The asteroid is running Barney: it sings of love on the high
frontier, of the passion of matter for replicators, and its
friendship for the needy billions of the Pacific Rim. "I love you,"
it croons in Amber’s ears as she seeks a precise fix on it: "let me
give you a big hug. . . ."
A fraction of a light-second away, Amber locks a cluster of
cursors together on the signal, trains them to track its Doppler
shift, and reads off the orbital elements. "Locked and loaded," she
mutters. The animated purple dinosaur pirouettes and prances in the
middle of her viewport, throwing a diamond-tipped swizzle-stick
overhead. Sarcastically: "big hug time! I got asteroid!" Cold gas
thrusters bang somewhere behind her in the interstage docking ring,
prodding the cumbersome farm ship round to orient on the Barney
rock. She damps her enthusiasm self-consciously, her implants
hungrily sequestrating surplus neurotransmitter molecules floating
around her synapses before reuptake sets in: it doesn’t do to get
too excited in free flight. But the impulse to spin handstands, jump
and sing, is still there: it’s her rock, and it loves her,
and she’s going to bring it to life.
The workspace of Amber’s room is a mass of stuff that
probably doesn’t belong on a space ship. Posters of the latest
Lebanese boy-band bump-and-grind through their glam routines;
tentacular restraining straps wave from the corners of her sleeping
bag, somehow accumulating a crust of dirty clothing from the air
like a giant inanimate hydra. (Cleaning robots seldom dare to
venture inside the teenager’s bedroom.) One wall is repeatedly
cycling through a simulation of the projected construction cycle of
Habitat One, a big fuzzy sphere with a glowing core (that Amber is
doing her bit to help create): three or four small pastel-colored
plastic kawai dolls stalk each other across its circumference
with million-kilometer strides. And her father’s cat is curled up
between the aircon duct and her costume locker, snoring in a
high-pitched tone.
Amber yanks open the faded velour curtain that shuts her room
off from the rest of the hive: "I’ve got it!" she shouts.
"It’s all mine! I rule!" It’s the sixteenth rock tagged by the
orphanage so far, but it’s her first, and that makes it
special. She bounces off the other side of the commons, surprising
one of Oscar’s cane toads–which should be locked down in the farm,
it’s not clear how it got here–and the audio repeaters copy the
incoming signal, noise-fuzzed echoes of a thousand fossilized
infant’s video shows.
"You’re so prompt, Amber," Pierre whines when she
corners him in the canteen.
"Well, yeah!" She tosses her head, barely concealing a smirk
of delight at her own brilliance. She knows it isn’t nice, but Mom
is a long way away, and Dad and Step-Mom don’t care about that kind
of thing. "I’m brilliant, me!" she announces. "Now
what about our bet?"
"Aww." Pierre thrusts his hands deep into his pockets. "But I
don’t have two million on me in change right now. Next
cycle?"
"Huh?" She’s outraged. "But we had a bet!"
"Uh, Doctor Bayes said you weren’t going to make it this
time, either, so I stuck my smart money in an options trade. If I
take it out now, I’ll take a big hit. Can you give me until cycle’s
end?"
"You should know better than to trust a sim, Pee." Her
avatar blazes at him with early teen contempt: Pierre hunches his
shoulders under her gaze. He’s only thirteen, freckled, hasn’t yet
learned that you don’t welsh on a deal. "I’ll let you do it
this time," she announces, "but you’ll have to pay for it. I
want interest."
He sighs. "What base rate are you–"
"No, your interest! Slave for a cycle!" She grins
malevolently.
And his face shifts abruptly into apprehension: "As long as
you don’t make me clean the litter tray again. You aren’t planning
on doing that, are you?"
Welcome to the third decade. The thinking mass of the solar
system now exceeds one MIP per gram; it’s still pretty dumb, but
it’s not dumb all over. The human population is near maximum
overshoot, pushing nine billion, but its growth rate is tipping
toward negative numbers, and bits of what used to be the first world
are now facing a middle-aged average. Human cogitation provides
about 1028 MIPS of the solar system’s brainpower. The real
thinking is mostly done by the halo of a thousand trillion
processors that surround the meat machines with a haze of
computation–individually, a tenth as powerful as a human brain,
collectively, they’re ten thousand times more powerful, and their
numbers are doubling every twenty million seconds. They’re up to
1033 MIPS and rising, although there’s a long way to go before the
solar system is fully awake.
Technologies come, technologies go, but even five years ago
nobody predicted that there’d be tinned primates in orbit around
Jupiter by now: a synergy of emergent industries and strange
business models have kick-started the space age again, aided and
abetted by the discovery of (so far undecrypted) signals from ET’s.
Unexpected fringe-riders are developing new ecological niches on the
edge of the human information space, light-minutes and light-hours
from the core, as an expansion that has hung fire since the 1970s
gets under way.
Amber, like most of the post-industrialists aboard the
orphanage ship Ernst Sanger, is in her early teens: her
natural abilities are enhanced by germ-line genetic recombination.
Like most of the others, half her wetware is running outside her
skull on an array of processor nodes hooked in by quantum-entangled
communication channels–her own personal metacortex. These kids are
mutant youth, burning bright: not quite incomprehensible to their
parents, but profoundly alien–the generation gap is as wide as the
1960s and as deep as the solar system. Their parents, born in the
gutter-years of the twentieth century, grew up with white elephant
shuttles and a space station that just went round and round, and
computers that went beep when you pushed their buttons: the idea
that Jupiter was somewhere you could go was as profoundly
counter-intuitive as the internet to a baby boomer.
Most of the passengers on the can have run away from parents
who thought that teenagers belong in school, unable to come to terms
with a generation so heavily augmented that they are fundamentally
brighter than the adults around them. Amber was fluent in nine
languages by the age of six, only two of them human, and six of them
serializable; her birth-mother–who had denied her most of the
prenatal mods then available, insisting that a random genotype was
innately healthier–had taken her to the school psychiatrist for
speaking in synthetic tongues. That was the final straw for Amber:
using an illicit anonymous phone, she called her father. Her mother
had him under a restraining order, but it hadn’t occurred to her to
apply for an order against his partner. . . .
***
Vast whorls of cloud ripple beneath the ship’s drive stinger:
orange and brown and muddy grey streaks slowly ripple across the
bloated horizon of Jupiter. Sanger is nearing perijove, deep
within the gas giant’s lethal magnetic field; static discharges
flicker along the tube, arcing over near the deep violet exhaust
cloud emerging from the magnetic mirrors of the ship’s VASIMR motor.
The plasma rocket is cranked up to maximum mass flow, its specific
impulse almost as low as a fission rocket but thrusting at maximum
as the assembly creaks and groans through the gravitational assist
maneuver. In another hour, the drive will flicker off, and the
orphanage will fall up and out toward Ganymede, before dropping back
in toward orbit around Amalthea, Jupiter’s fourth moon (and source
of much of the material in the Gossamer ring). They’re not the first
canned primates to make it to Jupiter subsystem, but they’re one of
the first wholly private ventures. The bandwidth out here sucks dead
slugs through a straw, with millions of kilometers of vacuum
separating them from scant hundreds of mouse-brained microprobes and
a few mechanical dinosaurs left behind by NASA or ESA. They’re so
far from the inner system that a good chunk of the ship’s
communications array is given over to caching: the news is whole
kiloseconds old by the time it gets out here.
Amber, along with about half the waking passengers, watches
in fascination from the common room. The commons are a long axial
cylinder, a double-hulled inflatable at the center of the ship with
a large part of their liquid water supply stored in its wall-tubes.
The far end is video-enabled, showing them a realtime 3D view of the
planet as it rolls beneath them: in reality, there’s as much mass as
possible between them and the trapped particles in the Jovian
magnetic envelope. "I could go swimming in that," sighs Lilly. "Just
imagine, diving into that sea. . . ." Her avatar appears in the
window, riding a silver surfboard down the kilometers of
vacuum.
"Nice case of wind-burn you’ve got there," someone jeers:
Kas. Suddenly, Lilly’s avatar, heretofore clad in a shimmering
metallic swimsuit, turns to the texture of baked meat, and waggles
sausage-fingers up at them in warning.
"Same to you and the window you climbed in through!" Abruptly
the virtual vacuum outside the window is full of bodies, most of
them human, contorting and writhing and morphing in mock-combat as
half the kids pitch into the virtual deathmatch: it’s a gesture in
the face of the sharp fear that outside the thin walls of the
orphanage lies an environment that really is as hostile as
Lilly’s toasted avatar would indicate.
Amber turns back to her slate: she’s working through a
complex mess of forms, necessary before the expedition can start
work. Facts and figures that are never far away crowd around her,
intimidating. Jupiter weighs 1.9 x 1027 kilograms. There are
twenty-nine Jovian moons and an estimated two hundred thousand minor
bodies, lumps of rock, and bits of debris crowded around them–debris
above the size of ring fragments, for Jupiter (like Saturn) has
rings, albeit not as prominent. A total of six major national
orbiter platforms have made it out here–and another two hundred and
seventeen microprobes, all but six of them private entertainment
platforms. The first human expedition was put together by ESA
Studios six years ago, followed by a couple of wildcat mining
prospectors and a u-commerce bus that scattered half a million
picoprobes throughout Jupiter subsystem. Now the Sanger has
arrived, along with another three monkey cans–one from Mars, two
more from LEO–and it looks as if colonization would explode except
that there are at least four mutually exclusive Grand Plans for what
to do with old Jove’s mass.
Someone prods her. "Hey, Amber, what are you up
to?"
She opens her eyes. "Doing my homework." It’s Su Ang. "Look,
we’re going to Amalthea, aren’t we? But we file our accounts in
Reno, so we have to do all this paperwork. Monica asked me to help.
It’s insane."
Ang leans over and reads, upside down. "Environmental
Protection Agency?"
"Yeah. Estimated Environmental Impact Forward Analysis
204.6b, Page Two. They want me to ‘list any bodies of standing water
within five kilometers of the designated mining area. If excavating
below the water table, list any wellsprings, reservoirs, and streams
within depth of excavation in meters multiplied by five hundred
meters up to a maximum distance of ten kilometers downstream of
direction of bedding plane flow. For each body of water, itemize any
endangered or listed species of bird, fish, mammal, reptile,
invertebrate, or plant living within ten kilometers–’ "
"–Of a mine on Amalthea? Which orbits one hundred and eighty
thousand kilometers above Jupiter, has no atmosphere, and where you
can pick up a whole body radiation dose of ten Grays in half an hour
on the surface?" Ang shakes her head, then spoils it by giggling.
Amber glances up.
On the wall in front of her someone–Nicky or Boris,
probably–has pasted a caricature of her own avatar into the virch
fight. She’s being hugged from behind by a giant cartoon dog with
floppy ears and an erection, who’s singing anatomically improbable
suggestions while fondling himself suggestively. "Fuck that!"
Shocked out of her distraction–and angry–Amber drops her stack of
paperwork and throws a new avatar at the screen, one an agent of
hers dreamed up overnight: it’s called Spike, and it’s not friendly.
Spike rips off the dog’s head and pisses down its trachea, which is
anatomically correct for a human being: meanwhile she looks around,
trying to work out which of the laughing idiot children and lost
geeks around her could have sent such an unpleasant
message.
"Children! Chill out." She glances round: one of the
Franklins (this is the twenty-something dark-skinned female one) is
frowning at them. "Can’t we leave you alone for half a K without a
fight?"
Amber pouts. "It’s not a fight: it’s a forceful exchange of
opinions."
"Hah." The Franklin leans back in mid-air, arms crossed, an
expression of supercilious smugness pasted across her-their face.
"Heard that one before. Anyway–" she-they gesture and the screen
goes blank "–I’ve got news for you pesky kids. We got a claim
verified! Factory starts work as soon as we shut down the stinger
and finish filing all the paperwork via our lawyers. Now’s our
chance to earn our upkeep. . . ."
Amber is flashing on ancient history, three years back along
her timeline. In her replay, she’s in some kind of split-level ranch
house out west. It’s a temporary posting while her mother audits an
obsolescent fab line enterprise that grinds out dead chips of VLSI
silicon for Pentagon projects that have slipped behind the cutting
edge. Her mom leans over her, menacingly adult in her dark suit and
chaperonage earrings: "You’re going to school, and that’s
that!"
Her mother is a blonde ice-maiden madonna, one of the IRS’s
most productive bounty hunters–she can make grown CEOs panic just by
blinking at them. Amber, a tow-headed eight-year-old tearaway with a
confusing mix of identities, inexperience blurring the boundary
between self and grid, is not yet able to fight back effectively.
After a couple of seconds, she verbalizes a rather feeble protest:
"Don’t want to!" One of her stance demons whispers that this is the
wrong approach to take, so she modifies it: "they’ll beat up on me,
Mom. I’m too different. ’Sides, I know you want me socialized up
with my grade metrics, but isn’t that what sideband’s for? I can
socialize real good at home."
Mom does something unexpected: she kneels down, putting
herself on eye level with Amber. They’re on the living room carpet,
all seventies-retro brown corduroy and acid-orange paisley
wallpaper: the domestics are in hiding while the humans hold court.
"Listen to me, sweetie." Mom’s voice is breathy, laden with an
emotional undertow as strong and stifling as the eau de cologne she
wears to the office to cover up the scent of her client’s fear. "I
know that’s what your father’s writing to you, but it isn’t true.
You need the company–physical company–of children your own
age. You’re natural, not some kind of engineered freak, even
with your skullset. Natural children like you need company, or they
grow up all weird. Don’t you know how much you mean to me? I want
you to grow up happy, and that won’t happen if you don’t learn to
get along with children your own age. You’re not going to be some
kind of cyborg otaku freak, Amber. But to get healthy, you’ve
got to go to school, build up a mental immune system. That which
does not destroy us makes us stronger, right?"
It’s crude moral blackmail, transparent as glass and
manipulative as hell, but Amber’s corpus logica flags it with
a heavy emotional sprite miming the likelihood of physical
discipline if she rises to the bait: Mom is agitated, nostrils
slightly flared, ventilation rate up, some vasodilatation visible in
her cheeks. Amber–in combination with her skullset and the
metacortex of distributed agents it supports–is mature enough at
eight years to model, anticipate, and avoid corporal punishment: but
her stature and lack of physical maturity conspire to put her at a
disadvantage when negotiating with adults who matured in a simpler
age. She sighs, then puts on a pout to let Mom know she’s still
reluctant, but obedient. "O-kay. If you say so."
Mom stands up, eyes distant–probably telling Saturn to warm
his engine and open the garage doors. "I say so, punkin. Go get your
shoes on, now. I’ll pick you up on my way back from work, and I’ve
got a treat for you: we’re going to check out a new Church together
this evening." Mom smiles, but it doesn’t reach her eyes. "You be a
good little girl, now, all right?"
The Imam is at prayer in a gyrostabilized mosque.
His mosque is not very big, and it has a congregation of one:
he performs salat on his own every seventeen thousand two hundred
and eighty seconds. He also webcasts the call to prayer, but there
are no other believers in trans-Jovian space to answer the summons.
Between prayers, he splits his attention between the exigencies of
life-support and scholarship. A student of the Hadith and of
knowledge-based systems, Sadeq collaborates in a project with other
mujtahid scholars who are building a revised concordance of all the
known isnads, to provide a basis for exploring the body of Islamic
jurisprudence from a new perspective–one they’ll need sorely if the
looked-for breakthroughs in communication with aliens emerge. Their
goal is to answer the vexatious questions that bedevil Islam in the
age of accelerated consciousness: and as their representative in
orbit around Jupiter, these questions fall most heavily on Sadeq’s
shoulders.
Sadeq is a slightly built man, with close-cropped black hair
and a perpetually tired expression: unlike the orphanage crew, he
has a ship to himself. The ship started out as an Iranian knock-off
of a Shenzhou-B capsule, with a Chinese-type 921 space-station
module tacked onto its tail: but the clunky, nineteen-sixties
lookalike–a glittering aluminum dragonfly mating with a Coke can–has
a weirdly contoured M2P2 pod strapped to its nose. The M2P2 pod is a
plasma sail: built in orbit by one of Daewoo’s wake
shield-facilities, it dragged Sadeq and his cramped space station
out to Jupiter in just four months, surfing on the solar breeze. His
presence may be a triumph for the Ummah, but he feels acutely alone
out here: when he turns his compact observatory’s mirrors in the
direction of the Sanger, he is struck by its size and
purposeful appearance. Sanger’s superior size speaks of the
efficiency of the western financial instruments, semi-autonomous
investment trusts with variable business-cycle accounting protocols
that make possible the development of commercial space exploration.
The Prophet, peace be unto him, may have condemned usury: but surely
it would have given him pause to see these engines of capital
formation demonstrate their power above the Great Red
Spot.
After finishing his prayers, Sadeq spends a couple of extra
precious minutes on his mat. He finds that meditation comes hard in
this environment: kneel in silence and you become aware of the hum
of ventilation fans, the smell of old socks and sweat, the metallic
taste of ozone from the Elektron oxygen generators. It is hard to
approach God in this third-hand spaceship, a hand-me-down from
arrogant Russia to ambitious China, and finally to the religious
trustees of Qom, who have better uses for it than any of the heathen
states imagine. They’ve pushed it far, this little toy space
station: but who’s to say if it is God’s intention for humans to
live here, in orbit around this swollen alien giant of a
planet?
Sadeq shakes his head: he rolls his mat up and stows it
beside the solitary porthole with a quiet sigh. A stab of
homesickness wrenches at him, for his childhood in hot, dusty Yazd
and his many years as a student in Qom: he steadies himself by
looking round, searching the station that is by now as familiar to
him as the fourth-floor concrete apartment that his parents–a car
factory worker and his wife–raised him in. The interior of the
station is the size of a school bus, every surface cluttered with
storage areas, instrument consoles, and layers of exposed pipes: a
couple of globules of antifreeze jiggle like stranded jellyfish near
a heat exchanger that has been giving him grief. Sadeq kicks off in
search of the squeeze bottle he keeps for this purpose, then gathers
up his roll of tools and instructs one of his agents to find him the
relevant sura of the maintenance log: it’s time to fix this leaky
joint for good.
An hour or so of serious plumbing, and then he will eat
(freeze-dried lamb stew, with a paste of lentils and boiled rice,
and a bulb of strong tea to wash it down), then sit down to review
his next flyby maneuvering sequence. Perhaps, God willing, there
will be no further system alerts and he’ll be able to spend an hour
or two on his research between evening and final prayers. Maybe the
day after tomorrow, there’ll even be time to relax for a couple of
hours, to watch one of the old movies that he finds so fascinating
for their insights into alien cultures: Apollo 13, maybe. It
isn’t easy, being the only crew aboard a long-duration space
mission: and it’s even harder for Sadeq, up here with nobody to talk
to, for the communications lag to earth is more than half an hour
each way–and so far as he knows he’s the only believer within half a
billion kilometers.
* **
Amber dials a number in Paris and waits until someone answers
the phone. She knows the strange woman on the phone’s tiny screen:
Mom calls her "your father’s fancy bitch," with a peculiar tight
smile. (The one time Amber asked what a fancy bitch was, Mom hit
her–not hard, just a warning.) "Is Daddy there?" she
asks.
The strange woman looks slightly bemused. (Her hair is
blonde, like Mom’s, but the color clearly came out of a bleach
bottle, and it’s cut really short, mannish.) "Oui. Ah, yes."
She smiles tentatively. "I am sorry, it is a disposable phone you
are using? You want to talk to ’im?"
It comes out in a rush: "I want to see him." Amber
clutches the phone like a lifesaver: it’s a cheap disposable
cereal-packet item, and the cardboard is already softening in her
sweaty grip. "Momma won’t let me, auntie ’Nette–"
"Hush." Annette, who has lived with Amber’s father for more
than twice as long as her mother did, smiles. "You are sure that
telephone, your mother does not know of it?"
Amber looks around. She’s the only child in the rest room
because it isn’t break time and she told teacher she had to go right
now: "I’m sure, P20 confidence factor greater than
0.9." Her Bayesian head tells her that she can’t reason accurately
about this because Momma has never caught her with an illicit phone
before, but what the hell. It can’t get Dad into trouble if he
doesn’t know, can it?
"Very good." Annette glances aside. "Manny, I have a surprise
call for you."
Daddy appears on screen. She can see all of his face, and he
looks younger than last time: he must have stopped using those
clunky old glasses. "Hi–Amber! Where are you? Does your mother know
you’re calling me?" He looks slightly worried.
"No," she says confidently, "the phone came in a box of
Grahams."
"Phew. Listen, sweet, you must remember to never, ever call
me where your mom may find out. Otherwise, she’ll get her lawyers to
come after me with thumb screws and hot pincers, because she’ll say
I made you call me. Understand?"
"Yes, Daddy." She sighs. "Don’t you want to know why I
called?"
"Um." For a moment he looks taken aback. Then he nods,
seriously. Amber likes Daddy because he takes her seriously most
times when she talks to him. It’s a phreaking nuisance having to
borrow her classmates’ phones or tunnel past Mom’s pit-bull
firewall, but Dad doesn’t assume that she can’t know anything
because she’s only a kid. "Go ahead. There’s something you need to
get off your chest? How’ve things been, anyway?"
She’s going to have to be brief: the disposaphone comes
pre-paid, the international tariff it’s using is lousy, and the
break bell is going to ring any minute. "I want out, Daddy. I
mean it. Mom’s getting loopier every week: she’s dragging me around
to all these churches now, and yesterday she threw a fit over me
talking to my terminal. She wants me to see the school shrink, I
mean, what for? I can’t do what she wants; I’m not her
little girl! Every time I tunnel out, she tries to put a content-bot
on me, and it’s making my head hurt–I can’t even think straight any
more!" To her surprise, Amber feels tears starting. "Get me out of
here!"
The view of her father shakes, pans around to show her tante
Annette looking worried. "You know, your father, he cannot do
anything? The divorce lawyers, they will tie him up."
Amber sniffs. "Can you help?" she asks.
"I’ll see what I can do," her father’s fancy bitch promises
as the break bell rings.
An instrument package peels away from the Sanger’s
claimjumper drone and drops toward the potato-shaped rock, fifty
kilometers below. Jupiter hangs huge and gibbous in the background,
impressionist wallpaper for a mad cosmologist: Pierre bites his
lower lip as he concentrates on steering it.
Amber, wearing a black sleeping-sack, hovers over his head
like a giant bat, enjoying her freedom for a shift. She looks down
on Pierre’s bowl-cut hair, his wiry arms gripping either side of the
viewing table, and wonders what to have him do next. A slave for a
day is an interesting experience, restful: life aboard the
Sanger is busy enough that nobody gets much slack-time (at
least, not until the big habitats have been assembled and the high
bandwidth dish is pointing at Earth). They’re unrolling everything
to a hugely intricate plan generated by the backers’ critical path
team, and there isn’t much room for idling: the expedition relies on
shamelessly exploitative child labor–they’re lighter on the
life-support consumables than adults–working the kids twelve-hour
days to assemble a toe-hold on the shore of the future. (When
they’re older and their options vest fully, they’ll all be rich–but
that hasn’t stopped the outraged herdnews propaganda back home.) For
Amber, the chance to let somebody else work for her is novel, and
she’s trying to make every minute count.
"Hey, slave," she calls idly: "how you doing?"
Pierre sniffs. "It’s going okay." He refuses to glance up at
her, Amber notices. He’s thirteen: isn’t he supposed to be obsessed
with girls by that age? She notices his quiet, intense focus, runs a
stealthy probe along his outer boundary: he shows no sign of
noticing it but it bounces off, unable to chink his mental armor.
"Got cruise speed," he says, taciturn, as two tons of metal,
ceramics, and diamond-phase weirdness hurtles toward the surface of
Barney at three hundred kilometers per hour. "Stop shoving me:
there’s a three- second lag and I don’t want to get into a feedback
control-loop with it."
"I’ll shove if I want, slave." She sticks her tongue
out at him.
"And if you make me drop it?" he asks. Looking up at her, his
face serious– "Are we supposed to be doing this?"
"You cover your ass and I’ll cover mine," she says,
then turns bright red. "You know what I mean."
"I do, do I?" Pierre grins widely, then turns back to the
console: "Aww, that’s no fun. And you want to tune whatever
bit-bucket you’ve given control of your speech centers to: they’re
putting out way too much double-entendre, somebody might
mistake you for a grown-up."
"You stick to your business and I’ll stick to
mine," she says, emphatically. "And you can start by telling
me what’s happening."
"Nothing." He leans back and crosses his arms, grimacing at
the screen. "It’s going to drift for five hundred seconds, now, then
there’s the midcourse correction and a deceleration burn before
touch-down. And then it’s going to be an hour while it
unwraps itself and starts unwinding the cable spool. What do you
want, minute noodles with that?"
"Uh-huh." Amber spreads her bat-wings and lies back in
mid-air, staring at the window, feeling rich and idle as Pierre
works his way through her day-shift. "Wake me when there’s something
interesting to see." Maybe she should have had him feed her peeled
grapes or give her a foot massage, something more traditionally
hedonistic: but right now just knowing he’s her own little
piece of alienated labor is doing good things for her self-esteem.
Looking at those tense arms, the curve of his neck, she thinks maybe
there’s something to this whispering-and-giggling he really likes
you stuff the older girls go in for–
The window rings like a gong and Pierre coughs. "You’ve got
mail," he says dryly. "You want me to read it for you?"
"What the–" A message is flooding across the screen,
right-to-left snaky script like the stuff on her corporate
instrument (now lodged safely in a deposit box in Zurich). It takes
her a while to page-in the grammar agent that can handle Arabic, and
another minute for her to take in the meaning of the message. When
she does, she starts swearing, loudly and continuously.
"You bitch, Mom! Why’d you have to go and do
a thing like that?"
The corporate instrument arrived in a huge FedEx box
addressed to Amber: it happened on her birthday while Mom was at
work, and she remembers it as if it was only an hour ago.
She remembers reaching up and scraping her thumb over the
delivery man’s clipboard, the rough feel of the microsequencers
sampling her DNA; afterward, she drags the package inside. When she
pulls the tab on the box it unpacks itself automatically,
regurgitating a compact 3D printer, half a ream of paper printed in
old-fashioned dumb ink, and a small calico cat with a large @-symbol
on its flank. The cat hops out of the box, stretches, shakes its
head, and glares at her. "You’re Amber?" it mrowls.
"Yeah," she says, shyly. "Are you from Tanté
‘Nette?"
"No, I’m from the fucking tooth fairy." It leans over and
head-butts her knee, strops the scent glands between its ears all
over her skirt. "Listen, you got any tuna in the
kitchen?"
"Mom doesn’t believe in seafood," says Amber: "it’s all
foreign junk, she says. It’s my birthday today, did I tell
you?"
"Happy fucking birthday, then." The cat yawns, convincingly
realistic. "Here’s your dad’s present. Bastard put me in hibernation
and blogged me along to show you how to work it. You take my advice,
you’ll trash the fucker. No good will come of it."
Amber interrupts the cat’s grumbling by clapping her hands
gleefully. "So what is it?" she demands. "A new invention?
Some kind of weird sex toy from Amsterdam? A gun, so I can shoot
Pastor Wallace?"
"Naaah." The cat yawns, yet again, and curls up on the floor
next to the 3D printer. "It’s some kinda dodgy business model to get
you out of hock to your mom. Better be careful, though–he says its
legality is narrowly scoped jurisdiction-wise."
"Wow. Like, how totally cool!" In truth, Amber is delighted
because it is her birthday, but Mom’s at work and Amber’s
home alone, with just the TV in moral-majority mode for company.
Things have gone so far downhill since Mom discovered religion that
absolutely the best thing in the world tante Annette could have sent
her is some scam programmed by Daddy to take her away. If he
doesn’t, Mom will take her to Church tonight (and maybe to an IRS
compliance-certified restaurant afterward, if Amber’s good and does
whatever Pastor Wallace tells her to).
The
cat sniffs in the direction of the printer: "Why dontcha fire it
up?" Amber opens the lid on the printer, removes the packing
popcorn, and plugs it in. There’s a whirr and a rush of waste heat
from its rear as it cools the imaging heads down to working
temperature and registers her ownership.
"What do I do now?" she asks.
"Pick up the page labeled READ ME and follow the
instructions," the cat recites in a bored sing-song voice. It winks
at her, then fakes an exaggerated French accent: "Le READ ME
contains directions pour l’execution instrument corporate dans le
boîte. In event of perplexity, consult the accompanying aineko for
clarification." The cat wrinkles its nose rapidly, as if it’s about
to bite an invisible insect. "Warning: don’t rely on your father’s
cat’s opinions, it is a perverse beast and cannot be trusted. Your
mother helped seed its meme base, back when they were married.
Ends." It mumbles on for a while: "fucking snotty Parisian
bitch, I’ll piss in her knicker drawer, I’ll molt in her bidet. . .
."
"Don’t be vile." Amber scans the README quickly. Corporate
instruments are strong magic, according to Daddy, and this one is
exotic by any standards: a limited company established in Yemen,
contorted by the intersection between shari’a and the global
legislatosaurus. Understanding it isn’t easy, even with a personal
net full of sub-sapient agents that have full access to whole
libraries of international trade law–the bottleneck is
comprehension. Amber finds the documents highly puzzling. It’s not
the fact that half of them are written in Arabic that bothers
her–that’s what her grammar engine is for–or even that they’re full
of S-expressions and semi-digestible chunks of LISP: but that the
company seems to assert that it exists for the sole purpose of
owning slaves.
"What’s going on?" she asks the cat. "What’s this all
about?"
The cat sneezes, then looks disgusted. "This wasn’t my
idea, big shot. Your father is a very weird guy and your mother
hates him lots because she’s still in love with him. She’s got
kinks, y’know? Or maybe she’s sublimating them, if she’s serious
about this church shit she’s putting you through. He thinks that
she’s a control freak. Anyway, after your dad ran off in search of
another dome, she took out an injunction against him. But she forgot
to cover his partner, and she bought this parcel of worms and
sent them to you, okay? Annie is a real bitch, but he’s got her
wrapped right around his finger, or something. Anyway, he built
these companies and this printer–which isn’t hardwired to a
filtering proxy, like your mom’s–specifically to let you get away
from her legally. If that’s what you want to do."
Amber fast-forwards through the dynamic chunks of the
README–boring static UML diagrams, mostly–soaking up the gist of the
plan. Yemen is one of the few countries to implement traditional
Sunni shari’a law and a limited-liability company scam at the same
time. Owning slaves is legal–the fiction is that the owner has an
option hedged on the indentured laborer’s future output, with
interest payments that grow faster than the unfortunate victim can
pay them off–and companies are legal entities. If Amber sells
herself into slavery to this company, she will become a slave, and
the company will be legally liable for her actions and upkeep. The
rest of the legal instrument–about 90 percent of it, in fact–is a
set of self-modifying corporate mechanisms coded in a variety of
jurisdictions that permit Turing-complete company constitutions, and
which act as an ownership shell for the slavery contract: at the far
end of the corporate firewall is a trust fund of which Amber is the
prime beneficiary and shareholder. When she reaches the age of
majority, she’ll acquire total control over all the companies in the
network and can dissolve her slave contract; until then, the trust
funds (which she essentially owns) oversee the company that owns her
(and keeps it safe from hostile takeover bids). Oh, and the company
network is primed by an extraordinary general meeting that
instructed it to move the trust’s assets to Paris immediately. A
one-way airline ticket is enclosed.
"You think I should take this?" she asks uncertainly. It’s
hard to tell how smart the cat really is–there’s probably a yawning
vacuum behind those semantic networks if you dig deep enough–but it
tells a pretty convincing tale.
The cat squats and curls its tail protectively around its
paws: "I’m saying nothing, you know what I mean? You take this, you
can go live with your dad. But it won’t stop your ma coming after
him with a horse whip and after you with a bunch of lawyers
and a set of handcuffs. You want my advice, you’ll phone the
Franklins and get aboard their off-planet mining scam. In space, no
one can serve a writ on you. Plus, they got long-term plans to get
into the CETI market, cracking alien network packets. You want my
honest opinion, you wouldn’t like it in Paris after a bit. Your dad
and the frog bitch, they’re swingers, y’know? No time in their lives
for a kid. Or a cat like me, now I think of it. They’re out all
hours of the night doing drugs, fetish parties, raves, opera, that
kind of adult shit. Your dad dresses in frocks more than your mom,
and your tante ’Nettie leads him around the apartment on a chain
when they’re not having noisy sex on the balcony. They’d cramp your
style, kid: you shouldn’t have to put up with parents who have more
of a life than you do."
"Huh." Amber wrinkles her nose, half-disgusted by the cat’s
transparent scheming, and half-acknowledging its message: I’d
better think hard about this, she decides. Then she flies off in
so many directions at once that she nearly browns out the household
net feed. Part of her is examining the intricate card pyramid of
company structures; somewhere else, she’s thinking about what can go
wrong, while another bit (probably some of her wet, messy glandular
biological self) is thinking about how nice it would be to see Daddy
again, albeit with some trepidation. Parents aren’t supposed to have
sex: isn’t there a law, or something? "Tell me about the Franklins?
Are they married? Singular?"
The 3D printer is cranking up. It hisses slightly,
dissipating heat from the hard-vacuum chamber in its supercooled
workspace. Deep in its guts it creates coherent atom beams, from a
bunch of Bose-Einstein condensates hovering on the edge of absolute
zero: by superimposing interference patterns on them, it generates
an atomic hologram, building a perfect replica of some original
artifact, right down to the atomic level–there are no clunky moving
nanotechnology parts to break or overheat or mutate. Something is
going to come out of the printer in half an hour, something cloned
off its original right down to the individual quantum states of its
component atomic nuclei. The cat, seemingly oblivious, shuffles
closer to its exhaust ducts.
"Bob Franklin, he died about two, three years before you were
born: your dad did business with him. So did your mom. Anyway, he
had chunks of his noumen preserved, and the estate trustees are
trying to recreate his consciousness by cross-loading him in their
implants. They’re sort of a borganism, but with money and style.
Anyway, Bob got into the space biz back then, with some financial
wizardry a friend of your father whipped up for him, and now they-he
are building a spacehab that they’re going to take all the way out
to Jupiter, where they can dismantle a couple of small moons and
begin building helium-three refineries. It’s that CETI scam I told
you about earlier, but they’ve got a whole load of other angles on
it for the long term."
This is mostly going right over Amber’s head–she’ll have to
learn what helium-three refineries are later–but the idea of running
away to space has a certain appeal. Adventure, that’s what. Amber
looks around the living room and sees it for a moment as a capsule,
a small wooden cell locked deep in a vision of a middle-America that
never was–the one her mom wants to retreat into. "Is Jupiter fun?"
she asks. "I know it’s big and not very dense, but is it, like, a
happening place?"
"You could say that," says the cat, as the printer clanks and
disgorges a fake passport (convincingly aged), an intricate metal
seal engraved with Arabic script, and a tailored wide-spectrum
vaccine targeted on Amber’s immature immune system. "Stick that on
your wrist, sign the three top copies, put them in the envelope, and
let’s get going: we’ve got a flight to catch."
Sadeq is eating his dinner when the lawsuit rolls
in.
Alone in the cramped humming void of his station, he
contemplates the plea. The language is awkward, showing all the
hallmarks of a crude machine translation: the supplicant is
American, a woman, and–oddly–claims to be a Christian. This is
surprising enough, but the nature of her claim is, at face value,
preposterous. He forces himself to finish his bread, then bag the
waste and clean the platter, before he gives it his full
consideration. Is it a tasteless joke? Evidently not: as the only
quadi outside the orbit of Mars he is uniquely qualified to hear it,
and it is a case that cries out for justice.
A woman who leads a God-fearing life–not a correct one, no,
but she shows some signs of humility and progress toward a deeper
understanding–is deprived of her child by the machinations of a
feckless husband who deserted her years before. That the woman was
raising the child alone strikes Sadeq as disturbingly western, but
pardonable when he reads her account of the feckless one’s behavior,
which is degenerate: an ill fate indeed would await any child that
this man raises to adulthood. This man deprives her of her child,
but not by legitimate means: he doesn’t take the child into his own
household or make any attempt to raise her, either in accordance
with his own customs or the precepts of shari’a. Instead, he
enslaves her wickedly in the mire of the western legal tradition,
then casts her into outer darkness to be used as a laborer by the
dubious forces of self-proclaimed "progress." The same forces that
Sadeq has been sent to confront, as representative of the Ummah in
orbit around Jupiter.
Sadeq scratches his short beard thoughtfully. A nasty tale,
but what can he do about it? "Computer," he says, "a reply to this
supplicant: my sympathies lie with you in the manner of your
suffering, but I fail to see in what way I can be of assistance.
Your heart cries out for help before God (blessed be his name), but
surely this is a matter for the temporal authorities of the dar
al-Harb." He pauses: or is it? he wonders. Legal wheels begin
to turn in his mind. "If you can but find your way to extending to
me a path by which I can assert the primacy of shari’ah over your
daughter, I shall apply myself to constructing a case for her
emancipation, to the greater glory of God (blessed be his name) in
the name of the Prophet (peace be unto him). Ends, sigblock,
send."
Releasing the Velcro straps that hold him at the table, Sadeq
floats up and then kicks gently toward the forward end of the
cramped habitat. The controls of the telescope are positioned
between the ultrasonic clothing cleaner and the lithium hydroxide
scrubbers: they’re already freed up, because he was conducting a
wide-field survey of the inner ring, looking for the signature of
water ice. It is the work of a few moments to pipe the navigation
and tracking system into the telescope’s controller and direct it to
hunt for the big foreign ship of fools. Something nudges at Sadeq’s
mind urgently, an irritating realization that he may have missed
something in the woman’s email: there were a number of huge
attachments. With half his mind, he surfs the news digest his
scholarly peers send him daily: meanwhile, he waits patiently for
the telescope to find the speck of light that the poor woman’s
daughter is enslaved within.
This might be a way in, he realizes, a way to enter dialogue
with them. Let the hard questions answer themselves, elegantly.
There will be no need for the war of the sword if they can be
convinced that their plans are faulty: no need to defend the godly
from the latter-day Tower of Babel these people propose to build. If
this woman Pamela means what she says, Sadeq need not end his days
out here in the cold between the worlds, away from his elderly
parents and brother and his colleagues and friends. And he will be
profoundly grateful: because, in his heart of hearts, he knows that
he is less a warrior than a scholar.
"I’m sorry, but the Borg is attempting to assimilate a
lawsuit," says the receptionist. "Will you hold?"
"Crud." Amber blinks the Binary Betty answerphone sprite out
of her eye and glances around at the cabin. "That is so last
century," she grumbles. "Who do they think they are?"
"Doctor Robert H. Franklin," volunteers the cat. "It’s a
losing proposition if you ask me. Bob was so fond of his dope that
there’s this whole hippie groupmind that’s grown up using his state
vector as a bong–"
"Shut the fuck up!" Amber shouts at him. Instantly contrite
(for yelling in an inflatable spacecraft is a major faux pas):
"Sorry." She spawns an autonomic thread with full parasympathetic
nervous control, tells it to calm her down: then she spawns a couple
more to go forth and become fuqaha, expert on shari’a law. She
realizes she’s buying up way too much of the orphanage’s scarce
bandwidth–time that will have to be paid for in chores, later–but
it’s necessary. "She’s gone too far. This time, it’s
war."
She slams out of her cabin and spins right around in the
central axis of the hab, a rogue missile pinging for a target to
vent her rage on. A tantrum would be good–
But her body is telling her to chill out, take ten, and
there’s a drone of scriptural lore dribbling away in the back of her
head, and she’s feeling frustrated and angry and not in control, but
not really mad now. It was like this three years ago when Mom
noticed her getting on too well with Jenny Morgan and moved her to a
new school district–she said it was a work assignment, but Amber
knows better, Mom asked for it–just to keep her dependent and
helpless. Mom is a psycho bitch control-freak and ever since she had
to face up to losing Dad she’s been working her claws into
Amber–which is tough, because Amber is not good victim material, and
is smart and well-networked to boot. But now Mom’s found a way of
fucking Amber over completely, even in Jupiter orbit, and
Amber would be totally out of control if not for her skullware
keeping a lid on things.
Instead of shouting at her cat or trying to message the Borg,
Amber goes to hunt them down in their meatspace den.
There are sixteen Borg aboard the Sanger–adults,
members of the Franklin Collective, squatters in the ruins of Bob
Franklin’s posthumous vision. They lend bits of their brains to the
task of running what science has been able to resurrect of the dead
dot-com billionaire’s mind, making him the first boddhisatva of the
uploading age–apart from the lobster colony, of course. Their den
mother is a woman called Monica: a willowy brown-eyed hive queen
with raster-burned corneal implants and a dry, sardonic delivery
that can corrode egos like a desert wind. She’s better than the
others at running Bob, and she’s no slouch when she’s being herself:
which is why they elected her Maximum Leader of the
expedition.
Amber finds Monica in the number four kitchen garden,
performing surgery on a filter that’s been blocked by toadspawn.
She’s almost buried beneath a large pipe, her Velcro-taped toolkit
waving in the breeze like strange blue air-kelp. "Monica? You got a
minute?"
"Sure, I have lots of minutes. Make yourself helpful? Pass me
the anti-torque wrench and a number-six hex head."
"Um." Amber captures the blue flag and fiddles around with
its contents. Something that has batteries, motors, a flywheel
counterweight, and laser gyros assembles itself–Amber passes it
under the pipe. "Here. Listen, your phone is busy."
"I know. You’ve come to see me about your conversion, haven’t
you?"
"Yes!"
There’s a clanking noise from under the pressure sump. "Take
this." A plastic bag floats out, bulging with stray fasteners. "I
got a bit of vacuuming to do. Get yourself a mask if you don’t
already have one."
A minute later, Amber is back beside Monica’s legs, her face
veiled by a filter mask. "I don’t want this to go through," she
says. "I don’t care what Mom says, I’m not Moslem! This judge, he
can’t touch me. He can’t," she repeats, vehemence warring
with uncertainty.
"Maybe he doesn’t want to?" Another bag. "Here,
catch."
Amber grabs the bag: too late, she discovers that it’s full
of water and toadspawn. Stringy mucous ropes full of squiggling
comma-shaped baby tadpoles explode all over the compartment and
bounce off the walls in a shower of amphibian confetti.
"Eew!"
Monica squirms out from behind the pipe. "Oh, you
didn’t." She kicks off the consensus-defined floor and grabs
a wad of absorbent paper from the spinner, whacks it across the
ventilator shroud above the sump. Together they go after the
toadspawn with garbage bags and paper–by the time they’ve got the
stringy mess mopped up, the spinner has begun to click and whirr,
processing cellulose from the algae tanks into fresh wipes. "That
was really clever," Monica says emphatically, as the disposal bin
sucks down her final bag. "You wouldn’t happen to know how the toad
got in here?"
"No, but I ran into one that was loose in the commons, one
shift before last cycle-end. Gave it a ride back to
Oscar."
"I’ll have a word with him, then." Monica glares blackly at
the pipe. "I’m going to have to go back and re-fit the filter in a
minute. Do you want me to be Bob?"
"Uh." Amber thinks. "Not sure. Your call."
"All right, Bob coming online." Monica’s face relaxes
slightly, then her expression hardens. "Way I see it, you’ve got a
choice. Your mother’s kinda boxed you in, hasn’t she?"
"Yes." Amber frowns.
"So. Pretend I’m an idiot. Talk me through it,
huh?"
Amber drags herself alongside the hydro pipe and gets her
head down, alongside Monica/Bob, who is floating with her feet near
the floor. "I ran away from home. Mom owned me–that is, she had
parental rights and Dad had none. So Dad, via a proxy, helped me
sell myself into slavery to a company. The company was owned by a
trust fund, and I’m the main beneficiary when I reach the age of
majority. As a chattel, the company tells me what to do–legally–but
the shell company is set to take my orders. So I’m autonomous.
Right?"
"That sounds like the sort of thing your father would do,"
Monica says neutrally. Overtaken by a sardonic middle-aged Silicon
Valley drawl, her north-of-England accent sounds peculiarly
mid-Atlantic.
"Trouble is, most countries don’t acknowledge slavery; those
that do mostly don’t have any equivalent of a limited-liability
company, much less one that can be directed by another company from
abroad. Dad picked Yemen on the grounds that they’ve got this stupid
brand of shari’a law–and a crap human-rights record–but they’re just
about conformant to the open legal standards protocol, able to
interface to EU norms via a Turkish legislative
firewall."
"So."
"Well, I guess I was technically a Jannissary. Mom was doing
her Christian phase, so that made me a Christian un-believer slave
of an Islamic company. But now the stupid bitch has gone and
converted to shi’ism. Now, normally, Islamic descent runs through
the father, but she picked her sect carefully, and chose one that’s
got a progressive view of women’s rights: they’re sort of Islamic
fundamentalist liberal constructionists! ‘What would the Prophet do
if he were alive today and had to worry about self-replicating
chewing gum factories.’ They generally take a progressive, almost
westernized, view of things like legal equality of the sexes,
because for his time and place, the Prophet was way ahead of the
ball and they figure they ought to follow his example. Anyway, that
means Mom can assert that I am Moslem, and under Yemeni law I
get to be treated as a Moslem chattel of a company. And their legal
code is very dubious about permitting slavery of Moslems. It’s not
that I have rights as such, but my pastoral well-being
becomes the responsibility of the local imam, and–" She shrugs
helplessly.
"Has he tried to make you run under any new rules, yet?" asks
Monica/Bob. "Has he put blocks on your freedom of agency, tried to
mess with your mind? Insisted on libido dampers?"
"Not yet." Amber’s expression is grim. "But he’s no dummy. I
figure he may be using Mom–and me–as a way of getting his fingers
into this whole expedition. Staking a claim for jurisdiction, claim
arbitration, that sort of thing. It could be worse; he might order
me to comply fully with his specific implementation of shari’a. They
permit implants, but require mandatory conceptual filtering: if I
run that stuff, I’ll end up believing it!"
"Okay." Monica does a slow backward somersault in mid-air.
"Now tell me why you can’t simply repudiate it."
"Because." Deep breath. "I can do that in two ways. I can
deny Islam, which makes me an apostate, and automatically terminates
my indenture to the shell, so Mom owns me. Or I can say that the
instrument has no legal standing because I was in the USA when I
signed it, and slavery is illegal there, in which case Mom owns me,
because I’m a minor. Or I can take the veil, live like a modest
Moslem woman, do whatever the imam wants, and Mom doesn’t own me–but
she gets to appoint my chaperone. Oh Bob, she has planned this so
well."
"Uh-huh." Monica rotates back to the floor and looks at
Amber, suddenly very Bob. "Now you’ve told me your troubles, start
thinking like your dad. Your dad had a dozen creative ideas before
breakfast every day–it’s how he made his name. Your mom has got you
in a box. Think your way outside it: what can you
do?"
"Well." Amber rolls over and hugs the fat hydroponic duct to
her chest like a life raft. "It’s a legal paradox. I’m trapped
because of the jurisdiction she’s cornered me in. I could talk to
the judge, I suppose, but she’ll have picked him carefully." Her
eyes narrow. "The jurisdiction. Hey, Bob." She lets go of the duct
and floats free, hair streaming out behind her like a cometary halo.
"How do I go about creating myself a new jurisdiction?"
Monica grins. "I seem to recall the traditional way was to
grab yourself some land and set yourself up as king: but there are
other ways. I’ve got some friends I think you should meet. They’re
not good conversationalists and there’s a two-hour lightspeed delay
. . . but I think you’ll find they’ve answered that question
already. But why don’t you talk to the imam first and find out what
he’s like? He may surprise you. After all, he was already out here
before your mom decided to use him against you."
The Sanger hangs in orbit thirty kilometers up,
circling the waist of potato-shaped Amalthea. Drones swarm across
the slopes of Mons Lyctos, ten kilometers above the mean surface
level: they kick up clouds of reddish sulfate dust as they spread
transparent sheets across the surface. This close to Jupiter–a mere
hundred and eighty thousand kilometers above the swirling madness of
the cloudscape–the gas giant fills half the sky with a perpetually
changing clockface: for Amalthea orbits the master in under twelve
hours. The Sanger’s radiation shields are running at full
power, shrouding the ship in a corona of rippling plasma: radio is
useless, and the human miners run their drones via an intricate
network of laser circuits. Other, larger drones are unwinding spools
of heavy electrical cable north and south from the landing site:
once the circuits are connected, these will form a coil cutting
through Jupiter’s magnetic field, generating electrical current (and
imperceptibly slowing the moon’s orbital momentum).
Amber sighs and looks, for the sixth time this hour, at the
webcam plastered on the side of her cabin. She’s taken down the
posters and told the toys to tidy themselves away. In another two
thousand seconds, the tiny Iranian spaceship will rise above the
limb of Moshtari, and then it will be time to talk to the teacher.
She isn’t looking forward to the experience. If he’s a grizzled old
blockhead of the most obdurate fundamentalist streak, she’ll be in
trouble: disrespect for age has been part and parcel of the western
teenage experience for generations, and a cross-cultural thread that
she’s sent to clue-up on Islam reminds her that not all cultures
share this outlook. But if he turns out to be young, intelligent,
and flexible, things could be even worse. When she was eight, Amber
audited The Taming of the Shrew: now she has no appetite for
a starring role in her own cross-cultural production.
She sighs again. "Pierre?"
"Yeah?" His voice comes from the foot of the emergency locker
in her room. He’s curled up down there, limbs twitching languidly as
he drives a mining drone around the surface of Object Barney, as the
rock has named itself. The drone is a long-legged crane-fly
lookalike, bouncing very slowly from toe-tip to toe-tip in the
microgravity–the rock is only half a kilometer along its longest
axis, coated brown with weird hydrocarbon goop and sulfur compounds
sprayed off the surface of Io by the Jovian winds. "I’m
coming."
"You better." She glances at the screen. "One twenty seconds
to next burn." The payload canister on the screen is, technically
speaking, stolen: it’ll be okay as long as she gives it back, Bob
said, although she won’t be able to do that until it’s reached
Barney and they’ve found enough water ice to refuel it. "Found
anything yet?"
"Just the usual. Got a seam of ice near the semimajor
pole–it’s dirty, but there’s at least a thousand tons there. And the
surface is crunchy with tar. Amber, you know what? The orange shit,
it’s solid with fullerenes."
Amber grins at her reflection in the screen. That’s good
news. Once the payload she’s steering touches down, Pierre can help
her lay superconducting wires along Barney’s long axis. It’s only a
kilometer and a half, and that’ll only give them a few tens of
kilowatts of juice, but the condensation fabricator that’s also in
the payload will be able to use it to convert Barney’s crust into
processed goods at about two grams per second. Using designs
copylefted by the free hardware foundation, inside two hundred
thousand seconds they’ll have a grid of sixty-four 3D printers
barfing up structured matter at a rate limited only by available
power. Starting with a honking great dome tent and some free
nitrogen/oxygen for her to breathe, then adding a big webcache and
direct high-bandwidth uplink to Earth, Amber could have her very own
one-girl colony up and running within a million seconds.
The screen blinks at her. "Oh shit. Make yourself scarce,
Pierre!" The incoming call nags at her attention. "Yeah? Who are
you?"
The screen fills with a view of a cramped, very
twen-cen-looking space capsule. The guy inside it is in his
twenties, with a heavily tanned face, close-cropped hair and beard,
wearing an olive-drab spacesuit liner. He’s floating between a TORU
manual-docking controller and a gilt-framed photograph of the Ka’bah
at Mecca. "Good evening to you," he says solemnly. "Do I have the
honor to be addressing Amber Macx?"
"Uh, yeah. That’s me." She stares at him: he looks nothing
like her conception of an ayatollah–whatever an ayatollah
is–elderly, black-robed, vindictively fundamentalist. "Who are
you?"
"I am Doctor Sadeq Khurasani. I hope that I am not
interrupting you? Is it convenient for you that we talk
now?"
He looks so anxious that Amber nods automatically. "Sure. Did
my mom put you up to this?" They’re still speaking English, and she
notices that his diction is good, but slightly stilted: he isn’t
using a grammar engine, he’s actually learned it the hard way. "If
so, you want to be careful. She doesn’t lie, exactly, but she gets
people to do what she wants."
"Yes, she did. Ah." A pause. They’re still almost a
light-second apart, time for painful collisions and accidental
silences. "I have not noticed that. Are you sure you should be
speaking of your mother that way?"
Amber breathes deeply. "Adults can get divorced. If
I could get divorced from her, I would. She’s–" she flails
around for the right word helplessly. "Look. She’s the sort of
person who can’t lose a fight. If she’s going to lose, she’ll try to
figure how to set the law on you. Like she’s done to me. Don’t you
see?"
Doctor Khurasani looks extremely dubious. "I am not sure I
understand," he says. "Perhaps, mm, I should tell you why I am
talking to you?"
"Sure. Go ahead." Amber is startled by his attitude: he’s
actually taking her seriously, she realizes. Treating her like an
adult. The sensation is so novel–coming from someone more than
twenty years old and not a member of the Borg–that she almost lets
herself forget that he’s only talking to her because Mom set her
up.
"Well. I am an engineer. In addition, I am a student of
fiqh, jurisprudence. In fact, I am qualified to sit in
judgment. I am a very junior judge, but even so, it is a heavy
responsibility. Anyway. Your mother, peace be unto her, lodged a
petition with me. Are you aware of it?"
"Yes." Amber tenses up. "It’s a lie. Distortion of the
facts."
"Hmm." Sadeq rubs his beard thoughtfully. "Well, I have to
find out, yes? Your mother has submitted herself to the will of God.
This makes you the child of a Moslem, and she claims–"
"She’s trying to use you as a weapon!" Amber interrupts. "I
sold myself into slavery to get away from her, do you
understand? I enslaved myself to a company that is held in trust for
my ownership. She’s trying to change the rules to get me back. You
know what? I don’t believe she gives a shit about your religion, all
she wants is me!"
"A mother’s love–"
"Fuck love!" Amber snarls, "she wants
power."
Sadeq’s expression hardens. "You have a foul mouth in your
head, child. All I am trying to do is to find out the facts of this
situation: you should ask yourself if such disrespect furthers your
interests?" He pauses for a moment, then continues, less abruptly,
"Did you really have such a bad childhood with her? Do you think she
did everything merely for power, or could she love you?" Pause. "You
must understand, I need an answer to these things. Before I can know
what is the right thing to do."
"My mother–" Amber stops. Spawns a vaporous cloud of memory
retrievals. They fan out through the space around her mind like the
tail of her cometary mind. Invoking a complex of network parsers and
class filters, she turns the memories into reified images and blats
them at the webcam’s tiny brain so that he can see them. Some of the
memories are so painful that Amber has to close her eyes. Mom in
full office war-paint, leaning over Amber, promising to take her to
church so that Reverend Beeching can pray the devil out of her. Mom
telling Amber that they’re moving again, abruptly, dragging her away
from school and the friends she’d tentatively started to like. Mom
catching her on the phone to Daddy, tearing the phone in half and
hitting her with it. Mom at the kitchen table, forcing her to eat–
"My mother likes control."
"Ah." Sadeq’s expression turns glassy. "And this is how you
feel about her? How long have you had that level of–no, please
forgive me for asking. You obviously understand implants. Do your
grandparents know? Did you talk to them?"
"My grandparents?" Amber stifles a snort. "Mom’s parents are
dead. Dad’s are still alive, but they won’t talk to him–they like
Mom. They think I’m creepy. I know little things, their tax bands
and customer profiles. I could mine data with my head when I was
four. I’m not built like little girls were in their day, and they
don’t understand. You know that the old ones don’t like us at all?
Some of the churches make money doing nothing but exorcisms for
oldsters who think their kids are possessed."
"Well." Sadeq is fingering his beard again, distractedly. "I
must say, this is a lot to learn. But you know that your mother has
accepted Islam, don’t you? This means that you are Moslem, too.
Unless you are an adult, your parent legally speaks for you. And she
says that this makes you my problem. Hmm."
"I’m not Moslem." Amber stares at the screen. "I’m not a
child, either." Her threads are coming together, whispering scarily
behind her eyes: her head is suddenly dense and turgid with ideas,
heavy as a stone and twice as old as time. "I am nobody’s chattel.
What does your law say about people who are born with implants? What
does it say about people who want to live forever? I don’t believe
in any god, mister judge. I don’t believe in any limits. Mom
can’t, physically, make me do anything, and she sure can’t
speak for me."
"Well, if that is what you have to say, I must think on the
matter." He catches her eye: his expression is thoughtful, like a
doctor considering a diagnosis. "I will call you again in due
course. In the meantime, if you need to talk to anyone, remember
that I am always available. If there is anything I can do to help
ease your pain, I would be pleased to be of service. Peace be unto
you, and those you care for."
"Same to you too," she mutters darkly as the connection goes
dead. "Now what?" she asks, as a beeping sprite gyrates
across the wall, begging for attention.
"I think it’s the lander," Pierre says helpfully. "Is it down
yet?"
She rounds on him. "Hey, I thought I told you to get
lost!"
"What, and miss all the fun?" He grins at her impishly.
"Amber’s got a new boyfriend! Wait until I tell everybody. . .
."
Sleep cycles pass: the borrowed 3D printer on Object Barney’s
surface spews bitmaps of atoms in quantum lockstep at its rendering
platform, building up the control circuitry and skeletons of new
printers. (There are no clunky nano-assemblers here, no robots the
size of viruses busily sorting molecules into piles–just the bizarre
quantized magic of atomic holography, modulated Bose-Einstein
condensates collapsing into strange, lacy, supercold machinery.)
Electricity surges through the cable loops as they slice through
Jupiter’s magnetosphere, slowly converting the rock’s momentum into
power: small robots grovel in the orange dirt, scooping up raw
material to feed to the fractionating oven. Amber’s garden of
machinery flourishes slowly, unpacking itself according to a schema
designed by pre-teens at an industrial school in Poland, with barely
any need for human guidance.
High in orbit around Amalthea, complex financial instruments
breed and conjugate. Developed for the express purpose of
facilitating trade with the alien intelligences believed to have
been detected eight years earlier by SETI, they function equally
well as fiscal firewalls for space colonies. The Sanger’s
bank accounts in California and Cuba are looking acceptable–since
entering Jupiter space, the orphanage has staked a claim on roughly
a hundred gigatons of random rocks and a moon that’s just small
enough to creep in under the International Astronomical Union’s
definition of a sovereign planetary body. The Borg are working hard,
leading their eager teams of child stakeholders in their plans to
build the industrial metastructures necessary to support mining
helium three from Jupiter: they’re so focused that they spend much
of their time being themselves, not bothering to run Bob, the shared
identity that gives them their messianic drive.
Half a light-hour away, tired Earth wakes and slumbers in
time to its ancient orbital dynamics. A religious college in Cairo
is considering issues of nanotechnology: if replicators are used to
prepare a copy of a strip of bacon, right down to the molecular
level, but without it ever being part of a pig, how is it to be
treated? (If the mind of one of the faithful is copied into a
computing machine’s memory by mapping and simulating all its
synapses, is the computer now a Moslem? If not, why not? If
so, what are its rights and duties?) Riots in Borneo underline the
urgency of theotechnological inquiry.
More riots in Barcelona, Madrid, Birmingham, and Marseilles
also underline a rising problem: social chaos caused by cheap
anti-aging treatments. The zombie exterminators, a backlash of
disaffected youth against the formerly greying gerontocracy of
Europe, insist that people who predate the supergrid and can’t
handle implants aren’t really conscious: their ferocity is
equaled only by the anger of the dynamic septuagenarians of the baby
boom, their bodies partially restored to the flush of sixties youth
but their minds adrift in a slower, less contingent century. The
faux-young boomers feel betrayed, forced back into the labor pool
but unable to cope with the implant-accelerated culture of the new
millennium, their hard-earned experience rendered obsolete by
deflationary time.
The
Bangladeshi economic miracle is typical of the age. With growth
rates running at over 20 percent, cheap out-of-control
bioindustrialization has swept the nation: former rice farmers
harvest plastics and milk cows for silk, while their children study
mariculture and design sea walls. With cellphone ownership nearing
80 percent and literacy at 90, the once-poor country is finally
breaking out of its historical infrastructure trap and beginning to
develop: another generation, and they’ll be richer than Japan in
2001.
Radical new economic theories are focusing around bandwidth,
speed-of-light transmission time, and the implications of CETI,
communication with extra-terrestrial intelligence: cosmologists and
quants collaborate on bizarre relativistically telescoped financial
instruments. Space (which lets you store information) and structure
(which lets you process it) acquire value while dumb mass–like
gold–loses it: the degenerate cores of the traditional stock markets
are in free fall, the old smokestack microprocessor and
biotech/nanotech industries crumbling before the onslaught of matter
replicators and self-modifying ideas and the barbarian
communicators, who mortgage their future for a millennium against
the chance of a gift from a visiting alien intelligence. Microsoft,
once the US Steel of the silicon age, quietly fades into
liquidation.
An
outbreak of green goo–a crude biomechanical replicator that eats
everything in its path–is dealt with in the Australian outback by
carpet-bombing with fuel-air explosives: the USAF subsequently
reactivates two wings of refurbished B-52s and places them at the
disposal of the UN standing committee on self-replicating weapons.
(CNN discovers that one of their newest pilots, re-enlisting with
the body of a twenty-year-old and an empty pension account, first
flew them over Laos and Cambodia.) The news overshadows the World
Health Organization’s announcement of the end of the HIV pandemic,
after more than fifty years of bigotry, panic, and
megadeath.
"Breathe steadily. Remember your regulator drill? If you spot
your heart rate going up or your mouth going dry, take
five."
"Shut the fuck up, ’Neko, I’m trying to concentrate." Amber
fumbles with the titanium D-ring, trying to snake the strap through
it. The gauntlets are getting in her way: high orbit
spacesuits–little more than a body stocking designed to hold your
skin under compression and help you breathe–are easy, but this deep
in Jupiter’s radiation belt, she has to wear an old moon suit that
comes in about thirteen layers, and the gloves are stiff. It’s
Chernobyl weather, a sleet of alpha particles and raw protons
storming through the void. "Got it." She yanks the strap tight,
pulls on the D-ring, then goes to work on the next strap. Never
looking down: because the wall she’s tying herself to has no floor,
just a cut-off two meters below, then empty space for a hundred
kilometers before the nearest solid ground.
The ground sings to her moronically: "I fall to you, you fall
to me, it’s the law of gravity–"
She shoves her feet down onto the platform that juts from the
side of the capsule like a suicide’s ledge: metalized Velcro grabs
hold, and she pulls on the straps to turn her body around until she
can see past the capsule, sideways. The capsule masses about five
tons, barely bigger than an ancient Soyuz. It’s packed to
overflowing with environment-sensitive stuff she’ll need, and a
honking great high-gain antenna. "I hope you know what you’re
doing?" someone says over the intercom.
"Of course I–" she stops. Alone in this TsUP-surplus iron
maiden with its low bandwidth comms and bizarre plumbing, she feels
claustrophobic and helpless: parts of her mind don’t work. When she
was four, Mom took her down a famous cave system somewhere out west:
when the guide turned out the lights half a kilometer underground,
she’d screamed with surprise as the darkness had reached out and
touched her. Now it’s not the darkness that frightens her, it’s the
lack of thought. For a hundred kilometers below her, there are
no minds, and even on the surface there’s not much but a
moronic warbling of bots. Everything that makes the universe
primate-friendly seems to be locked in the huge spaceship that looms
somewhere just behind her, and she has to fight down an urge to shed
her straps and swarm back up the umbilical that anchors this capsule
to the Sanger. "I’ll be fine," she forces herself to say. And
even though she’s unsure that it’s true, she tries to make herself
believe it. "It’s just leaving-home nerves. I’ve read about it,
okay?"
There’s a funny, high-pitched whistle in her ears. For a
moment, the sweat on the back of her neck turns icy cold, then the
noise stops. She strains for a moment, and when it returns, she
recognizes the sound: the heretofore-talkative cat, curled in the
warmth of her pressurized luggage can, has begun to
snore.
"Let’s go," she says, "time to roll the wagon." A speech
macro deep in the Sanger’s docking firmware recognizes her
authority and gently lets go of the pod. A couple of cold gas
thrusters pop, deep banging vibrations running through the capsule,
and she’s on her way.
"Amber. How’s it hanging?" A familiar voice in her ears: she
blinks. Fifteen hundred seconds, nearly half an hour
gone.
"Robes-Pierre, chopped any aristos lately?"
"Heh!" A pause. "I can see your head from
here."
"How’s it looking?" she asks. There’s a lump in her throat,
she isn’t sure why. Pierre is probably hooked into one of the
smaller proximity cameras dotted around the outer hull of the big
mothership. Watching over her as she falls.
"Pretty much like always," he says laconically. Another
pause, this time longer. "This is wild, you know? Su Ang says hi, by
the way."
"Su Ang, hi," she replies, resisting the urge to lean back
and look up–up relative to her feet, not her vector–and see if the
ship’s still visible.
"Hi," Ang says shyly. "You’re very brave!"
"Still can’t beat you at chess." Amber frowns. Su Ang and her
over-engineered algae. Oscar and his pharmaceutical factory toads.
People she’s known for three years, mostly ignored, and never
thought about missing. "Listen, you going to come
visiting?"
"Visit?" Ang sounds dubious. "When will it be
ready?"
"Oh, soon enough." At four kilograms per minute of
structured-matter output, the printers on the surface have already
built her a bunch of stuff: a habitat dome, the guts of an
algae/shrimp farm, a bucket conveyor to bury it with, an airlock.
It’s all lying around waiting for her to put it together and move
into her new home. "Once the Borg get back from
Amalthea."
"Hey! You mean they’re moving? How did you figure
that?"
"Go talk to them," Amber says. Actually, she’s a large part
of the reason the Sanger is about to crank its orbit up and
out toward the other moon: she wants to be alone in comms silence
for a couple of million seconds. The Franklin collective is doing
her a big favor.
"Ahead of the curve, as usual," Pierre cuts in, with
something that sounds like admiration to her uncertain
ears.
"You too," she says, a little too fast. "Come visit when I’ve
got the life-support cycle stabilized."
"I’ll do that," he replies. A red glow suffuses the flank of
the capsule next to her head, and she looks up in time to see the
glaring blue laser-line of the Sanger’s drive torch powering
up.
Eighteen million seconds, almost a tenth of a Jupiter year,
passes.
The imam tugs thoughtfully on his beard as he stares at the
traffic-control display. These days, every shift seems to bring a
new crewed spaceship into Jupiter system: space is getting
positively crowded. When he arrived, there were less than two
hundred people here: now there’s the population of a small city, and
many of them live at the heart of the approach map centered on his
display. He breathes deeply–trying to ignore the omnipresent odor of
old socks–and studies the map. "Computer, what about my slot?" he
asks.
"Your slot: cleared to commence final approach in six nine
five seconds. Speed limit is ten meters per second inside ten
kilometers, drop to two meters per second inside one kilometer.
Uploading map of forbidden thrust vectors now." Chunks of the
approach map turn red, gridded off to prevent his exhaust stream
damaging other craft in the area.
Sadeq sighs. "We’ll go in on Kurs. I assume their Kurs
guidance is active?"
"Kurs docking target support available to shell level
three."
"Praise the Prophet, peace be unto him." He pokes around
through the guidance subsystem’s menus, setting up the software
emulation of the obsolete (but highly reliable) Soyuz docking
system. At last, he can leave the ship to look after itself for a
bit. He glances around: for two years he has lived in this canister,
and soon he will step outside it. It hardly seems
real.
The radio, usually silent, crackles with unexpected life.
"Bravo One One, this is Imperial Traffic Control. Verbal contact
required, over."
Sadeq twitches with surprise. The voice sounds inhuman, paced
with the cadences of a speech synthesizer, like so many of Her
Majesty’s subjects. "Bravo One One to Traffic Control, I’m
listening, over."
"Bravo One One, we have assigned you a landing slot on tunnel
four, airlock delta. Kurs active, ensure your guidance is set to
seven four zero and slaved to our control."
He
leans over the screen and rapidly checks the docking system’s
settings. "Control, all in order."
"Bravo One One, stand by."
The next hour passes slowly as the traffic control system
guides his Type 921 down to a rocky rendezvous. Orange dust streaks
his one optical-glass porthole: a kilometer before touch-down, Sadeq
busies himself closing protective covers, locking down anything that
might fall around on contact. Finally, he unrolls his mat against
the floor in front of the console and floats above it for ten
minutes, eyes closed in prayer. It’s not the landing that worries
him, but what comes next.
Her Majesty’s domain stretches out before the battered Almaz
module like a rust-stained snowflake half-a-kilometer in diameter.
Its core is buried in a loose snowball of greyish rubble, and it
waves languid brittlestar arms at the gibbous orange horizon of
Jupiter. Fine hairs, fractally branching down to the molecular
level, split off the main collector arms at regular intervals; a
cluster of habitat pods like seedless grapes cling to the roots of
the massive cluster. Already, he can see the huge steel generator
loops that climb from either pole of the snowflake, wreathed in
sparking plasma: the Jovian rings form a rainbow of darkness rising
behind them.
Finally, the battered space station is on final approach.
Sadeq watches the Kurs simulation output carefully, piping it direct
into his visual field: there’s an external camera view of the
rockpile and grapes, expanding toward the convex ceiling of the
ship, and he licks his lips, ready to hit the manual override and go
around again–but the rate of descent is slowing, and by the time
he’s close enough to see the scratches on the shiny metal docking
cone ahead of the ship, it’s measured in centimeters per second.
There’s a gentle bump, then a shudder, then a rippling bang as the
docking ring latches fire–and he’s down.
Sadeq breathes deeply again, then tries to stand. There’s
gravity here, but not much: walking is impossible. He’s about to
head for the life-support panel when he freezes, hearing a noise
from the far end of the docking node. Turning, he is just in time to
see the hatch opening toward him, a puff of vapor condensing, and
then–
Her Imperial Majesty is sitting in the throne room, moodily
fidgeting with the new signet ring her Equerry has designed for her.
It’s a lump of structured carbon massing almost fifty grams, set in
a plain band of iridium. It glitters with the blue and violet
speckle highlights of its internal lasers, because, in addition to
being a piece of state jewelry, it is also an optical router, part
of the industrial control infrastructure she’s building out here on
the edge of the solar system. Her Majesty wears plain black combat
pants and sweatshirt, woven from the finest spider silk and spun
glass, but her feet are bare: her taste in fashion is best described
as youthful, and, in any event, certain styles–skirts, for
example–are simply impractical in microgravity. But, being a
monarch, she’s wearing a crown. And there’s a cat sleeping on the
back of her throne.
The lady-in-waiting (and sometime hydroponic engineer) ushers
Sadeq to the doorway, then floats back. "If you need anything,
please say," she says shyly, then ducks and rolls away. Sadeq
approaches the throne, orients himself on the floor–a simple slab of
black composite, save for the throne growing from its center like an
exotic flower–and waits to be noticed.
"Doctor Khurasani, I presume." She smiles at him, neither the
innocent grin of a child nor the knowing smirk of an adult: merely a
warm greeting. "Welcome to my kingdom. Please feel free to make use
of any necessary support services here, and I wish you a very
pleasant stay."
Sadeq holds his expression still. The queen is young–her face
still retains the puppy fat of childhood, emphasized by microgravity
moon-face–but it would be a bad mistake to consider her immature. "I
am grateful for Your Majesty’s forbearance," he murmurs, formulaic.
Behind her the walls glitter like diamonds, a glowing kaleidoscope
vision. Her crown, more like a compact helm that covers the top and
rear of her head, also glitters and throws off diffraction rainbows:
but most of its emissions are in the near ultraviolet, invisible
except in the faint glowing nimbus it creates around her head. Like
a halo.
"Have a seat," she offers, gesturing: a ballooning free-fall
cradle squirts down and expands from the ceiling, angled toward her,
open and waiting. "You must be tired: working a ship all by yourself
is exhausting." She frowns ruefully, as if remembering. "And two
years is nearly unprecedented."
"Your Majesty is too kind." Sadeq wraps the cradle arms
around himself and faces her. "Your labors have been fruitful, I
trust."
She shrugs. "I sell the biggest commodity in short supply on
any frontier. . . ." a momentary grin. "This isn’t the wild west, is
it?"
"Justice cannot be sold," Sadeq says stiffly. Then, a moment
later: "My apologies, please accept that while I mean no insult. I
merely mean that while you say your goal is to provide the rule of
Law, what you sell is and must be something different.
Justice without God, sold to the highest bidder, is not
justice."
The queen nods. "Leaving aside the mention of God, I agree: I
can’t sell it. But I can sell participation in a just system. And
this new frontier really is a lot smaller than anyone expected,
isn’t it? Our bodies may take months to travel between worlds, but
our disputes and arguments take seconds or minutes. As long as
everybody agrees to abide by my arbitration, physical enforcement
can wait until they’re close enough to touch. And everybody
does agree that my legal framework is easier to comply with,
better adjusted to space, than any earthbound one." A note of steel
creeps into her voice, challenging: her halo brightens, tickling a
reactive glow from the walls of the throne
room.
Five billion inputs or more, Sadeq marvels: the crown is
an engineering marvel, even though most of its mass is buried in the
walls and floor of this huge construct. "There is law revealed by
the Prophet, peace be unto him, and there is Law that we can
establish by analyzing his intentions. There are other forms of law
by which humans live, and various interpretations of the law of God
even among those who study his works. How, in the absence of the
word of the Prophet, can you provide a moral compass?"
"Hmm." She taps her fingers on the arm of her throne, and
Sadeq’s heart freezes. He’s heard the stories from the claim-jumpers
and boardroom bandits, from the greenmail experts with their roots
in the earthbound jurisdictions that have made such a hash of
arbitration here: how she can experience a year in a minute, rip
your memories out through your cortical implants and make you relive
your worst mistakes in her nightmarishly powerful simulation system.
She is the queen–the first individual to get her hands on so
much mass and energy that she could pull ahead of the curve of
binding technology, and the first to set up her own jurisdiction and
rule certain experiments to be legal so that she could make use of
the mass/energy intersection. She has force majeure–even the
Pentagon’s infowarriors respect the Ring Imperium’s firewall. In
fact, the body sitting in the throne opposite him probably contains
only a fraction of her identity; she’s by no means the first upload
or partial, but she’s the first-gust front of the storm of power
that will arrive when the arrogant ones achieve their goal of
dismantling the planets and turning dumb and uninhabited mass into
brains throughout the observable reaches of the universe. And he’s
just questioned the rectitude of her vision.
The queen’s lips twitch. Then they curl into a wide,
carnivorous grin. Behind her, the cat sits up and stretches, then
stares at Sadeq through narrowed eyes.
"You know, that’s the first time in weeks that anyone
has told me I’m full of shit. You haven’t been talking to my mother
again, have you?"
It’s Sadeq’s turn to shrug, uncomfortably. "I have prepared a
judgment," he says slowly.
"Ah." Amber rotates the huge diamond ring around her finger,
seemingly unaware. It is Amber that looks him in the eye, a trifle
nervously. Although what he could possibly do to make her
comply with any decree–
"Her motive is polluted," Sadeq says shortly.
"Does that mean what I think it does?" she asks.
Sadeq breathes deeply again. "Yes."
Her smile returns. "And is that the end of it?" she
asks.
He raises a dark eyebrow. "Only if you can prove to me that
you can have a conscience in the absence of divine
revelation."
Her reaction catches him by surprise. "Oh, sure. That’s the
next part of the program. Obtaining divine revelations."
"What? From the aliens?"
The cat, claws extended, delicately picks its way down to her
lap and waits to be held and stroked. It never once takes its eyes
off him. "Where else?" she asks. "Doctor, I didn’t get the Franklin
trust to loan me the wherewithal to build this castle just in return
for some legal paperwork. We’ve known for years that there’s a whole
alien packet-switching network out there and we’re just getting
spillover from some of their routes: it turns out there’s a node not
far away from here, in real space. Helium three, separate
jurisdictions, heavy industrialization on Io–there is a
purpose to all this activity."
Sadeq licks his suddenly dry lips. "You’re going to
narrowcast a reply?"
"No, much better than that: we’re going to visit them.
Cut the delay cycle down to realtime. We came here to build a ship
and recruit a crew, even if we have to cannibalize the whole of
Jupiter system to pay for the exercise."
The cat yawns, then fixes him with a thousand-yard stare.
"This stupid girl wants to bring her conscience along to a
meeting with something so smart it might as well be a god," it says,
"and you’re it. There’s a slot open for the post of ship’s
theologian. I don’t suppose I can convince you to turn the offer
down?"