Symphony for a Lost Traveler
by Lee Killough
This story copyright 1984 by Lee Killough. This copy was created
for Jean Hardy's personal use. All other rights are reserved. Thank you for
honoring the copyright.
Published by Seattle Book Company,
www.seattlebook.com.
* * *
They walked in a moving band of light, into
and out of darkness. The floor and ceiling panels of the corridor brightened as
Cimela and the butler-- in formal black-and-silver
jumpsuit-- entered each new section; glowing milky white, then
dimming out behind them. The passage bored straight through the moon's rock. A
glassy sheen of fused stone reflected back at Cimela between the succession of
contemporary and classic paintings decorating the walls: abstracts by Tanguy, a
Bosch, Seth Koerner's bleak planetscapes, and starships and aliens signed
Herring and Whelan.
Cimela frowned.
Kerel Mattias Ashendene's artistic taste ran to the fantastic. Why, then, had he
sent expensive shuttle and Moon rocket tickets along with the enigmatic
invitation to his lunar retreat-- I would like to discuss the
creation of a truly unique symphony-- to a composer whose work
celebrated nature?
She wished she had been able to
learn more about the man than public facts: that his Interstellar Mining and
Drilling, Inc. issued franchises to more than half the independent miners in the
asteroids and Jupiter and Saturn's moons, that he owned controlling interests in
numerous other corporations, including those manufacturing pharmaceuticals and
computers and contragrav units. Journalist friends could supply only two pieces
of tape on him, both eleven years old. One recorded his removal from the twisted
wreckage of his sailcar and the other his departure from the hospital months
later in a floatchair.
The butler clapped his hands.
A section of wall opened to reveal an elevator. "Ask for level four, madam. Mr.
Ashendene is waiting."
He was sending her alone into
the lion's den? Cimela reflected wryly.
Near-normal
gravity returned briefly, but faded again when the car stopped rising. The doors
opened.
Cimela gasped in horror. Before her lay the
open surface of the Moon, the side and bottom of a crater dropping away in a
sharp pattern of light and shadow!
For a moment she
did not see distorted smear of her reflection on the inside of a transparent
surface... the bittersweet of her jumpsuit a flame beneath her mahogany face and
the ebony velvet of her close-cropped hair. Then breath returned in a gasp of
relief. A dome! Even so, stepping out of the elevator, she felt for the
polyplastic to reassure herself.
"You're quite
safe," a deep resonant voice said.
She turned toward
the sound and found herself in a large, circular room. An assortment of tables
and chairs floated above the glowing floor along with a bed, a computer station,
and a desk piled with papers and minidisc files. Cimela barely noticed the
furnishings. Above the waist-high cabinets and bookcases around the
edge-- filled with genuine printed and bound volumes--
the dome and wire lattice generating its meteor screen rose invisibly, creating
the illusion that nothing separated the room from the lunar crater. Earth hung
overhead, a brilliant sapphire suspended against midnight velvet studded with
diamonds. With difficulty, she dragged her eyes from the view to the man gliding
toward her in a floatchair.
He extended a hand.
"I've been looking forward to meeting you."
"And I
you." His hand crushed hers. Eyes the color of moondust slid over her,
assessing, dissecting. Where in them, and in the assured voice, craggy features,
gray-touched hair, and iridescent jumpsuit was the person who bought those
paintings? "Tell me about your proposal."
"Will you
join me for tea?" He used the controls on one sweeping armrest to back his chair
toward a table floating above the glowing floor.
Cimela accepted the cup he handed her and folded
into a freeform chair. Suddenly, from somewhere, music flooded the dome. She
instantly recognized her Requiem For a Vanishing World, even without the
holo track. It flowed around her, stately bass notes representing whales booming
along under the high music of birds and the sinuous rhythms of predators, all
intermixed with the sounds of the animals' own voices: twittering, whale songs,
howls, snarls.
Ashendene's moondust eyes continued
to search her. "I never would have thought one could make music using DNA as the
score. Four notes sound so limiting."
She quirked a
brow. "Nature manages well enough with them." She expected some reply, but he
only continued to stare at her. The scrutiny brought a rush of irritation. "Am I
not what you expected?"
The moondust eyes flickered.
"Oh, yes... black and all."
She started. Could the
man read minds?
"I researched you, of course. Cimela
Bediako, thirty-one years old, single, born in Ghana, bioengineer father, music
training in Sidney, lead singer and song writer for the Neo-Renaissance band the
Rococo Roos until you switched to symphonic music and presented World
Primeval at the San Francisco Opera House five years ago. If I'm staring,
it's in admiration of one not only supremely talented and beautiful, but a
veritable Pied Piper as well."
Cimela blinked. "Pied
Piper?"
Whale songs cried in counterpoint to the
howl of wolves. Ashendene said, "World Primeval generated a renewed
interest in dinosaurs, I understand, and your wildlife symphonies have inspired
a growing conservation movement."
"I hope so!" She
glanced up at the luminous sapphire above them, so unflawed at this distance.
"We're spreading out across the galaxy, but we're not leaving anything to come
home to."
"Not quite across the galaxy. We haven't
left the solar system yet."
Cimela shrugged. "Well,
there's no practical star drive. Star ships would also take metals away, and we
don't even know there's anywhere to go."
The
moondust eyes flicked over her. "Those are just the excuses we've concocted for
abandoning the stars... all invalid. We do have an efficient drive and there's
not only somewhere to go, but someone to meet."
Her
breath stuck in her chest. "Someone..."
Ashendene
leaned toward her. "Three years ago a miner I franchised found a derelict ship
in the asteroids. It's three thousand years old."
Her throat went dry. "We've been in the asteroids
for only a century."
"Yes." He sat back. "My
scientists have taken the ship apart and learned the principles behind the
drive. I want to put that drive in human ships now. That's why I asked you here.
I plan to announce my plans at a dinner for potential investors and I want music
to celebrate the occasion. In addition to keeping all rights to the music and
being my guest while you work, you will, of course, receive monetary
remuneration."
He named a figure that any other time
would have left Cimela dazzled, but now she could feel only the bitter stab of
disappointment. Background music! This was his idea of a unique musical
work? She stood. "No, thank you. I don't do commercials or waiting room music."
The moondust eyes went chill as the crater outside.
"Perhaps you would be polite enough to hear me out. The credit I spent bringing
you here entitles me to at least that much of your time."
She sat down again, stiffly, on the edge of the
chair.
Ashendene frowned. "I want very special
music, a long piece to be performed after dinner by an orchestra, something
arranged as only you can do it, on DNA. That ship wasn't empty, Ms. Bediako."
Searing hot and cold shot through Cimela like an
electric charge. Every hair on her body raised. "You found... people?" she
whispered.
"What remained of them. Now are you
interested?"
His sarcasm went unnoticed over the
crescendo of her heart. People. Aliens! Life different from any that had ever
walked this world! How were they built? Did all life share the same nucleotides,
or would their genetic matter sing a different song? And Ashendene offered her
the chance to see first. Breathlessly, she asked, "When may I see a printout of
the nucleotide sequence?"
A thin smile crossed his
mouth. "Today. I'll have it brought to your room. There's a computer station and
synthesizer already there for you, but if you need anything else, just ask for
it. Albert will show you the way."
* *
*
Her "room"
consisted of a large suite, one entire wall of which had been built of the same
polyplastic as the dome and looked out into the crater. Neither Earth nor
Ashendene's study were visible from it; just moonscape, starkly lifeless in
patterns of black and silver, with the crater ringwall rising jaggedly into the
velvet-and-diamond canopy of sky.
Staring out, she
caught a reflection of the room: the butler entering with an overall-clad young
woman pushing a contra-gee cart piled with computer printout. Cimela lost all
interest in the crater. Pulse leaping, she spun on the cart and fingered the
printout in anticipation. "Did you bring holos of the aliens, too?"
The young woman shook her head. "They didn't give me
any."
Cimela frowned. She needed them to pick
appropriate instruments and tempi, and to build the holo track. She would have
to ask Ashendene for them.
The butler and technician
set the printout on the floor while Cimela unpacked her electronic keyboard.
After the door slid closed behind them, she arranged the paper in a circle on
the carpet, creating her own ringwall. Then she sat cross-legged in the center,
keyboard in her lap, and began reading through the nearest stack of printout.
Some corner of her mind remembered a servant serving
supper, and that she flung herself on the bed for awhile, but most of her
awareness focused on the nucleotide sequences. She saw nothing else and heard
only the music they made in her head and on the keyboard.
The computer had not printed out the chemical
structure, either as formulas or zigzag diagrams, but the terminology told her
the aliens' "DNA" differed from humans': A', G', C', and T' where A, G, C, and T
usually stood for the nucleotides, plus two more named PU-3 and PY-3, indicating
an addition purine and pyrimidine. Six nucleotides! Their genetics must be very
complex... but more than that, this time she had six notes to work with.
Except that a seventh, out of key, kept intruding.
She tried to ignore it.
"Ms. Bediako!"
Cimela started with enough force to lift her off the
carpet. Turning, she met the keen gaze of moondust eyes regarding her from the
doorway.
Ashendene floated his chair into the room.
"I came to check on you. Alfred said you didn't touch breakfast or lunch and
wouldn't answer the door chime."
Meals? Door chime?
Oh... the seventh note. She grimaced. "I should have warned you how engrossed I
become when I work."
A brow quirked. "Indeed.
However, I didn't bring you here to expire from anorexia. To reassure me of your
nutrition, will you have dinner with me this evening?"
Dinner? That would mean losing two or three hours of
working time. Still, it might also give her the chance to learn where the steely
businessman became the lover of fantasy. "Thank you. What time and where?"
"I take my meals in my room normally. Alfred will be
pouring the wine at nineteen hundred hours. It's a house vintage, from grapes in
our hydroponics farm. I think you'll like it."
Spinning his chair, Ashendene sailed it out of the
room. Only after the door had closed behind him did Cimela remember that she had
forgotten to ask him for holos of the aliens. Shrugging, she returned to work.
By eighteen hundred hours she had decided on the
length of the symphony, chosen the key, and decided that the notes from
Mi up to Do would comprise her scale. She stood stiffly,
stretching, ready for a break before looking for the strand sequences to
harmonize with and make a counterpoint to the main sequence.
*
* *
Ashendene greeted her with a nod of
approval. "Lovely."
Cimela smiled. Though this was
just a break in work, she had dressed carefully, choosing a gauzy gold jumpsuit
with the voluminous sleeves and legs, snuggly cuffed at wrists and ankles, that
the Moon's low gravity inspired in this year's fashions. Sitting down at the
round library-type table where dinner had been set, she looked out at the crater
and up to the luminous globe of Earth overhead. "Do you like this room best for
its view of Earth or the moon?"
"The stars."
Ashendene said
The butler poured wine and served
dinner, gliding over the glowing floor silent and efficient as a robot. Her
Kings of the Air played softly around them, a chorus of strings singing
the nucleotide sequences of the great raptors.
Ashendene asked, "How did you happen to begin using
DNA as a score?"
Cimela sipped her wine. It was
delicious, pale and lightly sweet as moonlight. "My father once gave my mother a
birthday card that was a sheet of music with notes assigned to nucleotide
sequences that resulted in the pigmentation of her hair, skin and eyes. 'The
song is you,' I remember him telling her. That fascinated me. I started playing
with DNA tunes. Even the music I wrote for the Rococo Roos had DNA sequence
themes, and later, when I began writing about life that had vanished or seemed
about to, what better than to let the very substance of those animals plead for
them? World Primeval sounds like any symphony, but even its themes are
expanded from nucleotide sequences of the shark, lizard, echidna, and platypus."
Ashendene laughed. "I'm astonished how well it all
sounds with such a restricted form, but even more amazed at the profound
emotional effect your music has on people."
That
always surprised her, too. "A friend once came up with a theory in an inebriated
moment. He said the response results from resonance, a recognition on a deeply
subconscious level of its similarity to the pattern of our own genetic
structure. It's as good as any other explanation I've heard. I'll be interested
in seeing how people react to an alien coding."
The
moondust eyes flickered. "I would think they'd feel the same, given that the
music uses human instrumentation."
She frowned.
Human instrumentation. Could that be wrong? Perhaps aliens deserved new and more
exotic sounds. She would play with the synthesizer. Which reminded
her-- knowing what they looked like would help her select
appropriate sounds. "Mr. Ashendene, I need tapes or holos of the aliens."
He sipped his wine and grimaced. "There aren't any
worth seeing."
She shrugged. "I don't care how poor
they are; I need something for a basis of the visual track."
"The bodies were too badly damaged to tell much
about their appearance. The 'DNA' has been read from a few cells that froze
quickly enough to be thawed without destroying the internal structure."
"Even damaged bodies are worth something," she
protested. "Are they large or small? How many limbs do they have? What's their
clothing like? What about the ship?"
The moondust
eyes stared into her, then went thoughtful. "I see what you mean. We have holos
of the ship and you'll have them by morning. We're working on a computer
reconstruction of the aliens based on a composite and skeletal structure and
you'll have that, too, as soon as it's finished. From what I saw, the aliens are
a bit smaller than we are, covered with... bronze or gold feathers."
Golden bird people? She grinned in delight. Perhaps
flutes and strings, or chimes, should carry the musical theme. She played with
the idea in her head the rest of dinner, and afterward programmed the
synthesizer in her room for airy instrumental sounds.
*
* *
Cimela kept working with the synthesizer, at
the same time deciding on secondary and tertiary musical lines. During rests she
studied the holos of the ship. It appeared strictly utilitarian, without
decoration or color. Ceilings pressed low overhead, barely centimeters above the
squatly arched doorways. The crew apparently never used furniture except tables
and something like low blanket racks with padded bars. Water-filled mats on the
floor served as beds. Beyond that the holos told her nothing about the aliens.
She set them aside.
Every evening she ate with
Ashendene in the domed study. The floor glowed beneath them; Earth shone
overhead; moonwine filled their glasses like luminous silver. Ashendene
entertained her with stories about his early days mining the asteroids. "IMDI
was just me, five buddies, and a patched junk ship in those days."
Cimela smiled at him over her wineglass. "You sound
like you enjoyed it. Why did you give it up for a desk?"
He shrugged, looking past her at the sky. "The
asteroids are just a way station."
After dinner they
took tea in the study, or he showed her through another portion of the house. It
had the facilities of a small colony: laboratories, workshops, staff apartments,
and a hydroponics farm. Working on the ship here, no wonder he had been able to
keep his find a secret. At some point they passed to a first-name basis, and one
evening during her second week there she had the chance to learn about his love
of fantastic art.
"I respect people who dream," he
said, "even if it's nightmares, like Bosch. So few people dream these days. And
speaking of dreaming, how is your work coming?"
The
question had been inevitable. She sighed. "Slowly, as always. I'm still
undecided about the lead instruments. Perhaps I'll use a recorder and a
samisen."
He blinked. "A what?"
"The samisen is a three-stringed Japanese guitar
with a long neck. The recorder is a very old flute that's played like a
clarinet. It went out of common use about the time of Bach, at least until the
Neo-Renaissance movement revived interest in it. It has a lovely mellow sound."
A crease appeared between the moondust eyes. "Don't
forget you're writing this for modern ears."
As
though modern sound could not come out of old instruments. But that was what
came of discussing instruments with a non-musician. "Of course. When do I need
to be finished?"
"The dinner will wait for the
music. Oh, I almost forgot. Albert." He beckoned to the butler. "Will you bring
Cimela the envelope from my desk?"
Her heart went
into fortissimo at the sight of the small, square gray envelope.
"The alien construct program?"
Ashendene finished his wine. "Now you can start on
the holo track, too, and stop being underworked."
She laughed at his teasing, but could hardly wait to
finish eating. Ashendene appeared to read her mind. He said little the remainder
of the meal and did not ask her to stay for tea afterward.
Back in her rooms, Cimela slipped the minidisc into
her computer and waited curled cross-legged in her chair. The image appeared one
line at a time, as though being sketched inside the screen. It pivoted at the
same time, the far side of the three-dimensional shape remaining visible through
the forming lines of the near side. With every turn, however, more details
appeared-- feathers, the facets of compound eyes,
fingernails-- followed by textures and finally by color, until the
screen held a construction that did not look like a computer drawing but a
holophoto of an actual being.
The alien stood on two
muscular legs that bent strangely but carried him like coiled springs. He had no
wings after all: small arms, also oddly jointed, folded across the golden chest,
ending in hands with a thumb and two long, many-jointed fingers. Feather-fringed
ears belied out from the sides of the broad head. Faceted opal eyes dreamed
placidly above nasal slits and a smiling bow of mouth.
Cimela sighed in satisfaction. He was alien, yes.
Completely inhuman-- she could not even identify the tools hanging
on his belt-- but utterly fascinating.
She plunged happily into her doubled task and over
the next several weeks used the computer to create and store the thousands of
images that would be projected as the visual track, while at the same time
experimenting with countless nucleotide sequences played against each other in
the voices of several dozen musical instruments... culling, choosing, refining
choices. She lived, breathed, and dreamed the symphony, aware of little else.
Even at dinner with Ashendene they spoke only of the work.
He did not appear to mind. He listened intently, and
once Cimela looked up from the computer to find his chair in the doorway, his
expression hungry. How long he had sat there Cimela could not begin to guess,
and she eyed him, suddenly aware how isolated the house was, and that leaving
would entail more effort than just hailing a cab, if she needed to escape
unwanted attentions.
"Is that part of the final
thing?" he asked.
She did not know whether to be
relieved or disappointed. His passion was for the symphony, not her. "Do you
like it?"
The hunger flared brighter in the moondust
eyes. "It's even better than I dreamed. Have you titled it yet?"
"How about The Lost Traveler?"
"Perfect. Will you think I'm impatient if I ask how
close you are to being finished?"'
"Yes." But she
smiled. "I'll answer, though. I'm almost finished. So plan your dinner and give
me an orchestra for rehearsals. Do you really plan to bring an entire orchestra
all the way from Earth?"
He smiled back. "No, just
around the Moon. The Chinese have a very nice orchestra at the Celestial Village
complex." His smile broadened. "Maybe the samisen is appropriate after all."
* * *
Now work really began: printing out the
score for each instrument, working with the butler to assign rooms to the
several dozen musicians who flooded the house. Her days filled with hours of
rehearsals, all held where the dinner and performance would be given: the
ballroom, a dome like the study but many times larger. How she had missed seeing
it before Cimela did not know, for it appeared to sit almost in the center of
the crater, the rugged ringwall rising on all sides.
She had little time to admire the view, however.
Though she spoke little Chinese and the conductor knew even less English, the
two of them argued endlessly over tempi and other details.
Ashendene, attending one of the rounds, murmured,
"Maybe we should have settled for a synthesizer."
Cimela shook her head. "I've been through this
before. Wu Chien and I will work out our differences or I'll turn him into
Peking duck."
Ashendene raised a skeptical brow, but
by the day of the dinner she and the conductor were indeed bowing and smiling at
one another. He shook his head. "Remarkable talent indeed."
The house filled to bursting. Each of the men and
women Ashendene had invited moved in with companions and personal staff. They
arrived a shuttle-load at a time from the Americans' Port Heinlein for two days
before the dinner, and though one or two did not arrive until the last moment,
by seventeen hundred hours on the appointed day all were gathering in the
ballroom for cocktails.
Ashendene hovered outside
the elevator like a king on a throne, greeting his guests and introducing them
to Cimela, who stood beside him in gold velvet.
The
group had the glitter of an international opening night, the women wrapped in
jewels and expensive fabrics, the men dressed in elegant formal versions of
jumpsuits, kimonos, and dashikis... but it was neither that nor their names,
most of which Cimela failed to recognize, that kept her heart in allegro tempo.
The aura of power curled around them visibly. Without being told, Cimela knew
that she shook hands with the men and women who really ran the world, and whose
web of influence extended even out to the edge of the solar system.
The scene had the surrealism of one of Ashendene's
paintings: the tables, impeccably set with the finest china, crystal, and
sterling, arranged in a circle on the milky glow of the floor; and outside the
circle the guests, milling together wearing their power as easily and elegantly
as their formal clothing, chatting, seemingly unaware or uncaring that they did
so in the center of a lunar crater. Light from hidden spotlights flooded the
crater. No Earth or Sun shone in the sky, however. The jagged teeth of the
ringwall framed a breath-taking vista of stars alone, infinitely vast and far,
yet so brilliant that each distant sun-- which one warmed the world
of the golden-feathered people?-- looked close enough for Cimela to
reach up and pluck.
She sat at the head table beside
Ashendene, completely unable to distinguish what she ate. Instead Cimela stared
up at the glorious blaze overhead and wondered how the guests could ignore it
for shop talk and gossip. "Don't they ever look up?" she whispered to Ashendene.
"Perhaps after tonight they will." Grasping the edge
of the table, he pulled himself upright. "Ladies and gentlemen!" He waited while
the roar of conversation died away. When only the occasional clink of a dessert
spoon against glass remained, he went on. "I want to thank you all for coming."
As he spoke, Cimela noticed that a square in the
center of the floor dropped and slid aside.
"I hope
you've enjoyed the food and wine. In a few minutes the Celestial Village
Symphony Orchestra will present the new work by Cimela Bediako that I promised
you."
"Before that, however, let me relieve your
curiosity about the business proposal I used to entice you here. In a word, I am
offering you the stars."
Cimela saw several people
start to frown, but before they could complete the expression the air swirled
above the circle of tables. It solidified into a holo projection of the aliens'
battered ship, a blunt cigar shape wrapped in a scaffold-like spiral. Brows
arched around the tables, then dipped again speculatively as the guests
recognized the strange craft's aged appearance. The eyes widened when Ashendene
explained what the ship was and how and where it had been found. Then the ship
dissolved and in its place a holo of the alien appeared, just as Cimela had
first seen it: a pivoting outline, rapidly filling with detail, texture, and
color. A sigh of indrawn breath swept the circle.
"We have learned to duplicate the drive," Ashendene
said. "Star travel is now possible in flights of weeks and months instead of
enduring for generations. All we need is a company to build the ships."
The physics behind the drive and the talk about bent
space did not interest Cimela. The expressions around the tables did, and she
bit her lip. She had seen closed faces like those before... on critics who
decided even before the conductor raised his baton that her work could not
possibly contain real artistic merit, only novelty, gimmickry. These people had
no interest in investing money to build star ships.
"...opportunity to establish trade," Ashendene was
saying now. "If we'll use this drive, the universe and whatever profit may lie
out there are ours. And now, refill your wine glasses and prepare for pleasure."
The alien holo dissolved. "I present the Celestial Village Symphony Orchestra
playing the most beautiful and talented Cimela Bediako's The Lost
Traveler." He dropped back into his chair.
Sometime during his speech the orchestra had slipped
into its place at the end of the room. Cimela laced her fingers tightly in her
lap, her heart thundering like kettledrums, and nodded at Wu Chien.
After the first few bars, however, she forgot her
nervousness, and even Ashendene and his guests. Nothing existed but the music.
It soared, the main melody carried by a descant recorder, samisen, and harp.
Other strings, the brass, and woodwinds sang behind them, playing complementary
nucleotide sequences. And in the center of the tables the computer projected the
visual track: golden-feathered aliens with faceted opal eyes, stretching upward
or striding along on their powerful legs, circling and embracing in a
minuet-like dance, all against the backdrop of moonscape and starfields.
Cimela closed her eyes and let the sound possess
her, reverberate through her bones and blood, hypnotic. How foolish people were
to think that they created music, she mused. Nature did it first, and better, in
the voices of wind and water and animals, and even in the very substance of what
made all life what it was. The aliens might come from a different sun and a
different sea, but in the very center of them their cells sang a song not that
different from those of the trees, insects, and men of Earth.
When the music stopped, such absolute silence filled
the dome that Cimela heard the sigh of breathing and the beat of her own heart.
She opened her eyes hesitantly to find every guest sitting blinking at the empty
air in the circle. She swung around to meet Wu Chien's eyes, stomach plunging.
Oh. no! They hated it. She tried to look an apology at the orchestra.
Just then the applause began... a single pair of
hands, joined by another, then another, the sound swelling until the thunder of
it shook the dome. Ashendene grinned and urged her onto her feet. And one by one
the guests stood, too. The most powerful men and women in the solar system rose
to their feet, their hands still pounding together in approval.
Cimela remembered bowing to the guests and
orchestra, remembered the orchestra bowing; then everything blurred into a crowd
of people surrounding her with congratulations. She floated on a cloud of
euphoria that did not dissipate even when the ballroom emptied and she stood
alone with Ashendene and a few servants.
She hugged
him in sheer joy, throwing herself into his lap. "Kerel, thank you for giving me
the chance to write this symphony."
"I thank
you for creating it. Every one of them has asked to invest in the
starship corporation." Then his arms tightened around her.
Somehow, without much surprise, she found herself in
his private dome, in his bed; and the lovemaking made a celebration indeed,
sweet and deeply satisfying as moonwine and her music together. Ashendene might
be crippled, but not disabled, she discovered.
Some
long time later she woke beneath the glorious blaze of stars and sat up in the
bed, dreamily watching them. What happened next? Her contract with Ashendene
gave her all rights to Lost Traveler, so she supposed she should take it
back to Earth. After news of the alien ship spread, interest ought to run high.
She sat up more, smiling at the room, a place as
surreal as the paintings: bookcases and the overburdened desk beneath stars and
the lunar ringwall. She would miss the room, and probably Ashendene.
Cimela slid out of bed to pad naked along the
bookcases, touching the antique objects and peering at their titles: fairy
tales, science fiction, astrophysics, planetology, psychology. One book lay on
the desk: another collection of fairy tales with a square of stiff paper marking
The Pied Piper of Hamlyn. Amused, she started to read the story, then noticed
that the other side of the marker held a holophoto. But what of? She
tilted it to the light of the floor, frowning. The thing looked like a misshapen
porpoise... more like a giant slug, except that gray-green feathery-looking
scales covered it and one end sprouted three tentacle limbs, two tipped in
triple talons, the third ending in a cluster of smaller tentacles, and all
situated around a great fang-filled maw. Eyes scattered back along the great
body, faceted opals peering through the fronds.
Faceted opals? The hair raised on Cimela's back.
The book of fairy tales dropped forgotten to the
desk as she pawed through the rest of the papers piled there. What she wanted
lay under where the book had lain: more holos and a lengthy report Cimela
studied every holo and read the report, anger boiling up in her. That lying
bastard!
"What are you doing, Cimela?"
She slapped the report down on the desk and whirled.
"You lying son of a bitch! Golden-feathered aliens? The only similarity between
the fraud and these holos is the eyes!"
He sat up.
"Yes."
Her hands clenched to keep from spreading
into claws. "You let me make Lost Traveler a fraud!"
Ashendene frowned. "Only the visuals are...
inaccurate."
"Only!" He destroyed her
artistic integrity and said only? "You-- " No pejorative
seemed vile enough to describe him. "Why did you do it!"
The moondust eyes regarded her solemnly. "Because I
want man to go to the stars, and they won't if they think that the stars are
inhabited by fanged slugs."
Angrily Cimela paced,
flinging her head. "That's ridiculous. You lied about the age of the ship, too.
That report says it's three million years old-- and the
aliens were chlorine breathers. They could be extinct by now, and even if they
aren't, we don't have much chance of contacting or trading with them. It doesn't
make any difference if they're out there."
He piled
pillows up and leaned back against them. "Most people won't believe that. All
they'll pay attention to is what they see-- and you and I, of all
people, know how much appearance influences what people think of something or
someone."
Anger drained out of Cimela. She bit her
lip. Oh yes, she knew. She sighed. "Why tell anyone about the aliens at all? Say
you invented the drive."
His mouth twisted wryly.
"Do you really think just having a drive will rekindle the star dream? No,
they'll still talk about wilderness and lack of cost effectiveness. Some
explorers go into wilderness just because they want to know what's there, but
most people need a reason: population pressure, military advantages, trade.
Greed is most effective, I think. Promise of profit will goad people into going
places they'd never dream of otherwise."
Cimela sat
down on the foot of the bed and hugged her knees. "So you invented attractive
aliens and used me to dangle a trade carrot in front of your guests," she said
bitterly.
"I had no other choice."
"You might have told me what you were trying to do.
You could have asked me to help."
"After you
parroted the words of every stay-at-home who's scoffed at my dream of the
stars?"
That stung, but she saw his point "What
happens when they learn the truth?"
To her surprise
he grinned, shrugging. "It may not be. That's a big galaxy; no one will expect
to find our feathered visitors right away. Even if the truth does eventually
leak, we'll be out there; and once people go into wilderness they usually stay."
The man was incorrigible, totally without
conscience. In disbelief; she said, "You'd really base a star culture on a lie?"
He looked up at the blaze above them. "If that's
what it takes. Babies don't remain in the womb forever. We're crippling
mankind's growth by clinging to Earth and the Sun." His gaze dropped to meet
hers. "Think of the possibilities. The trip doesn't have to be one-way. I
can even go, and not have to be content with going by proxy. Think of what we
can find. Wouldn't you like to visit a new world and play the music in the cells
of the life there?"
Her breath caught at the flood
of possibilities.
He leaned toward her. "Let me take
you there. All I ask is that you help me bring the rest of Mankind, too."
He never stopped manipulating, did he? She almost
regretted admiring his motives.
Cimela eyed the
fiery blaze overhead. She ought to redo the holo track and make Traveler
an honest symphony. And yet... a universe of life to make music on... Longing
throbbed in her. Damn the man!
"Cimela? What do you
say?" His hand touched her wrist. The heat of it spread up her arm. "Come on.
Help me."
Sighing, she yielded to siren call above
and within her. "All right. You win. You've bought yourself a Pied Piper."
Published by Alexandria Digital
Literature. (http://www.alexlit.com/)
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