to metals, in a young galaxy," Reymont
said. "A globular cluster ought to have plenty of supemovae in its
early stages, which ought to enrich the interstellar medium locally,
giving second-generation G-type suns about the same composition as Sol.
As we enter our target galaxy, let's scout for that kind."
"We may not detect any that we
can reach in less than years," Nilsson warned.
"Well, then we don't," Reymont
answered. "We can settle for a planet less well-endowed with iron and
uranium than Earth was. That's not crucial. We have the technology to
make do with light alloys and organics. We have hydrogen fusion for
power.
"The important thing is that we
be about the first intelligent race alive in those parts."
They stared at him.
He smiled in a way they had not
seen before. "I'd like us to have our pick of worlds, when our
descendants get around to interstellar colonization," he said. "And I'd
like us to become — oh, the elders. Not imperialists; that's
ridiculous; but the people who were there from the beginning, and know
their way around, and are worth learning from. Never mind what physical
shape the younger races have. Who cares? But let's make this, as nearly
as possible, a human galaxy, in the widest sense of the word
‘human.' Maybe even a human universe.
"I think we've earned that
right."
Leonora Christine
took only three months of her people's lives from the moment of
creation to the moment when she found her home.
That was partly good fortune
but also due to forethought. The newborn atoms had burst outward with a
random distribution of velocities. Thus, in the course of ages, they
formed hydrogen clouds which attained distinct individualities. While
they drifted apart, these clouds condensed into sub-clouds —
which, under the slow action of many forces, differentiated themselves
into separate families, then single galaxies, then individual suns.
But inevitably, in the early
stages, exceptional situations occurred. Galaxies were as yet near to
each other. They still contained anomalous groups. Thus they exchanged
matter. A large star cluster might form within one galaxy, but having
more than escape velocity, might cross to another (with stars
coalescing in it meanwhile) that could capture it. In this way, the
variety of stellar types belonging to a particular galaxy was not
limited to those that it could have evolved at its own age.
Zeroing in on her destination, Leonora
Christine kept watch for a well-developed cluster whose
speed she could easily match. And as she entered its domain, she looked
for a star of the right characteristics, spectral and velocital. To
nobody's surprise, the nearest of that sort had planets. She
decelerated toward it.
The procedure differed from the
original scheme, which had been to go by at high speed, making
observations while she passed through the system. Reymont was
responsible for it. This once, he said, let a chance be taken. The odds
weren't too bad. Measurements made across light-years with the
instruments and techniques developed aboard ship gave reason to expect
that a certain attendant of that yellow sun might offer a haven to man.
If not — a year would
have been lost, the year required to reapproach c
with respect to the entire galaxy. But if there actually was a planet
such as lived in memory, no further deceleration would be called for.
Two years would have been gained.
The gamble seemed worthwhile.
Given twenty-five fertile couples, an extra two years meant an extra
half hundred ancestors for the future race.
Leonora Christine
found her world, the very first time.
Chapter
23
On a hill that view ed wide across a beautiful valley, a man
stood with his woman.
Here was not New Earth. That would have been too much to
expect. The river far below them was tinted gold with tiny life, and
ran through meadows whose many-fronded growth was blue. Trees looked as
if they were feathered, in shades of the same color, and the wind set
some kinds of blossoms in them to chiming. It bore scents which were
like cinnamon, and iodine, and horses, and nothing for which men had a
name. On the opposite side lifted stark palisades, black and red,
fanged with crags, where flashed the horns of a glacier.
Yet the air was warm; and humankind could thrive here.
Enormous above river and ridges towered clouds which shone silver in
the sun.
Ingrid Lindgren said, "You mustn't leave her, Carl. She
deserves too well of us."
"What are you talking about?" Reymont retorted. "We can't
leave each other. None of us can. Ai-Ling understands you're something
unique to me. But so is she, in her own way. So are we all, everyone to
everyone else. Aren't we? After what we've been through together?"
"Yes. It's only — I never thought to hear those
words from you, Carl, darling."
He laughed. "What did you expect?"
"Oh, I don't know. Something harsh and unyielding."
"The time for that is over," he
said. "We've got where we were going. Now we have to start afresh."
"Also with each other?" she
asked, a little teasingly.
"Yes. Of course. Good Lord,
hasn't this been discussed enough among the bunch of us? We'll need to
take from the past what's good and forget what was bad. Like
… well, the whole question of jealousy simply isn't
relevant. There'll be no later immigrants. We have to share our genes
around as much as we can. Fifty of us to start a whole intelligent
species over again! So your worry about someone being hurt, or left
out, or anything — it doesn't arise. With all the work ahead
of us, personalities have no importance whatsoever."
He pulled her to him and
chuckled down at her. "Not that we can't tell the universe Ingrid
Lindgren is the loveliest object in it," he said, threw himself down
under a tall old tree, and tugged her hand. "Come here. I told you we
were going to take a holiday."
Steely-scaled, with a skirling
along its wings, passed overhead one of those creatures called dragons.
Lindgren joined Reymont, but
hesitantly. "I don't know if we should, Carl," she said.
"Why not?"
"Too much to do."
"Construction, planting,
everything's coming along fine. The scientists haven't reported any
menace, actual or potential, that we can't deal with. We can well
afford to loaf a bit."
"All right, let's face the
fact." She brought the words unwillingly forth. "Kings get no holidays."
"What are
you babbling about?" Reymont lounged back against the rough,
sweet-scented bole and rumpled her hair, which was bright beneath the
young sun. After dark there would be three moons to shine upon her, and
more stars in the sky than men had known before.
"You," she said. "They look to
you, the man who saved them, the man who dared survive, they look to
you for —"
He interrupted her in the most
enjoyable way.
"Carl!" she protested.
"Do you mind?"
"No. Certainly not. On the
contrary. But — I mean, your work —"
"My work," he said, "is my
share of the community's job. No more and no less. As for any other
position: They had a proverb in America which went, ‘If
nominated, I will not run; if elected, I will not serve.'"
She looked at him with a kind
of terror. "Carl! You can't mean that!"
"I sure as hell can," he
answered. For a moment he turned serious again. "Once a crisis is past,
once people can manage for themselves … what better can a
king do for them than take off his crown?"
Then he laughed, and made her
laugh with him, and they were merely human.
END