Enigma
Book
2 of the Trigon Disunity
Copyright © 1986 by Michael P.
Kube-McDowell.
JIADUR'S WAKE
AN ANAMNESIS OF THE NEW HISTORY
Radiation mutates not
only organisms but societies. The heat of fire both raised cities and razed
them. The electromagnetic waves from Edison's lamps reshaped the cultural
shoreline on which they broke. And it was with a halo of radiation that the
unmanned Journan museum starship
Jiadur
first made its presence known to Earth.
As
is well known now, but was not widely known then, Jiadur's pyrotechnic fall into
solar orbit in the year
A.R.
35 was not die Joumans' first contact with mankind. That honor went to the
crude Pangaean starship
Pride of Earth, which had intercepted Jiadur in deep space some eighteen
years earlier. And it was
Pride of Earth's crew, of course, which first learned the
stunning, inexplicable fact that Journans and humans were common genetic stock:
twins somehow separated after birth.
It
is difficult now to realize what a shock that discovery was. When humankind
took its first tentative steps into the interstellar expanses, we were
emotionally and philosophically ready for nearly anything, except our own
children. But that, of course, was what we found.
Instead
of carrying or even relaying that revelation back to its home world, Pride of Earth
pursued the mystery to its source, ending its days in orbit around Journa.
Inevitably, just as Leif Eiriksson's achievements in reaching the New World
have been forever subordinated to those of Cristoforo Colombo, it was Jiadur which impressed
upon the masses the realization that the cold infinity of the Galaxy harbored
life. That that life was human turned out, oddly, to be more comforting than
discomfiting.
To
be sure, many historians and scientists were badly injured by collapsing
paradigms. But the average citizen replaced his mental image of a dead, hostile
Universe with an equally false image of worlds teeming with humanity—and went
blithely about his business. The First Colonization and the Forefathers who
carried it out were given an affectionate, semireligious niche in the cultural
mythology, and then largely dismissed from thought. Species chauvinism meant
that a colony on Jouma demanded fewer mental adjustments than a truly alien civilization
would have required.
None
of this was self-evident in the wake of
Jiadur's
spectacular arrival. It was a number of years before World Council analysts
felt secure enough to advise their employers that the only lasting change Jiadur had wrought was the
emergence of the Universal Creation Church, a relatively benign successor to
Cooke's activist Church of the Second Coming. Convinced that its grasp of (and
grip on) the sociodynamics of the single global culture it was creating was
complete, the Council breathed a sigh of relief and went about maintaining the
prosperity that had purchased a lasting peace.
But Jiadur had another lasting
impact, one not immediately obvious: It changed the course and objectives of
the Unified Space Service.
The
USS had been established in the original Articles of Union as an operationally
independent but financially dependent arm of the World Council, and for a time
had seemed content in that role. But after
Jiadur,
the USS set about parlaying its monopoly on space travel into economic
self-sufficiency. By the end of its first century, the USS relied on Earth for
only one resource: people. And as the Reunion Day sesquicentennial approached,
the Service was fast becoming the tail that wagged Earth's dog.
By
then, the Transport branch was operating two dozen packets, a score of mining
ships and bulk freighters, a fleet of heavy-lift shuttles, and an assortment of
smaller craft. At any given instant, the space tracking centers were keeping an
electronic eye on the movements of perhaps a hundred ships scattered between
the orbits of Venus and the asteroids.
At
the same time, the Resource division's sunsats were providing a third of the
electricity used on the planet. The USS comsats handled virtually all
electronic communications traveling more than 100 kilometers. A tenth of the
metal used in earthly consumer goods originated in asteroidal ores. Eighty-five
families of industrial chemicals were manufactured pollution-free by the robot
platforms associated with Unity, the Service's largest space station. The bulk
of those chemicals were purchased by the various manufacturing concerns which
leased space on USS-Resource's five production centers, each nearly as large as
Unity herself.
All
this benefited Earth, but none of it was undertaken for that reason alone.
Because of the success of Transport and Resource, the Service could
independently support a.program of deep-space exploration far exceeding what
the Council would have been willing to finance. Though the Survey branch operated
only a handful of capital ships, each was larger than all save the newest
freighters and faster than all save the newest propulsion research prototypes.
They were the vessels to which belonged the glamour, the mystery, and, in time,
the Galaxy.
Throughout
this period, the Council remained strangely blind to the importance of these
developments. There was no doubt in their minds that they were that era's
history-makers, that universal education and the eradication of poverty were
the 2nd Century A.R.'S
headlines. But in fact, the cusp point for the human future had already moved
from Earth to space
—Merritt Thackery
unpublished manuscript
USS
Security Status: Protected
Clearance
for WorldNet: DENIED
chapter 1
Jupiter
As Merritt Thackery
waited in line to enter the
Amalthea's Panorama
chamber he felt no special excitement.
In
a few minutes, he would be able to look out from the bow of Amalthea at the face of the
Jovian planet, with nothing between him and it save the thin synglas bubble
holding in the liner's atmosphere. Probably more than most of those present,
Thackery knew what to expect, and that knowledge took the edge off any
anticipation he might feel. He had seen the pictures, and so felt he had seen
the planet.
In
any event, Thackery regarded Saturn as the system's premiere planet, and the
only one which on his own he would have considered visiting (though only if the
visit could be achieved in hours rather than weeks). But despite a favorable
opposition, Amalthea
would bring its passengers no closer than a half-billion miles to the
tranquil-faced giant and its rings, and the telecamera view offered in the
Promenade Theater would be little better than that offered by the lunar and
Earth-orbital observatories. Had Saturn been waiting for him in the Panorama,
that would have justified some mild excitement.
But
it was only Jupiter.
I might as well be in line for the 3-D
planetarium at the Smithsonian Science Center,
he thought.
Reflexively,
Thackery began to study those who waited with him in the steadily moving queue.
Even with a total passenger complement approaching five hundred, after two
weeks aboard most of the faces were familiar. But then, Thackery had worked
harder
than most to learn them. He had nearly completed his
microsociety
study, needing only the time to finish analyzing
the third-order
sociograms.
"Looking
for someone?"
The
voice came from behind, from the male half of a couple Thackery had seen
parading their fashionably pale, slim, and hirsute bodies in the microgravity
mist-pool. Naturalists, both— but then, most of the younger passengers were. By
forsaking skin ornamentation, body perfume, and depilatories, the naturalists
rejected—and invited rejection from—the economic stratum into which they had
been born. Thackery found their conscious avoidance of social affectations an
affectation in itself.
"No,"
Thackery replied. "I thought perhaps Ms. Goodwin might be here, but it
seems not." "Is that the older woman you were playing backgammon with
on the promenade yesterday?" asked the female.
The
question was impertinent, but then so was the whole conversation.
"Yes," Thackery said, helpless to escape until they reached the
Panorama.
"I
saw her dancing in the ballroom last night, with that tall woman with the rose
tattoo on her cheek." She dropped her voice conspiratorially. "From
the way they were dancing, I don't think they'll be getting up very
early."
"The
best way to make sure you find diem in the morning is to be with them all
night," the male said with a wink.
Thackery
smiled politely and used the progress of the line as an excuse to turn away.
But when he had taken up the slack, they were right behind him and still eager
to talk.
"By
the way, I'm Mollis and this is Bellus," the female offered. "You're
one of the sweepstakes winners, aren't you?"
"Yes,"
he said curtly, wondering if she realized the full derivation of her name.
Given names taken from new-Latin biological nomenclature were common among
naturalists, but mollis
could mean "weak and changeable" as well as "soft and
voluptuous"—not the most flattering self-image. Thackery found the male's
name, though unambiguous, equally inappropriate. Handsome you're not—
"I
thought so," she went on blithely. "Bell thought you might be some
sort of security officer for the Titan Line, or a Council observer, the way you
watch everyone all the time. But you're a student or something, aren't
you?"
"Government
Service Academy, Georgetown."
"See?"
Bellus said triumphantly. "He's a baby bureaucrat. It's practically the same
thing. And I told you he wasn't as old as he looks."
"He's
right about that," Mollis said, appraising him with a critical eye.
"What are you, third year? You can't be more than twenty-five. But you
carry yourself like you're forty. You really need to let yourself relax a
little." She reached out and grasped his hand familiarly. "Come on
down to the pool after we're done here. I'll introduce you to some
people."
Before
he needed to give an answer, Thackery reached the threshold with its blinking
MICROGRAVITY ENVIRONMENT BEYOND THIS POINT sign. He allowed one of the Amalthea's green-clad crew to
pin the radiation badge to his vest. But he disdained the proffered arm of an
usher, and coasted unassisted across the Panorama's uncluttered hemispherical
volume to an open handhold on the face of the opaque synglas.
He
was relieved to see that Mollis and Bellus did not follow him there; they
called out to and joined another couple near the periphery of the chamber. A
few minutes later, the last places were filled and the hatchways sealed from
the outside. Predictably, the Jupiter movement of Hoist's "The
Planets" sounded from concealed speakers. Then the narration began:
"Jupiter.
Son of the Titans. King of both gods and men. Jupiter. Star that nearly was,
never to be."
It
went on in that vein for nearly two minutes, a mixture of pop astronomy and
simplified mythology, as the lights in the chamber slowly dimmed until they
were hanging in the darkness. The synglas bubble beneath him, above him, before
him, remained opaque, and Thackery began to grow impatient. Then the narration
ceased, the music grew louder, and the clamshell shields began to roll back.
There
was a communal gasp and cries of childlike delight as a band of color appeared
across the width of the bubble, but Thackery barely noted the sound. Before him
was spread a breath-taking living canvas, an animated palette festooned with
whorls and spirals of orange and white and yellow and hues for which he had no
name: the face of Jupiter.
And
though even the first glimpse communicated the awesome scope of that canvas,
moment by moment there was more. The shields moved quickly for their size but
in stately pace, as though they were curtains swept back at the herald's call
to admit the royal presence.
Outbound,
Thackery had wondered why the builders of
Am-althea
had gone to the trouble to include the Panorama when an ordinary observation
deck might have done as well. Now he understood. He found himself forgetting
the passengers at his elbows. No interior lights or reflections betrayed the
presence of the synglas bubble. It was as if the ship itself had vanished.
In
one dizzying moment of transformation, he floated suspended between the
dazzling stars at zenith and nadir, alone in the void with the Herculean presence
of the great gas giant. Vertigo impelled him forward, and he was certain that
if he loosed his grip on the railing he would fall the endless fall into its
alien depths.
It
was as though, having spent his life contentedly viewing the world in two dimensions,
a third had suddenly been revealed to him. It was as though he had grasped a
high-voltage wire of emotion, and his body sang unfamiliar songs of ecstasy.
The swirling storms of Jupiter were part of him, and he of them, a rapturous
communion, a participatory consciousness—
And
then, without warning, it was suddenly over, the spell broken, the moment lost.
The experience itself gave way to simple sense memory of the experience, and he
cried a silent, futile protest.
After
a time he became aware how much time had passed, and that he was nearly alone
in the chamber. Most of the others. Mollis and Bellus included, had drifted
away to more diverting or less vertiginous pursuits. For them, it seemed, the
family of Jove had been little more than an exotic backdrop to a month of
hedonism.
But
Thackery, frightened and at the same time angered by the loss of self, ashamed
and at the same time possessed by the unprecedented sensuality, remained. He
begged silently for the moment to return, anxious to analyze it rather than be
ambushed by it. Thus obsessed, he stayed until his radiation badge glowed a
warning yellow and began to chime softly.
Only
then, and only at the insistence of the Panorama staff, did he excuse himself
from the presence of the King.
By
the time he reached his cabin, Merritt Thackery was angry.
liie
first object of his anger was chance, a player whose power he previously had
held in disdain. Someone had to win, and in that sense it was not a matter of
chance at all. But that it had to be him—there was the unwanted touch of the
Odds-maker.
Six
months ago, a Titan Line messenger, accompanied by a minicam team, had walked
into Dr. Royce's Controlled Market Economies seminar and announced to all
present that Thackery would receive a cost-free berth for the Amalthea's first cruise to
the realm of the giant planets—one of thirty-seven such gifts, one for each of
Jupiter's satellites.
No
one was more stunned than Thackery, who had not only not entered the
sweepstakes, but had been only vaguely aware that it.was underway. Least
surprised seemed to be Royce, who segued neatly into an explanation of how such
things worked.
Three
decades earlier, Royce related, the World Council had cast its critical eye on
sweepstakes and lotteries and decided that they pandered to the antirational
outlook it was laboring to eradicate. In a move typical of the Council, it did
not ban them: It simply set an impossible condition. All citizens of Council
states had to automatically be made entrants. It was illegal to require
potential winners to take any action whatsoever to qualify themselves.
As
a consequence of the new rule, lotteries lost their source of prize money and
sweepstakes their promotional value, and both faded away. But the Titan Line,
looking to protect its two billion Council-dollar investment in Amalthea, won a court
ruling allowing it to use the Council's own citizen registration banks for a
promotional sweepstakes.
So
it was Thackery's twelve-digit Citizen Identification number which had brought him
his "good" fortune, and at very long odds; the pool of possible
winners numbered nearly nine billion.
Thackery's
first impulse was to refuse the award. He had no interest in astronomy, and
neither did Georgetown—the subject did not even appear in the Academy
curriculum book. Nor did he have time for a sightseeing cruise. His attention
was focused on holding his own in the challenging second-tier GS disciplines:
Linguistics, Cultural Anthropology, Political Psychology, Economics of
Production. Successful completion of all six tiers at GSA-Georgetown would
qualify him for an internship somewhere in the Council's world-wide
bureaucracy.
Though
only twenty-two, Thackery had worked hard to separate himself from what he saw
as youthful affectations, and to take on the habits of thought more appropriate
to a mid-level Council facilitator or field agent. He was not surprised that
Mollis took him for older than he was—that happened frequently. Nor was he much
surprised that she found him stilted, even dull. There was no room for chance
or emotional impulse in his plan. He meant his life to be orderly, even tame.
That was, after all, the function of the World Council—to see that lives were
orderly, even tame. With nine billion lives to consider, orderly and tame was
the only acceptable formula.
But
Georgetown's administration had intervened, which is why he was angry at them
as well. Too many instructors had seen opportunities to use the trip as a
practicum in their specialty: sociodynamics, economics, consumer motivation.
His advisor had agreed with them, and Thackery was saddled with a half-dozen
special projects to be completed before, during, or after the one-month voyage,
with never a word to reducing or rescheduling his regular duties. And Director
Stowell had approved the plan without troubling to find out what Thackery
thought of it.
So
he had not come aboard Amalthea
looking for excitement, or companionship, or even relaxation. He had come
because his coming pleased those on whom so much of his future depended. And he
was angry at himself for having forgotten it. He had gone into the Panorama not
to see Jupiter but to observe his fellow passengers' reaction to it. Instead,
he had allowed himself to lose control.
And
now he was afraid to go back. Afraid that it would happen again, and afraid
that it would not.
For
two days Thackery stayed away, while
Amalthea
looped around Jupiter between the orbits of the innermost Galilean moons. In
that time, he managed to insult Ms. Goodwin, to start an argument over the
current Council that nearly became a flstfight, and, by being conversationally
brusque and sexually inconsiderate, to turn a pity fuck offered by Mollis into
a disaster.
"What
is it with you?" she asked as she dressed afterward.
"Your
drug program out of balance?"
"I'm
not using," he said, bristling defensively.
"Then
maybe you ought to be. What has you so wired? I thought you were all right,
just a little naive," she said, not unkindly. "But you knew what you
were doing—you just didn't care about my half of it. You can't treat people
like this. It isn't right."
I'm fighting myself
he thought. And losing.
"I'm sorry. It
wasn't
your fault."
"I
don't need you to tell me that."
Chastened, he watched as she finished
dressing. "Come to the Panorama with me," he said impulsively.
"I don't think so. Thanks all the same." "I told you, it wasn't
personal." "That's part of the problem." When she was gone he
sat on the edge of the bed and buried
his face in his hands. It isn't getting better—you're as out of control
today as you were in the Panorama.
You're still angry,
he told himself.
No one planned this. It's not anybody's fault.
I'm not angry at anyone in particular,
he realized. I'm angry because I'm
afraid and I don't like it. Angry because I let myself be surprised. Angry
because—He
balked at completing the thought.
Because—
Because that hour Jupiter had me was the best
hour of my life... and because it's too late to let that change the course I'm
on.
Thackery
mulled over that revelation for several minutes, examining it from all sides,
looking for flaws. There were none. All
right, then!
he chided himself. Nothing's changed.
Nothing's going to change. So why aren't you at least enjoying it while you
can?
Over
the next twelve hours, Thackery entered the Panorama four times, which was as
often as the radiation medtech would allow. Each time, he felt anticipation as
he neared the threshold. Inside, he was caught up in the complexities of the
seething technicolor clouds. The one occasion
Amalthea's
attitude allowed, he marveled at the fractured surface of Europa, the
sulfur-splattered textures of Io. He reveled in the illusion that he was the
center of the universe. All those discoveries denoted new additions to his
sensibilities. Like a newborn butterfly which had just unfolded its crinkled
wings, he felt as though his horizons had been immeasurably broadened.
These are things / could not feel before,
he thought happily.
But
no more than a hint of his earlier rapture returned, a
memory only, an echo.
Thackery accepted his lot with equanimity. How
could I ever forget enough to be surprised that way again? How could / ever
wipe that impression from my mind? And why would I want to?
That
night, the Panorama staff closed the chamber's clamshell shield for the last
time on that voyage, as
Amalthea
said good-bye to Jupiter and began the two-week fall inbound to the Charan
Space Operations Center and Earth.
Now things can return to normal,
Thackery told himself. To speed that process, he absented himself from the
grand ballroom with its continuous music, intoxicants on tap, and seductive
star projection. He steered clear of the self-proclaimed beautiful people with
their gemstone nosepins and patterned skin sculptures, who hugged too readily
and laughed too loudly as though determined to Have Fun during every waking
moment. He refused the companionship of the young naturalists, who thought
themselves his peers when they were in fact his inferiors.
Thackery
stayed within himself, recapturing the discipline and determination of the
student, the dignity and distance of the GS professional. By the time die
Charan shuttle pierced the atmosphere of Earth, all was as it had been—except
for one moment, one memory, the flame of which would not die. And because of that
flame, nothing was as it had been.
For
the most part, the changes were visible only to Thackery himself. Where he had
once prided himself on never pressing the deadline on assignments, now he found
himself working late nights to complete work which had gone neglected. Where he
had previously preferred to direct group projects he was part of, now he
allowed others to take the lead and the responsibilities that went with it.
On
more than one occasion, he tapped into the GS databases with the intent of researching
one assignment or another only to find his attention turning elsewhere. He read
the history of space exploration with a curiosity he had not previously known.
He called up hundreds of historic photographs and video clips, including some
of the crude bit-mapped images of Jupiter returned by the earliest Pioneer and
Voyager probes. And he studied carefully the organization and recruitment
practices of the three-headed Unified Space Service.
In
all but the most demanding seminars, Thackery's attention wandered. He found
the professors pedantic and their observations obvious. In one jarring moment,
he realized he had always felt that way, except that he had been too busy
trying to garner approval to care. GS Georgetown had always been a greater
challenge to his endurance than to his intellect, a gateway to something
better.
But
in an equally disturbing revelation, Thackery realized that living in the
Council's world would mean being surrounded by more of the same boring
sameness. And since all Council decisions were collective, the product of
committees and studies and consensus, he could not even count on a heady sense
of power to enliven his life.
That
night he had a vivid dream which found him alone in the Panorama when the
synglas itself crawled back. Drawn through the opening, he began to move toward
Jupiter, more floating than falling. As it grew nearer he felt its compelling
presence and the eager foretaste of union with its substance. He never achieved
that union: Whether he awoke first or the insistent alarm woke him, he was
snatched back when on the brink of rapture.
For
several minutes, he lay drained and shaken on the sweat-dampened sheets. When
he finally rose, he was well behind schedule for making his Political
Psychology seminar on time. But that did not matter, because he had already
decided to skip the session. He went instead to the Evaluation and Counseling
Center.
"I
want to take the career orientation assessment," he told the clerk,
flashing his identity card.
Within
fifteen minutes the psychometrician had him wired up in a testing cubicle.
"Would you rather dig a ditch or fix a broken toy?" asked the
silicon-brained proctor, and the assessment was underway.
As
in the past, none of the questions seemed to relate to what people actually did
for a living, nor did his own answers seem to have any pattern or to point
authoritatively to any particular career. And yet the assessment had high marks
for reliability, especially when presented one-on-one by the proctor with the
subject wearing a biosensor band on one wrist.
Processing
the results took less time than Thackery needed to walk from the testing
cubicle to his counselor's anteroom, and Thackery was waved in without waiting.
"What
prompted you to ask for a re-exam?" the counselor asked, absentmindedly
rolling a touchscreen stylus between his fingertips.
"I
find I'm not as interested as I once was. I wanted to find out whether it was
fatigue, second-tier syndrome, or something real." It was at least a
partially true answer.
The
counselor tilted his data display toward himself and glanced at it. "In
terms of ideals and skills, you continue to come out as a very strong candidate
for GS."
"Oh,"
Thackery said, both disappointed and relieved.
"But
there is one curious finding, which you've already anticipated. Your emotional
commitment to those ideals and skills is much weaker than it was on your last
assessment."
"What
does that mean?"
"Lip
service," the counselor said bluntly. "You're just going through the
motions." He leaned forward. "What do you really want to be doing,
Mr. Thackery?"
"Doesn't that tell
you, sir?" "Of course not. You gave the 'right' answers for
Georgetown, not the right answers for yourself."
"Does
it matter where I want to.be?" Thackery asked. "I'm twenty-three.
It's a little late to be changing my mind. This is the only thing open to
me."
The
counselor smiled slightly. "You underestimate yourself, Mr. Thackery. You
are one of the very best training for a field which, rightly or wrongly, is
considered to be the most demanding on this planet. You have options. Whether
or not you wish to take them is another question."
Thackery
was slow in responding. "Do you mean that other training centers might
accept me?" "I think there are very few that would turn your application
down."
"Why
are you telling me this?" Thackery asked suspiciously. "Isn't it your
job to shepherd us through, to keep us happy here?"
"I am trying to keep you
happy," the counselor said gently. "If that requires you to take a
year off, or even leave here completely, both you and the GS will be better for
it. Now— shall we talk about those options?"
it
was remarkable how little there was to pack. The materials he had studied, the
music he had played, the art that had decorated the apartment walls—all had
been on-line from the GS Depository, and yet they had made the apartment
uniquely his. All he really owned was his clothing and a few boxes of what
might best be called memorabilia: photos of friends, award certificates from
past schools, knickknacks bought on trips with Andra.
Andra. How are you going to take this?
he asked his mother in absentia. How
hard are you going to make it? Thackery did not dwell
on the questions; because he knew the answers lay just a few hours away.
He
was nearly finished packing when he was interrupted by the paging tone from the
apartment's front door. He opened it to find, not entirely unexpectedly,
Director Stowell, a somber man whose face and dignity were flawed by a bulbous
nose seemingly designed to keep eyeglasses from slipping off. Since Stowell
wore contacts, the consensus was that he was afraid of corrective surgery. A
minority held that he was a closet naturalist.
"Good
morning, Mr. Thackery." Stowell's glance took in the disarray behind
Thackery. "I'm glad I turned down a second helping at breakfast. I might
not have found you."
"Won't
you come in. Director Stowell?"
Stowell
threaded his way to the center of the room before answering. "It's not
uncommon for second-tier students to withdraw. We expect it. In some cases we
welcome it. Occasionally we even request it. But we both know that you are in
absolutely no academic difficulty. On the contrary, your work has been
uniformly excellent. When you filed your notice of withdrawal with the
registrar, you elected not to give your reasons. Would you do me the courtesy
of sharing them with me privately?"
Thackery's
face wrinkled with discomfort. "I don't think I could properly express
why," he said finally.
"Ah."
Stowell frowned. "I don't mean to pry, Mr. Thackery. It's only that I
would regret to see the Council lose the services of someone with your
potential due to some"—he paused to search for the right
word—"irrelevancy. I would like to help you, if you'll allow me."
Thackery
folded his arms across his chest in a subconscious gesture of resistance.
"I've just decided not to continue in GS."
Stowell
nodded. "You wouldn't object if I chose to list you as on hiatus rather
than withdrawn?"
Guarding
his thoughts because he did not trust himself to guard his words, Thackery
shook his head. "I don't see any point to it."
"The
point is that your reasons for withdrawal may be temporary."
How can I tell you that everything you care
about seems shallow to me now? How can I explain about Jupiter?
"I plan to enroll in TSI-Tsiolkovsky."
Stowell
nodded gravely. "I know."
"I
received word yesterday that they would accept me."
"As
did I." Stowell settled on the arm of a chair as though he meant to stay a
while. "I'm hardly surprised they accepted you. The Technical Service
needs people with your qualities even more than we do. But you should be
thinking about your needs, not theirs. Speaking frankly, I don't see you being
happy in an essentially subservient posture. No matter how skilled a TS
graduate is, everything they do is subordinate to decisions from GS—"
Not everything,
Thackery thought. The Council doesn't rule
everywhere.
"—and
I've always seen you on the decision-making side of that relationship,"
Stowell concluded.
"I
understand that, sir."
"There
is something else to consider. You know that you can be successful here. Your
success elsewhere is less certain. Your competition at Tsiolkovsky has been
specializing for years, just as you have. You will be a long time catching
up—if you ever do. Raw ability is not everything."
"I've
considered that, Director," said Thackery, though he had not.
"You've
considered that," the director echoed without conviction, chewing at his
lower lip. "You should also think of your individual development. The TS
institutes offer far greater freedom to set your own pace than we do. Do you
understand why? They're only teaching cold science, not providing a total
acculturation as we do. There is a dynamism in Government Service that you will
not find there, because it is a crucible for human interaction, not chemical
reaction."
"I've
taken the differences between the branches into account, Director
Stowell."
"Then
consider one thing further: whether you want to commit yourself to an
enterprise which in the scheme of things has no future."
"What
do you mean by that?"
"That
our investment in space is temporary, ephemeral. Our population is very nearly
stabilized, and die infrastructure needed to support it is well on its way to
being completed. Once those two conditions are in place, we will have very
little need for off-planet resources. Tlie long-term plan calls for stability,
not growth. There will be a time, not all that much farther down the road, when
we will call the ships home. Oh, we will still be busy in earth orbit, but that's
practically an eighth continent. It's the System and Survey ships we'll have no
use for. Is that part of your calculation, too?"
"No,
sir. I dispute your precis," Thackery said with quiet confidence.
"The Council might well call the ships home. But I doubt very much if they
would come."
Sighing
resignedly, Stowell stood and moved to the door. "A romantic notion. Have
it as you wish. I think you're making a mistake. You won't be the first to let
Georgetown intimidate you, or the first to bolt. I like you, Merritt, so I hope
I'm wrong. But if I'm right, I just hope you're smart enough not to let the
door lock behind you."
The
use of his first name was an unexpected and jarring familiarity. Thackery drew
a deep breath and blew it out his mouth. "All right. I'll concede there's
at least some uncertainty. So please put me on hiatus."
Content
with that small victory, Stowell opened the door and was gone.
Thackery
shook his head wearily and resumed his packing. There was no ready way to prove
it to another's satisfaction. But he knew in his own heart that he was running toward, not running away.
Nevertheless,
turning back Stowell's challenges had exhausted his tolerance for
confrontation. He had arranged his schedule so that the turbocopter from Dulles
would drop him at Philadelphia's central transport node four hours before his
flight to London was scheduled to leave from the outlying PHX airport—enough
time to seek out Andra. But when he arrived, he sought out a public netlink
instead.
He
sat and stared into the nearly blank screen for a long time, composing his side
of the conversation in advance. The results were unsatisfying. Then, on
impulse, he selected Message mode rather than Call mode. He felt a pang of
guilt over ducking a confrontation that way, then washed it away with a wave of
comforting rationalizations: It
won't help us to yell at each other. A fight won't change anything—
Then
the prompt bell chimed, and it was time to record:
"Hello,
Andra. I'm here in Philadelphia, at the transnode. I'd hoped to come by and see
you, but I'm afraid the schedule got squeezed and I'm not going to be able to.
I have another flight to catch—I'm on my way to London, to study at
Tsiolkovsky. This is a little scary for me, but one of the things that I'm
counting on is that you're behind me, and that you're happy I'm getting this
chance." He smiled nervously and searched for something else to say.
Nothing else seemed relevant. "Take care, Andra. I'll be in touch."
Thackery
did not really know what kind of reaction he expected. In his most pessimistic
moods, he comforted himself with the knowledge that there was no way she could
stop him. "Mother" was a flexible concept without much legal
standing, considering all the Alternate Conception variations—fetal adoption, host-mothering,
group contract, blind-donor fertilization (Andra's choice). And even the
limited powers granted by his Care & Custody papers had expired when he was
sixteen. He was an adult in the eyes of the law, an independent agent. The
decision was not hers, it was his.
But
not being stopped was not enough. He wanted her approval. It had always meant
more than the honors and awards he had accumulated with seeming ease, even
though it came infrequently and in measured doses. Her blessing would smooth
the difficult path ahead. It would give him the reassurance that she
thought,this, too, was within his reach.
What
he got was two days of silence, and then a visitor.
Coming
home from his first meeting with the engineering project team to which he had
been assigned, he found her waiting for him outside his student flat. They
hugged, more out of ritual than warmth of feeling. Her presence made him
suddenly anxious, but he was too busy trying to read her mood to realize that
he was telegraphing his own emotions.
She
cast a jaundiced eye at the inside of the flat, which was bland where it was
not cluttered, but said nothing.
"Still
settling in," he volunteered.
She
nodded absendy, examining the netlink. "A 400 series? That's a
ten-year-old model."
"It
does everything I need it to."
"I
suppose," she said, continuing her inspection. "I've been walking
around the Institute. It seems more like a warehouse than a school. How many
students are here?"
"About
twelve hundred."
"Twelve
hundred! They can't be very selective."
"It's
very competitive."
"Oh,
I'm sure, but on what level?" she said, settling in a chair.
"Merritt, would you explain why you didn't come talk with me before doing
this?" "It wasn't a hard decisiort. I didn't have any doubts that
this is what I want."
"After
I got your message, I went up to Georgetown to talk with Director Stowell. He
told me that the door is open for you to return."
Thackery
nodded. "I know. I didn't think it was necessary. It was his idea."
"He
also told me that you've already damaged your reputation among the faculty just
by doing this, that you've raised questions about your ability to take the
pressure. He said that if you let as little as three months go by before you
return, it'll be next to impossible for you to regain your former academic
standing."
Aware
of Andra's mastery of the leading question, Thackery wished he could hear
Stowell's version of the conversation. "That's sounds about right,"
he said lamely.
"You're
very sanguine about it."
"Andra—you don't seem to
understand. I don't expect to go back." "You don't seem to understand
that you have to go back." "I know this isn't what you were expecting
from me—" "Merritt, I know what the cost of taking time out is. I
took
time out to give you
life. I was thirty-one, right in the middle of my career. My column was getting
good placement in all three newsnets. I had good relationships not only with my
peers, but with Council insiders. I took two years out, and I never caught
up."
"But they held your
job open—" She shook her head. "The rest of the world doesn't hold
still. I was on track to become chief policy interpreter for the
whole North American
zone. I never got there, because of the time I took out for you. I don't regret
it—you're the best thing I've ever done. But if you let this opportunity slip
away, you're not only making what you've done pointless, you make what I did
pointless, too."
Never
much for conflict, Thackery's stomach had begun to chum. "I haven't
lowered my standards, just changed my goal."
"Do
you really think that? Do you really think that your future here compares in
any way with the future you can still have in Government Service? Director
Stowell agrees with me that you have the potential to go all the way to the
Council itself."
"But,
Andra—that's your script for my life, not mine. That's not what I want."
"A
script? Is that the way you think of it? Then what kind of role did I write for
myself? I kept you at home until you were ten. How many mothers waited that
long to put their children in full-time childcare? I would have kept you longer
if Shelby Preparatory hadn't been residential. Even so, I was always there to
help you. I let you use my contacts for your studies. When you were on break, I
took you to legislative briefings, agency hearings—not because I wanted to, but
because you wanted to know how it all worked. I didn't drag you into the GS
track. You wanted it."
Thackery
squirmed. It was true enough—for a long time he had taken the lead, had gladly
applied himself toward making real what had seemed a sparkling vision. Until
very recently he had not even realized that it was she who had planted that
vision.
Andra
was not finished. "You made a commitment, and I supported you. We both
worked very hard for a long time for this. You're a thoroughbred, Merritt. I
haven't trained you, others have, but I know the course. You're very close to a
big hurdle, and I'm not going to allow you to refuse the jump. I expect you to
go back. I will not let you quit."
Torn
between incompatible yearnings, Thackery could not mount an effective defense.
"All I want is your support," he said pleadingly, his eyes wet.
"Why can't you give me that?"
"Because
if you stay here, you're going to fail," she said coldly. "Not just
fail to live up to your potential. Did any of the track-jumpers who came into
Georgetown last? No. You know what happened to them. It didn't matter how
bright they were. It didn't matter how much they wanted it. They didn't have
the background, and they didn't know how the system worked. They were
outsiders, and they stayed outsiders until they gave up. And that's what will
happen to you if you don't come back with me."
"I
can't," he said helplessly. "I can't."
She
stood, and for a long moment searched his face with a hard gaze. "You mean
you won't. Which tells me not only what you think of me, but what you think of
yourself. And I don't like either part of that message." Stopping at the
door, she looked back. "I'm going to arrange a prepaid fare in your name
for the transatlantic shutde, one that'll be good for the next three months. I
hope you won't be too proud or wait too long to use it."
For
a long time, Thackery had cause to wonder if Andra had been right.
He
discovered quickly that the Tsiolkovsky students were no less intellectually
able than those at Georgetown. Hobbled by his weak background in physical
science, Thackery barely made an impression, much less a splash, in his classes
and engineering project team—just as Andra had predicted. Nearly all of his
previous training, save for the advanced mathematics, was useless. It took him
a month to reach the point where he could follow conversations, and three
months until he could contribute to them.
But
he did not go back. He viewed the expiration of the shuttle ticket to be a message
to Andra, a message that said, You're
wrong, Andra. I can, loo, make it here.
Yet
by the end of the first year, Thackery had come to the sobering realization
that he would in all likelihood never catch up to his new trackmates. He had
started too far behind in a race in which there were no shortcuts. He took
solace in knowing that he was stretching himself, was learning how to sustain a
higher level of effort than he had ever needed before. And he held on to the
hope that though he might never be the best again, he would be good enough.
Toward
the end of his second year, he sent Andra a letter that both took cognizance of
and ignored the breach between them. He filled it with personal social details
and his perceptions of London and environs, while avoiding mention of his
studies or plans. A month later, he received a short reply from her in which
she similarly avoided any mention of Tsiolkovsky. The fact that she responded
at all he took to mean that she had come to at least a grudging understanding
that he was not coming back to Georgetown; the way in which she responded
suggested that they had established the ground rules for some sort of
rapprochement, if not a complete end to hostilities. From that point on, he
made an effort to write her every three or four months. Usually she answered.
In
all, it took Thackery three years to pass his technical exams. But part of that
extra time was a strategic delay. Unlike GS and the various free industries,
which snapped up talent whenever and wherever they found it, the USS did not
accept applications until and unless they had openings. Instead, it maintained
a short "Qualified—Call As Needed" list to fill short-term needs, and
posted a Notice of Opportunity when the QCAN list became too short or a new
project or ship was approved.
So
Thackery waited at Tsiolkovsky, sharpening his skills, avoiding the binding
commitments which would have come with graduation. He watched the Placement
Services list like a broker with an order to buy until, one morning, he dialed
in to find a short-term USS Notice of Opportunity posted. He would not know the
reason until later that day: overnight, a fierce chemical fire had broken out
in the cargo compartments of the packet
Moliere.
Nineteen of the twenty-five techs being ferried back from Mars' orbital
Materials Reprocessing Center were dead.
Thackery
went directly to the Tsiolkovsky testing center. Nine hours later, he returned
home with his Technical Service Auxiliary (sysawk) rating, a post with
USS-Transport, and a seat on the Friday morning shutde for his first trip to
the orbiting city called Unity.
The
shuttle Vulpecula's
liftoff was smooth and on time. Due to its inverted attitude, the Earth would
remain visible through cabin ports throughout the four-hour flight. But Thackery
soon tired of looking back, and began to watch for the first glimpse of Unity.
Early
in its history, Unity had been home to the offices and ministers of Rashuri's
Pangaean Consortium. That highly symbolic "government-in-the-sky"
position seemed progressively less important in the years after Rashuri's
death, and when the World Council supplanted the Consortium, it moved to a
1600hectare free-floating artificial island built for it in the Mediterranean.
Rather
than being a blow to Unity's fortunes and status, the departure of the
bureaucrats actually opened the door to its explosive growth. Freed of the
thousand and one restrictions imposed in the name of security, Unity quickly
became the primary hub of orbital activity. Now it was more a city than a space
station. It first appeared on the cabin display as a bright star surrounded by
five smaller, dimmer satellites. The central star soon resolved itself into the
starfish-like radial shape of Unity, the satellites into globular automated
production centers.
As Vulpecula closed on the
city Thackery made out the slender communications masts which extended in both
directions from its central hub, giving the structure the appearance of a
five-spoked child's jack. New construction was underway, skeletal'structures
spanning the gaps between the spokes like webbing growing between the fingers
of a hand. TTie dozens of construction waldoids moving among the girders were
like so many scurrying orb-weavers, creating their web even as he watched.
Thackery's
contemplations were interrupted by a tone from the seat speaker.
"This
is Commander Gerhard. The crew and I just picked up something in the intership
traffic that we're sure will be of interest to you. The word is that Orpheus, the USS-Survey
ship working the Vela octant, has discovered a fourth human colony!"
The
shuttle's cabin erupted into applause and chest-beating celebration, with
Thackery contributing as much as anyone. Gerhard must have been either
monitoring or expecting the outburst, for he waited until it moderated to go
on.
"We
don't have much more information for you at the moment. I can tell you the
colony is called Pai-Tem by the inhabitants, which number only about twenty
thousand. I can also tell you that
Orpheus
is under the command of SC Alvin Reed, and that the crew and I and all of
USS-Transport are damned proud of what our brothers and sisters in the Survey
branch are doing."
So are we all,
Thackery thought. It's easy to be proud.
But would you trade places with them, Gerhard? Would you give up everything to
be where they are?
"We'll
be docking at Unity in just a few minutes, and there may be more information on
the base net by the time we're processed."
There
was another spattering of applause as the end-ofmessage chimes sounded. His
seat partner, apparently a member of the Universal Creation Church, joined
several others on board in chanting aloud the opening phrases of the hour-long
Prayer of Thanksgiving.
Thackery,
at once exhilarated by the news and fiercely jealous of Reed and the others
aboard Orpheus,
barely heard them. Fighting to contain both emotions, he turned his eyes toward
Unity, his thoughts toward others' past, his hopes toward his own future.
Journa, Muschvnka, and Ross 128—all cold
history, discovered long before I was born. And now Pai-Tem. Let there be more,
Thackery begged silently as
Vulpecula
eased into the empty dock at the tip of Unity's wing C.
Let there be more! And leave one for Merritt
Thackery. One world in a billion. Not so my name is applauded a hundred years
later and a hundred trillion miles away. All I want is Jupiter again. To lose
myself in the magic of discovery again. Because there can only be one first
time.
THE PATHFINDERS
(from Merritt Thackery's
JIADUR'SWAKE)
. . . The radio beacon
from Mu Cassiopeia stirred a somnolent Earth into a social and technological
metamorphosis, a metamorphosis symbolized by Tilak Charan's Pride of Earth.
Considering the technological, logistical, and sociological obstacles, the
successful construction of
Pride
ranks as the high-water mark of Devaraja Rashuri's reign.
But Pridewas the product of an
infant technology. Its voyage was one of risk and hubris. Its mission meant an
encounter with an alien society of unknowable inclination. Because Pride never returned nor
reported, it was widely assumed that it had failed to survive. But no one could
say which of the factors was to blame.
As
a result, the USS began to build the only survey ships explicitly authorized by
the World Council. What turned out to be a follow-up mission was conceived as a
pioneering one, and so the ships were collectively named The Pathfinders. Their
individual names remembered the aerial vanguards of Odin and Noah: S2 Hugin, S3
Munin, and S4 Dove.(The honorary designation SI was assigned "posthumously"
to Pride of Earth herself.)
Where Pride of Earth had
been a fragile lifeboat, the Pathfinders were comparative dreadnoughts. Three
years after Jiadur
reached Earth, they set off for the Mu Cass system. There they
"discovered" Journa, its inhabitants, and one lone survivor from Pride of Earth—a
meeting thereafter commemorated on both worlds in the annual Reunion Day
festivities.
But
that meeting was also the beginning of the Service's colony problem. The
Joumans claimed to be children of Earth, a claim that proved as irrefutable as
it was inexplicable. How could a space-going technological culture have
flourished on Earth ten or a hundred thousand years ago and then vanished
without a trace? What twisting of history could allow for such a dissonant
fact?
There
were no answers on Journa.
Absent
appropriate instructions, the Pathfinders separated and began a roundabout
return to Earth. Their self-set purpose was to define the parameters of the
problem by searching for other possible remnants of the First Colonization. If
there were none, then perhaps some relatively painless revisionism might
suffice—
Then Hugin, under the command of
Kellen Brighamton, found a neoprimitive human community on a planet orbiting
the white dwarf component of 40 Eridani. When Brighamton's report on the
Muschynka reached Earth, it became clear that a more ambitious effort to locate
and explain the worlds of man was called for. The shipyards went to work,
turning out five new survey ships of the Argo series. USS strategists went to
work, drawing up a plan to visit each star system within twenty-five
light-years of Earth.
Phase
I proceeded largely as planned. The inbound Pathfinders and outbound Argonauts
recorded visits to more than 130 star systems over a span of a century and a
half. And Commander Yabovsky of
Castor
earned permanent fame when his crew discovered an extinct human colony on a
cold world orbiting a dim star in the constellation Virgo.
But
despite these labors, the colony problem remained impervious to solution. So
even as the aging Pathfinders and their Van Winkled crews neared Earth, Survey
brass were planning for them not rest but a role in an even more ambitious
Phase II....
chapter 2
Ambition
No announcement was made,
but everyone on Dove
nevertheless knew when it was time for the ship to come of out the craze. Those
pulling duty away from the bridge listened in on the shipnet, while the others
drifted by ones and twos into the contact lab, edrec compartment, or onto the
bridge itself.
Among
those who came to the bridge was SC Glen Harrod, commander of the Dove. But he made no move to
displace bridge captain Alizana Neale from the pedestal, choosing instead to
stand in the back with the talkative, almost childishly giddy techs and awks.
Dove had come out of craze
eighteen times before, and there was no technical reason why the nineteenth
should prove any more eventful than the others. "Craze" was a
fanciful description of what the D-series Avidsen-Lopez drive did to the local
fabric of space. Only a few Service researchers claimed to fully understand the
"why" of the AVLO power plant. It was commonly known that it was a
gravity gradient drive (dubbed the pushmi-pullyu because of the twin bow and
stern field projectors). It was also commonly known that to go beyond that
casual description, it was necessary to deal with Driscoll's abstruse grand
unified field theorem.
The
drive's effect, however, was easy to describe. The ship, accelerated beyond the
speed of. light, and the rest of the universe disappeared. No chronometers ran
backward, no one's gray hair turned black again, no theatrical pyrotechnics
punctuated the transitions past c, but when you got to your destination the
numbers always added up so that you were there sooner than Einstein said you should
have been. A fifteen light-year craze in a Pathfinder-class ship extracted
barely a month from the crew's biological calendar. When such a ship crazed,
nothing in the Universe could catch it—not even the electromagnetic radiation
on which all sensing and communication depended.
That
fact contributed to the secondary meaning of the term "craze." To
some surveyors, referred to unsympathetically as "the phobes," the
blank screens and dead air meant an enforced isolation in a universe that ended
at the ship's hull. Craze fear had elements of cabin fever, Gansel's syndrome,
and prisoner's psychosis. Unmoderated by drugs, victims of mild cases suffered from anxiety,
poor concentration, and irritability: those more seriously afflicted
experienced sexual dysfunction, insomnia, and panic.
The
one blessing was that few were affected.
There
were no acute phobes aboard
Dove, and
only two milder cases. In that,
Dove was
fortunate—according to one dispatch they had received, the Argonaut Heracles was limping along
with nearly half its crew impaired.
So
neither technology nor psychology could account for the eagerness with which
the approaching transition was awaited. What was special about Dove's nineteenth craze
was not how it was accomplished or how long it lasted but where it would end.
After making visits to eighteen strange suns,
Dove
was finally going home.
"One
minute," the navtech at the gravigation console called out, and nearly all
eyes went to the imaging window at the front of the semi-darkened triangular
compartment. The comtech hunched over his console, checking out instruments
that had sat unused for sixteen days.
"Transition."
In
that moment, a crazy-quilt of radiation—light, radio, microwave, X-ray—began to
impinge on the ship's many eyes as
Dove
regained her senses. Neale looked up expectantly at the window, and when the
dazzle cleared, found herself looking at a splendid circular starfield, the
distortion a product of their still-tremendous velocity. As Dove continued to decelerate,
the view would slowly come to resemble the view from the South Dakota pasture
which had first captured her curiosity.
I started out trying to find Orion in a winter
sky for a teacher whose name I can't remember. Look at me now,
she thought with a rush of emotion.
"Which
one's the Sun, damnit?" demanded a bearded sysawk standing with the
onlookers. Several eagerly, if impatiently, answered him. "There! Right
there! Dead on center!"
"That's
the wrong color."
"We're
still blue-shifted," Harrod reminded the awk gently.
The
navtech poked a spotting circle onto the screen, enclosing the small bluish
star and settling the disagreement. "What year is it?" asked someone.
"I
make it A.R. 195,"
said the navtech. "We'll get confirmation once we start picking up our
mail."
"A.R ?" asked the
medtech, his face showing consternation.
"After
Reunion," the comawk standing beside him answered. "They changed the
calendar on us while we were gone." "That's 2205 for those of you
still thinking in Gregorian calendar dates, like Bristol there," the
navtech added.
That
hushed the observers and the bridge crew alike. "A hundred and freezin'
fifty-seven years," one said finally. "They better cook up some fine
kind of reception for us."
"Speaking
of which, we've got just eleven days to get this ship ready to hand over to the
yard, and there's a lot to be done," Harrod said. "I'm sure no one
wants to be hung up by scutwork when they could be off on leave, so let's get
to it."
"Amen
to that," said the bearded sysawk. "The Service's already taken a
bigger piece of my life than I'd planned on offering."
'Tell
'em, Waite," cheered one onlooker.
Harrod
raised a questioning eyebrow. "Just don't forget, there's a whole new
generation of ships being built, and they'll be wanting to put some experience
on all of them. Be thinking about it. Even you, Waite."
Waite
laughed derisively. "I've got other plans."
Neale
knocked lightly at Harrod's cabin door. "Glen?"
"Come
on in."
She
slid the door aside and stepped over the threshold. "Just wanted to tell
you she's ready for the hand-over—finally." "That's good to
hear."
"It's
been hard to get much work out of them these last three days, with the Earth
sitting there in all the screens and getting bigger by the minute."
"Understandable,
though, eh? It's been a long sixteen years— or hundred and fifty-seven,
depending on how you like to count."
"I'll count sixteen, if you
don't mind. Have you gotten word on how they're handling the crew?" Harrod
nodded. "Just came in about an hour ago. We're only the second ship ever
to come back—"
"Who
beat us in?"
"Mvnin—twelve years ago.
Anyway, there'll be a fair amount of fuss. They've been tracking our relatives
while we're gone, and there'll be somebody to greet each one of us. Except for
Waite." Harcod looked up. "Funny thing, eh?"
"His
won't come?" she asked indignantly.
"He
hasn't any. I'd have thought that if anybody had left a few genes behind it'd
have been that rabbit. But he's got no living relatives, not even a grandniece
or nephew. So he's going to be 'adopted'—isn't that considerate of the Flight
Office?" His tone carried a burden of sarcasm.
"What
comes after? Do they just turn us loose?"
"They've
got a place set up in New Zealand where we can 'resynchronize'. Benamira, I
think's the name. From the way they talk about it, I'm not sure whether they're
more afraid of the world shocking us or us shocking the world," he said
wryly. "They'll want to know in sixty days whether we're interested in
another flight assignment—though it might be a year or two before they actually
need us."
"Any
idea what you're going to do?"
"Oh,
this is it for me. I've already told them I plan to do a lot of low-tech
fishing in a lot of very placid streams. Yourself?"
"I'm
going back out, if they treat me right."
Harrod
nodded as though he had expected it. "You'll probably get a command."
"That's
what I want."
Harrod
nodded again, started to say something, stopped himself, and then started
again. "What we've seen—where we've been—" He stopped and frowned,
searching for the right words. "I guess I don't understand, Ali. What's
out there except more of the same? I know we didn't find any colonies
ourselves, but—"
"It's
not finding them that matters so much. You should know after all this time.
Glen," Neale answered, one hand on the door. "I want the answer to
the colony problem."
"That
bums in you, doesn't it?"
"You
know it does. I want to know what makes a mother forget her children. Why did
it take the Journans to tell us there had been a First Colonization? There's no
more important question for us to answer. I don't know how you can sidestep
it."
Harrod
smiled a tired smile. "My instinct for self-preservation. Peace of
mind." He offered a hand and she clasped it, not as a handshake but as a
hug. "You did a good job for me. I wish you the best. Command, without
doubt. A colony, at least. Maybe even an answer to your question. You'll have
all three, if wanting matters."
"It
does," she assured him. "It does."
The
broadcast of the welcoming ceremonies reached BT-09 Babbage midway between Ceres and
home. The asteroid tug, its three-man crew, and its metal-rich, million-tonne
catch were falling sunward in a graceful month-long spiral that would end at
the Cluster B processing center trailing a half-million klicks behind Earth in
solar orbit.
—I
think I see them now, Gregory.
—Yes,
Madia, here they come, the two-hundred-year-old space travelers, back home at
last after visiting eighteen other star systems.
—That's
right, Gregory. It's important that our viewers realize that even though Dove did not discover any
colonies, her crew is bringing back with them geophysical data on eighty-one
different worlds, including samples from the twenty they actually set foot on.
—And
of course they were part of the historic Pathfinder mission to the Jouma
colony, which started everything.
—You're
right about that, Gregory. You know, the Unified Space Service tells us that Dove has rolled up more than
500 trillion miles since leaving Earth in
A.R.
38.
—That's
just amazing, Nadia. They're twenty very brave men and women, that's for
certain.
"I
say they're twenty crazy men and women," systech Brian Hduna said with a
yawn, looking up from the small screen set into the console before him.
"What do you say, Thack? Lot of fuss over nothing?"
Merritt
Thackery was seated before an identical display at the opposite end of
Babbage's command console. "Hardly," he said quietly without looking
up.
"Hell,
what we do on this run counts for more than their whole mission. We're bringing
in iron, chromium, nickel—a quarter-million tonnes of it. Think there'll be a
band playing when we dock? Hell, no," Hduna grumped.
—Each
of the voyagers will be greeted by a member of his own family, Gregory.
—Gone
but not forgotten, that's the best way to describe it. We're going to identify
them for you as they come out of the shipway. The first out should be Commander
Glen Harrod. Here he comes now. SC Glen Harrod, 192-year-old commander of the Dove, being greeted by his
great-great-greatnephew Tony Harrod.
—And
there's SC Alizana Neale, the bridge captain. She'll turn 186 tomorrow, I
understand. That's her 85-year-old fourth cousin Randy Stovik waiting there for
her.
Hduna
made a face. "Can you imagine making it with a 186-year-old woman?"
"Fry out," Thackery said angrily, his eyes burning into Hduna's.
"You couldn't have done what they did." "You make it sound like
they're better than we are," Hduna
said, squinting at
Thackery.
Thackery
crossed his arms and looked away, saying nothing.
"If
you're not proud of what you are and where you are, maybe you'd just better
retire and wait for Survey to call. Wearing the yellow's supposed to mean
something," he said, flicking a finger against the yellow ellipse pinned
to his collar, the theater insignia for system crews.
Thackery
laughed brittlely, "It's none of your damn business, but I transmitted my
application this morning."
Hduna
cocked an eyebrow, then let out a grunting laugh. "Huh. Well, now I know
why you spend all your spare time studying. When'd they post the Notice of
Opportunity?"
"Last
night. Sixty openings over the next three years."
"Well,
well. So you want to wear the black ellipse."
"Everybody
who's honest with himself does."
Hduna
shook his head. "Not me. Can't see it. Too much to give up." Thackery
laughed. "What's to give up? This billet? Where's the challenge in it?
What do we do that couldn't be done just
as well by hundreds of
others? You used to do your own assays. Now there's a whole team of geologists
living in the Belt, tagging asteroids faster than we can haul them in. They're
turning the whole Belt into a warehouse, and you into a truck driver. The
Council's busy taking the rough edges off of everything, turning this into a
finished world. I know. 1 spent two years being trained to help them."
Hduna
snorted. "Hell, I don't know what I'm arguing with you about. You won't
even make first call. You ought to know you've got to transfer down a grade to
get into Survey."
"That's
not in the quals."
"That's
the way they do it, all the same. They turn Corns into techs and techs into
awks. You're only a awk with, what, six years' experience? What are you going
to transfer as?"
"If
I don't make it this time, I'll get other shots. They've got a lot of openings
to fill, on the new ships and the old ones. I'll make it," Thackery said
determinedly.
Hduna
laughed nastily. "They're going to have a lot more than sixty openings to
get down the list to you."
There
was no room at the inn at the Eddington Yards. All five parallel shipways of
the voluminous construction base were filled by hourglass-shaped hulls in
various stages of completion.
Dove
stood off a kilometre away like a jilted suitor.
Alizana
Neale studied the survey ships from the bubble of the jitney. To her right and
back a step, Alvarez, the supervisor of ship construction, waited respectfully
for her questions.
"How
long before they can get on with refitting
Dove?"
"We'll move the Tycho Brake out within the week so Commander
Tamm can get on with preparing it for departure." "That's the Tycho on the far end?" "Yes—and
left to right from there, the Aristarchus, Kepler,
Herschel,
and Huygens,"
Alvarez said proudly. "We're turning them out at ten-year intervals—the
last of the astronomers series.
Copernicus, Hubble, and
Galileo
are already on station."
"Am
I misjudging, or is Tycho
smaller than Dove?"
"Just
slightly. But you'll find it actually has more interior volume. No weapons on
this class, of course, which helps. And the K-series drive is half the size of
that monster in Dove, so
there's an additional deck for both Operations and Survey.
We've
learned some lessons in the last two centuries."
"Haven't
we all," Neale said, her voice heavy with irony.
Alvarez
crossed his arms over his chest and tucked his hands
under his armpits.
"I understand only four of you off the
Dove are
going back out?" She nodded. "Kislak, Tamm, Rogen, and I. Tamm gets Tycho and Kislak as his exec, I
get Descartes
and Rogen."
"I
guess I'm a little surprised there are even that many—"
"I'll
be surprised if there aren't more by the time we leave," she said shortly.
"Let's not drag this out, okay? I've got work to do back at Unity. Let me
have a quick tour of the section my crew will occupy."
"Of
course."
The
construction manager brought the jitney in from above and berthed it at a work
station inside the bay occupied by Tycho's
apparently finished hull. They went aboard via a flex tunnel attached to the
aftmost crew portal, near the spherical bulge of one of the four lifepods.
There seemed to be little activity aboard, on which Neale remarked.
"We're
pretty much down to punch lists and failproofing," Alvarez said as they
moved downship on the three-sided climb-way ladder. "I've got a test team
on the bridge and two mop-up crews working in the drive compartment, but you
wanted to see your area. Step off here, please."
The
climbway ended at the gig bay pressure hatch. On the other side was more of the
same: corridors, bulkheads, and doorways. "I'm afraid you'll find you have
a little less elbow room here than the ship's main quarters, but it should be
adequate. You've got thirteen double cabins and four singles, your own edrec
library, and a small exercise area."
"And
all this will be pulled once we reach Advance Base Cygnus, I understand."
"Yes.
It's modular—three big sections sized to squeak through the bay's space door.
The Cygnus folk should be able to break it down and have it out of here and
added to their own base in three working days. And because it's intended for
reuse, I think you'll find it's not as crude as you were afraid it would
be."
"Where's
the ship's gig and the rest of the gear that'd usually be in here?"
"It'll
go piggyback in a pod amidships on the main hull, along with the new equipment
for Descartes.
You won't be able to get at it until you reach Cygnus Base, but you won't have
need of it, either."
Neale
poked her head inside one of the double cabins and gave it a cursory
inspection.
"I'll
have to admit I was a little dubious when they told me how they were going to
ferry my crew out to Advance Base Cygnus, but this should be
satisfactory," she said, rejoining Alvarez.
"Hitching
twenty-five lights in a gig bay doesn't sound very attractive," he agreed.
"Could be worse—they could have put you
in the pod." He shook his head abruptly. "Slitters. They've got the
gain up again. Excuse me a moment, Commander."
Alvarez
pressed a finger into the hollow behind his left ear and cocked his head
slightly as if listening. "Understood," he said as though to himself,
and lowered his hand back to his side. "That was Unity, Commander. Your
first call is starting to arrive."
She
nodded. "I've seen enough. Let's go back." She knitted her brows and
added, "Is everybody wearing those implant relays now?"
"Oh,
yes," he effused. "They're awfully damn convenient. Not much to the
operation—I'll bet the medtechs could take care of you before Tycho heads out."
Neale
shuddered. "No, thanks. Being hardwired into the net doesn't come under my
definition of duty."
Rocking
back in her chair, Neale studied the solemn-faced young awk as he made his way
to the empty chair opposite her. "Commander," he acknowledged with a
bob of his head as he sat down.
"God,
does everyone here do that?" she exclaimed in annoyance. "Don't
presume. I'm not your Commander. My name is Neale. Use it."
Thackery
nodded, taken aback. "Neale."
She
glanced at the flat data-display slate lying on her lap. "So, Thackery,
you want to be famous."
"Excuse
me?"
"You
watched Dove's
homecoming and you'd like to go out and become a conquering hero just like its
crew."
Thackery's
face wound up into a look of puzzlement. "Is that in my file? I
never—"
"Oh,
come now, it's all right to admit it. I'm one of them, after all. I know what
it's like."
"Sir—"
"You're
presuming again."
Thackery
blinked. "I'd guess I'm more likely to end up forgotten here than famous.
More of us will go out than will ever come back."
"Quite
true," Neale said, a hard edge to her voice. "Do you know why?
Because coming back is a lot harder than leaving. Ask my shipmates from Dove, trying to adjust at
Benamira. We would never have brought the Pathfinders back if we hadn't
promised the crews they'd see Earth again. And we might not have kept that
promise if those ships hadn't needed major refits to be useful during Phase II,
refits that the advance bases aren't yet equipped to handle. But this is the
last time that'll be true. From now on, the advance bases will be the staging
points."
"I
understand."
"Do
you?" she asked skeptically. "Turn your chair to face the far wall
and place your hands over the silver band at the end of each armrest. I'm going
to show you some pictures and find out what you think of them."
The
room lights dimmed, and the first image appeared on the floor-to-ceiling
flatscreen: weathered rust-colored spires casting long shadows on the jagged
rivercourse.
"Grand
Canyon. Northern section, I think," Thackery said.
"This
isn't a geography test," she said with annoyance. "The monitors will
tell me what I want to know." Glowing numbers on Neale's slate told of
Thackery's galvanic skin response and heart rate.
Five
seconds later, the Grand Canyon was replaced by a view of the Lagoon Nebula,
and both of Thackery's readings jumped. They remained high for the next photo,
three bare-breasted women walking along a sun-drenched Mediterranean beach,
then nosedived when a nude, well-muscled man appeared in their place.
The
images came one after another:
—a
snowfield in the Himalayas.
—the
hilly streets and Victorian homes of San Francisco.
—two
men kissing.
—the
Virgo galaxies.
—a
young couple holding their toddler on the back of a carousel horse.
—the
capital city of the Jouma colony.
—Jupiter.
Neale
studied Thackery as each new image appeared, while the slate recorded the data
from the biosensors. Despite her rebuke, Thackery silently mouthed the identity
of many of the images as they appeared, and smiled to himself at the sight of
Philadelphia's Fairmont Park. And he jerked reflexively when the portrait which
had once accompanied Andra Thackery's newsnet columns appeared.
Then
the lights went up, and Thackery shot Neale a questioning look. "What kind
of test was that?"
"I
find it useful to know something about the strength of a prospective surveyor's
attachments," she said idly. "As well as the direction of their
sexual proclivities."
"Do
I get to know how I did?"
A
faint smile appeared on her lips. "No." She touched an icon on
"her slate and the display changed. "You have an odd background,
Thackery. Six years in the GS track, and two at Georgetown—they don't let too many
get away. Then three at Tsiolkovsky."
"I've
worked hard to develop my tech skills."
"Don't
apologize. I like people with odd backgrounds. The candidates I've seen so far
could have come out of a cookie cutter. Study linguistics?"
"Eight
years. That's a core subject."
"Anything
practical in it?"
"I
can tell what era you grew up in by the way you refuse to use token honorifics,
or to let me call you Commander when I'm not under your command. Most people
probably just think you're rude."
She
laughed. "You like that kind of reading between the lines, Mister Thackery?"
"Yes."
"And you've some skill in
sociodynamics, according to this Gordon Stowell." "He would
know." Neale laid the slate aside. "Thackery, you probably recog
nize that Survey is
making this up as it goes along. We're improvising the rules those that come
after will treat as revealed truth. But right now, a Commander enjoys a lot of
autonomy in structuring her crew. A ship's a small place when you've been out
for three, five, ten years. It gets smaller with every
craze. I need to feel
good about the people I take aboard."
"I
understand."
"I
doubt you'd have even made first call for Tamm. You're just not very
experienced. On face qualifications only, there's no way to justify making you even a
sysawk." "I realize that," Thackery said, his face showing
disappointment. "I appreciate your—"
"I'm
not finished. All that notwithstanding, you seem like a right type. How would
you feel about becoming a member of
Descartes's
contact team?"
Thackery
gaped.
"Every
surveyor needs at least two specialities. I see you serving as linguist on hits
and resource geologist on misses," she went on. "I'm guessing that
with your background, eventually you might have something to contribute to the
overall direction of contact strategy as well. Does that mesh with what you saw
yourself doing?"
"Nothing
could please me more," Thackery said quietly.
She
smiled faintly. "That's what your attachment test suggested. All right.
I'll initiate the transfer proceedings right away. Go straight from here to the
Survey Medical offices for your pre-assignment screening. It's pretty damn
thorough, so don't make any other plans for today."
"Could
what they find keep me here?"
"Yes,"
she said bluntly. "Your general flight physical didn't take into account
your genetic endowment. We have to." She paused and marshaled her
thoughts. "If you clear, I'll okay a pass downwell and a five-day leave so
that you can get your affairs straightened out. Report back on the eighth for
orientation. If Tamm can get his people settled, we'll be outbound within sixty
days. That's all. You can go." She waited until he had stood and taken a
step toward the door, then added, "Oh, one more thing. This Andra—chances
are she'll be dead before we come out of our first craze. That all right with
you?"
Thackery
started, then drew a deep breath. 'To be honest, we could hardly be more
separated than we are now."
"Dead
is a very special kind of separated. So is taking a berth on a Survey ship.
You're going to get hit with both, and it'll be worse if you leave with the
relationship still screwed up. While you're downwell, get it taken care of.
Whatever kind of problem you're having, resolve it."
"I've
done about everything I can to make peace," Thackery
said, gesturing
helplessly. "We have a kind of a precarious understanding. One of the
rules is we don't see each other very often. One of the other rules is that
when we do, we don't talk about what I'm doing."
"You're
going to have to talk about it. Don't just drift away. Kiss her good-bye or
tell her to go to hell. But one way or another, leave it here. Don't bring it
along. Clear?"
"Yes—Commander?"
he said tentatively.
"Ah,
you're learning. Tell them to send the next one in."
By
mutual consent, they had not seen each other in four years. The last time had
been during the long leave between his reassignment from the transfer freighter Ripon Falls to the Babbage. They had gone to a
sculling race on the upper Schulkyll, then had dinner downtown. Since then, Babbage and inertia had
kept them apart, save for their infrequent, often impersonal letters.
So
he had not been there when she received the Council's Commendation of Merit for
Journalism, or when she was retired by the Net the next year at age fifty-eight.
He was not there when her hip was broken in a street accident, or when she gave
up her colonial row home in New Market for a place in a 28story glass-faced
microcommunity overlooking Fairmont Park.
He
sat outside that structure's entrance in his rented car and thought for a long
time before he made any move to go inside. Neither the building nor the
neighborhood carried any feelings of home. Pity. He would have welcomed a rush
of sentiment to thaw the ice inside him.
She
let him in wordlessly. The apartment might have been a hostel for all the
individuality it displayed.
"Hello,
Andra," he said. "How've you been?"
She
eyed his jumpsuit coldly, then closed the door behind him. It was the first
time he had worn Service garb in her presence, a deliberate breach of the
rules. "Do you want a real answer or a polite one?"
"We could at least
start out polite." "Then I'm fine." She settled in a chair in
the far corner and rested folded hands on crossed legs. "So what brings
you down?"
Thackery
sat on one end of the overstuffed russet-colored couch before answering.
"I've come here to have a conversation we've both been avoiding for a long
time."
"Is
wearing that uniform here part of your strategy for making peace?"
"It's
not a uniform—"
"Excuse
me, 'standard issue shipboard garb, male'—"
"This
is part of what I am."
"In
case you'd forgotten, I'm not on good terms with that part of you."
"That's not where our problem comes from," he said, shaking his head.
"No?
You and I both worked hard to give you an opportunity to be someone special,
and you threw it over without as much as a word of warning. You didn't ask my
advice, my opinion, or my permission. I suppose you'd like me to forget
that."
"It
wasn't your place to give permission."
"Don't
you think you made that clear? Doing what you did told me exactly what you
thought of me and of our relationship."
"What
I did had nothing to do with you."
"Exactly.
It should have."
"I
made the decision I had to to keep peace with myself. I'm doing what I want to
do."
She
stood and crossed the room to where a drug dispenser sat on the oak dry sink.
"I see," she said, fumbling for an ampule. "You prefer hauling
rocks to serving on the World Council of Commissioners."
"You're
the only one who ever thought that was a real possibility. I never did."
Her
head whipped around and she glowered at him with eyes that were fast becoming
red and puffy. "You should have. Merritt, I knew those people. I saw them
every day, with their public face on and in the back rooms. I knew what it
takes, and I made sure that you had it. You were better than most of them,
Merritt, and you should be on your way to sitting where they're sitting. With
your gifts—." Frustration silenced her.
Thackery
looked away. How wrenchingly difficult to be that close to the decision-makers
and have no say in the decisions, he realized for the first time. The
translator at the summit meeting—the stenographer at a great trial. If you have
any ego at all, you would have to want to contribute your thoughts, but you're
locked out because of your station.
"I'm
sorry, Andra," he said finally. "I'm sorry that it wasn't possible to
make us both happy. We've never talked about it, and we should have, a long
time ago. But there's something more important for us to deal with."
Her
face showed puzzlement. "What?"
"I
want to know who my father was."
She
turned her back on him, hiding her expression. "I never hid that from you.
You've known since you were ten. You were an alternate conception child—I was
inseminated at the Human Fertility Institute on Broad Street. Beyond that all I
know is that the genes were male, healthy, and compatible."
Thackery
rested his chin on his folded hands and shook his head almost imperceptibly.
"No, you weren't," he said softly. "You had your prenatal
testing done there. But you were already pregnant."
Her
back stiffened. "Their records aren't open to you."
"No,
they aren't," he agreed. "But they're open to the Service, when the
Service is researching a candidate. I'm not an AC. Since I'm male I can't be a
partho. And we're too close a match for me to be adopted. I'm part you and part
someone else. I have a right to know."
Hugging
herself as if chilled, she turned back to him. "The Service can have your
genes analyzed. They can leam everything they need to from a skin
scraping."
"Which
is what they did. But there are some things I need to know that a scraping
can't answer."
"No,"
she said, her eyes wet but her head high and chin firm. "You have no right
to that part of my life. Why should it matter? And why should it matter
now?"
"It
matters now because I know now—because I could have had a father, not just a
geneparent. You kept that from me. You kept
him
from me."
"He
never belonged to you," she said, turning her head away.
"Did
he belong to you?"
She
retreated to her chair before answering. "The genes you cany are all he
gave either of us," she said softly. "All he could give us."
"Then
this isn't how you wanted it?"
She
chased the wistful expression from her face and met his gaze squarely.
"Don't try to be a mind-reader. You're no good at it," she snapped.
"I'll say this much and that'll be the end of it. If what I told you
before wasn't literally true, it wasn't a lie, either. There're times that
there's no difference between a penis and a syringe."
Inside,
Thackery cringed at the crude image. "That may be so, but you wouldn't
know. Andra, you can't make me back off just by being disagreeable. I kept
growing when I went away."
"I
never realized that being 'grown up' meant feeling free to call your mother a
liar."
"Only
when she is."
After
scorching him with a furious look, she bounced out of the chair and headed for
the hallway to her bedroom. Thackery moved quickly and blocked her path.
"We're
running out of time, Andra," he said gently.
Her
angry look gave way to her thoughtful one, and she turned and walked slowly
back to her chair. "I see I've missed something here. You said the Service
was researching a candidate. Surely they didn't wait all these years to get
around to that. But you've only just found out. What aren't you telling
me?"
"I'd rather tackle
one subject at a time—" "You tell me now or this conversation is
finished. Why are they looking into your records now?" It was Thackery's
turn to wear a desperate look. "I don't want to get the two
entangled." "They already are," she said coldly. "Why are
they prying into my privacy?"
Thackery
looked away. "I'm transferring to Survey. I'm part of the new crew for Descartes, which is waiting
for us at Cygnus Base." He raised his head to look at her. "It's what
I wanted all along, and I won't apologize for it. But I didn't want to use it
as a club to get you to answer my questions."
"Don't
worry. It wouldn't have worked," she said curtly. "So—you're leaving
us. Well, I can't say as I'll see the difference. I'd throw a going-away party,
but I can't think of anyone else who'll miss you, either."
'Ten
years ago that might have hurt," he said quietly. "But I know you
better now." She waved her hands in an abrupt gesture of dismissal.
"You
don't know me at
all."
"I've
had occasion to wish that were true."
"And
now it will be. Well, go, then, and stop pretending what I think or how I feel
matters. I'll be fine without you. Is that what you want to hear? Go! You're
absolved."
The
urge to lash back was almost irresistible. Angry answers filled his head: You made the choice to be alone, and you will
be. Stay here in your room and wallow in your bitterness. Your life is over.
I'm going to see places and things no one has ever seen before. Maybe my father
would have known how to be proud of me and happy for me. You've forgotten how
to love anything you can't control.
But
he squashed those thoughts, saying only in a calm, quiet voice, "My
mistake, Andra. When I made my choice, I put myself first. I understand now
that I learned how to do that from you." Then he fled the apartment
without looking back.
Not
until he was safely in the lift did he realize why he had settled for a parting
snipe instead of a full counterattack. It was not the fear of hurting her that
had checked him, but rather the fear of discovering she could not be hurt.
THE
BLACK ELLIPSE
(from Merritt Thackery's JIADUR'S WAKE)
.
. . In the beginning, it was the rarest gem in the Universe.
It
was the rarest because it was a synthetic creation, the product of man's
laboratory rather than nature's. It was the rarest because only the Service
knew how to make one, and because only the chosen few who held billets aboard
the survey ships were permitted to wear one.
The
black ellipse was, in fact, the only insignia worn aboard those ships, for a
variety of reasons. A survey ship was too small and the missions too long for
in-flight promotions, so it behooved the Service to de-emphasize rank. The
black ellipse served as a reminder that its wearers were part of a team of
equals, not a military hierarchy. The absence of glittery status symbols was
thought to remove unnecessary formality and encourage the crew to relate on
personal as well as professional levels.
Or
so said the director of the Survey Branch.
But
despite that ennobling symbolism, life on a Survey ship was usually dominated
by an authoritarian command structure and awkward personal chemistry. And what
the black ellipse really stood for depended a great deal on whom you asked...
chapter 3
Outcrossing
On his return to Unity,
Thackery, the other five surveyors, and Contact Leader Rajesh Jaiswal were
plunged into a ten-day basic orientation to the Class II survey ship. No more
than that was needed, since it was only in the direst emergency that surveyors
would pull operations duty. Thackery was not sure how much help they would be
even then. Few surveyors had even minimum quals in any of the operations
technicals: AVLO drive, gravigation, communications, ship's ecology, and
library and electronic systems.
The
team then moved from Unity to
Tycho
for a six-week hands-on familiarization with the extensive array of surveyor's
equipment. During this time Jaiswal, an Asian biologist, proved himself likable
despite his high expectations and swift, sharp-tongued rebukes. Thackery also
got on well with Gregg Eagan, a slender African a year or two Thackery's
junior. They spent a good deal of time together, since Eagan was Thackery's
"inverse"—the prime resource geologist, and the backup linguist.
Thackery
saw less of the other four surveyors, but still enough to have largely good
feelings about them. Two were Europeans: Derrel Guerrieri, the astrophysicist,
and Jael Collins, the interpolator. Michael Tyszka, the technoanalyst and gig
pilot, hailed from the West Coast of North America. Donna Muir, the
exobiologist, called South America home.
The
one glaring weakness in the Contact Team was the absolute lack of experience.
Not one of them was a Phase I vet. Collins and Jaiswal were even Service
outsiders, with no prior Orbital or System experience.
That
weakness became painfully apparent during the mock field exercise in Queen Maud
Land, Antarctica. From the moment
Tycho
moved into the appropriate polar orbit, the exercise was marked by indecision
and error. Thanks to the snow and ice, Eagan misread the spectroscopic data and
underestimated the resource base. Muir missed the rock lichens which were the
test zone's primary life form. Tyszka found but initially misinterpreted the
artifacts placed there by the Service. Jaiswal allowed the team to return
without seeing to proper decontamination precautions.
Though
they were surely not all his fault, the misadventures cost Jaiswal his
position. When Tycho
returned them to Unity, Thackery and the other surveyors moved into the
station's D wing to begin preflight gnotobiotic conditioning. Jaiswal did not.
The stiff-necked answer to their queries was that he had been reassigned.
Whether it was voluntary or involuntary was not open for discussion.
No
immediate replacement was forthcoming. There was talk that the Service was
desperately courting the vets in search of an experienced Contactor for the Descartes. In the meantime,
the team members concerned themselves with reclaiming their personal
possessions from the decon crew and determining if the objects had survived the
irradiation and other processing.
Bayn
Graeff, the dark-complected, husky-voiced
Dove
vet who had signed on as
Descartes'
bridge captain, then took charge of the team. She shepherded them through
meetings with the investors who would handle their compensation accounts, the
fitness experts who laid out their diet and exercise programs, the
psychologists who retested them for craze fear, and the gnotobiologists who rearranged—for
the worse—their inner environment.
As
far as Thackery was concerned, gnotobiology was a synonym for misery. The
necessity was inarguable: Since the colonists were full human stock, any
successful contact brought with it the risk of crossinfection. It was not
merely a matter of seeing that they were free of active or latent pathogens.
Even the 1200-odd grams of ubiquitous human microflora—primarily intestinal
bacteria, but including significant colonies on the skin, and in the mouth,
lungs, eyes, vagina, and nose—had to be eliminated. The ship and the crew had
to be made, insofar as was possible, germ-free.
That
meant not only numerous injections of broad-spectrum antibiotics, but a
complete blood replacement for anyone carrying active viral particles, be they
from past infections or from past immunizations. At the same time, the doctors
flushed each crewmember's intestinal tract with a diet of antibiotic-laced
food, then provided each with microflora capsules to reestablish the benign,
symbiotic anaerobes. The resulting five days of diarrhea left a permanent stain
on Thackery's romantic conception of being an interstellar traveler.
What
made matters worse was that all the misery only eliminated half the risk: the
chance of the Contactors infecting the colonists. The chance of the colonists
infecting the Contactors was still very real, and though there were steps that
could be taken should the occasion arise, Thackery knew the Contactors would
rehiain vulnerable. But that was a risk the Service found acceptable, and as he
prepared to leave Unity for
Tycho,
Thackery knew he would have to find a way to view it in the same light.
His
arms full, Thackery pressed the door release with his elbow and shouldered his
way into his cabin. At a glance, he saw that the compartment was more roomy
than the one he had occupied on
Babbage.
Though cramped and lacking some amenities—most notably privacy—it would
certainly do for a month. Coming downship from the aft portal, Thackery had
caught a glimpse of one of the relatively luxurious cabins in the Survey
section, and expected that the same awaited them in Descartes.
Three
metres away and seemingly oblivious to Thackery's presence, a red-haired awk
stood facing the far wall, beyond which lay the consumables storage section of Tycho's gig bay. The
man's fingers were tracing the almost invisible zipweld between two plates of
structural composite.
"Hey,"
Thackery called, tossing his haversack on the nearest bunk. The awk looked back
over his shoulder. "Hi. Do you know
anything about materials
science?"
Good to meet you, too, roomie.
"No."
"Oh."
He tucked his hands in the belly pockets of his jacket and turned to face
Thackery. "I was just wondering how strong this is."
"Couldn't
tell you." Thackery settled on the bed and opened the neck of his bag.
"I've seen you during training but I don't know your name."
"McShane.
Daniel McShane. You're Thackery. I asked." He smiled a nervous smile.
"I guess you've never been out, either."
"I've
been to the Belt."
"I
meant gone through a craze."
"No.
That I haven't done." He laughed. "You can't get near those vees in a
tug."
"I
guess not." McShane rubbed his neck. "There's storage under the bed
for your gear, and that's about all. No drop-downs or hideaways back
here."
'Tourist
class."
'Temporary."
He laughed nervously again. "That's something, isn't it, going into
deep-space in a temporary structure?"
"We're
still inside Tycho."
"In
the bowels of the beast. Sure. Sure. Look, if you haven't been out, maybe you
should know. Anybody who comes down with craze fear will be put off at
Cygnus."
"I
hadn't heard that."
"Oh,
yeah. They'll be watching us real closely on this leg."
"Good
to know. Are you worried about it?"
"No,
no. Except that it means we're not in yet. There's one more hurdle to get
over."
By
the time TychoBrahe
was ready to leave, Alizana Neale's list of grievances against the Service in
general and Lin Tamm in particular had grown too long for recitation.
It
was bad enough that Tamm, junior to her on
Dove
in rank if not in experience, had been gifted with the brand-new Tycho, while she had been
assigned to Descartes.
Though operationally identical to
Tycho, Descartes' oversized and inelegant cargo blister marked
it for the one-time freighter and transport it had been.
Like
all its sister ships in the Pioneers series,
Descartes' first
job had been to ferry the components of an Advance Base to a spot decreed by
Service planners: In this case, twenty-five light-years in the general
direction of the distant supergiant Deneb. With the construction crew
transformed into the A-Cyg staff,
Descartes
waited there like a white elephant for a survey crew to take her further.
Neale's crew.
But
the Tycho
had been designed for just one purpose. It was a better Dove, not an unwieldy hybrid.
Its L-series drive made it 5 percent faster than the Descartes; in Neale's eyes,
its newness made it 100 percent more desirable. It should have been mine,
she thought almost daily. But
they gave me the hand-me-down.
When
she expressed that complaint privately to a sympathetic rating in the Flight
Office, she learned of a second affront to add to her list. Her appointment had
come by the narrowest of margins, 3-2; her opponents would have given the
position to Keene Rogen, her exec.
"They're
both recidivist sexists," her source confided. "Everybody knows they
didn't want to give it to a woman, but they we're careful to build up Rogen
instead of tearing you down. Otherwise they'd have been reprimanded for sure.
So they gave you Descartes
as a compromise."
The
idea that "everyone knew" but no one did anything kept Neale
simmering for several days. No better received was hearing the way Tamm
described her and her crew during his appearance on an interview show broadcast
net-wide.
"I
understand Tycho's
first task, though, will be to serve as kind of a space taxi," the
interviewer had ventured.
"That's
right," Tamm had responded. "We'll have thirty passengers to ferry
out to Advance Base Cygnus, at the fringe of explored space. We'll drop them off,
then continue on to begin our prime function of surveying planetary
systems."
We'll be right on your heels in
Descartes, damnit,
she thought furiously. Don't
make it sound like you're going to scout the whole freezin' octant by yourself.
"But
isn't the prime function finding more First Colonization civilizations?"
the interviewer demanded.
"Not
really. There are so many systems, and we have so little basis for saying this
one or that one might have a colony, that we really have to think of surveying
as the number one task," Tamm began his answer, and the subject of the
second crew never came up again.
Even
while the show's closing credits were still appearing, Neale was on the phone
to Alvarez, the supervisor of ship construction.
"I
want a mock bridge for my crew," she demanded. "Something we can use
for training simulations en route, and slaved to Tycho's bridge for
current status displays. We'll give up the exercise space."
Alvarez
had started to shake his head almost immediately. "That's not enough room
for one, and there's not enough time now if it was."
"I
don't want to hear why it can't be done."
"Not
hearing them won't change the facts, Commander Neale," Alvarez said,
bristling. "You'll have full shipnet access down there, but there's just
not enough time to rig something as complex as a training mockup."
"Then
I want access to the real bridge."
"There
I can't help you. That'll be up to Commander Tamm."
It
wasn't until the next day that she tracked down Tamm,
only
to find she needn't have bothered.
"Look,
Ali, I can't see the sense to disrupting my crew's routine as well as
yours," Tamm told her. "After all, it's not crucial that you be ready
to jump in Descartes
and roar off the instant we reach A-Cyg. You can stay there a week, two weeks,
a month for orientation if you want to. There's really no rush."
You're enjoying this,
she thought, studying his face.
You like having the upper hand. The discovery puzzled
her, since she could think of no residual friction traceable to their time on Dove.
"The
fact that there are no deadlines doesn't justify wasted time," she
retorted.
"Oh,
of course not. But I'm sure you can find some way to see that your people's
first craze isn't wasted," he said superciliously. "It's only
fifty-three days to Cygnus."
When
at last Tycho was
ready to leave, Neale and Rogen were the only members of the Descartes' crew invited
forward to view the departure from the
Tycho
bridge. Neale suspected that, were it not for the fact that bridge video was
being made available to Worldnet by the Service, even that small courtesy would
have gone by the board. Any sense of commonality among Dove alumni had apparently
faded quickly.
Tycho was given an escort
comprised of five ships, including a World Council yacht bearing John Langston.
Langston was the best known of the several retired Councilors still living,
having held a seat in that body for an unprecedented and generally
distinguished nineteen years. From him came the traditional "Cleared for
departure" signal.
Angling
up out of the ecliptic and leaving the escort behind, Tycho also received a
spectacular salute by means of a kilometrewide ring of starshell mines. When
detonated, the charges formed a perfectly symmetrical yellow halo through which
the departing ship passed. It was the first time Neale had seen fireworks in
space, and though the Tycho's
own monitors failed to capture the effect, the view relayed from Unity reminded
her of the opening of a space-warp from early video fiction. She wondered if
the parallel were intentional.
"Are
we combining our outcrossing ceremony with
Tycho'sT'
Rogen asked.
"We're
not welcome to," Neale answered curtly. "Don't you know? The Net
wants their ceremony to cap the coverage of Tycho's
departure." She sighed. "That's all right. I wouldn't want it that
formal anyway, with the Council anthem and the Service fanfare and all the
rest."
Rogen
took a moment to digest that news. "We'll be leaving the heliosphere
pretty quick. We should probably go get ready for our own, then," he
suggested as the comtech poked a view of fast-diminishing Earth onto the bridge
window. Unity was already invisibly small.
"In
a minute," Neale said wistfully and gestured toward the screen. "I
kept trying to find a way to prepare the new crew for that sight, and never
did. As little good as came out of coming back, I still think it's harder to
face the second time than it was the first. Because this time we know we'll
never see it again."
When
Neale finally left Tycho's bridge
she went directly to her cabin, delegating the outcrossing preparations to
Rogen. Half an hour later, shortly after the announcement came over the shipnet
that Tycho
had passed beyond the heliosphere, Rogen came by for her. He carried a
book-sized leatherette case under one arm.
"The
lesser colors are assembling in the library for the pinning. So whenever you're
ready—," Rogen said deferentially.
Neale
lay aside the slate on which she had been reading a translation of Ptolemy's Almagest. "Let me
see."
Holding
the case in front of him, Rogen tipped it and opened the lid so that Neale
could see its contents: twenty-five Service deep-space theater insignia,
twenty-five gleaming black elliptical jewels.
"Never
saw so many of them in one place before," she said, taking the case.
"Damnit, I hate this. Giving them out like candy to kids. They've done
nothing to earn them, but you put one on them and they'll think they're as good
as you or Sebright or Waite or any of the vets. It cheapens the insignia."
"It's
just not going to be such an exclusive club anymore," Rogen commiserated.
"You
know, I'll bet I could still tell you the original complement of all three
Pathfinders," she went on. "We knew everyone who wore the black
ellipse. Now I need to use the library just to remember the commanders of all
the ships. I've never even met most of them."
"There're
a lot of new faces everywhere," Rogen agreed. "They tell me Homal had
twenty-seven lessers when he took out
Galileo."
Neale
shook her head in disgust. "Come on. Let's get it over with."
There
was much happy talk and some braggadocio among the twenty-five crew waiting in
the crowded library. Thackery did not take part in either, content to listen
and defend the corner of the workstation he had staked out as a seat. He had
too many conflicting feelings to freely enjoy the anticipation of his pinning.
For
one thing, he had heard that the outcrossing was to be televised. But it was
obvious now that that was not true— which meant that he was already gone as far
as Andra and any Georgetown alumni who might remember him were concerned. Not
that Andra would have been likely to watch, but, still, the ceremony's
importance had been diminished.
At
the same time, he remained proud of what he had accomplished. He had set a goal
for himself, what seemed an outrageous goal at the time, and—more easily than
he had thought possible—he had achieved it. True, that pleasure in his
accomplishment remained internal, somewhat tainted for lack of anyone who could
revel in the feeling and reflect it back to him. His crewmates were unsuited to
that role, having matched his success on the strength of, in most cases, even
more experience and expertise.
It's like going from the top rung of one
ladder to the bottom rung of the next. The people you left behind are impressed
only to the extent that they want to be where you are—and the people that
you've joined aren't impressed at all.
He
came to his feet with the others when Neale and Rogen appeared. All talking
ceased, and all turned to face the officers. That was all Neale and Rogen
expected; the Service's heritage lay with the merit-oriented Pangaean
Consortium, not the militaristic International Police.
"Since
the days of Charan Rashuri, commander of
Pride of Earth, it has been the ship commander's obligation to
recognize a moment of transition for those among his crew new to the Survey
branch," Neale began.
"I
have no doubt that some among you have invested the outcrossing with far more
meaning than it deserves. It is an occasion for the exchange of theater
insignia. You give up the blue Oitoital or yellow System ellipse you now wear.
You receive the black Intersystem ellipse. But the difference in color is
meaningless in itself."
Then why do you vets call us lessers?
Thackery wondered, fingering his own System insignia absently.
"Contrary
to what many of you believe, this is not a promotion. The Service does not
honor you by doing this. All we do here today is to mark the beginning of an
opportunity for honor—honor you will have to bring to yourself in the months
and years ahead. You wear the black ellipse, but you have not yet earned
it."
A
tech to Thackery's right nudged him and whispered, "Trying to scare us
with the tough bitch routine, huh?" Thackery ignored the comment.
"In
the last two months, I have even heard some of you use the term 'cadet'. You
mislead yourself if you think of your role here in those terms. There are no
'cadets' in the Survey Branch, and even if there were, there would be none in
the crew of Descartes. A
cadet is expected to make mistakes and learn from them. You are expected not to
make mistakes. Remember that, always."
She
handed the case to Rogen, opened it, and took out the first insignia.
"Technician
Jessica Baldwin," she called out.
When
Thackery's turn came, he came forward suffused with pride despite Neale's
deflating remarks. She made the exchange smoothly and wordlessly, deftly
removing the yellow, handing it to Rogen in exchange for a black, and pinning
the new jewelry in place. Then the moment was over. But as he turned away he was
conscious of the new weight on his collar all the same.
I didn't see it happening this way, he
thought as he walked back. Not
full of down-talk, not as part of a human assembly-line, not in a crowded
temporary compartment in the hold of someone else's ship. But damnit, I'm here.
We're on our way. And this is what / wanted, no matter how it comes packaged.
As
Neale was pinning the next-to-last tech a shipnet comtech broke in to announce:
"First warning. Craze in thirty minutes."
Neale
waved the last auxiliary forward and called out instructions as she pinned him.
"First command watch, forward to the
Tycho
bridge. Second watch, monitor from here. In both cases, I want the navtechs and
comtechs to prepare an annotated log and critique of Tycho's watch procedures.
Everyone else out of here, they need room to breathe. Questions?"
There
were none, and the gathering broke up quickly as the officers left and the
various crew scattered to their posts. Thackery fought his way through the
congested corridor and caught up to Neale and Rogen at the former's cabin door.
"Commander, a
request?" Neale looked back over her shoulder, then turned to face him.
"Thackery," she acknowledged. "Permission to observe the craze
from the bridge. Commander?" "I've sent them as many observers as
they will accept. I'm the commander of
Descartes,
not of Tycho."
"Then
permission to observe from the library."
She
shook her head. "There'll be time enough for that later."
"What's
your interest, Thackery?" Rogen inteijected.
Thackery
glanced sideways at the bridge captain and hesitated before answering. "I
understand that any phobes will be rousted out at Cygnus."
"That's
correct. They'll be transferred to the permanent staff there."
"Well—I'd
like to find out right away."
A
bemused smile slowly spread across Rogen's face, and he walked away chuckling
to himself.
"The
craze phobia is psychological, not perceptual," Neale said coldly in
answer to Thackery's baffled look. "If that were not the case, we would be
able to screen for it more effectively."
Flushing
rapidly, he said, "I always heard it compared with claustrophobia—"
"An
analogy only. Its effect becomes evident only over a period of time. So we
won't know right away whether you are fit to continue on this ship," she
said pointedly. "You have as much to prove here as anyone, Thackery, if
not more—and not just in your flight adaptation. So I would suggest you spend
less time letting the vets mislead you and more time working to improve your
skills."
She
turned her back and entered the cabin, leaving him alone in the corridor. The
moment Neale's door closed, Thackery smacked his thigh sharply with a fist. Idiot! How could you—
"Second
warning. Fifteen minutes to craze," the shipnet intoned. "Prepare to
terminate local telemetry handshaking. Receiving final inmail. Last call for
personal outmail."
Unable
to readily shed the foolish feeling or forget the sound of Rogen's laughter,
Thackery made his way back to his quarters. Mercifully, McShane was with the
second watch in the library. Mercifully for him, considering his contribution
to Thackery's blunder.
Thackery
flung himself lengthwise on his bunk and blew a weighty sigh between his lips. Well, let's add up the day. You had to come
aboard without being able to reach Andra, found out your new commander thinks
most of her crew isn't worth a straw, and then you proceeded to prove her
right. A great start, Thack. A great start.
Unpinning
the Intersystem insignia from his collar, Thackery held it up at eye-level and
stared into it, the first time he had had a chance to examine one closely. True
to its reputation, the black crystal's invisible internal facets created a
marvelous illusion of a dimensionless void. Though barely three centimetres
across the long axis, it was almost possible to believe that it contained a
universe as infinite as the one in which it existed.
My compliments to the crystallurgists.
Thackery
recalled having heard on Unity that a vet from the Hugin was arrested for
trying to sell his black ellipse to a Filipino businessman. Though nothing had
appeared in any official media to confirm any part of the story, the asking
price was said to be 675,000.
How many are there, six hundred scattered
through 65,000 cubic light-years?—And I have one of them. How could he sell it?
Why would he even consider it?
Meaningless
in itself, Neale had said.
You're wrong, Commander, Thackery thought as he returned the insignia
to his collar. It means enough to make
up for what we gave up to get it, what we put up with because we wear it, what
it will cost us to keep it. And on days like today, it means everything. ~~
"Thack
?"
He
reached across and tabbed the shipnet. "Here."
It
was Baldwin. "Just passing the word. You got mail."
"What?"
"In
the last dispatch before we crazed. It was a big batch. We were receiving
almost right up to the last minute."
"Oh.
When can I access it?"
"It's
already queued up under your file number."
"Oh.
Thanks."
Thackery
retrieved his slate from one of the drawers beneath his bunk and switched it
on, wondering what he had left unfinished or who he had failed to settle with.
To his surprise, there was not one but three messages in the queue.
Touching
an icon, he brought the first of them to the slate's display. He recognized the
header immediately: It was the formal letterhead of the Government Service
Academy at Georgetown.
The
face of Director Stowell appeared . He smiled briefly. "Good morning,
Merritt. Or at least it's morning where I am. I don't suppose that term applies
where you're heading.
"One
of the things I've learned in twenty-two years as an educator is that the
talented students will find their own way, no matter how bone-headedly
determined the institution is to hinder them.
"I
believe I told you once that I couldn't see you as a follower. I didn't realize
then that you had it in your head to be a pioneer. I never had the desire to be
where you are today, but the task you have chosen is an important one, and I
wish only that your part in it brings you great satisfaction." He smiled again,
in fatherly fashion, and the picture was replaced by a fax of Thackery's
student record. In the space where it had once said ON HIATUS, the legend now
read WITHDRAWN WITHOUT PREJUDICE.
The
second message was text only, and Thackery found it puzzling at first. There
was no header, only a twenty-four-yearold clip from POLINET.
FOR
RELEASE: 3:00 p.m. GMT May 12,
A.R.
172 )CAPITOL ISLAND—World Council insiders are pointing to Associate Director
John Merritt Langston as the most likely candidate for the seat of 75-year-old
retiring Councilor Den-Buodi Kuoinmoni. )A 52-year-old native of Newfoundland,
Langston would be the youngest ever selected to the 17-man executive body, and
the first North American so honored since the turn of the century...
The
rest of the article comprised an unusually positive biography of Langston, in
which he came off as being bright without being snobbish, fast-rising without
being ambitious, and one who practiced traditional values without being a shill
for them. It was sharp, well written, and incisive. And it made not a whit of
sense until Thackery reached the end and the creditline:
A
NEWS ANALYSIS BY ANDRA THACKERY,
POLINET CORRESPONDENT.
Even
then, he only understood who had sent it, with just the barest hint of why. It took
Andra's trailing note to fill that gap-
Merritt—son—
Within
an hour of your leaving that day, I came to admit (I always realized) you did
indeed deserve to know. Since then I also realized other difficult truths: Most
importandy, that when I could not have him, I tried to make you into him, and
that I think is a far greater offense.
Even
so, I can only make myself tell you now because you are beyond reach, and you
cannot disturb him, or me, with your hunger for an alternate past. Don't wonder
at his silence, for he never knew—another choice I made for all of us.
It is impossible
to control and too late to change what
you
feel toward me. But please believe that I am as proud
of
you as I can be. I have asked a friend to drive with
me
into the country and help me find Cygnus, so that I
can
look into the night sky and think of you often.
Andra
Numbly,
Thackery asked the netlink for a picture of John Langston. He looked a long
time into the eyes of the gaunt face which appeared on the display, then asked
for a younger picture. The eyes became stronger, the chin firmer, the folds and
wrinkles fewer. He asked for a younger picture yet, and a chill went through
him when it appeared. It was as though he were looking into an unfaithful
mirror, or at the face of a brother, or—
There
was one message remaining in the queue, and for one brief moment of
wish-fulfilling weakness Thackery allowed himself to hope it might be from
Langston—from his father. Even now, as little as it would be, it would mean so
much—
But
there were to be no tidy endings. The final message was a routine
congratulatory from the current dean of Tsiolkovsky Institute, a man whose name
meant nothing to Thackery and whose words were formal and meaningless.
Thackery
retreated to his bed as a wounded animal goes to his lair. There was almost
deliberate cruelty in the way Andra had told him, for it was already too late
for him to use the knowledge. There was no way to reach out to Langston, no way
to heal the trauma. Descartes
had crazed, and the wall had gone up. When it came down again, Langston would
be dead.
And
so would Andra.
He
saw with renewed clarity how selfish she was, even at the last. She had given
him what he had demanded, but only after waiting long enough to render it
valueless. For all her apologies, her message did more to free her conscience
than it did to restore what had been stolen from him.
Damn you, Andra! Better you hadn't told me at
all than to tell me now, in this way. You've made leaving harder, not easier.
And instead of redeeming yourself, you've given me another reason to hate you—
Except
that she was dead, and he was beginning a new life.
In his mind's eye, he
would still her voice and freeze her form, and he would bury her. With a will,
perhaps he could forget her.
That
way, he would not have to find a way to forgive her. Because he did not see how
that would be possible.
THE VETERANS
(fromMerritt Thackery's
JIADUR'S WAKE)
. . . For some reason,
the Flight Office was eager to see that there was Survey experience aboard
every outbound ship. Older surveyors saw it as a sign of creeping conservatism,
since the all-novice crews of the Pathfinder and Argo ships had managed to cope
with what they encountered.
Nevertheless,
the Flight Office worked hard to see that, at minimum, the commander, exec, and
contact leader on each new ship were veterans. That was a deceptively ambitious
goal. To place three vets on each new Pioneer-class ship and keep even that
number for each refitted Pathfinder-class ship, nearly half of each returning
crew had to be coaxed into going out again.
But
asking a vet to sign a second contract, even a limited-term, three-year mission
contract, meant asking them to give up the country-club atmosphere of the
resynchronization center at Benamira, New Zealand. It meant asking them to pass
up figuring out how to spend the enormous fortune which resulted from sixteen
years' salary invested (even at the Council-imposed ceiling of 3 percent) for
more than a century.
There
were only two kinds of veterans to whom returning to space was the more
attractive alternative: those happy few who had found their identities there,
and those unhappy few who had lost their souls...
chapter 4
Hysteresis
Contact Leader Mark
Sebright sat on the edge of the lab workstation, crossed his arms over his
chest, and surveyed the expectant faces of his surveyors. The team was studying
him just as intently, for they had seen little of him since he came aboard.
The
last name added to the Descartes
roster, Sebright was the long-awaited and often despaired-of replacement for
Jaiswal (who, according to rumor, had left the Service entirely and gone back
to teaching at Hzui-Tyu). And he promised to be a more than adequate stand-in:
Sebright was not only a Pathfinder, but a veteran of Hugin, the ship which had
discovered the Muschynka colony in Eridanus.
Sebright's
assignment was finalized a bare five days before departure, the minimum
required to pass him through the gnotobiotic tortures, and two days after the
team had transferred to
Tycho. Thackery
had caught only a glimpse of Sebright since then, as the vet had spent most of
his time huddled with Neale, Rogen, and Dunn. What little Thackery had seen
encouraged him. The rangy, tangle-haired Sebright comported himself confidently
and casually. Where Neale seemed to be constantly on edge, Sebright had the
worldly-wise eyes and demeanor of someone for whom life holds no more
surprises.
"Morning,"
Sebright said, his inspection complete. "This won't take long." There
were several skeptical smiles, for that was a promise
Graeff
had made often and never kept.
"I've
been over your records," he continued. "You're a damn sight more
educated than we were. Half of you have quals in specialties that didn't exist
until we found out the Service needed them.
"Unfortunately
for you, the Com doesn't agree with me. She says we don't know enough. She
wants to solve it by sending everybody up for another qual test when we reach
A-Cyg. That'll be worth a few more Coullars in the pay account, so I suppose
there's some of you who won't kick too hard," he said with a shrug.
"But the way I see it, it's not that we don't know what to do—"
Eagan,
sitting at Thackery's elbow, whispered, "He should have seen us in Queen
Maud Land."
"—It's
that what we know how to do doesn't need doing yet," Sebright continued.
"I suspect she's a lot more worried about idle time on the leg out than
she is about your quals. If it were up to me, I'd say enjoy it while it lasts.
It'll probably be the last vacation you have until you die or transfer out.
"You
wouldn't know it from your simulations, but once we hit our first system, we'll
be working harder than anyone on board. And when we leave the first system,
we'll be running three shifts during the craze just to analyze the data we
collected. Unfortunately, we'll reach the second system before we're done with
the first—and the backlog will build from there."
He
paused and scratched his chin. "So I can't tell you what freezin' good
passing another technical will do you. But Neale expects it. I'll leave it up
to you to see that you're ready. Pick a new area or try to move up to the next
level in your current ratings, I don't care which. And you can sync yourself to
whatever shift you choose."
"Do
you want to approve our study plans?" asked Tyszka.
Sebright
shook his head. "I don't even want to know that you have one. Hell, you're
not students or trainees. You're professionals. That little trinket you're all
wearing proves it, right? So start living up to it these next few weeks."
He stood up and tucked his hands into the thigh pockets of his old-fashioned
jumpsuit. "That's all."
As
the meeting broke up, Muir planted her gamine body in front of Thackery.
"What do you
think?" demanded the exobiologist. "I think I like him, Donna,"
Thackery said, watching Se-bright out the door. "Did you hear? He intended
all along to bump someone from either
Tycho
or Descartes."
"So?"
"He
didn't tell them until the last minute because he wanted to avoid the
'nuisance' of preflight training." "Where'd you hear that?"
"From someone in the Flight Office." A cross look took
over her face. "They
should have let Raji stay on. It wasn't his fault we screwed up down
south."
"Sure
it was. He was Contact Leader," Thackery said, standing. "Look,
Sebright is the only one aboard, command crew included, who's actually been
involved in a successful Contact. We're going to leam a lot from him."
"I
don't think so," Muir said, shaking her head.
"You
come to conclusions too fast," Thackery retorted as he edged past her.
"You'll have to watch that. It's a bad habit for a surveyor."
The
rush of good feeling stayed with Thackery, and at mid-rats he pursued the topic
with Collins. "We've done really well, you know?"
"What
do you mean?" she asked.
'To
have five vets in our crew."
"I
thought there were four."
"The
Com, the exec, Graeff, Dunn, Sebright."
"Oh—I
forgot about Dunn. He's that quiet one, isn't he, who's always in a little
crowd of awks."
"He is senior tech. Anyway, we
are lucky, aren't we? There's only three on
Tycho."
"I
suppose," she said, nibbling the edge of a pastry. "I wonder
sometimes what they're doing here."
"The Dove reups are easy to
understand," Thackery said defensively. "They have something to
prove."
"Because
they didn't find a colony? Maybe there aren't any more." She sighed.
"No, I shouldn't say that, it'll jinx us. But they've seen—well, look at
it this way. When they step out on their patio at night and look up, there are
eighteen flickery points of light that to them are real places. They can point
and say, 'I've been there. That's a place that I know.*" She shook her
head. "That must be the most wonderful feeling in the world. I don't know
what else they could want."
Thackery
smiled. "Maybe the best feeling isn't remembering, but being there."
"Then why don't they all go back? Oh, I don't know. Did you hear about
Sebright?"
"Stalling
the Flight Office? Yeah, that's made the rounds."
"No,
this is something I heard from Jessie. I guess Sebright doesn't have full
Contact Leader quals." "Nor" "No, you know they're supposed
to be qualified in all six
survey specialties, like
the Com is on operations specialties. But he's only passed resource geology and
technoanalysis. Kind of makes you wonder how far down they had to dig to get
him."
Thackery
shook his head. "There're face quals and real quals. Raji had face quals,
and we saw how that worked out. Sebright's going to be good for us. Besides, I
figure the reason he doesn't want to be bothered with our study plans is because
he's going to be busy with his own."
"Maybe.
He just better not try to tell me how to do my job until he knows at least as
much as I do." She looked at her watch, then wiped her lips on her napkin.
"Speaking of which, I've got some work to do with Donna," she said,
pushing back from the table.
She
took two steps, then stopped and came back to where Thackery sat. "Look,
you're not one of those ones who's going to think that because we had a
conversation, I want to change cabins, are you?"
"No,"
Thackery said uncertainly.
"Fine.
Because Donna and I are perfectly happy rooming, all right? You can pass that
word around if the subject comes up."
"Sure."
Her
seat had barely begun to cool when Tyszka came up behind Thackery and slipped
into it.
"You
getting anywhere with her?" he asked earnestly, resting his folded hands
on the table before him.
"Not
trying to. I haven't even been thinking in those terms," Thackery answered
honesdy.
"You'd
better start," Tyszka said, clucking. "The numbers aren't good to start
with, and some of us are going to be left out." He stood and surveyed the
nearly empty wardroom, then clucked again. "Maybe Donna's up in the
library. I'll see you when the war's over, okay?"
Thackery
chuckled. "Right."
Thackery
spent the afternoon with Eagan upship in the survey laboratory, being glowered
at as interlopers by members of
Tycho's
contact team and trying to make the best use of the time on the linguacomp that
had been granted them.
"This
is your specialty, not mine," Eagan said dubiously as he regarded the
machine's 318-character keyboard. "Why doesn't it have voice input?"
"It
does,'-' Thackery said, unfolding the operator's seat from its storage space
against the wainscoat and settling in front of the terminal. "It can
monitor any shipnet channel, and do character scans off any medium. This
keyboard's not for input. It's for processing."
"I
thought all we had to do is tell it the text we want and let it go to
work."
Thackery
laughed mockingly. "Don't we wish. The L-comp is smart. It's not
clairvoyant. Say we feed it a sample of a language it's never seen before. What
can it do with it?"
Eagan
scratched his cheek. "I'll let that be rhetorical."
"If
the sample is too small, it can't do anything. A lesson from
cryptography—sufficiently small sequences are undecodable. But even if your
sample is unlimited, there's a limit to the L-comp's abilities. Here," he
said, pointing to the screen. "Here's the first cut on a Journan text
sample."
The
complex display was arranged in groups of three lines: The first showed
phonetic Journan, the second a standard English translation, and the third a
series of two-digit numbers.
'Try
reading the English lines and you'll see this is no universal translator. If it
was, they wouldn't be still trying to figure out how to talk to whales,"
Thackery observed.
"The
numbers under each word are the confidence probabilities?"
"Yes.
Now, I can highlight the object-words, the action-words"—he touched a key,
and the display now resembled a tree proof—"or forget the words entirely
and look at the proposed syntax."
"Most
of the percentages are between thirty and seventy," Eagan noted, then
wrinkled his nose. "But the L-comp knows Jouman."
"I
hid that part of the knowledge base from the inference processor so I could
show you what we might be facing. We're here to operate the L-comp, but we're
also here to make the decisions the L-comp can't."
"Or
there's no Contact."
"Or
there's no Contact," Thackery agreed. "What are you fluent in,
again?"
"English,
Russian, and Latin."
"That's
right. The science languages. All right, here's the program. We'll rehearse by
trying to Contact each other. I'll take a language you don't know, compose a
1000-word practice message in it, and then set up the sign-on so that language and
any first cousins are hidden from the processor when you're working. When
you've got it translated, compose a standard Contact message in that language.
I'll let you know how you did."
"And
I'll do the same for you."
"Right—all
the way into A-Cyg, as much as they'll let us use this thing. Now, watch. I'm
going to show you how to set a knowledge base restriction."
Later,
resting in his room, Thackery reflected on the task he had taken on. The
machine's limits were even more severe than he had acknowledged to Eagan. If
the language did not parallel a significant number of Earth dialects—for
instance, the Romance family—the confidence level for individual words rarely
went above 60 percent.
A
purely oral language posed its own daunting difficulties. How did you break the
flow of sound into words? Were variations in pronunciation mere dialects, or
meaning units in themselves? Even with a linguacomp to create the graphemes and
search for repetitions and correlations, there was much guesswork and gruntwork
involved.
Eagan
would leam of those problems, too, when he could face them without concluding
that the task was impossible.
For
there was no room to think of the task as impossible. Should Descartes prove a lucky
ship and carry its crew to a First Colonization world, it would be up to
Thackery and Eagan to lay the groundwork for the Contact. Unless they and the
linguacomp could come up with a satisfactory decoding of the natives' language,
there would be no Contact landing. The team would be limited to whatever could
be learned from orbit and from landings outside the inhabited areas—something
that had never happened before.
Three
months ago, he had accepted the responsibility without truly understanding its
dimensions. Now he silently vowed to himself to do everything necessary to see
that he was equal to the challenge. He wanted Sebright to have confidence in
him. He wanted Neale to have confidence in him.
But
before others could, he would have to have confidence in himself.
There
were two disadvantages to sharing a cabin with McShane. One was that his bunk
and desk seemed to autonomously generate clutter. The other was that he seemed
constitutionally incapable of falling asleep without holding a protracted
conversation first.
So
far the topics had ranged from the contents of the Tycho's entertainment banks
(McShane holding forth on the merits of both the inclusions and exclusions) to
the mysteries of the AVLO drive (McShane finding it very significant that no
one could make him understand how it worked). His favorite time to begin seemed
to be just as Thackery was about to fall asleep.
The
fifth night out, the question that came out of the dark was: "Did you ever
wonder why they named our ship after Descartes?"
Thackery
let a portion of his groan become audible, then a portion of his impatience
taint his tone as he answered. "No. He was a key figure in the scientific
revolution, and an outstanding mathematician."
"But
he was also the one who said that the world around you only existed because you
believed in it, and that if you stopped believing in it, it would
disappear."
TTiackery
laid his head back on the pillow and squeezed his eyes closed. "I'm not
sure that's a fair summation of his ideas about reality."
"That's
what one of my instructors said," McShane said defensively.
There
followed a long silence that encouraged Thackery to think he had successfully
shut McShane off. It was not to be.
"I
wonder whose dream this is. I' ve tried to make it disappear but it
doesn't." Thackery could not be sure McShane was joking but chose to take
it that way. "Neale's, I think." "Maybe." Another long
pause. "I haven't seen her much. Do you know her well?"
"No." Thackery hesitated. If
he's determined not to let me sleep, then at least we can talk about what I want
to talk about. "Do you see Sebright? I mean ever?"
"The
Contact Leader? No."
"I
was asking Michael today whether Sebright had said anything to him about a
briefing on the Muschynka contact. He said he hadn't seen Sebright for three
days."
"He's
probably sync'd to the C or D watch schedule."
Thackery
missed the impatience in McShane's voice. "No, because I left a message
for Derrel—he's on that cycle—and he said he hasn't seen Sebright either."
"So,
Sebright's a recluse. So what?"
"He's
supposed to be here to give us the benefit of his experience," Thackery
insisted. "We're five days out and I can't even find anyone who's met with
him. He doesn't respond to pages, he doesn't answer messages, and he's never in
his cabin."
"Look,
I've got problems of my own," McShane said irritably. "If you've got
a real grievance, go see Neale. If you just want to complain, find some of your
own people to listen."
"McShane,
you're a selfish son-of-a-bitch," Thackery said tiredly.
McShane
jumped up from his bunk. "Damnit, I'm the one with responsibilities on
this craze. You don't have to stand watches. You don't have Rogen and Graeff
breathing down your neck looking for an excuse to replace you. You're on a
freezin' vacation."
"Whoa,
easy," Thackery said, snapping on the light. McShane shivered oddly, hung
his head, and stood a moment with arms akimbo.
"Sorry,"
he said at last. "If your problems aren't my fault, I guess mine aren't
yours, either." He sighed expressively and setded back on the bed.
"He's got a single, doesn't he? Break his damn door down and wait for him.
He's got to show up there sometime."
Thackery
laughed tiredly. "Unless he's moved in with some little awk from Tycho." He
turned out the light and turned on his side. "Who knows," he said to
his pillow, "maybe that's what I ought to be concentrating on, too."
For
two days, Thackery shifted Sebright to the back of his mind. In that time, he
made a token (and profitless) attempt at courting Jessica Baldwin, got off to
an encouraging start on his studies for the exobiology qual, and solved the
first test message Eagan had composed for him.
But
on one of his many trips from the passenger hive upship to the Tycho library, he cast a
glance as always from the climb-way down the corridor onto which Sebright's
door opened— and saw a woman he did not know push that door open and disappear
inside.
For
a moment Thackery was torn by ambivalent impulses. Then impatience won out over
propriety, and he stepped off the climbway and stalked down the short corridor.
But
there was no answer to the page button, no answer to his insistent knock.
"Concom Sebright," he called out, listening for sounds beyond the
closure. "This is Merritt Thackery. Can I talk to you?"
There
was no answer, no sound at all. Frustrated, Thackery smacked the door release
with a balled fist and began to turn away. But the door, which had been locked
every time he had been there before, slid open.
Sebright
was lying prone in the narrow single cabin, his ankles strapped in a
microgravity exercise cradle and one hand gripping the crossbar. Beads of
perspiration stood out on his cheeks and forehead, and the longish hair was
matted. But his eyes were closed, as though he were sleeping. An instant later,
Tliackery saw why: The fingertips of Sebright's right hand were in the grasp of
a small black box lying on the bed next to him.
Thackery
took in all that in the moment before the woman rose up from the chair beside
Sebright and rushed toward Thackery, protectively blocking the view with her
body.
"Out,"
she demanded.
"He's
on a tranq machine," Thackery said, disbelieving.
"I'm only going
to ask one more time. Then I'll remove you myself," she said fiercely.
"He's on a tranq machine!" Thackery repeated, this time indignant.
"That's
none of your damn business."
"He's
my supervisor and an officer of this ship," Thackery said, his voice
rising. "I've got as much right here as anyone, and more right than
you."
Glowering
at him with piercing black eyes, she reached behind him and closed the door.
"Thackery—look," she said in a more modulated tone. "He told me
he was going to do this and he asked me to look after him. I give him nutrient
shots and sponge baths and make sure the exerciser doesn't hurt him. I read his
messages and answer the ones that need answering. If he's needed somewhere, I
come in and wake him up."
Thackery
cast about for a plausible explanation to the inexplicable sight on the bed.
"Is he a phobe?" he asked, almost hopefully.
"No.
He just—prefers to absent out sometimes. He—doesn't tolerate boredom well. It's
not my place to talk about it." His eyes narrowed by suspicion, Thackery
asked, "Why are you doing this?"
She
smiled tolerantly. "It's not what you're thinking. I'm his four-gen
grandniece. I met him when
Munin came
in twelve years ago—I was his greeter. Look, I've told you more than I needed
to. Now will you go, so I can take care of him?"
"I
want to talk to him," Thackery said stubbornly.
"Why?
To see if I'm telling the truth?"
"No.
About the team. About Survey business."
"It
can wait."
"Damnit,
no!" Thackery exploded. "He's got responsibilities. This isn't just
for me. There are six green surveyors that he ought to be working with. Wake
him up."
"No."
"Why?
Will it hurt him?"
"No.
But he doesn't want to be disturbed."
"You're
not in his chain of authority. He'll have to tell me himself."
She
crossed her arms and shook her head stubbornly. "He'll do his job when
it's time to do it."
"Part
of his job started a week ago." Thackery paused and looked down at
Sebright, then continued in a voice that was quietly threatening. "If he's
getting messages, then there are people who don't know about this. Like Neale,
maybe?"
"People
know."
"Some
would have to. But not Neale, right? If you don't wake him up, she's going
to."
Her
eyes spat angry sparks, but she moved to Sebright's side all the same. A touch
on the tranq box controls, and the metal bands opened to release the vet's
fingers. A few moments later, stirred by an influx of amphetamine molecules in
his blood, Sebright opened his eyes.
"Morning,
Yolanda. What's happening?"
Scowling,
she jerked a thumb in Thackery's direction.
"Concom,"
Thackery said, taking a step forward.
The
older man pulled himself up to a sitting position. "Thackery, isn't it?
The linguist."
"That's
right."
"What's
up, Thackery?"
"I'd
like to talk to you about Muschynka."
Sebright
looked from Thackery to his grandniece, then back again. "Read about it in
the Op Recs," he said gruffly. "I've answered those questions too
many times already."
"But—"
"Sure,
you only asked once. But a thousand other people have asked once, too."
Resting his folded arms on the crossbar and his chin on his arms, he looked up
at Thackery. "You know how when you try to tell someone about a dream,
you're really trying to tell them about an experience, but you end up telling a
story?"
Thackery
nodded uncertainly.
"Every
time I tell about Muschynka, I lose a litde bit more of the experience. Pretty
soon all I'll have left is the story. The story becomes the experience."
"I
don't understand—"
Sebright
nodded. "I didn't really expect you to. Listen, Thackery. Don't do this
again. You'll see enough of me once we're aboard Descartes. But until we have a ship, we're not a crew,
and my only responsibility is to myself."
"So
you won't hold a briefing for the team?"
"They
can read the Op Recs, too," he said. "Any more questions, since I'm
up?" A hint of a sardonic smile touched his lips.
"Just
one. Why did you bother to sign on again?"
Sebright
was immune to the venom. "No. Try Dunn. He's only been back two months. He
may still want to talk about it." He laid back and poked Yolanda playfully
with a finger.
"Anything to eat
around here?" he asked her, and Thackery took that moment to move toward
the door.
"Sneaking
out, Thackery?" Sebright called after him. "For future
reference—you'd be smart not to push in where you haven't been invited. You
can't afford to alienate people on a little ship."
His
picture of Sebright savaged beyond repair, a benumbed Thackery made the climb
to C deck and the library. Having absorbed most of his values from Government
Service, he felt personally betrayed. Information was a free good, freely
available, freely exchanged—the Ninth Article. To have a Contact treated as a
personal possession was unthinkable, as unthinkable as a Contact Leader who
refused to lead, who chose to spend eight weeks in a drug-induced black-out—
The Op Recs. Maybe the answers
are there—if there are any
answers for a man like that—
The
story of the Muschynka was not new to Thackery. Hundreds of anthropologists had
fallen over themselves in their eagerness to sift through the contact records
and publish their findings. There was even a standing request before the Flight
Office for a follow-up mission, since the Muschynka represented a form of human
society no longer available for study on Earth: a polytheistic, communal-living
patriarchy employing slash-and-burn agriculture.
But
if there was any explanation in the voluminous contact report for Sebright's
attitudes, it was beyond Thackery to see it. There was plenty of data on the
Muschynka's dependence on lightning for fire, on their movable longhouses, on
their death beliefs and funereal customs. But there were no answers in the
records for the questions he would have asked Sebright: How did it go? What was
it like to be there? How did you know what to do?
Any
wisdom that had been gained in the course of the Contact had been stripped of
its anecdotal elements and made part of the general Contact protocol. Any
narrative power in the account had been erased by the third-person-impersonal
voice. The feeling of the moment had been reduced to dry history and cold
science.
Is that what they tried to do to you,
Sebright?
he wondered. Did you come back because
you wanted to dream again?
That
thought replaced most of Thackery's accumulated re
sentment with a troubling
premonitory vision. Is that what I'm doing?
Chasing a piece of the past?
Thackery
pushed the thought away. There had to be better reasons. Sebright's was the
quest of the addict for a remembered high, he decided—one so exquisite that it
made normal life unbearable. But Dove's crew had sustained themselves through
an abstinence enforced by unfriendly Chance. There had to be better reasons,
and the Dove vets
had to know them—or those now aboard
Tycho would
not have chosen to accept their new assignments.
Late
to be wondering why you're here. You know why you're here,
he answered himself. You just don't know what
will sustain you now that you are.
A
day later, Thackery found Thomas Dunn in
Tycho's
wardroom, conducting a training session on the AVLO drive for Baldwin, Behnke,
and four of the awks. The silver-haired senior tech was soft-spoken, but he
clearly knew both his subject and how to communicate it. Thackery listened with
interest from the doorway as Dunn held forth for twenty more minutes, then
moved toward him when the class filed out. "Mr. Dunn? Sebright said you
might be able to help me."
Dunn
cocked his head and squinted. "Aren't you Thackery? The inquisitive one?"
Thackery's
face wrinkled up. "You heard—"
"Didn't
you think we veterans talked to each other?"
"I
didn't think anything worth talking about happened," Thackery said
stiffly. "Privacy has an exaggerated importance on a survey ship. You'll
understand after a while."
"Is
that a warning not to ask you any personal questions?"
"No."
Dunn settled cross-legged on the table. "I try to be a little more
sympathetic to novices than Mark is." Thackery settled in one of the
recently vacated seats. "I was wondering why you came back."
"To
the Service? I'm not that
sympathetic. Next question."
"Well,
what about Sebright? What makes somebody like that come back after five years
out?"
Dunn
craned his head and looked at the ceiling. "I don't think that I can speak
for someone else, Thackery. If I'm guessing, I might be wrong. If I know, I
have no right to violate their confidence."
Thackery's
face showed his growing exasperation. "So don't talk about him
specifically. You spent time at Benamira. How do the vets feel about what they
did, about where they are?"
Dunn
swung his crossed legs back and forth. "Until you feel it yourself, it'll
just be words."
"Tell
me anyway."
Nodding,
Dunn said: "Some of us come back knowing what the parameters are. Some
only need a few weeks at Benamira to learn it. Some resist and spend a few
years trying to fight it."
"Like
Sebright?"
His
eyes clouding, Dunn only smiled faintly in answer. "You see, the Service
has to be your family, provide your loves and mates, even take care of you when
you age. Because Earth will forget you, and if you ever return there you'll
find it strange, almost incomprehensibly so—even with the Council doing its
best to put the brakes on change. My advice would be not to return. You've done
more than change jobs, Thackery. You've changed lives. Your old one is now
forever out of reach."
Dunn's
words struck Thackery as unnecessarily melodramatic. "That's no secret.
Any fool would know it. And the Flight Office warns us."
"You
won't begin to understand until much later," Dunn said with that same
faint smile. "It's almost as though there's a grace period—which is just
as well. It's not a reversible decision. You're already out of time."
"I
thought that's what Benamira was for—to put you back."
Dunn
chuckled knowingly. "When I was growing up, the world government was led
by statesmen. Now it's in the hand of bureaucrats. Back then, everyone knew who
Devaraja Rashuri was. My father
worked for
Benjamin Driscoll. But say those names to someone from this era and you'll get
a blank stare two times out of three." He threw up his hands. "I
don't like the music of today. I find the styles of clothing garish. I consider
body adornments self-mutilation. What can the Service do to help me? Yes, they
wanted Benamira to be a halfway house. But it never cures anyone. More accurate
to call it a hermitage—and some vets aren't made to be hermits."
"What
about Neale? Is that what moves her, too?"
Dunn's
eyes twinkled. "So you're mystified by the Space Lily?"
Thackery
grinned uncomfortably. "Where'd she pick up that tag?"
"That's
one of her several nicknames, none of which you should ever let her hear you
using. A horticulturist at Unity hung that on her. When you were home, did you
ever grow any lily-of-the-valley?"
"I
think I've seen it."
"It's
small, unobtrusive, and looks delicate—and the next thing you know it's taken
over the garden. You follow?" "No." "She'll make it clear
to you at some time or other, I'm
sure," Dunn said, in
a way that made clear the subject was closed. "Well—have I satisfied your
curiosity, Thackery?"
"Less
than you might have."
"You
incline toward the painfully blunt, have you ever been told?" He brought a
hand to his mouth. "Let me be equally forthright. Have you paired yet? Are
you happy with McShane as a cabinmate?"
The
question cast Dunn's willingness to talk in a new and unwelcome light.
"I'm
fine," Thackery said, too quickly.
But
Dunn took no offense. "We'll be out a long time. I hope you'll keep me in
mind when you're ready for a change."
A
glimpse of the rainstorm building on the horizon pulled Thackery off the climb
way and onto the Tycho
edrec deck. The landscape was playing on all twelve of the screens ringing the
huge circular room.
Iowa, Thackery thought. Or maybe eastern Nebraska.
One
chair had been turned to face the darkest part of the clouds, and above the
fabric of the shoulder rest projected a shock of reddish hair.
"Dan?"
He
was answered with a grunt.
"You
pick this?" Thackery asked, settling in a chair nearer the center of the
deck, where the illusion was better.
"Yup."
"Something
up, or are you just trying to depress the hell out of everybody?"
"I
got chewed out by Graeff today, in front of everybody."
"Deserve
it?"
"No.
She's got it in for me. I work twice as hard as any bridge awk, and everybody
knows it. She's just busting me."
"Don't
argue. Vets know everything," Thackery said cynically. From behind he
heard the faint ringing sound the climb-way made when someone was near. A
moment later Tyszka bounded off the ladder and joined them.
"Is
this the meeting of the
Descartes
Masturbators' Society and Sewing Circle?" he asked loudly, striding across
the deck and plopping into the chair to Thackery's right. He craned his head
ami took in the landscape that was playing. "God, how depressing. If I
tell you how it comes out, will you put on something else?"
"Put
on what you want," McShane replied disinterestedly.
But
Tyszka made no move toward the control pedestal, instead sliding sideways in
his chair and hooking one knee over the arm. "You two look like you've
already heard the news."
It
was Thackery who offered the obligatory response. "What news?"
"It's
done. They're all gone," Tyszka said, clucking and shaking his h^ad.
"And unless my intelligence is faulty, none of us have c »r. I warned you,
Thack."
"Now I i-.ow what
you're babbling about."
"Will
so.neone tell me?" called McShane.
"Women,
my son, women. They're all spoken for. I know. I just helped the last one move
in with my roommate."
"No
doubt a painful experience."
"Considering
it was Nakabayashi, I would say significantly painful." He made a loud
clicking noise. "We don't need them, though, right?"
"Celibacy
forever," McShane rallied.
"That's
right," Tyszka said, pounding the padded armrest for emphasis. "We
resisted, despite their crude attempts to seduce us."
"We
were too smart for them," Thackery said, trying to get in the spirit of
the foolishness.
"We
refused to let them sap our vital life fluids," declared McShane.
"No
matter how much they begged."
"Right.
They didn't meet our standards."
"Not
a one of them."
The
patter became rapid-fire, self-reinforcing improvisation. Thackery sat back and
listened, the laughter building in him but showing only as a wry smile.
"Muir."
'Too
butch."
"Abrams."
"The
ice queen. Uibel is still defrosting."
"Shaffer."
"White
wear."
"Too
fragile."
"DeLaCroix."
"Too
experienced."
"Too
crowded in her bed."
"Baldwin."
"Big
sister."
"She'll
tuck you in but she won't fuck."
That
brought the first involuntary, half-embarrassed laugh spilling'out of Thackery,
and his laughter triggered theirs. "Graeff," McShane managed to say,
trying to keep it going. "Untouchable," Tyszka fired back.
"Neale." "Unthinkable," Thackery blurted, and as the
landscape dis
solved into rain around
them, they dissolved into the silly, out-of-control laughter of the tired and
the stressed. Thackery laughed until his chest hurt, until his throat rebelled
with rough coughs and his eyes brimmed with moisture.
"Well,"
Tyszka said as decorum slowly returned, "if the Concom was right, maybe
we'll be too busy to notice."
The
mention of Sebright wiped the remaining smile from Thackery's face. "I
don't know how much stock to put in him these days," he said soberly, then
kicked Tyszka's chair. "Change the freezin' tape, will you? This is depressing."
Ten
days from A-Cyg, Neale posted a schedule of crew interviews—four a day in
two-hour blocks. No purpose for the interviews was given. Some of the
interviewees came back in fifteen minutes, while a few stayed the two hours,
and Nakabayashi was gone for three. None would discuss the interviews or even
divulge their topic. The consensus in the hive was that the interviews were
fitness reviews, and the anxiety level of those well down on the alphabetical
list climbed precipitously.
To
minimize his distraction, Thackery refocused his attention on increasingly
difficult Contact simulations. Almost before he realized it, his appointment
was imminent. He convinced himself he was at ease by eating a normal lunch just
before he was due in officer's country. En route from the mess to Neale's
cabin, Thackery detoured to his cabin to relieve his slate.
He
was startled to find McShane there, sitting cross-legged on his bed and hunched
over a portable netlink, a unit similar to the slate but with input
capabilities.
"What's
up?"
McShane
did not look up, and Thackery moved to peek over his shoulder. The screen was
filled with two columns of names, none of them familiar.
"Aren't
you supposed to be on the bridge watch?" Thackery asked, glancing at his
watch.
"I've
got to get this finished first."
"What
the hell is it?"
McShane touched the scroller several
times and the list jumped downward. "There," he said. "There you
are." Thackery's name was in fact on the screen, along with the names of
several other crewmembers.
"Some
sort of personnel list?"
McShane
craned his head to look up at Thackery. "Do you remember the name of the
woman who passed us through the Unity screening center?"
"No."
"Come
on, the blonde with the long hair. The young one."
"I
barely remember her. What are you doing, anyway?"
He
turned back to his machine. "I'm trying to make a list of everybody who
ever knew me. I mark them with a caret if they were friends, and an asterisk if
I had sex with them. Everybody else is just an acquaintance. See, your name has
a caret."
"Why
are you doing this?"
"So
nobody forgets. Are you sure you don't remember her name?"
"I
don't think I ever knew it."
"Damn.
Oh, all right. I suppose I can leave her off."
"Don't
you think this could wait until your watch is over?"
"No,"
McShane said placidly, then abruptly changed the subject. "Thack, do you
know what happens if you die out here? They can't give you space burial—there's
no place to send you to. I wonder what happens to the soul, whether it has a
way of escaping the craze."
"Dan,
maybe you should go see Pemberton," Thackery said tentatively, naming the
medtech.
McShane
snapped his fingers. "That's a great idea. I'll bet he had to work with
her on the screening. He ought to remember her name."
With
an anxious glance at his watch, Thackery picked up his slate and moved toward
the door. "Dan, I wish I could stay, but Neale is expecting me. Go upship
and stand the rest of your bridge watch. I'll go see Pemberton with you
later."
His
back to Thackery, McShane shook his head. "I've got to finish my list
first." He sighed. "I wish you could have seen Karen at Lake
Ponchetrain."
With
an effort of will, Thackery made himself open the door and leave the compartment.
How do you help them?
he asked, sagging against the corridor wall. How
do you bring them back?
But
there were no ready answers, and Neale was waiting. First things first,
he told himself, and hurried off.
When
Thackery arrived, Neale's cabin was full of stars in motion—a time-compressed,
asymmetric scale projection of the Expanded Local Group, 10,000 stars in a
100-light-year radius sphere centered on Earth. Four of the stars were a
brilliant green: the colonies. Thackery stepped through the doorway and into
the swirl of stars.
"Chair
to your left," said Neale's disembodied voice. Thackery moved that way and
felt his way into the seat. The motion of the stars suddenly stopped with three
of the four green spots within Thackery's reach.
"Do
you know them?" she asked.
Thackery
studied the projection. "Pai-Tem," he said, pointing at one. "82
Eridani, that's Muschynka. Journa. And Ross 128, over there in Virgo."
"Very
good." The lights came up, masking the projection. Only then could
Thackery see Neale, who was almost swallowed up by a padded recliner modeled
after an orbital acceleration couch. Neale's fingers beat an irregular rhythm
against the arm as she stared the thousand-mile stare.
Her
gaze drifted sideways and found Thackery's face. "I'm sorry to say that
only about half the operations crew can cor
rectly identify all four without
prompting," she said. "I'm reassured to find that my surveyors are
more knowledgeable." She crossed her aims across her smallish breasts.
"Have you thought much about the First Colonists, Thackery?"
"No."
"I'm
surprised. I marked you for more intellectual curiosity than that answer
suggests."
"I've
thought about what it would feel like to take part in a Contact, about my
responsibility if Descartes
should happen to find a colony. But about the First Colonists themselves, no.
It's hard to see how there's any profit in the effort."
"Do
you think that all of the colonies have been found?"
"Life,
I hope not."
"Then
wouldn't there be profit in making our search more effective?"
"If
there were some chance in knowing what the First Colonists were like and what
motivated them. But it's all guesswork. Unless there's been some recent
discovery I don't know about, we don't have a single FC-era artifact."
She
wagged a finger at him. "How wrong you are. We have four very significant
artifacts. You named them earlier."
"But
the colonies don't remember their founders any better than we do the
civilization that produced them. Even the First Cities of Jouma turned out to
postdate the colonization by thousands of years."
"There
are conscious memories and unconscious memories, Thackery. Don't mistake one
for the other. If we don't remember the Firsts, then we need to look more
deeply into ourselves. They left their mark on us, I have no doubt. But set
that aside for now. How would
you
choose the destinations for a fleet of colony ships?"
When
Thackery made no answer, treating the question as rhetorical, she went on.
"So
many of your generation think it's so easy—just pick a dozen or two stars
similar to ours in temperature and spectrum, long-lived and stable. Journa's
sun is the perfect example, a pretty little G-type star. So is 82
Eridani."
"Yet
they passed up Tau Ceti and Alpha Centauri A."
"Exactly!"
She sat up in the lounger. "Some of the other colonies are around some of
the most improbable suns. Pai-Tem has a K binary, for life's sake! And it's no
wonder the Ross colony failed, orbiting a M-star so cold it takes a greenhouse
effect to make the planet livable. But they chose it deliberately. What did
they know that we don't? What fact would unscramble the puzzle? There's the
fascination, Thackery. That's the magic of the colony problem."
She
sat back and waited for his reply. When he said nothing, she gestured. "I
asked you here to tap you. I want my crew's best thoughts, honest thoughts.
Otherwise we'll never solve this thing."
"I
think it's a mistake to worship the Firsts and act as though there was some
magical wisdom in their choices," Thackery said tentatively. "Maybe
they ended up where they did because they had no way of continuing on—we've
never found one of their ships to know their capabilities. For that matter,
there might not be any ships to find, maybe there are other instrumentalities.
Or maybe all that was special about them was that they were first."
The
lights dimmed as Neale touched a control on the arm of her lounger. "You
disappoint me, Thackery," she said as the spherical halo of stars once
again took over the room. "You lack imagination."
"Commander,
I'll be happy to devote some attention to this now that I know of your
interest—"
"Don't
bother," she said brusquely. "You haven't the vision for it, and I
don't need another flufflicker." She continued mechanically, "I
invoke your pledge of confidentiality. You are not to discuss this interview or
any of its subject matter until I free you from the pledge. There will be a
general announcement to that effect when the remaining interviews are
completed. Good day."
Descending
toward the hive, Thackery heard the commotion coming up the climbway before he
saw the gathering. There were five or six awks and techs crowded around the
open door to his cabin, peering inside as best they could.
"What
happened?" he demanded, shouldering his way between two of the spectators.
Guerrieri,
standing closest to the doorway on the right, looked back and saw who had
asked. "It's McShane. The craze got him."
"He
was screaming something about the hull splitting open," another offered.
Thackery
bulled his way to the doorway and surveyed the room. McShane was stretched out
motionless on Thackery's bed, with Pemberton crouching beside him monitoring
vitals and Dunn looking on. McShane's own mattress was leaning crookedly
against the far wall, as though the vertical zipweid had started to open and
McShane had used the mattress to try to seal off the leak.
"Oh, Dan," he said
feelingly. Dunn looked up. "Ah, Thackery. Did he give you any warning on
this?" Thackery took a step into the cabin. "No. I didn't know he was
having trouble." The half-lie came easily, too easily.
Dunn
nodded acceptingly. "Sometimes it's like that," he said softly.
"Sometimes they're clever enough to save all the madness for their private
moments, even though they're not clever enough to see where that leads. Do you
want him moved upstairs. Pembe?"
The
medtech stood. "Yes. He's stable now, but we'll want to watch him. He'll
be on antianx and antidep right in to A-Cyg"
"Where he'll
stay," Thackery said involuntarily. "Afraid so," Dunn said,
grunting as he gathered up McShane in a fireman's carry. Thackery stepped aside
to let Dunn pass with his burden. "It's not fair. He was working so
freezin' hard." "It happens," Dunn said from the doorway.
"Wanting to do well's not enough. Some don't have what it takes."
"First warning,"
the Tycho gravigator announced sonorously. "Thirty
minutes to transition. Com officers, prepare for reacquisition of signals.
Repeating, first warning, end cf craze."
"That's
a freezin' shame. He didn't miss by much," one of the onlookers said,
shaking her head as she turned away.
"Coming?"
asked Guerrieri from the corridor.
With
a sudden violent motion, Thackery reached out and slammed the cabin door shut,
sealing out the curious who had not already scattered. When he turned back to
face the disarray, the sight of it resonated with his own internal disharmony.
He drew a series of long, trembly breaths, then gave in and sat down where he'd
been standing, letting the tears of frustration and disillusionment run quietly
down his cheeks.
This is not how it was supposed to be—not at
all—
A FRIENDLY FACE IN A DISTANT PLACE
(from MerrHtt Thackery's
JIADUR'SWAKE)
. . . Search the stars
for planets. Search the planets for life. So simple in concept, so incredible
in execution.
Even
today, there are few in or out of the Service who can grasp the dimensions of
the project. The AVLO drive has salved our battered imaginations, just as
trans-Pacific shuttles make the voyage of the Kon-Tiki inconceivable.
But
consider: the Local Group, those stars clustered within twenty-five light-years
of the sun, consists of some two hundred glowing motes. Extend your view to the
hundred light-year radius of the Expanded Local Group and your gaze now takes
in more than fourteen thousand stars scattered through a volume of four million
cubic light-years.
Mercifully,
many of the stars are found in groups of two or three or even more. Some are
barren, and, if they are close enough to a first-class observatory, that
absence of planets can be detected and that system bypassed.
But
even with the AVLO drive, even excluding the close binaries and trinaries,
excluding the unstable giants and the fiery short-lived O-spectrum dwarfs,
excluding all but the MK-G spectral classes thought most favorable for
habitable planets, a survey of the Expanded Local Group still called for a
thousand-year plan. <
The
broad outline of the strategy was shaped by the geometers of the Strategic
Planning Office. With a stroke of their lightpens, they partitioned the sphere
of space centered on Earth's Sun into eight equal sectors, four north of the
celestial equator and four south of it. Onto that playing field came the survey
ships, built by the Procurement Office, equipped by the Research Office,
staffed by the Flight Office, first one ship for each octant, then three, with
plans for five and finally eight if the millenium-long plan stood up.
It
was not enough, however, to simply loose a fleet of survey ships into the
Galaxy. For the most part, these great vessels were self-sufficient—had to be,
or the entire emprise was unworkable. But ships and crews alike had useful
lifetimes. The former could be refitted; the latter required rejuvenation and,
eventually, replacement.
The
planners anticipated other needs as well: for communications relay points, for
nearby support centers for the colonies, perhaps even for hub points for
commerce among the not-yet-Unified Worlds. It was implicit in the name given to
the long-agO founding of Journa and its sisters that the Service saw itself the
agent of the Second Colonization.
For
all those reasons and more, the Advance Bases were conceived and constructed,
one in each octant, frontier outposts which were to become tomorrow's
metropoli. In a Ptolemaic perversion of astrography, each was named, not for the
star near which it was located, but for the constellation in which it appeared
from Earth: Perseus. Lynx. Bootes. Cygnus. Eridanus. Vela. Lupus. Microscopium.
But
that cleptic confusion was the least of the problems faced by these nascent
communities. For, while they were close to those they were expected to serve,
they were also very far from Earth and the authority of Unity—far enough that
some came to have their own ideas about what they were there for...
chapter 5
Cygnus
Tycho picked up the A-Cyg navigation
beacon immediately on coming out of the craze. The beacon consisted of an
eight-bar musical theme, the tracking pulse, a timemark, and a voice message:
"Welcome
to Advance Base Cygnus, located just west of Infinity on the Far Edge of
Nowhere. Your hosts are the men and women of the 'we'll go anywhere we're told'
Unified Space Service, Survey Branch. Your innkeeper is Wayne 'don't bother me
with details' Coulson. Request you transmit crew directory to speed check-in.
We monitor standard frequencies A and D."
There
was laughter on the bridge, but Neale did not join in it. Damned unprofessional,
Neale complained to herself. /
wonder if the base commander knows what's being broadcast.
Tamm
seemed amused, however. "Sounds like they've been a bit lonesome out
here," he said. "Let's let them know they'll have company for
dinner."
"The
ship's transponder is already putting out our identification signal," the
communications officer noted.
"Let's be a little
more personal," Tamm said. "Give them ' a hi-how-are-you and repeat
it until we hear from them live. Navcom, how far out are we?"
"Ninety-two
light-minutes."
Tamm
nodded. "We should hear from them right about change-of-watch."
Still
hurtling at high velocity despite the steady gravitational braking of the AVLO
field aft, Tycho
closed on the commonplace M7 star which was host to Cygnus Base. Well before
no-lag communications were established, the telecameras picked up the
silhouette of the complex. The station was orbiting just sunward of the fourth
of the five small planets comprising the system. At first, only the two huge
energy sails were visible. But as the image grew larger and more refined it
quickly became apparent that not all was as expected.
"What
the hell have they been up to?" Tamm demanded indignantly. "Let me
see the station fax."
The
comtech turned to his console, and a moment later, an architectural diagram
shared the window with the telecamera view.
"You've got the
wrong damn document," Tamm said with annoyance. "No, that's Cygnus—file
number AB21N," insisted the librarian.
"Scale
them the same."
"They
already are."
"What?
They must be ahead of schedule. Show me the station development plan."
The
librarian complied, and Neale walked forward to study the display.
"Here," she said, pointing to one of the more symmetrical shapes.
"This section wasn't supposed to be added for another five years."
She swung her arm to point to an irregular mass which seemed to have grown
tumorlike from the central cylinder. "And whatever this is, it isn't in
the development plan at all."
She
looked back at Tamm, and the commanders exchanged puzzled glances.
"They
were sent out here with a hundred-year plan for expansion of the base,"
Tamm said, nonplussed. "What the hell are they doing ignoring it after
just five years?"
"Seems
like the discipline problems go all the way to the top," Neale said
critically.
They
stared together at the bright image of A-Cyg. The neat symmetry of the original
design was badly marred by the new additions. "Not our problem, I
guess," Tamm said, standing and stretching. "We're not staying."
"Where's Descartes?"
Neale asked suddenly.
The
ship was nowhere in sight. The station's single dockport was empty.
"Give
us a wider field," Tamm ordered, and the image of Cygnus Base shrank.
Almost immediately, Neale loosed a noisy sigh of relief. Powered down and
empty, Descartes
trailed several kilometres behind Cygnus in the same orbit.
"Looks
like you won't be staying, either," Tamm said with a wink. "What'd
you think they'd done with it?" "Considering what we've seen already,
I was afraid to guess."
On
docking, Tamm and Neale were whisked through an ebullient throng to the
administrative level and the opulent office of Wayne Coulson. The corpulent
base director bounded out of his chair to greet them, shaking hands vigorously
and ushering them into the room.
"I've
just been told before you got here—you're keeping your crews on board?"
Coulson asked, the disappointment keen in his voice.
"At
least until we've worked out the arrangements with you," Neale said.
"Oh,
heavens, there's no need for special arrangements. We're all set up for you.
Please, call over there and give them liberty," he urged earnestly.
"We've been planning for this for most of the last year. My people are very
eager to meet with your crew. You're three weeks overdue, did you
realize?"
"Tycho's
a brand-new ship. We stayed around to have some little problems fixed—can't
expect it to come out of the yard perfect," Tamm said, smiling.
"Never stopped to think that we'd be missed at this end," he
gestured. "Use this netlink?"
"Of
course—it was probably wrong of us to pin so much on the schedule. It's been
five years for us but thirty-two back on Earth. The program could have been
delayed, even canceled. We had to wonder."
"Everything's
still go. There'll be more following us," Tamm assured him, then turned to
the netlink. "Kislak, I'm authorizing liberty for the second, third, and
fourth watches. We'll continue to stand one-in-four until further notice. Make
sure everyone understands that."
"Yes,
sir. Does this order include the hive?"
Tamm
looked to Neale, who shook her head emphatically and turned away. Tamm
shrugged. "No. Not the passengers. Just our crew."
"Is
there some problem, Commander Neale?" Coulson asked, his eyes narrowed by
concern.
"Commander
Neale doesn't approve of the discipline here," Tamm said, then moved
toward the bar to avoid Neale's baleful glance.
"Is
he right, Commander?" Coulson said, a puzzled expression wrinkling his
round face.
"I
do have some questions about your priorities," she said stiffly, settling
herself in the least plush of the several chairs. "We spent sixteen years
on Dove
without this sort of breakdown, and you've been here barely five."
"What breakdown is
that?" She waved a hand in the air. "Your hailing message—your
abandonment of the development plan—"
Coulson
likewise took a seat. "We haven't abandoned the development plan—not yet,
anyway. We've adapted it. If you'd had time to analyze what we've done, you'd
see that our modifications won't prevent us from building what was prescribed.
That's not to say we may not yet get tired of waiting for structural components
from Earth and do it our own way."
"You
have no authority to make that decision."
Coulson
spread his hands expressively. "This is home, Commander. We have the right
to make it livable. We have the right to make it ours. I would guess that your
sixteen years on Dove were
busy ones. But once we had the cylinder sealed and the energy panels erected,
there hasn't been a whole lot of urgency to what we have to do."
"Unless
you feel like you're doing for yourself, rather than for some distant
authority," Tamm said between sips of his liqueur.
"Exactly,"
pounced Coulson. "And that requires a certain latitude on less important
matters. Commander Neale, I assure you we came to this out of necessity. The
first three years we went by the book. At the end of that time, most of us were
ten kilos overweight and averaging one fight a week. Every work team was
anywhere from a month to half a year behind schedule, and I was turning into an
autocratic son-of-a-bitch because of it. We even had two suicides and a
half-baked mutiny—that's why we moved
Descartes
off-station. Frankly, for a while I had doubts about our community surviving
until you got here."
"So
what happened?" Tamm asked, enjoying Neale's discomfiture.
Coulson
smiled. "We had a town meeting and took a good hard look at ourselves. The
end result was that we reclaimed control over our own lives. We'll do things because
they need doing or because we want to, but never just because the Service said
so. We apply that same principle locally. You can call me Director if you
prefer, but the truth is that I'm more like an elected city manager. I
represent these peoples' interests. I don't tell them what their interests are
supposed to be."
"That's
insubordination," Neale said sharply.
"Yes,
I suppose it is," was Coulson's casual reply. "But we're too far away
to allow ourselves to be dependent on Earth. I believe the hundred-year growth
plan was nothing less than an attempt to lock us into a structural technology
which would keep us looking to Unity at least that long. We choose not to be so
bound. That planet down there has accessible hydrocarbons, which we're tapping to
process our own construction material."
"Is
that what you used for that addition?"
"Yes. You should
make a point of seeing it. We're very pleased with how it turned out—"
"What is it?" Neale demanded. "A playroom." "A
playroom!" "For the children—and the adults. Everything from soccer
to gymnastics to
hide-and-go-seek—"
Tamm
interjected, "You're having children already?"
"Yes—another
modification of the plan. It's the best way
I know to make a place
feel like home," Coulson said simply. "There've been six born
already, and that many more are on the way. We've got fifty-four people here
now. But we've already built the base up to where it could handle over a
hundred."
"Plenty
of guest rooms," Tamm said, chuckling.
"You
may laugh, but that image has been useful to us," Coulson said soberly.
"We try to be happy with ourselves, but the simple truth is that this
community is too small and our memories of Earth are too strong. We need to
believe that others are coming—not just visitors, but emigres. I look forward
to when they start calling me the landlord instead of the innkeeper."
There
was a long silence when Coulson finished, a silence broken at last by Tamm.
"Listen,
Wayne," he began tentatively, "I don't know how this fits in with
what you've told us, but those cargo blisters on Tycho are full, half of it
yours and half of it ours. And I was expecting your people to yank the
temporary compartments out of our hold and generally help get the Tycho in mission
configuration."
Coulson
nodded. "We'll do that for you, just as we got Descartes ready before we
moved her out. As to making use of those modules in the hold, as you've seen
we're hardly hurting for
lebensraum. But
we are eager to see the rest of what you've brought us. How soon do you think
we could arrange to duplicate your technical and edrec libraries? We've got
some catching up to do."
"I'll
have my librarian get together with your people immediately and work out the
transfer." Tamm finished his drink and set it aside. "Very nice
synthesis, this," he said, gesturing at the empty glass. "How long do
you think it'll take your people to strip the hold?"
Coulson
pursed his lips and considered. "I'd say a good week's work at
least."
Tamm
frowned. "I was hoping you could get us out faster than that. If it would
help, I have some people with construction experience—waldoid and
teleoperator—that I'll make available—"
"Commander
Tamm," Coulson began, smiling benignly. "We understand how eager you
are to begin your mission. And we won't make your stay here any longer than it
has to be, even though we might be tempted. There's not much out here to do
except work, eat, and have fun, and we're good at all of them. Give us a week
and let us show you what we can do."
Tamm
laughed easily. "All right, Wayne. I think we understand each other."
"What about my crew?" Neale demanded. "We need to get aboard Descartes."
Coulson
shrugged apologetically. "I can't do anything for you until we're finished
with Tycho.
We only have the one dock, after all."
"Then
take us out to Descartes,
if you can't bring her in here."
"You're
not at Unity, Commander. We don't have sixteen-seat peoplemovers and interorbit
ferries. I don't even have a long-range backpack available to put your senior
tech aboard. We disabled them all after the mutiny."
"You
could have thought to make a second dock part of your building spree,"
Neale complained.
"We
don't have many traffic jams here, Commander," Coulson said lighdy.
"Besides—here you are, asking favors from us, and you've done nothing to
let us enjoy the benefits of your crew's presence."
Neale
stared at him for a long moment, then walked to the nedink.
"Channel
A," Coulson said helpfully.
"Rogen,"
she said with a note of annoyance. "Pass the word to the crew that
anyone—make that anyone who passed their upgrade or requal exam—is free to come
over to the base if they choose."
"Thank
you, Commander," Coulson said smoothly. "And we'll be happy to put
you up here while our work crews are disassembling your former quarters.
There's not much in the way of amenities, but we certainly have the room. And
we'll do our best to see you're entertained."
The
first thing Thackery saw on disembarking was the last thing he had expected to
see: children. There were three, one very tiny one sleeping in its mother's
arms, one perched on his mother's shoulders, and one standing on wobbly legs
and clinging to her father's leg.
But
the welcoming committee of which the children were part was no surprise. The
exuberant reception which had greeted Tamm, Neale, and the first watches to
leave Tycho
had been audible all up and down the ship's central climbway. By the time Descartes' crew was released
an hour later, the gathering had thinned to thirty or less. But the welcome was
just as warm, all clapping and spontaneous hugs and beaming faces.
A
small podium with a microphone was set up in the shipway. As each Descartes crew member
emerged from the tunnel they were guided to the dais to give their name and
birthplace and accept the applause of the group. Each was then met by a Cygnan
escort and led from the chamber.
While
he waited his turn Thackery's attention was captured by a bright-eyed,
raven-haired female technician standing near the front of the gathering. The
bright embroidery covering her USS jumpsuit made her stand out as much as the
body it so flatteringly concealed. When he introduced himself and she
moved lithely forward in
response, he silently exulted in his good fortune. "I'm Diana Marks,"
she said, taking his hand familiarly and leading him away. "I'll be
looking after you while you're here."
"I'm
glad you waited for us."
She
smiled. "We knew you'd be out before too long. Coulson promised us that.
Is Merritt what people call you? It seems too formal for everyday—don't you
have a nickname?"
"Not
one I like."
"Then I'll call you Merry, and
try to see that you are," she said, then grimaced at her own pun.
"What would you like to do first? The grand tour? Lunch? What?"
"Is there a place from which you can see your planet—" He paused,
searching his memory. "Does it have a name?" "After a fashion.
Astrography calls it Survey General Catalog 182 Cygnus-4." "That
seems too formal for everyday," he parroted. "Doesn't it have a
nickname?"
She
laughed easily. "Planets should be named by the people who live on them,
don't you think? And no one lives there." She paused, then added,
"Though some of us think we could."
"Are
you that lonely for natural gravity?"
Her
face became serious. "No—for open spaces. For a place to stand facing a
world instead of a wall. When I joined, I was thinking about roaming an
infinite universe. I never really stopped to realize that I'd be seeing it from
inside a series of very finite, fragile bubbles."
"Sometimes
you can forget the bubble's there," Thackery said, remembering. "I
never have," she said with regret. "Come on. We'll go down to the
playroom. You can get a good view from there."
Seen
through the binocular telescope mounted at one of the playroom's viewports, the
unnamed world wore a crust of sludgy brown and orange. Forgetting Diana
standing beside him, Thackery scanned its undulating surface. He noted the thin
arc of atmosphere visible at the sunward limb, studied briefly one of the
turgid hydrocarbon fountains, watched the advancing shadow of night race across
a lifeless world. But despite his eager yearning to do so, Thackery could not
engage his emotions in the viewing.
"Nothing,"
he said in a soft sad voice.
"Why
do you say that?"
He
had not meant to speak aloud, and her question invaded a private space left
momentarily unguarded. "Nothing like home," he said, straightening
and turning away from the telescope. She seemed to accept the elaboration at
face value. "Does Earth still feel like home to you?"
"Doesn't
it to you?"
"I
can't let it," she said simply. "Not if I want to be happy
here."
Her
honesty demanded an equally self-disclosing answer. "Force of habit,"
he said with a weak smile. "At the moment nowhere really feels like
home."
"Until
you get on Descartes?"
Thackery
nodded absentiy, looking around the playroom. The semi-circular white-walled
room was part gymnasium, part resort courtyard. A multiplicity of colored lines
on the floor of a sunken central arena attested to the room's versatility.
"Would
you like to see the rest?" Diana asked suddenly.
"The
rest?"
"Come
on," she said.
From
a compartment adjacent to the playroom, Thackery was led up a ladder into a
tunnel bored out of a solid mass of spongy, rough-textured porifoam. Before
they had gone a dozen steps the tunnel began to close in on them, driving them
to hands and knees in order to continue. Moments later, the station's gravity
fell off dramatically, and their awkward leaden scrabbling became the graceful
touch-and-push of the micrograv veteran.
Wondering
but unquestioning, Thackery followed Diana through a maze of tees and branch
tunnels. They passed tiny alcoves, dove confidently through a many-entranced
spherical chamber, and caught glimpses of—but never caught up to— other
visitors.
"What
is this place?" he called ahead to Diana.
"It's
a good place to get lost—so stay close," she answered, a playful note in
her voice.
At
last she stopped, curling through the opening to one of the alcoves. He
followed and found her floating in the synglas
half of a small surface blister.
Behind her was star-glitter andthe disc of the bronze planet.
"Close
the privacy panel," she said, her pupils large.
He
turned and complied. When he turned back, she had anchored herself with
widely-set toeholds. Locking eyes with him she reached up to her throat, and
the top of her jumpsuit fell open to bare soft skin. A moment later, she undid
in one smooth motion the long zipper which ran from instep to groin to instep.
Underneath was all Diana.
"I
hope you like this view better," she said.
After
fifty-nine days of celibacy, he didn't question his luck. She was supple,
hot-skinned, lubricious, and he came to her eagerly. They tasted each other,
explored each other's contours, then joined in a coupling prolonged and
intensified by the restraint forced on them by the absence of gravity. Thackery
took from her a pleasure uncomplicated and untarnished, and she took the same
from him in a mutual selfishness which left both satisfied and neither cheated.
"Tell
me about the last time you saw home," she whispered afterward, clinging to
his shoulder. He chewed at his lip as he thought back. "When Tycho left Unity—"
"No—not from orbit," she said quickly. "The last time you were
there."
Thackery
thought back farther. "I'd gone downwell to tell my mother that I was joining
Survey, and to be with her. She took it badly, so I had some extra time. I went
down to Cape May. I walked along the breakwater in front of the old gingerbread
houses, and on the beach at the point."
She
dug her fingers into his arm. "Make me see it."
Thackery
closed his eyes to help sharpen the memory. "There was a strong breeze off
the bay, and the smell of the salt marshes. Green-head flies were biting. There
was a charter fishing boat coming in, with a flock of gulls following off the
stern, begging for an easy meal. The sand was hot, even through my shoes, so I
took them off and walked along the tideline with the sandpipers. I found a
horseshoe crab shell, with the tail and three of the legs still attached."
He opened his eyes and smiled wistfully. "I wanted to bring it along, but
it didn't survive the sterilization procedures."
"That's
a good last time."
"I
guess it is. I wasn't planning it as one. It's just a place I liked to
go."
"I
know." She pulled away from him and began to restore her clothing to its
previous tidy state. "We have to go clear out your cabin on Tycho."
"Why?"
he asked, reluctantly following her lead and dressing himself.
"They'll
be starting to strip the hold soon."
"Where
will I stay?"
She
slid the privacy panel into its hideaway, then looked back at him with head
cocked to one side. "Didn't I tell you? You stay with me tonight."
When
they reached her room, they fell into each others' arms again. This time she
urged him to a harsh vigor with whispered entreaties, opened herself for him
and invited his entry,-clutched at him and made little moaning cries as they
drove their loins together. Under her spell, Thackery disengaged his mind and
lived through his senses, his nostrils full of her scent, his eyes fixed on her
rapturous face.
And
again, when they were spent she clung to him and wanted to talk. "I picked
you out, you know," she said with uncharacteristic shyness.
"How's
that?"
"When your crew data
came in, they called in the volunteers and let us pick whom we wanted to
escort. I picked you." "I can't imagine why—but I'm glad you
did," he said, bending over and planting a kiss on her forehead.
Snuggling
in closer, she coaxed him to talk about himself. He told her about Georgetown
and Tsiolkovsky, about Babbage and Descartes, even about
McShane and Andra, though that was difficult. He even tried to explain about
Jupiter, though so awkwardly that she seemed not to understand.
At
last, arm benumbed and eyelids drooping, he yawned convincingly enough that she
turned off the light. But his thinking was clouded by a lingering testosterone
high and the happy fatigue in his limbs, and he slipped away without realizing
he had learned nothing of her at all.
Seated
on Tycho's
nearly deserted bridge, Neale watched as a trio of waldoids unshipped the Tycho's gig from the port
cargo pod and nudged it free. The whole process seemed painfully slow, like
everything the Cygnans did. It had taken the work crew four days to clear the
hold, and only now were they beginning to transfer to it the equipment which
had been stored away in the temporary hull blisters amidships. Yet Tamm, who
had been so impatient to begin the mission, seemed not to mind at all that the
original seven-day schedule was already being projected out to ten days—
"Ali?"
Neale
turned away from the monitor and saw that it was Rogen who had interrupted her.
"Yes?" "Coulson has been trying to locate you." "I
know." "He wants to talk about the personnel transfer—to go over
some candidates for our
opening." "I know." She saw his look of consternation and added,
"I've been avoiding him. I can't stomach the man." 'Tom Dunn keeps
prodding me to get it settled, so he can start breaking in the new awk."
She
sighed. "I know. I suppose I have no choice. Any problems with the rest of
the crew? Anything else I need to talk to Coulson about?"
"No
problems."
"No
problems with the locals?"
Rogen's
smile was almost a smirk. "Hardly, sir."
"Accommodations
satisfactory?"
"More
than. I've never seen the crew this happy, the men especially. They're going to
hate to leave. But they'll be glad for the rest, if you know what I mean."
Her
eyebrow shot up. "I don't. Explain yourself."
A
trapped look appeared on Rogen's face. "Well, I'm sure it's no surprise to
you, eh? Didn't you work out the arrangements with Coulson?"
"What
arrangements are those?"
"The
Cygnan escorts—Commander, you had to know. Commander Tamm knows about it."
"Knows what?" Rogen spread his hands, embarrassed. "That they've
been
more than friendly. My
girl, Kiena—well, hell, you'd expect some of it just because of the new faces.
Coolidge effect, eh? But they act like they've been going without."
"Son-of-a-bitch
suit slitter!" she exclaimed, coming to her
feet.
"Curse me for a goddamn fool. Where's Coulson?" "He paged me
from his office, I think." "Call him! Tell him to park his freezin'
ass until I get there. Those words exacdy, hear me?"
Wayne
Coulson wore the sanguine expression of an overconfident matador as he awaited
Neale's charge. Arrayed comfortably in a reclining chair with his feet up and a
drink at his hand, he waved Neale into his office with the air of a gracious
monarch.
"Am
I suitably parked?" Coulson asked sardonically.
"Your
people are screwing my people," Neale said bluntly.
Coulson
reached for his drink. "You sound surprised. Didn't they believe in sex on Dove?" "Your
women are fertile," she accused. "We hope so. Most of the menstrual
cycles are in sync, and
your arrival timed out
perfectly."
"Damn
it, I should have known when you talked about having brats. But I assumed you'd
at least be planning the births, not just throwing the whole thing wide
open."
"We
did plan it. We went over your personnel files and let each woman choose among
the hets in both your crews."
"That's
damned mechanical, don't you think?"
"Let's
not be puritanical, Commander. They'd have been bouncing the beds anyway just
for novelty. What matter if there's a practical side, too?"
"What
practical side?"
"Why,
doubling our gene pool right at the outset, of course. Commander, an Advance
Base is not a ship. We're going to try our damnedest to be a normal
community." "A community of liars. Or do our men know what's going
on?"
"No.
Why should they?"
"My
people deserved the right to say no."
"I
can assure you no one was dragged into this against his will."
"How
about her will? What kind of woman would let herself be used this way?"
Coulson
shook his head back and forth slowly. "Commander, I guess you've never
discovered it, but being pregnant isn't all nuisance and misery. Having a baby
is a beautiful experience. I didn't twist any arms."
"But
you weren't honest. You've turned my people into freezin' sperm donors."
"We
think this is the best way. We accept the responsibility of raising any
children that result from this... exercise. If you tell your crew, what will it
gain you? You'll sour what for most of them has been a very pleasant
experience, and fill their minds with thoughts of the son or daughter that
maybe they're leaving behind."
She
turned her back on him for a moment. "I hate agreeing with you on
anything, but you're right about that. I won't tell them," she said
finally. "But I want
Descartes
brought to the dock within twenty-four hours."
"Or
what?"
"Hmm?"
"If
you were my superior, that would be an order. But you're not, so it must be the
first half of a threat." Neale cast about for a suitably large stick.
"I'll report this to Unity—"
"You're
so proper you're going to do that anyway," Coulson interrupted casually.
"Besides, by the time they receive the report and can do anything about it
I'll be dead of old age. Face it, Alizana. You can't move me and you can't
remove me. So why don't you relax, and stop being so damned jealous."
"Jealous!"
"Of
course. Whether you're jealous of the men or the women is the only question I
can't answer. Want to give me a clue?"
"You're
a shit, Coulson."
"When
it's to my advantage, Commander. Now—shall we talk about finding you a
replacement Auxiliary?"
It
was Diana's hands fondling his hardness that woke Thackery, drew him slowly and
pleasurably up out of a dream that briefly blended with reality. He reached for
her but she brushed aside his touch and moved to straddle him.
"Let
me," she whispered, and lowered herself on him. She rode him with a gentle
rocking motion that, all too soon, ended in wet shuddering spasms.
"That
wasn't fair," he complained good-naturedly as they held hands. "You
rushed me."
"We
didn't have much time, and I wanted to look at you," she said tenderly.
"You're being called back to
Tycho."
"What?
What for?"
"I
don't know. You're due on board in a half hour."
"Did
Neale or Sebright make the call?"
"I
don't know. They want everyone, with gear."
Thackery
sighed unhappily. "I'd guess I'd better be there, then. Shower with
me?" She smiled coyly. "We'd just get started again, and we don't
have the time. I'll wash up later."
When
he returned from the bath, she had donned a soft robe and gathered his extra
clothing into his bag. At the door she kissed him sweetly, a kiss that lingered
on his lips after contact was broken. "Thank you, Merry—for being nice to
me."
"I'll
be back."
Her
smile was small and poignant. "I don't think so."
Dunn
and Sebright were waiting at the gangway to check in the arrivals. "Almost
left without you, Thackery," Sebright said with world-weary bemuse ment.
"Down to G deck and join the queue."
"Left?
What's going on?"
"Where've
you had your head?—as if I didn't know," Dunn said salaciously. "It's
moving day. Next ferry should leave in about twenty minutes."
"Leave
for where?"
"Descartes,
of course. You didn't think we were going to stay here for ever, did you?"
"But it was supposed to take a week—" "It didn't," Sebright
said succinctly. "The Com found us
some transportation—Tycho's gig. What's wrong, you
having second thoughts?"
"Diana—"
"You
didn't fall for that, did you?" Dunn asked cattily. "She only wanted
to improve her chances of getting picked for
Des-cartes. But
the joke's on her, isn't it—she was sleeping with the wrong man."
"Lay
off, Tom," Sebright said sharply. His tone became sympathetic. "This
is one of those things you wanted me to tell you, Thackery, except you wouldn't
have understood. When it comes to relations outside the ship, you've got to
have your emotions in neutral. If you don't, you're just asking to be
kicked."
"But
I care
about her—"
"You
can't afford to," Sebright said. "Because you can't stay, she can't
leave, and she won't be here if you ever get back. Like it or not, that's the
way it is."
Thackery
answered him with a hostile scowl and moved off toward the climbway. Dunn's
unkind laughter followed him, but he did his best not to hear it.
Despite
the bustle of activity on board, the atmosphere of Descartes had the chill and
fuggy odor of an unused basement. At the center of the bustle was Tyla
Shaeffer, processing the new arrivals.
"Thackery,"
she pronounced when he reached her. "E deck, cabin 5."
"Where's
Neale?"
"Commander's
on bridge deck. Don't you want to know who your roommate is?"
"No," he said. "Is that all?" "It's Voss, the new
awk." When he showed no reaction,
she went on,
disappointed. "Pick up your personal gear in the hold and put your cabin
in order. Then Sebright wants a power-up checkout of the equipment in the
survey lab."
Nodding
acknowledgment, he brushed past her.
The
cabin lock responded to his touch, and he tossed his bag onto one of the bunks.
Sliding into the only chair, he switched on the netlink.
"A-Cyg
net," he requested.
"Restricted.
No personal communications." It was the system's voice, not the comtech.
"Authority."
"By
order of Commander Neale."
"Page
op, please."
"Tycho— excuse me, Descartes com," said a
new voice.
"Is
that you, Jessie?"
"I
think so," Baldwin said, chuckling.
"Why
the com restrictions?"
"I
think they're uploading data from
Tycho."
"That
wouldn't affect the whole net, would it?"
"Hey,
I'm new here myself. Excuse me, the bridge is paging."
"Can
you get Neale for me?"
"She's
on her way down the core to see Abrams about the drive." "Thanks-
It
was just a few steps down a short corridor to the climbway. Stepping off the
deck, he started to ascend hand over hand toward the bridge deck. He felt the
vibrations of other traffic, and, looking up, spotted Neale.
"Portside
up, starboard down, mister," she snapped at him when her feet were within
a few rungs of his hands.
Chastened,
he crabbed around to the other side of the ladder. "Commander Neale, will
you lift the com restrictions when the data upload is finished?"
"No,"
she said, moving past without pausing.
"Will
we be docking at the base before we leave?" he called with a note of
desperation. The reply was the same. Thackery scrabbled downship to stay with
her. "There's someone on base I need to talk to—"
Neale
stopped and gazed unsympathetically at Thackery. "No."
"Commander, I have a right to my private life—" "Forget
her," Neale said bluntly. "It wasn't what you thought it was,
whatever you thought it was."
"It
meant something—"
"Grow
up, Thackery," Neale growled irritably, "before I start wishing I was
leaving you here with your old roomie."
She
went on downship, leaving him feeling helpless and hating it. This is going to stop happening,
he thought determinedly. Go
back to what you know. You learned the game at Georgetown, that you make your
place not by worrying about your needs but by meeting theirs. Accommodation,
compromise, living within the rules, that's the game here, just like it was
there. You wore that suit once and it's time to bring it out and dust it off
again.
IMPERFECT KNOWLEDGE
(fromMerrittThackery's JIADUR'S WAKE)
. . . The linguacomp's
inference processor represented the highest successful application to date of
expert systems technology—thinking machines. But despite the heuristic marvels
of the Interlisp-P programming language, the inference processor could do
nothing without an extensive knowledge base. Aboard the survey ships, that
knowledge base consisted of a syntax and vocabulary file for every known
language and dialect, from dead languages such as Latin and Gaelic, to invented
ones such as Esperanto and Cobol, to the native languages of Journa, Muschynka,
and Pai-Tem.
But
the linguacomp was only one application of a basic technology for which a
bigger job was waiting: the colony problem itself. The inference processor was
ready whenever the knowledge base was large enough. The Service was hungry for
information, a hunger barely slaked by the hundreds of entry and exit
dispatches streaming back from the survey ships to Unity, filling more and more
volumes of subatomic memory with the portraits of a profusion of suns and
worlds. Every colony discovery was a feast, a thousand more pieces for the
billion-piece puzzle.
At
some point, the knowledge base would reach a threshold of completion, and the
machine would at last unravel the five fundamental mysteries of the First
Colonization—to where from where, when, how, why, and, most tantalizing, what
happened afterward. That was the hope, nay, the expectation, of the Committee
on the ReCreation of First Colonization Planning. They had nothing else on which
to pin their hopes, convinced as they were by their own failures that the
intricacies of the problem were beyond the scope of an individual human mind.
But
until that threshold was reached, until the machine proved itself the equal of
those expectations, it was the insights and energies and inspirations of those
individual humans on which so much depended....
chapter 6
Redemption
At first, the star and
planets comprising 118 Lyra were mere dimples, tiny space-time pocks on the
gravigator's mass detector. Then
Descartes
dropped out of the craze, and, with an urgent curiosity that seemed to belong
more to the ship than the parasites within, reached out with her many senses
and made them worlds.
The
ship was already within the heliosphere, that living, pulsating halo of charged
particles which bathed some planets in death and battered relentlessly at the
magnetic armor of the rest. On the bridge, the immediate priority was to sample
the plasma pouring outward from the cool orange star and gauge its threat to
the crew.
If,
as the remote survey had suggested, the host star was a normal Main Sequence
inhabitant in stable mid-life, then the Survey Protocols would come into play.
But if 118 Lyra were an undiagnosed flare star or other miscreant, Descartes would leave
hastily and with no regrets, for no star hostile to Descartes could be a friend
to dirt-bound life.
Downship
in the survey lab, a cheer went up when Guerrieri confirmed that it was a
planetary system, and not a primordial nebula, which was responsible for the
excess infrared measured by the A-Cyg observatory.
"We've
got rocks!" he exulted. "Two, no, three big ones— looks like eight
altogether." But Sebright did not join in the celebration, and his reserve
put a damper on their exuberance.
The
gravigator's data was already being processed into a map of the system and a
timetable for visiting its components. But most of the instruments lay inert,
and would remain so until
Descartes
fell into orbit around its first new world. Only the telecameras, probing the
still-distant face of the nearest planet, and the com scanner, searching
hopefully for new voices in the ether, were in use.
Presendy,
lights flickered throughout the ship as the entry dispatch, a high-intensity
burst of radio waves carrying the report of their arrival, was transmitted
toward Earth. The lights flickered again, less severely, as the same message
was directed at A-Cyg. It was one of the ironies of the Service that had either
message been one of real urgency, it would have been necessary for Descartes herself to
return, since the dispatch was bound by a celestial speed limit which the
ship's drive was empowered to ignore.
At
last the ship's ecologist gave her blessing to an extended stay in the system,
and the real work of Descartes
began. By that time Muir had determined that only the second planet fell within
the star's biosphere, as defined by human-biased criteria. But her pleas to
begin there fell on deaf ears.
"There's
three planets more or less between us and Two that need surveying first,"
was Sebright's reply.
"But
Commander Neale—"
"Doesn't
know enough about stellar ecology to start telling us how to set our
priorities," Sebright finished for her. "I know, the Corn's real
eager to find a colony. But possible isn't the same thing as probable, and
probable's nothing close to certain. We're going to do this efficiently,
without a lot of jumping around and doubling back. Be patient. Anything that's
there on Two now will be there ten days from now."
So
the first world to be studied was Seven, a cold gray-green globe tracing a
slow, lonely path near the rim of the system. In the course of twenty-four
hours, more than 95 percent of the planet's gaseous face was scanned
simultaneously by more than a dozen instruments: photopolarimeters, imaging
radars, ultraviolet spectroscopes, magnetometers, and more. Data poured in far
faster than it could be reviewed, much less analyzed, forcing each team of
specialists to focus on just one or two key items.
Eagan
and Thackery mapped the thick atmosphere in three dimensions and determined its
composition, while Guerrieri and Tyszka gauged mass and rotation and listened
in on the squealing and booming of the magnetosphere doing battle with the
stellar wind. At their elbows Muir and Collins worked out Seven's energy budget
and modeled its unpromising ecosphere. Sebright contented himself with the
narrow-angle telecamera and its subjective portrait of the planet's face.
They
expected few surprises, and found none. In truth, the Service had only modest
interest in planets per se. A few facts sufficed to place most new worlds
firmly in the Rogermann planetary classification system: the major constituent
of the planetary mass (ices, oxides and silicates, or gases), the primary
source of internal heat, and the primary constituent of the atmosphere.
Virtually
all possible combinations of those three characteristics had been seen during
Phase I, and most of them more than once. Uranus had a hundred known cousins,
and Mercury a thousand. As a consequence, unless there was some compelling
anomaly, no uninhabitable planet warranted more than a day's intensive study.
Not even Seven's third satellite, an ice world puddled by nitrogen lakes fed by
nitrogen rain from a dense nitrogen sky, was deemed worthy of a lingering look.
The
lesson of Rogermann's system was that it is in the fine structure that worlds
achieve uniqueness. The Valles Marineris of Mars and the Great Red Spot of
Jupiter, the lobate scarps of Kapteyn's Star Three and the equatorial plateau
of Muschynka—from such things proceeded all individuality, all identity. A
corollary lesson was that such considerations matter only on a world which
harbors life or temporarily enjoys its company.
It
was the search for such life, then, and not reflexive scientific hoarding or
the need for exacting classification which prompted the wholesale collection of
data. The story of the Pai-Tem contact provided a sharp reminder of the wisdom
of that practice. That small, pretechnological colony was discovered not during
the initial survey, but during the analysis of data on the craze to the next
star.
The
alternating six-hour watches, which began the day before a planetary encounter
and ended a day after it was concluded, were eye-fatiguing and bottom-numbing.
The surveyors took short breaks when they could, most often at their consoles
or no more than a few steps away. Housekeeping went by the board, and meals
were eaten on the fly if at all.
"Sebright
wasn't exaggerating, was he?" a yawning Tyszka asked at one point during
the encounter with One, a parched cinder orbiting just outside the star's Roche
limit.
"About what?" Thackery
said, eyes trained on the columns of numbers rolling up the screen of the
geoscience console. "About how hard we'd be working. Even if I had a sex
life, which I don't, I wouldn't have one now." At the other end of the
lab, Muir rolled her eyes and turned away.
"It
isn't so bad," Thackery said.
"No?
I get maybe four hours sleep in a six-hour block. And I'm developing lower back
pain from spending too much time sitting in this damn ergonomic chair."
Thackery
shrugged. "I'm getting along all right."
"Come
to think of it, I haven't heard you complain—not even when Sebright's
away." Tyszka peered narrowly at Thackery. "What's your secret?"
"No
secret."
"Give, or I'll
tell the joke about the Councilman and the pavement princess again,"
Tyszka said threateningly. "For life's sake, tell him," Muir pleaded.
"I've heard it four times already, and it wasn't funny when it was new."
Thackery,
grinned. "No secret. I keep thinking that a single system, even a single
star or planet, would be a lifetime's work to properly study, and that there's
no telling when anyone will come here again. Makes me want to make the most of
the time we have."
"Stars,
a serious answer. How dull," Tyszka said disappointedly. "Didn't
think you cared that much for this part of it. What happened, did Gregg infect
you with rock fever?"
Thackery
shook his head. "I want to do my part. I realize I may never get a chance
to prove myself as a contact linguist. So if I'm going to contribute, it has to
be this way."
"Nice
speech," Muir said cynically. "Should have saved it for when Sebright
was around." Tyszka clucked. "Now, Donna, you wouldn't be impugning
Thack's motives here, would
you?"
"Ask him."
"Woof,"
said Tyszka to himself as he turned back to his work. "And I thought /
wasn't getting enough sleep."
During
the first watch at Four, Thackery amassed enough data to demonstrate that the
planet was a volcanic nightmare, the heat from its rich lode of radioactives
driving a restless geothermal engine which continually bathed the surface in a
patchplaster of liquid rock.
"Let's
send down a couple of spike seismographs," Eagan said after reviewing the
report. "I thought you might want to. I've got some candidate sites picked
out "
Passing
up the chance to return to his cabin and sleep, Thackery stayed and helped
prepare the two-metre-long torpedo-like instruments for deployment. Then he
hovered behind Eagan at the teleoperator station as he flew the first of them
down to a stable landing and a successful implant.
"How about letting me handle
number two?" Thackery asked as Sebright entered the survey lab and joined
them. Sebright raised an eyebrow, but Eagan genially said, "Why not?"
and gave up the chair.
Conscious
of the appraising eyes behind him, Thackery shrugged off his fatigue and
marshaled his concentration. Unexpected upper-air winds in the turbulent
atmosphere threatened to carry the seismograph downrange, but he was able to
kill off the extra velocity with a series of controlled stalls and guide the
glider to a gentle three-legged landing within metres of its intended target,
half a globe away from the first.
"I
thought languages were supposed to be your long suit," Sebright said
afterward.
"They
are," said Thackery, unaware that his answer came across as bragging. This part isn't so different from what I was
doing aboard
Babbage, he was thinking.
Wouldn't that give Hduna a few laughs at my expense—
Sebright
grunted. "Well, it's good to know we don't lose too much when Gregg's
catching his six." You
don't lose anything, Thackery thought but did not say. And before I'm done you'll know it.
At
last Descartes
moved on to Two, a clear-skied rust-faced world with the thin air of the
Himalayas and a temperate-zone climate like a sunny November day. At the end of
five orbits Sebright called the team together. Their subdued expressions spoke
volumes about their findings.
"What's
the prospect?" asked Sebright.
Muir
responded as though the question had been addressed to her alone. "Gregg
says there's no methane signature in the atmosphere. None of my instruments are
showing any ground cover. The oxygen's all in the crust and the water vapor's
all in the air, and the geochemical cycles that might move them are sluggish or
nonexistent."
"Conclusion?"
"Livable,
but not without a fairly high level of environmental technology," Tyszka
offered. "A level we would have detected by now."
"So
nobody's home."
"In
a word, no."
"Did
you seriously expect otherwise? On our first semiterrestrial planet in our
first system?" He was answered with sheepish smiles. "All
right." He squinted at diem. "Anyone living upstairs? You are, aren't
you, Mike?"
Tyszka
nodded.
"Get
yourself moved down here, pronto. You'll be bunking with—" "Me,"
said Thacl -ry. "You'll have to move out Voss." "With Thack. Fii
1
his roommate and tell him he's being
chased."
A
grin broke out on Tyszka's face as he realized what the order meant.
"Right away," he said, and left the room with long, bounding strides.
"We're
going down?" Eagan asked, surprised.
Sebright
nodded.
"But
there're no indications to justify it. This has every earmark of an ordinary
B2N world. Oxysilicate crust, primary nitrogen atmosphere, three-strength
magnetosphere—God knows I wish it were a more interesting place, but it's
not."
Sebright
waited patiendy until Eagan was through. "I intend for us to make a survey
landing on every surface where a minimum E-suit is enough protection,"
Sebright said. "Or at least one in every system."
"But
what about the Survey Protocols—"
"I
haven't read them," was Sebright's offhand reply.
"Survey
Protocols are advisory," Thackery offered from his station at the far end
of the lab. "The Concom has discretion in all matters related to
landings."
"The
protocols say that, do they?" Sebright mused idly.
"Yes."
"Well,
good. Then let's go down and have a look." He reached across the board to
the shipnet. "Ali, this is Mark. We're going into isolation mode in thirty
minutes."
Neale's
tone communicated her displeasure. "There's no colony on Four, is
there?"
"No
indications of one to this point."
"Then
I assume you have some other good reason. This will hold us here for at least
another day, and there're four more planets to look over before we can move
on."
The
comer of his mouth curling upward, Sebright glanced at Thackery. "It's
just a three-hour survey landing, Ali. Per the Protocols."
Neale
sighed audibly. "All right. Flag your landing site on the map and I'll see
we're moved into an appropriate orbit." Switching off, Sebright grinned.
"Let's make a house call. Donna, Gregg, Derrel, get going."
As
the trio rose and hastened out, disappointment flashed momentarily across
Thackery's face. Then the mask fell back in place—but not so quickly that
Sebright missed the transition.
"What's
the matter, Thack?" Sebright said, standing. "Think you should be
going?"
Thackery's
response was quick and evenly modulated. "No. Backups take part in
planetary landings only when the primary specialist is unavailable."
Sebright
snorted bemusedly and shook his head. "I almost believe you mean that. All
the same, I don't think I'll play any poker with you. Don't worry—you'll get
your chance."
"I'm
not worried," he said, jumping up. "Any objection to me going down
and helping them with their E-suits?" Sebright regarded the younger man
thoughtfully, and for a moment Thackery thought he had gone too far.
"Never mind," Sebright said, sighing. "Go ahead and give them a
hand."
By
universal agreement, the difficult part of an E-suit was the gloves. The suit
itself, a close-fitting single-piece garment, resembled a Service allover and
was put on the same way. To that basic foundation were added boots, gloves, and
a soft helmet, all made of the same thin polymerized sandwich of synthetics and
all attached by rigid and uncooperative binding rings. A wearer could usually
get both boots secured in place, frequently the helmet, rarely the first glove,
and almost never die second glove.
When
Thackery reached the dress-out room at the foot of the climhway, Guerrieri was
already dressed and aboard, beginning his checkout of the gig. Muir had donned
all but her helmet and was trying to help Eagan with his gloves. The E-suit fit
her more closely than her usual garb of choice, leading Thackery to a quiet and
favorable reevalution.
"Oh,
good, Thack," Muir said on seeing him. "You can do this. My gloves
are so freezin* slippery I can't get a grip on his." Tossing the glove she
had tucked under one arm to Thackery, she stepped to the hatch and dropped
through.
"That's
so the microbes can't get a grip on them, either," Thackery called after
her. He waited a moment for a laugh that didn't come, then turned to Eagan.
"I
don't know if I should let you do those," Eagan said sparringly as he held
out his hands.
"Why?"
"I
think you want my job."
"Banish
the thought," Thackery said as a loud
clack
announced that the first glove was properly seated.
"I
don't know. You've been busting cee all week—no, since we left A-Cyg, really.
Even Sebright's noticed, asked about you."
"When was
that?" Thackery said, and then bit down on his lower lip as he applied
leverage to the remaining glove. "I don't know, one of my watches. After
Four. What was all that bowing and scraping about up there, anyway?"
Clack.
"I
don't know what you mean," Thackery said, stepping back. "You're all
set."
"Sure
you don't. All the same, better watch it, it's hard on the knees," Eagan
jibed. "You going to stay here and help Mike?"
"Yes.
Go on, check out your gear."
It
took another forty minutes to get all three of the surveyors on board and the
gig checked out to Sebright's satisfaction. Watching on the bay monitor in the
dress-out room, Thackery did not hear the go to proceed. But there was no
mistaking the hissing and the basso thrum of pumps as the air in the bay was
drawn into a storage reservoir. Now it was the pressure hatch at the foot of
the climbway, and not the bay's wide clamshell space door, which Descartes' internal pressure
held firmly closed. A few moments later the gig was released from its anchors,
and slid sideways out the space door and away.
The
picture shuddered as the wind grasped at the camera pylon, extended two metres
above the fuselage of the gig. The picture was of a rock-littered desert
stretching out to meet a pale violet sky.
"Wish
we were watching upstairs on the edrec deck," Tyszka said wistfully.
"It's
being recorded. Later," Thackery chided.
It looks like a recording now, he added silently,
disappointed. Mars, or maybe Procyon
Six—I've seen so much video this seems like just one more. Connect,
Merritt—your friends are down there.
"Here
they come," Collins said suddenly.
At
the bottom of the screen appeared heads, distorted by the foreshortening of the
wide-angle lens. In that moment, as the landing team walked out onto the
landscape, kicking up the dust of a new world, Two lost its patina of
familiarity for Thackery.
"This
is fantastic!" crackled the voice of Eagan. On the monitor, the shortest
of the three figures raised his arms to each side and made a slow pirouette.
"I haven't even seen them yet and I can tell you the pictures don't do
justice."
Another
of the blue-suited figures turned and waved vigorously toward the camera.
"For something that clogs up the whole damn bay, the gig sure looks tiny
down here," Guerrieri radioed. "Man, I was starting to forget what a
wide-open space really looks like. This is going to spoil the edrec room for me
for a while."
"I
can practically feel the wind right through the suit," Eagan crowed.
"Look at this! I feel naked." Sebright chuckled. "Best advice is
not to follow through on that impulse."
In
the background, Muir had been edging away from the others. Now she broke into a
trot, heading toward the horizon. She stumbled and almost fell, and they heard
her laughter as she caught herself and kept going, dancing nimbly among the
rock obstacles.
"Don't
go out of sight," Eagan called after her.
Without
breaking stride, Muir reached up and switched off her radio.
"Stay
with her, please," Sebright counseled, and the two men started after Muir
at a brisk walk. Two hundred metres out, she disappeared over a rise. A few
moments later Eagan and Tyszka followed her footprints into invisibility.
"Hey, Donna."
They heard a long sigh of pleasure. "No walls. No people. Oh, what a
wonderful place."
"She's
got something there," Guerrieri said fervendy. "If I turn my back on
these guys, I'm all alone here. It's like I always have been alone here, you
know? Because the gig's out of sight, and that's the only reminder that I was
ever anywhere else. It's a very strange feeling."
"Understood,
Gregg," Sebright said. "Now if you folks would wander back, we'll
take a look at item one on die survey landing checklist."
An
answer came not from down on the surface, but from upship and the command deck
and in the terse, angry voice of Neale. "Mark, are you there?"
"Yes,
Ali."
"I
want to see you, the minute you break isolation."
That
minute was a long time in coming. After the gig was safely nestled back in its
moorings inside the bay, it took three hours to process the landing team
through primary decontamination. Beyond that stretched a 48-hour incubation
period during which the contact decks continued to be sealed off physically and
environmentally from the rest of the ship. By the time the team was pronounced
healthy and the isolation mode terminated,
Descartes
had moved on to Five.
But
Neale had no trouble summoning up her simmering anger when Sebright at last
appeared before her, especially since by that time it was also clear that the
scientific results of the landing were, to be charitable, trivial.
The
encounter was in the privacy of her cabin anteroom, and she did not waste words
on protocol. "What was the purpose of that display down on Four?" she
demanded. "Is that a sample of the kind of leadership you've brought to
this ship? Whatever his other failings, your predecessor wouldn't have asked
for a landing on a world like Four. He wouldn't have allowed that landing to become
an undisciplined frolic. He
wouldn't
have wasted the time and resources of this ship on a
private
self-indulgence. Explain why you did it."
But
her emotion seemed to wash over Sebright without affecting his sanguine
expression. "Walking out onto a new world is a high," he said simply.
"I want them to leam how to handle it when it doesn't matter if they screw
up or their attention wanders."
"That's
not good enough."
"It
is for me."
Neale
scowled. "You could at least make an effort to persuade me that this was a
valuable rehearsal, or something to that effect."
"Why?"
Sebright said, stretching out his legs and resting one ankle on the other.
"Look, Ali, I could argue that we really needed a full test of the gig so
we knew we could count on it. I could wax poetic on how much we learned from a
dry run of the isolation procedure. I could try to make you think we needed
some physical samples to keep Gregg and Thack busy during the next craze. Most
of that is even true."
"Then
do it, dammit, and let's get this behind us."
"Ali,
if we get lucky, you want the contact to go smoothly. You want the contact team
paying attention to the colonists and not the surroundings. Right?"
"They
don't need practice to do that. They need discipline."
Sebright
scratched his chin and studied her. "Maybe we should take you down with
us. I'd be willing to bet that in all your time on Dove, you never made a
landing."
"It
wasn't my place to," she bristled.
Sebright
nodded. "I know that. But you wouldn't say that kind of thing if you had
that experience. Look, when this business was first starting and the astronauts
would come back from a flight, everyone asked them what it was like to see the
Earth from space. It was a very exclusive experience, and it seemed like only
members of the club could make each other understand—and they didn't need to.
Maybe you even felt that way when you made your first orbital. I know I
did."
"So?"
"So
now things are reversed. We're used to the sight of a planet from orbit. It's
going down to walk on one that pushes those buttons for us. Don't take my word
for it. Go down with Jael and the others on the next one."
"No,"
she said sharply. "First, ship commanders belong on the command deck, not
in a landing team taking unnecessary risks—certain tapes in the edrec library
not withstanding. And second, there aren't going to be any more of these
excursions."
"Survey
landings are at the Concom's discretion," Sebright said quiedy.
"Subject
to my
review. You don't run this whole ship, Mark. You don't even seem to be running
your part of it with any particular distinction." She looked away and
exhaled sharply. "I'll accept your other reasons for this landing, so
there'll be no more trouble over it. But you've used those reasons up, and
until you have some new ones there'll be no more survey landings."
"I
gave you another reason."
"If
you mean that nonsense of yours about needing to 'adjust' to making landings, I
reject it. Every planet's different anyway, so 'adjusting' to one won't do a
damn bit of good on the next. What they need is to be taught to put their
responsibilities first. That's how to make these things go smoothly, whether
it's a survey landing or a contact landing."
Sebright
stood, his face offering an unflattering opinion of what he had heard.
"There'll be some trouble, bad feelings, if the others don't get to go.
You have to let me have one more rehearsal landing."
"No,
I don't. Your bad judgment created the trouble," she said cuitly.
"You deal with it."
After
nineteen days in the system,
Descartes
crazed again, carrying them on to the next star. Thackery left feeling as
though the task he had set for himself was already half accomplished. He knew
he had done a good job, and he knew that Sebright recognized it. That pleased
him in two ways: because Sebright was his superior, and because since A-Cyg
Thackery had seen a different Sebright, one that in time he might grow to
respect.
Unfortunately,
the obvious but unacknowledged falling-out between Sebright and Neale meant
that Thackery could not count on that favorable impression filtering upward. To
move up in Neale's eyes, Thackery knew he would have to do well in something
close to Neale's heart.
And
there was only one solution to that equation. The colony problem was more than
Neale's primary interest—it was a preoccupation verging on an obsession.
Already it was a standing joke that anytime Abrams, the senior electronics
tech, could not be found, she was probably in Neale's quarters working on the
star projector.
Yet
there were risks in such a tactic—the risk of succeeding too well. If he were
to somehow generate a real advance in First Colonization theory, he could count
on arousing not her approval but her professional jealousy. Certainly he could
not expect to retain credit for any minor insights shared with her. She had
already shown with her crew interviews, particularly the lengthy exploration of
Nakabayashi's slow-ship/fast-ship argument, that she had no compunction about
appropriating others' ideas for her personal dispatches to the FC Committee.
No,
for Neale a slightly different strategy was required. The road to her approval
was not to be a high achiever, a rival expert, but to be seen as taking the
colony problem seriously. Then his interest would be reinforcing, not
threatening. They always want
confirmation from others that what they think important really is,
he thought. Well, that I can give
her.
Despite
that modest goal, Thackery knew he had to be properly prepared. Enthusiasm
would not be enough; he had already felt the quick scorn Neale reserved for the
self-serving and opportunistic. Nothing destroys the illusion of sincere
interest faster than an ignorant question, he reminded himself, and nothing
establishes credibility faster than an insightful one.
Time
for that preparation hid to be found in a schedule nearly as hectic as that
they had kept insystem. But by arranging to be assigned responsibility for
analyzing the data from the four worlds least likely to support life of any
kind, Thackery was able to steal hours from his regular duties without risking
an embarrassing oversight. He spent those hours studying the direction FC
theory had taken since Jiadur
and Journa.
Thankfully,
he was still a quick study, especially on matters sociological and theoretical,
and two days before the craze ended he judged himself ready. But there was
still the problem of arranging a private consultation, especially since Neale
rarely met with ratings except at her own request. After weighing the
alternatives, he chose to intercept her as she was leaving the wardroom after
what he hoped was a satisfying meal.
"Commander
Neale?"
"What
is it, Thackery?" She did not stop, and so he followed
her out
into the corridor.
"I've been doing
some thinking about the colony problem—" "As I recall, you badly
needed to do some." "Yes, sir. Commander, I've reached a bit of a
branch point,
and nobody seems to be
able to tell me whether I'm going the right direction. If you could find a
little time to spare me, I'd very much appreciate the benefit of your experience
in keeping me on track."
"What's
this 'branch point'?"
"Commander,
what I'm really hoping for is some guidance in evaluating the alternatives to
the standard First Colonization paradigm."
"You
think there are any alternatives?"
"Well,
I thought so, at least one interesting one—but that's why I really need the
advice of someone who's been involved in this from the beginning."
There
was a long pause. "All right. I can give you ten minutes. Not here. My
quarters, two o'clock."
She
kept him waiting several minutes, but acted as though the reverse had been
true. "You don't have much time, so let's hear it," she said as she
settled in her lounger.
Thackery
took a seat facing but not too close to her. "As I understand it, the
reigning First Colonization theory is that there was a great civilization in
Northern Europe during the last glacial interstade, some 25,000 years
ago."
"Yes,
the Mannheim hypothesis," she said. "But you oversimplify. There are
some theorists who place the civilization in the U.S.S.R. during the Valdai
glaciation, and a number that would push the date of the Forefather culture
back much farther, to the Ipswich interglacial. There are probably a hundred
variations on that basic idea. We're obliged to look back at least as far as the
Weichsel—we have too good a picture of history since then."
"And
if I understand Mannheim's argument, the civilization was wiped out by a
subsequent fast glaciation, and any remaining traces were destroyed during the
reoccupation of the continent, accounting for the lack of any historical
records or physical artifacts of their culture."
"Not
exactly. Most members of the Mannheim school believe that the rather remarkable
and historically sudden development of Middle Eastern civilization from the
Sumerians to the Greeks was built on refugees who brought at least some of
their knowledge, if not their technology, down from the north."
"I
see," Thackery said, though he had already known that detail. "Of
course, the higher the technology with which we credit the FC culture, the
harder it is to explain why they didn't anticipate or find some way to cope
with the glaciation. And even a fast glaciation is slow in human terms."
Thackery's
comments consciously echoed those in a paper Neale had written after the end of
the Dove
mission, and she studied his face a long moment before responding. "I
believe the First Colonization
was their
response to the glaciation. It's possible the Firsts had an incomplete
knowledge of planetary climatology, and thought that when the ice started to
return it meant, in essence, the end of the world. They couldn't have known or
even had reason to hope that the ice would only advance as far south as Kiev
and die Spanish-French border."
"They
must have had an excellent understanding of the basic nature of the Galaxy,
though."
"Oh,
obviously, of course. They must have had their Anaxagoras, their Copernicus,
their LaPlace. They must have known that the planets were other worlds, and
must have believed that the stars were other suns."
"Has
any linguistic analysis been done comparing the early Mideastern languages with
the colonial languages?" "Yes, not very fruitfully. Have you been
considering that avenue of research?"
"If
I had access to the proper materials, I'd certainly want to go over what has
been done and see what's left to be done." Thackery made that commitment
knowing full well that the ship's library did not contain facsimiles of the
ancient documents he would need.
"I
doubt anything conclusive could come out of it, or it would have been pursued
elsewhere."
"Most
likely," Thackery agreed quickly. "Now, the way I understand it, one
of the hard questions has been why the colonists weren't able to maintain the
level of technology that brought them there."
"That's
right. On Earth we can blame a combination of the ice, the cultural stress
imposed by the colonization effort, and a society-wide fatalism that came out
of their misunderstanding of the situation. Out of the four colonies, only
Journa was even close to being capable of space travel, and it was only the
spur of contact with the Founders—us—that brought that out of them."
"And
even that was accomplished in primitive fashion, with a nuclear-pulse slowship
and no computer technology."
She
nodded. "But their hydromechanical switching and logic systems still
represent the highest level of technology found on the colonies."
Thackery
shook his head as though bemoaning a regrettable twist of fate. "And no
records or remnants of the FC starships have been found."
"Well,
of course, for a while, we thought
Jiadur
was one, left in orbit and then pressed back into service for the Reunion. But
the Joumans apparently built it themselves."
"Is
there any chance they were following an FC design?"
She
crossed her arms across her chest, which to Thackery was a telling bit of body
language; he had noted that there was no information in the Journan contact
record about Jiadur's designers. "That's a question that probably hadn't
been looked into as carefully as it might have been," she said carefully.
"But we know a lot about how they built it, and it's pretty obvious that
it was something fully within the reach of the contemporaneous Journan
culture."
"Let
me be sure I understand. Even though the Mannheim hypothesis holds together
analytically, there's no hard evidence to support it."
"No,
there isn't. Which is why the door is still open, at least a crack, for
alternatives. Which is what you said we were going to talk about."
"How
seriously is the possibility of a second-species intervention taken?"
"It's
called the Daniken hypothesis, which if you understand the reference is one of
the problems." She sighed. "It would be taken very seriously, I
suppose, if anyone could nominate a second species that might be responsible.
You know what the Service has found. The Galaxy is not exacdy fecund. There's a
lot of worlds that could support at least some life, but very few of them
actually do, and littie above the complexity level of a sea sponge. Even the
colony worlds tend to have a fairly simple native ecology."
"But
the theory doesn't require fecundity. It would only take one other species
reaching the level we have, but ten or fifty thousand years sooner. And
second-species intervention eliminates a lot of the difficulties,"
Thackery said with manufactured earnestness. "It would explain why the
colonists 'lost' their high technology, because it would mean they probably
never had it. I would explain Earth 'forgetting' an earlier technological age,
because it would never have had one. It would eliminate the problem of
accounting for the choice of colony stars and worlds in human terms."
"And
this magic is worked through an even more farfetched series of postulates than
the Mannheim hypothesis requires," she said sharply. "Every serious
student of colony theory considers this 'alternative' at some time or
another—because it's easy. What questions it doesn't answer it makes
unanswerable, because it transfers both the problems of means and motive to an
unknown and unknowable alien intelligence. The Daniken hypothesis is wishful
thinking. I would not waste any more time on it."
The
answer was no less than Thackery expected—in fact, he privately agreed with it.
"I appreciate your frankness, Commander," he said smoothly, rising.
"And I'll follow your advice and concentrate on the question of proof for
the Mannheim hypothesis."
She
nodded approvingly. "That's the only profitable course. Not that you've
shown me any reason to think you're capable of making a contribution. There was
nothing new in anything you had to say. But at least you've moved beyond the
ignorant mental meanderings you displayed the last time." She glanced at
her watch. "Your time is up, Thackery. You're excused."
Despite
her words, it was an effort to keep the grin of self-satisfaction off his face
as he left. It was an effort to keep from dancing a celebratory jig down the
corridor. For he knew without any question that he had achieved his purpose. He
was a long way from a complete redemption, and even farther from achieving the
status he hoped eventually to reach, but he was on the way.
He
knew that not because of his confidence that Neale's next personal dispatch
would include a speculative commentary on the origin of the design of Jiadur. He knew it not
because she had implicitly included him in her comment about "every
serious student of contact theory."
Rather,
he knew it because his ten-minute consultation had taken the better part of an
hour to complete, and it was not until the end of it that Neale had noticed or
cared. For the moment, that was all the confirmation he required. The rest
would come in time, as it always had.
PROTOCOLS
(from Merritt Thackery's JIADUR'S WAKE)
. . . Easily overlooked
in evaluating the wisdom of the Service administrators is the qualitative
difference between the Phase I and Phase II searches.
The
crews of the Pathfinders, and in particular their commanders, were expected to
show initiative and exercise judgment. They carried a burden of trust which
freed them to focus on results rather than procedures. They responded to that
challenge with courage, integrity, and responsibility far exceeding any narrow
definition of duty.
By
contrast, the crews of the Pioneers were expected merely to follow the
Protocols. There were Flight Protocols limiting the discretion of the
commanders, Operations Protocols governing the work of the crew, and Survey
Protocols dictating the priorities of the surveyors. If the need ever presented
itself, there were voluminous Contact Protocols as well.
The
Protocols were meant to be the accumulated wisdom of the Service, stronger than
recommendations, less rigid than regulations. It was always understood in the
Planning Office that the Protocols could not be inflexibly applied, that they
represented the past and would not always pertain to the present. The
acknowledged risk was that a crew might remember to follow the Protocols and
forget to think, might substitute the judgment of the dead and the distant for
their own.
But
the veterans of the black ellipse perceived something else entirely. The
Protocols represented a loss of faith, a presumption of incompetence, a
failure-oriented psychology. There were few of Command rank who did not realize
that the standards against which they would be judged had been changed, and
that "I followed the Protocols" would be a stronger defense than
"I did what I thought best at the time."
So
it turned out, with bitter irony, that the rules which were intended to prevent
mistakes instead guaranteed them
chapter 7
Gnivi
Though Thackery could cope
with catching his sleep four or five hours at a time, that did not make him any
more accepting of being awoken in the middle of such a session. But there was
no ignoring a shipnet priority page—if the piercing tone did not rouse him, the
annoyed occupants of the adjacent cabins would.
"Here," he
said, standing on unsteady legs in the darkness. "This is Jael. Better
come on up," she said. "I think this might be the one."
"I'll need a shower if I'm going to keep my eyes open," he said.
"I'll be there in a little bit."
Thackery
knew immediately what Collins' call meant: that the planet they were now
orbiting might be the kind of docile B-type world to which Sebright had sent
half the contact team some two months and three crazes ago. Since then his
promise of more such landings had languished unfulfilled as they looked down on
a seemingly unending series of hostile worlds.
Even
based on the inbound scans Thackery saw before the change-of-watch, 605
Cepheus-5 was clearly bland-faced and lifeless. But it was also benign, with a
climate not far removed from that of the ice-free valleys of Antarctica. When
Thackery had turned over the geoscience console to Eagan and left the contact
lab, the orbital studies had just begun. Collins' call told him all he needed to
know about how they were progressing.
The
pitch of excitement in the contact lab and the eagerness
with
which Thackery was greeted provided confirmation. "This is the one,
Thack," Collins said with proselytizing fervor. "It's our turn."
"It looks good. It looks real good," Tyszka said. "Tell him,
Gregg."
"You'd
better brush up on your piloting, then," Thackery jibed, moving to look
over Eagan's shoulder. "I don't want any landings on the bounce. What
about it, Gregg?"
"Everything
I've seen says that minimum E-suits would do," Eagan offered, leaning back
in his chair. "There's a few nasty spots along the equatorial fracture
zone, but nobody says you have to go there."
"I
wish Sebright would get down here," Collins fussed.
"When's
he due?"
'Twenty
minutes ago."
"How long till we need to make a
go/stay decision?"
"An
hour. We're only programmed for three orbits."
"Well—he'll probably be
down," Thackery said, turning out his hands in a gesture of helplessness.
"Look, he's got to be awake by now," Collins insisted. "I think
I should call him and get the okay to start preparations." "Maybe
it'd be better to go on up there in person," Eagan suggested.
"No,"
Thackery said firmly. "That's not a good idea."
"You're
putting too fine a point on it, the way I remember," Tyszka said dryly.
"He'll
be down," Thackery said with more hope than confidence. "He saw how
this planet was shaping up before he went off-shift."
But
too soon, the third orbit was completed, and the expected call came down from
the flight deck:
"Contact
lab, are you clear?"
Thackery
glanced around the room. "Who's today's watch supervisor?"
"I
am," said Eagan. "Look, I can't help you. I can give the clear, but I
can't authorize a landing. And the fact is, all the studies are finished. But if I tell
them that, Neale'll take us out of orbit."
Collins and Thackery exchanged
glances. "If I go get Se-bright, will you wait?" Collins asked Eagan.
"If you don't take too long." He tapped into the shipnet.
"Hold a little
while, will you, Navcom? We're going over the checklist."
"Be
quick about it. The Boss is itching to move on."
"Understood.
We'll have an answer for you post haste."
Shortly,
Sebright appeared at the lab doorway, trailed by Collins. "—like you did
for Donna and the others," she was saying to him.
"Just
hold on," Sebright said, going to the central netlink and placing a finger
on the actuator. "Current. Survey. Summary." The words brought data
to the screen, which Sebright scanned quickly.
Then
he reached for the net switch. "Bridge, this is Sebright. We're
clear." He turned a hard face to Eagan. "Why couldn't you decide
this?"
"Just
a minute—what about our landing?" Collins demanded.
"A
landing's not indicated," Sebright said curtly.
"But
you said—"
"Read
your Protocols. A landing requires anomalous geology, indigenous organisms, or
some other Priority l phenomenon. Do you have anything like that? Jael?"
"No,
but—"
"Mike?"
The
technoanalyst shook his head.
"Thack?"
"No."
"Then what the hell
did you need me for?" Sebright demanded and stalked out, leaving the room
in stunned silence. "Well, no field trip, class," Tyszka ventured
finally. "I won
der if Neale didn't call
him down for the last one."
"Then
why didn't he tell us so?" Collins demanded.
Eagan
shnigged. "Command loyalty, maybe. What d'you think, Thack?"
"Probably,"
Thackery said slowly. "Vets sticking together." The disappointment
was already fading, the hope having been so recently kindled. "He might
have told us sooner. He could have warned us not to expect anything."
Eagan
tried to offer a hopeful outlook. "We'll just have to find you a Priority
l anomaly, eh? They aren't that rare."
But
Collins tossed her head angrily. "That's all right for you. You've got
lots of possibilities. But, Thack, I'm surprised at you. The only thing now
that will get any of us to the surface is a colony," she said bitterly.
"Want to give me odds of less than six figures on that?"
No
one did.
Descartes spent the
succeeding months wandering within the tenuous remnant of a nebula which had
given birth to a small cluster of young T Tauri stars. Since they were barely a
half-million years old, the nebula's children were considered poor prospects
for life of their own. But spectrographic studies of the nebular remnant showed
it was rich in second-generation elements—oxygen, silicon, iron, and other
atoms cooked in the hearts of long-dead stars—which made the stars good
candidates to form terrestrial planets.
So
young were the systems that the first
Descartes
visited, 312 Lacerta, was caught still in the process of planet formation. The
stellar nebula had condensed into a flattened disk revolving around the
protostar, but the inner edge of the disk was only beginning to be driven
outward by the T Tauri wind, the blast of energy pouring out of the newly
ignited fusion furnace. It was only the second time that a USS survey ship had
come upon a system in that state (though several had been studied
telescopically by the Service's High-Inclination Observatory orbiting the Sun
in the cis-Cytherean space).
"Looks
like they set out to build Saturn, but the engineers dropped a decimal
point," was Thackery's observation. But that image came only from
imagination and, later, computer modeling, since in close quarters 312 Lacerta
appeared as little more than a vast cloud, lit from within by sporadic
electrical discharges and masking their view of half the Galaxy.
As
there were no planets to be evaluated, Thackery spent much of his time at
Guerrieri's elbow, trying to sharpen his understanding of the gestation of
planets. His own discipline of resource geology was only interested in
geohistory to the extent that it made assays of the crust more accurate.
Unfortunately, the seminar was a brief one.
Descartes
made a single, 22-hour mapping run across the north face of the disk, then
continued on.
At
their next stop they found but a single planet and a thin glittery remnant of a
nebular disk. But the planet was a hundred times the mass of Jupiter, a third
the size of its parent star and very nearly a star in its own right. Seen in
visible light, the planet's coral and ochre atmosphere seethed and surged from
the heat generated at the core by gravitational collapse. Seen in infrared, the
planet literally shone.
Two
crazes later, they reached a system which none of the crew would ever forget.
The three inner planets of 298 Lacerta were undergoing a breathtaking
bombardment as they swept the remaining nebular debris out of the ecliptic.
Even from a safe fifteen million kilometres above the activity, the telecameras
showed at least one spectacular strike blossom into a shortlived crimson flower
every two or three seconds.
"Some
show," Muir said, who along with Thackery and several off-shift operations
awks was watching the spectacle on the edrec screens.
"Isn't it just
glorious?" Thackery said. 'Typical male comment—it looks like a war. Like
a god-damn nuclear war."
"No,
you're not looking at it right," Thackery said earnestly. "It's a
birth—a little bloody, a little stressful, but when it's all over and they get
cleaned up we'll be looking at brand-new triplets."
"Save
it," Muir said tiredly.
"Don't
you understand? We only ever get to see worlds in middle age, just snapshots
that make you think they've always been that way. Seeing this, it's easier to
remember that they change, that they have beginnings and ends—that there're
cycles longer than we can see."
She
looked at him with surprise in her eyes. "I actually think you mean that.
When did this happen?"
He
looked back at her and laughed a little self-deprecating laugh. "I don't
really know."
"Maybe
you pretended you were interested so often that the idea took."
"Maybe,"
he said, and paused. "Was it that obvious?"
"Yes."
Thackery
frowned. "I think maybe it's that I've brought my
expectations in line with
reality. This isn't a bad life. It isn't what I was expecting. But it isn't all
bad, not nearly so."
She
looked back at the screen just as an enormous double strike mushroomed near the
pole of the second planet. "Not nearly so," she echoed. "Keep this
up, Thackery, and I might actually start to find you tolerable. Not attractive,
mind you. But tolerable."
There
was a great deal of interest in 214 Cygnus-2 right from the start. It was the
first world on which there was enough free water for the familiar dynamic of
the water cycle to influence the topology. It was the first world on which the
clouds held rain, not burning acids or strangling smog.
Even
so, the three discontinuous seas were modest by comparison with those of Earth.
The largest, dubbed Mare Australis both for its size and location, averaged
barely a thousand metres deep across its four million square kilometre expanse.
The smallest, a circular body comparable in size to the Caspian Sea, appeared
to be a Hudson Bay-type astrobleme. From the regularity of the shoreline and
the surrounding plain of jagged ejecta, Eagan estimated the asteroidal impact
had occurred less than a quarter million years ago.
From
the beginning of the first orbit, it was on those seas that the contact team's
attention focused. Free water was a Priority 1 anomaly, and there was no
question but that there would be at least one survey landing for samples and
soundings. However, Sebright had not announced whom he would send— the primary
survey team of Muir, Guerrieri, and Eagan, or their impatient backups. Collins,
at least, thought that the question was still an open one.
"He's
got to even things up," she said confidendy to Thackery during the first
orbit. "As long as things don't get too interesting down there, he can
justify sending us. Unless there's something really special down there, he
can't justify not
sending us."
The
discovery that the water of Two's seas was brackish and poisonously
mineral-laden made Thackery wonder if Collins might not be right. But it was
Thackery himself who made the observation that quashed that hope.
"Donna?"
"What?"
"Anything
on the shoreline?"
"Not
a hint. Too many salts and heavy metals. Anything that could grow there would
have to have cell walls made of ceramic." "Agreed. That's what you
get when a pluvial lake shrinks over time, during a warming period. But Mare
Australis does
have active feeder
streams. What about conditions upriver?"
"Show
me the feeders."
She
watched over his shoulder as Thackery tracked the sinuous path of the largest
of the three shallow rivers. For several hundred kilometres there was no change
in the signatures returned by the infrared mapper: weathered rock, salt flats,
and mineral deposits. At irregular intervals, the river even disappeared underground,
only to reemerge a kilometre or more further along.
"There,"
Thackery said suddenly. "What's that?"
"Looks
like a grassland," she said, hurrying back to her own console. "Oh,
blessed, look at how big it is. Five thousand kilometres on a side."
"How'd
we miss it?"
"We
didn't. I'm looking at the data from the first pass. Damn, there's even some
variation in the flora—four or five different signatures, all mixed
together."
"Like
farmland?" "Oh, no. It's got to be a natural distribution. But it's
still the best we've found so far."
Thackery
turned the console over to Eagan a few hours later, along with a request from
Tyszka and Muir to construct a model of the grassland's aquifer and drainage
patterns.
"Michael?
What kind of resolution do you and Donna want on this map?" Eagan called
to the other end of the lab as he settled in.
"What
do you usually do?"
"Three-metre
contour lines."
"That
won't do. Can you give us one-metre?"
"I
can give you half-metre—it just takes longer to process."
"We'll
take it. The distribution of plant species here is a little hard to figure.
Donna hopes the answer is microclimates."
"I'll
try to have something for you before end-of-watch."
The
task, though time-consuming, called for no new observations. The Nebraska Prairie—as
Muir had dubbed it— had already been scanned, and all data was always collected
at the maximum resolution of the various instniments. The information Eagan
needed was safely stored in the radiation-shielded memory modules which filled Descartes' hull just
downship from the bridge.
Ordinarily,
the data would have remained there until needed for analysis during the
outbound craze, or until the post-Contact exit dispatch to Unity. After the
dispatch, only an abstract of the data would be retained on board for future
reference. The rest had to be purged to make room for new observations on the
next system. It was left to Unity to study the data to exhaustion, and at every
order of resolution.
But
one of the reasons for having a crew on board at all was to maintain
flexibility. For Descartes'
purposes, and particularly the ecologists', the finest resolution was not the
most useful. Too much detail blurred the picture, obscuring the patterns and
relationships which gave order to their science. But if the ecologists needed
that detail, Eagan was prepared to extract it.
The
bulk of the work, the plotting of the ground contours and the extrapolation of
the Nebraska watershed, was done automatically by the geoscience computer.
Nevertheless, at such a fine resolution the processing revealed dozens of
topological features which cried out for Eagan's attention.
In
the course of monitoring the mapping routine, Eagan took a closer look at one
of the regions where the river became subterranean. To his surprise, he found
the contour lines on either bank to be severe in the vertical dimension and
angular in the horizontal, forming a hill-and-rill pattern reminiscent of
spreading ripples on a pond. A central longitudinal rift split the circles into
complementary arcs.
Curious,
Eagan called up die telecamera survey in place of the mapping radar. When the
image of the sector he had been studying materialized on his display, Eagan's
breath caught in his throat. The hills were rows of buildings, the rills
concentric streets.
"There's
a city
down there," he breathed.
So
congested was he with emotion that no one else in the lab heard him—not Muir,
who was by the door laughing with Sebright about something, not Sebright, not
Guerrieri, who was yawning and rubbing his eyes tiredly. When there was no
response, he whirled a half-turn in his seat and shouted as though insulted,
"Didn't you hear me?" That they heard clearly, but not having caught
his first utterance, it only made them look at him wonderingly. He spun back to
face his console and mashed the shipnet contact under his fist.
"Page.
Eagan for Commander Neale," he demanded.
The
answer came from the net's silicon caretaker. "Page mode not available.
Commander Neale is—"
"Jessie!"
Eagan pleaded.
"Here,
Gregg," Baldwin broke in. "What's—"
"Stop
talking and listen! Get Neale up. Get her down here. There's a city below us,
on the Nebraska. A city, d'you hear? We've found a colony! We found a freezin'
colony!"
When
the news reached her, Neale was alone in her room in the embrace of an exercise
cradle, performing the twenty-eighth of a planned fifty leg lifts, the last
element of her thrice-weekly program. By the time she had disengaged herself
from the machine and hastily wiped the perspiration from her face, an update hard
on the heels of the first alert added the welcome detail that the city was
occupied, its streets filled with life. That fillip drove out of her mind any
thought of a quick shower and change of clothing.
There for you. Glen Harrod, she
thought in triumph as she danced down the climbway. There for you, Lin Tamm.
Her short-cut hair was damp and tangled, and bands of perspiration streaked her
singlet between her breasts and in the middle of her back. But her eyes were
bright and eager, glowing with the triumph of her moment. There for you, Wayne Coulson. You all tried
to get in my way, but you couldn't stop me.
This
time, the familiar descent down the climbway was endless, its hundred rungs
seemingly a thousand: down through the enclosed tunnel of the systems section,
through the open spaces of the middecks, past a noisy celebration on the edrec
level, through the longer tunnel piercing the drive, then at last to the
aftdecks and the lab level. The contact lab door was closed, and Sebright was
waiting for her outside it.
"This
is wonderful, Mark, just wonderful," she exulted, throwing her arms around
him in an uncharacteristic display. "Are your people all together in
there? I want to meet with all of you, hear everything."
He
shook his head stiffly. "Not yet."
"We
have to lay out our timetable—"
"No,
Ali," Sebright said composedly. "Not 'we.'"
She
stepped back and squinted at him. "What?"
"You've
already heard everything. Gregg spotted a city on the Nebraska, straddling the
river. The population might be as much as fifty thousand. There's some evidence
in the ecological data which suggests cultivation in the surrounding prairie.
We're searching right now for other cities. That's all we have, to the
minute."
"Which
is why we need to review our strategy—"
"No,
Commander," Sebright said, more sharply than before. "There's
pressure enough on them right now. I won't have you adding to it."
His
words, his very attitude, brought a flash of rage to her gut and a cold
rigidity to her features. "What exactiy does that mean?"
"We'll
make this Contact as expeditiously as possible. But that may mean six weeks
sitting up here learning what we can about them. It may mean six months."
"I understand
that." "I doubt very much if you do. Everyone on this ship knows how
much you've invested in the colony problem." Shfe stored her anger in a
tightened spine, keeping the tension from her face. "What exactiy are you
accusing me of?"
"It's
not an accusation, just an observation. You have one objective, getting
information. I have a whole series of them— a good survey, a safe landing, a
successful Contact, and then, only then, data on the colony problem. I don't
want you suggesting to those people that the first three are any less important
than the last, or infecting them with your impatience. If we're going to do
this right, we're going to have to take it step by step."
"Are
you telling me I don't know how to handle my own crew?"
Sebright
crossed his arms over his chest. "No. I'm reminding you that they aren't
your crew. Not now. When we're crazed,
Descartes
is all yours," he said calmly. "But when we're surveying, the Concom
sets the agenda. Maybe I haven't asserted that as much as I should have up to
now. But we're on Sebright time now. Before you go in there you're going to
have to acknowledge that."
"I
do, do I? Will you tell me what to say when I get in there, too?"
"After
a fashion. You can go in there to congratulate them, and you can go in there to
talk them up for what's coming. You can tell them you have confidence in them
and you can tell them you'll be looking forward to the results of their work.
And that's all. I won't have you down
here looking over their shoulders and getting in the way." "You make
it sound like they're children. Do they know how little confidence you have in
them?"
"When
it comes to this, they are children. And I don't want you getting them excited
about the carnival across die street before they've learned how to look both
ways."
Tight-lipped,
she asked, "And later? Do you have a script for me then, too?"
"We'll
hold an update briefing at every change of watch to go over new material.
You're welcome to monitor those sessions, or even to come and sit in as a
spectator."
"How
very gracious of you. And how exactly do you intend to enforce your
edicts?"
"I
don't need to," Sebright said. "Because you know I'm right, and
because you know I'm within my rights. You know this is the way the Flight
Office meant for the chain of command to go, why they wanted a vet and why they
weren't happy with my predecessor."
"You're
awfully confident of my good will."
"No.
Of your professionalism and your sense of duty. Ali, you did your job. You got
us here. But you're not the expert now. We are. Let us do our job."
Be damned if I'll let you have anything, least
of all my colony, she thought fiercely. This is a grab for glory, nothing more. And
it won't work. It won't work. But for the moment, she
could do nothing. Maddeningly, infuriatingly, Sebright was right.
"I'm
not entirely convinced that anyone's an expert," she began curtly,
"considering that this is only the fourth colony Contact the Service has
attempted. And I hope this discussion isn't a sample of your ability as a
diplomat. Luckily for you, I'm able to separate what you had to say from the
downright abrasive way you said it. And to overlook being accused of something
I wasn't about to do. We'll proceed according to the Protocols—as I always
intended."
But
as she moved past him into the lab and congratulated each member of the team
individually, her mind was occupied with far less conciliatory thoughts. I've outlasted and outmaneuvered far better
than you, Sebright, went the silent refrain. And I'll deal with you, too, soon enough.
"Padwa gnir par batu."
"Sar tan we—"
"Belotoy
gnivi."
Gnivi,
with a hard G. Thackery and the linguacomp agreed that it was the colonists'
name for the city, but it had quickly been adopted as the name of the planet
and the people as well. It seemed only fair, since Gnivi appeared to be the
only city on its surface. There was a rural population numbering perhaps a
hundred thousand scattered throughout the Nebraska, but their most complex
social organization appeared to be the family, and their ties to the city
seemed to be stronger than to each other.
The
sound of Gnivian voices had been a constant in the contact lab for weeks. The
night after the city had been discovered, Tyszka had taken the gig down to
scatter a hundred pebble-sized relays across the city in a nighttime,
lights-out pass five hundred metres above the rooftops. Sixty-four of the
peepers had survived, and fully a dozen had fallen where they regularly picked
up conversations and relayed them back to
Descartes.
Of
that group, the most useful was Number 41, which had come to rest on the
sloping roof outside the second floor great-room window of a Gnivian merchant
family. Since the Gnivi did not seem to have invented glass, the team was
treated to a fairly intimate aural glimpse of Gnivian family life.
Next
most useful was Number 5, which lay in the courtyard of an open-air eatery,
from which it relayed the discussions of a much wider strata of Gnivian
society. Though even with the directional selectivity of the instrument, the
cacophony at the peak of business was often more a source of humor than insight.
Nevertheless,
the constant influx of information allowed Thackery and the linguacomp to make
steady progress on what seemed to be a very basic, functional language with
simple constructions, little use of modifiers, and few if any inflections. A
handful of the peepers were located where Thackery could use the telecameras to
get at least an overhead view of who was talking and, thereby, a clue of what
the topic of discussion might be. With that boost, the confirmed vocabulary
list of what Sebright called the "language hard to lie smilingly in"
grew daily.
It
was Sebright, not Thackery, who had decided the feed from a choice peeper
should be audible in the lab during at least half of each watch. Thackery
actually joined Muir and Collins in protesting that their concentration would
be adversely affected by the alien chatter.
"Even
if you don't understand it now, you'll have the sound of it in your ear,"
Sebright said in rebuffing them. "When it's time to start learning Gnivan,
it'll come to you that much faster."
The
work of the rest of the surveyors was proceeding nearly as smoothly. What
surprised them most was how little surprised them. Each new revelation fit
neatly into the patterns and ranges established by ten thousand human societies
through ten thousand years of Terran history. For the biologists, it was more
evidence that biology was the primary shaper of human behavior. For everyone
else, it added up to an irresistible urge to identify with the Gnivi.
"They're
so like us," Collins blurted out during one early change-of-shift
briefing. "They're
too
like us," was Sebright's gruff response. "I trust you're ail making
an effort to remember that they
aren't
us."
But
it was through thinking in terms of the known that most progress was made. It
was impossible not to use terms drawn from the anthropological bank of their
own experiences, and once those terms were firmly attached to some aspect of
Gnivi, it was impossible to be uninfluenced by their previous associations.
One
example was Eagan's map of the city, which was full of familiar names. Gnivi's
only two entrances, East Gate and West Gate, lay at either end of Broadway, the
great central corridor which bisected the city. At each of the entrances, a
half-dozen major thoroughfares fanned out from a great plaza like fingers of a
hand, leading into other parts of the city. The thoroughfares were officially
identified by letter codes, but it was Eagan's more informal names—Camino Del
Real, Via Appia, Champs-Elys6es—which gained currency.
To
the bare bones of Gnivi's physical layout the team quickly added details of the
patterns of traffic, commerce, and habitation. Within the first few days, they
identified an industrial sector along the presumed path of the river, a civic
complex at the heart of the city, and scattered residential and business
districts. No one quarreled with the anthropocentric flavor of the labels.
There
were more cautionary parallels, as well. Overall, Gnivi had the look of a
walled fortress city. Each half of the outer ring of buildings was in fact one
contiguous structure, an unbroken barrier which clearly marked the boundary
between the city and the prairie beyond. Not even the river breached the
fortress wall, for the Gnivians had bridged over its waters and built part of
their city atop it. Inside the city, even though many smaller, secondary
streets branched off of the main byways, all were dead ends, channeling
traffic—or invaders—along those main roads rather than between them.
But
there were no fortifications, no ramparts along the "wall," no
patrolling guards or armaments. Nor was there any evidence that the rural
peoples could muster any serious threat io the city. In fact, the rurals were
seen daily entering the city with two- and four-wheeled carts drawn by unidentifiable
draft animals. Coming in, the carts were loaded with foodstuffs; going out,
they carried cold-rolled iron implements from the Gnivian forges, cloth from
Gnivian looms.
It
was clear even to those who were not interpolators that any period of conflict
had ended long ago, leaving as its only legacy the layout of the city. And if
any doubt existed, it was banished when the archaeological base yielded up a
long list of Earth cities, including Beijing, Delhi, and dozens more, whose
fortress design had lived on into more peaceful eras.
Gnivi's
industrial economy was based on the power of the river that flowed beneath it.
From the differing elevations of the river on either side of the city and
measurements of the kinetic energy lost in between, Tyszka postulated that the
underground waterway included a series of small dams driving dozens of overshot
water wheels. He was eager to see the complicated ligature of shafts and
pulleys which would be needed to distribute that energy to the various
workplaces.
"Imagine!"
he said during one briefing. "They may've built themselves a completely
mechanical power distribution net, completely analogous to an electrical grid,
with transformers, substations, feeder lines, and branch circuits. That was
done in single factories at the start of the Industrial Revolution, but never
that I know of was a whole factory district tied together."
All
this screamed to Collins of a planned city, one that had been laid out in every
detail before the first brick was laid, rather than evolving haphazardly as
economics and individual initiative dictated.
"I
think there's a good chance we're looking at a First Colonization city plan
that's remained almost unchanged since the beginning," she declared during
another briefing "Gnivi may be the clearest clue yet to how large the FC
ships were and how they chose to adopt their technologies to the world they
colonized. They weren't afraid to take big steps backward. They may even have
had a strong cultural preference for simpler ways and a nonexpansionist
lifestyle. That's why none of the colonies have had spaceflight, or radio, or
even the steam engine."
"Except
Journa," Tyszka pointed out.
"The
exception that proves the rule. They had the search for the Founders as a
driver. Since they found them—us— they've been very conservative about
introducing any new technologies to their general society. They've even let
some Jiadurera
technologies go."
To
back up her argument, Collins could point to the otherwise unexplained
observation that despite its apparent vitality, no construction was underway in
the city except for what could be described as maintenance. The buildings were
thousands of years old, but kept fresh and livable by what seemed to be an army
of plasterers, mudworkers, and masons.
"When
we get down there, I think there's a chance that we could pin down the time of
the First Colonization with a precision nobody's even dared hope for," she
concluded triumphantly. "We just might crack this thing."
For
all the optimism around him, Sebright showed little inclination to hasten the
day of the contact landing. In fact, during the update briefings Sebright never
spoke of a landing at ali. His interest was in what was known, in what remained
unknown, in cross-fertilization between the disciplines, as though there were
no objective beyond building an accurate portrait of Gnivi and its inhabitants.
To Thackery, it seemed to be a clear message from one who had been there to
those who had not that the team was not ready.
But
as the days slipped by, a week, then two, and the questions fell one by one,
Sebright's recalcitrance became both more obvious and more puzzling. He
acknowledged their progress without ever acknowledging what they were
progressing toward, always providing a new task to replace one completed.
The
contact landing team was diplomatic enough not to bring it up in the presence
of either Sebright or those who would not be landing, but when they were alone
together in the lab they began to wonder out loud.
"Aren't
we ever going down?" fumed Collins, the most impatient of the three.
"When
we're ready, I guess," Tyszka said with a shrug.
"But
we are ready," she insisted. "I'm beginning to pile up my
interpolations three deep. We've exhausted what we can do from here. I need
some fresh data. I need to get down there."
Thackery
found himself in the unfamiliar position of defending Sebright. "When we
do go down, Sebright's got the heaviest burden. Maybe it's not a question of
whether we're ready, but whether he is. He has the responsibility to speak for
us, to negotiate for us, to explain for us. By comparison, we're just going
along as tourists."
"Well,
damn it all, how long is it going to take him?"
"He's
working harder than any of us," offered Tyszka.
"I
know he is. He understands the language as well as Thack does, he can recite
back my own findings to me, anr1
: even seems to understand what Guerrieri is talking about. That's why this is
so frustrating. What's he waiting for? What else does he need?"
"You
could go ask him," Tyszka said with a grin.
"Oh,
no," she said, playfully filliping a crumb of her breakfast in his
direction. "I learned that lesson the last time. I'll do my bitching to
you two, thank you very much."
"The
Concom's gain, our loss," Thackery said, for which she hurled a headset
his way.
But
others had noticed Sebright's behavior as well, Thackery discovered one night
when the piercing tone of the shipnet awoke him two hours before his alarm
would have.
"Page.
Commander Neale for Thackery," the machine announced.
Groggy,
Thackery swung his legs over the side of the bed and groped his way to the desk
before the tone could sound again. "Thackery here."
"I
trust I haven't disturbed you, Merritt?"
"Oh—no."
"Good.
I'd like you to do something for me."
"Certainly,
Commander. What is it?"
"Before
I tell you, let me find out how you personally feel about the progress of the
team."
It
took no great insight to know where the conversation was leading. Thackery knew
that Neale had been monitoring the briefings; Sebright had made a point of
warning the team so they could avoid saying anything that might have
repercussions. Thackery had welcomed the news, since it meant that Neale would
have a chance to see him at his best.
"I
can't judge for everyone, Commander," he said. "I know that I'm feeling very
comfortable. Four days ago I was sitting in the lab working and listening to
the feed from Gnivi that was on the speaker, when I suddenly realized that I
was thinking in Gnivan—that I had stopped translating back and forth from
Gnivan to English in my head."
"So
you would be
ready for a landing."
Thackery
did not want the responsibility she was implicitly offering. "That's for
you and the Concom to decide. All I can say is that our language data surpasses
the criteria specified in the Protocols."
"Very
good," she said. "What I want from you is this: Sometime during the
next update briefing, ask for a summary evaluation of the team's readiness for
a Contact."
Thackery's
nose wrinkled. "I don't quite understand, Commander. I thought that's what
the whole briefing amounted to."
"You've
been spending a lot of time on things that are peripheral to the main
objective, guessing about things that we can go down and ask them about,"
she said briskly. "I want to see people put on the spot. I want everybody
to have to say 'I'm ready' or 'I'm not ready until X.'"
"I
don't know if it's really my place to ask for that—," Thackery began
apprehensively.
"I'm
sure you'll find a way."
Thackery
did not have to work for an opportunity: Sebright himself created one, at the
end of every briefing.
"All
right," Sebright said. "Let's go round the table once. Gregg,
anything else? Jael? Donna? Thack?"
Thackery
took a deep breath. "I've got a question."
"Go
ahead."
"I
think it'd be useful if we knew where we stood by departments. I know that I'm
ready, but I don't know enough about the requirements for the rest of you to
know how close you are."
Sebright
cast a piercing glance in his direction, as though he knew exactiy what was
behind the request. "Fine," was all he said. "Thack thinks he's
ready. How about you, Jael?"
Her
"yes" was firm and hopeful.
"Mike?"
"Just
give the word."
"How
about the rest of you?"
There
were some nervous glances exchanged. "I don't have any problem with my own
material," Guerrieri said tentatively. "But I've been going over
Thack's transcripts and Gregg's map. I can't see any evidence they've got the
necessary astronomical knowledge to understand what we have to tell them."
Collins
had a quick answer to the astrophysicist's objection. "They don't need to
be able to think in terms of our own perspective. In fact, you can be sure that
they won't. They're not obliged to understand our worldview. But it's incumbent
on us to understand theirs."
"From
what I've found so far, I don't think they have one," Guerrieri said.
"I don't know if they've ever looked up."
"I
would project a very primitive astronomy," Collins persisted.
"There's no compelling nighttime body, such as a major satellite. The
planet has a minimal axial inclination, so the seasons are very modest. They
don't travel, so there's no navigational impetus. And all the farming is done
by the rurals, who apparendy don't do much more than organized foraging and
probably don't have any need for a planting cycle."
"So,"
Sebright said, cutting off any further discussion. "You all vote go. Let
me point out a few things to you. Thack, you may know basic contact Gnivan
inside out. Do you know how to insult them? Do you know how to keep from insulting
them?"
He
did not wait for an answer but turned to the rest of them. "If the
importance of that is too abstract for you, try this one. The Gnivians have
potential farmland right outside their front door as good as any anywhere in
the Nebraska. Why don't they use it? Why depend on the berry-and-campfire
types? For that matter, why don't the rurals use it, instead of dragging their
goods in from all over the map? When we get some of those questions answered,
then we can start thinking about a landing."
"We
can answer the questions we have left better down there," Thackery said.
Cocking
his head to one side, Sebright gazed penetratingly into Thackery's eyes.
"See if you can understand this, rookie. Every pre-Contact profile has
been wrong in at least one important way. Not just a little wrong. Not just
wrong in the details. Every crew has missed something big enough to endanger
the Contact, only they got by. We're missing something, too. You just can't
learn about a society by flying overhead."
Thackery's
ears burned, but his example had emboldened Collins. "So what are we going
to gain by waiting?" she demanded.
'Time,"
Sebright said curtly. "Enough time for you folks to come down off your
high and start thinking again. When that happens, then we'll visit Gnivi. Now,
before we break up, I have some additional studies to assign "
That
night, Neale called Thackery to her cabin.
"Which
is it, Thackery? Are you ready or aren't you?"
Thackery
squirmed uncomfortably, anticipating the choice he was about to be forced to
make. "I'm really not the one to ask. I can only speak for myself."
"Um."
She walked toward him and sat on the edge of the credenza. "You know, you
and your teammates have done first-class work. In little more than four weeks,
you've given us as complete a picture of the Gnivi as I could have hoped for.
You've brought us to the point where we're ready to close this out. We have a
lot of questions for the Gnivi. I think it's time we started asking them. In my
judgment, Mark is being too cautious. What do you think?"
When
he hesitated, she reached out to touch his knee, adding, "It's time to
choose your friends."
Thackery
slowly drew a breath. "There's a certain irreducible risk in a contact
landing. I think that the Concom could be overly occupied with that aspect of
the decision."
She
was not finished. "In your judgment, will the work you're now doing
materially affect the chances of a successful Contact?"
"No.
I don't think it will."
"Do
you know any specific reason why Mark should delay the Contact?"
"No." "What about the land around the city not being
fanned?" "Jael projects that the rurals are emigres from the city. De
pending on the
circumstances under which they left, they may have been forbidden to come
within a certain distance of the city. The ban probably evolved into custom and
taboo."
"Then there's no reason not to
begin the contact landing on the next cycle." Thackery rubbed his
forehead. "I don't see any," he said finally. "Then say so at
the next briefing. And be ready with answers for his objections."
"But—"
"I'll
be sitting in. Leave the rest to me."
It's amazing, Thackery
thought as he watched Neale and Sebright face each other down across the table, how much can be communicated without words. Since
the briefing had begun, Neale had said nothing, though she had made a point of
talking to each of the team members before a late-arriving Sebright had
appeared. Since his arrival, Sebright had been hardly more communicative,
saying only as much as was necessary to arbitrate the meandering discussions of
Gnivian diet, timekeeping, and ethics.
Yet
there was a tension between the two officers, a negative energy flowing back
and forth across the table. A shift in position, a raised eyebrow, a loud
exhalation—these were the elements of the code.
They've
had this out before, Thackery realized belatedly. He knows what she wants, and
she knows what she has to do to get it—put him on the spot in front of us.
Through me. And anything I gain with her by doing it I'll lose with him.
He
had not recognized the choice so clearly before. He knew Sebright better, knew
him and had to work with him day in and day out. Thackery's early harsh
judgments had been tempered by the experiences of the last few months. But
Sebright had no ambitions. He was where he would be until he resigned. On the
other hand, Neale was not yet finished. She was still climbing, and might take
others who had been useful along with her.
Thackery
was not entirely comfortable with the criteria on which the decision was
turning. But neither was he comfortable with the thought of facing Neale after
failing her. The time to say no had already been lost.
Only
the hope that he was right consoled him when the moment came.
"Concom
Sebright, concerning our discussion at the last briefing? I would like to formally
recommend that we proceed with the contact landing," Thackery said in a
voice less sonorous than he had hoped to muster. "As far as I can
determine, the data we've collected exceeds in every category the minimums
established in the Protocols. We should be able to function effectively among
the Gnivi."
For
a moment, Sebright did not respond.
"Do
you want seconds on that?" Eagan asked.
"No,"
Sebright said. "A landing would be premature at this time."
His
tone invited Thackery to pursue it no further, but Neale's presence was a more
powerful motivator. "Sir, I think the team would appreciate it if you
could identify your specific areas of concern."
Sebright
shook his head. "I have no specific areas of concern." "Then why
are we waiting?" Collins demanded. "Because you don't trust us?"
Resting his chin on his folded hands, Sebright met her level gaze. "It's
not a question of trust." "What, then?" Tyszka asked. "Why
the delay? We have a right to know."
"I
had hoped that some of you would see it yourselves. Or are you all completely
insensible to the effect we're going to have on the Gnivi?" Sebright
asked. His eyes swept around the table, accusing each in turn. "The moment
we go down there, we've changed them forever. Whatever uniqueness of thought,
whatever social harmony they've evolved over the centuries will begin
disappearing the moment they're confronted by our existence. Is what we're
after so important that we can't take the time to at least record what they
were like?"
"Salvage
ethnology," Collins said, surprised.
"Exactly.
Preserving what we know we're about to destroy. The data we're collecting now
is all there'll ever be. We have an obligation to do what we can to help them
remember what they were. As far as I'm concerned, it's worth whatever additional
time it takes."
"Except
that doing so is not part of our charge," Neale said quietly.
"There's no provision in the Protocols for this kind of undertaking."
Sebright
scowled at her. "So everything not required is forbidden?"
"It'll take six months or more to do a proper salvage study," Collins
complained.
"We
lose years by the fistful every time we craze. It can't matter much to Unity if
our Gnivi data comes in a few months later."
"If
Unity were the only consideration, I would have to agree," Neale said.
"But is such a project proper use of this ship and this crew's time? We're
equipped and staffed to initiate Contact. Anything beyond that will have to
wait for the follow-up mission."
Sebright
crossed his long arms over his chest. "That'll be too late. We'll already
have contaminated their culture, just like we did the Muschynka and the
Pai-Tem."
Belatedly,
Thackery understood Sebright's objection.
So this is why you didn't like talking about Muschynka. But why shoulder the
guilt when the decision was made by someone else? Neale's right. The Planning
Office isn't willing to commit a survey ship to each colony just to find a way
to mitigate the shock of Contact—
"Cultural
contamination is the whole reason this ship exists," Neale was saying unsympathetically.
"I think Thackery's original question is still on the table. Is the team
ready, or not?"
Thackery
marveled at how neatly she had manuevered Se-bright into a position where he
could not say no. With the salvage issue out in the open, any refusal to
proceed with the landing would be suspect. He could not fight, because he had
no allies: Neale, the Protocols, and the threat of dissonance on the team all
stood against him.
But
Sebright was a long time in answering, as though he were not convinced that the
issue was lost. He sent Thackery a sideways glance which was an indictment, and
locked gazes with Neale in a silent, furious battle of equipollent wills.
"The
team will consist of myself, Thack, Jael, and Mike," he said finally.
"Derrel will fly the gig and drop us off on the East Gate road during
local night. We'll enter Gnivi the next morning. That gives us about thirteen
hours before we want to be on the surface. I suggest you spend the first eight
hours of it sleeping."
Afterward,
they came to congratulate Thackery, to clap him on the shoulder and praise him
for saying what they had been eager but afraid to. All except Sebright, who
quietly left, and Neale, who caught Thackery's eye and nodded approvingly
before following. To Thackery, the celebration seemed hollow. I'll do the rest,
she had said. And so she had, but never in a way that committed her, never in a
way that risked anything. She had gotten him to take the risk for her.
You'd better remember,
he thought. You'd better take care
of me. Because if you don't, then I've been used.
The
road was crushed rock cemented by rain and centuries of booted feet and
iron-rimmed cart wheels. They walked toward the city until they could see its
walls outlined against the night, then squatted down to wait for the dawn.
Collins
and Tyszka quietly practiced their Gnivan together, while Thackery fussed with
his nostril filters in a vain attempt to get them to draw freely. Sebright sat
apart from the rest, craning his head, listening to the night sounds of Gnivi
and staring into the darkness as though there were more than a deserted
grassland to be seen.
When
morning came, they waited until the first traffic emerged from the East Gate,
then rose, dusted themselves off and started in. As they drew near they saw
that the city was adorned with all the detail and glitter of an illuminated
manuscript. Instead of the bare off-yellow stucco the orbital views had led
them to expect, the outer wall was a continuous work of art which was coherent
without being patterned.
"Not
representational," Collins said. "Pure decoration."
"They
must teach graffiti in school," Tyszka said drily.
"It's
beautiful," Thackery said.
They
passed two groups of outbound rurals, each with a half-full cart, without
incident.
"Early
risers," Tyszka said, taking note of the empty road between them and the
city.
"Did
you see those animals?" Collins said excitedly. "That's
a canine breed of some sort, just
like on the other colonies." "From the size of them, I hope they
breed them to be toothless," Tyszka wisecracked.
"Everybody
have their transceivers in and on?" Sebright asked. When they gave assent,
he nodded and said, "Page. Contact-1 to
Descartes.
Jessie, do you have a good signal on everybody?" The message was relayed
by his own transceiver, nestled in his right ear canal like a hearing aid.
"We've
got you all," came back Baldwin's voice, as clear in Thackery's ear as the
voices of those with him.
"Thanks,
Jess. Contact-1 EOT."
As
they neared the gate Sebright reminded them, "Remember, hands visible at
all times, and answer their stares with smiles." He said it in Gnivan,
which was in itself another reminder.
They
had made no effort to disguise themselves as either rurals or Gnivians, and so
expected to draw some attention. Thackery, Tyszka, and Collins wore the royal
blue allovers, Sebright the same in red. Walking four abreast, they entered the
city.
Just
inside the gate, the plaza which served as the intersection of the nine great
boulevards was full of foot traffic. Yet they crossed it without difficulty,
the stream of traffic parting effortlessly to permit their passage.
"They
know we're here," Thackery said.
"Nipag todya," he added, ducking his head in greeting to a
woman frozen staring by the sight of them.
"Good,"
Sebright answered. "We're not here to surprise them. I want the civil authorities to
know we're coming well before we get there."
Thackery
scanned the perimeter of the plaza. Each boulevard seemed to have its own color
scheme, its own characteristic whorls and filigree. "Broadway straight
ahead," he said.
Swapping
ends, Collins came up on Thackery's right. "There's too damn many of them
talking," she whispered. "I can't understand a word."
"I'm
having a little trouble myself," Thackery admitted.
"I
think there's your first writing, Thack," Tyszka said, pointing at two
vertical plaques cut into the corners of the entrance to Broadway and filled
with bas-relief characters.
"Street signs."
"'This way to our leaders.'" Tyszka laughed. "God, I feel
great."
Broadway
was a canyon through the heart of the city, its walls rising a story higher
than those of any of the other thoroughfares. The plaza traffic and its noise
fell behind them, and the sound of their own footsteps echoed loudly off the
hard walls. They were as alone as they had been walking into the city, with
only a few of the natives visible in the distance.
Suddenly
fighting panic, Thackery pivoted his head quickly to either side and stared at
the decorated walls. There were dozens of fist- and head-sized openings
incorporated into the design, from waist-height to high overhead. He looked
again and saw not decorations but disguised machicolations, positioned to
provide a crossfire from which there would be no hiding.
"Mark!"
he cried, stopping and grabbing the veterans' arm. The others carried on a step
or two further, then stopped and half-turned to look back.
Collins'
eyes widened dramatically, and she pointed past them back toward the plaza.
"What are they doing?"
Thackery
twisted to look over his shoulder and saw a solid wall of Gnivians, standing
across the entrance to Broadway. They were watching, waiting, as though they
knew something—
Pfwtt. Pfwtt-pfwtt. Pfwtt.
The
sound was of birds' wings beating. But there were no birds on Gnivi. Yet things
flew all the same, swooping down from the battlements of Broadway, things with
backbones of hardwood and beaks of barbed iron. Thackery turned back and took
one step toward Collins. As he did she fell toward him to her knees, the lost
look on her face as devastating as the angry red flower blossoming on her
chest. On the periphery of both sight and consciousness he knew that Michael,
too, was down and screaming.
Pfwtt. Pfwtt.
Thackery
dove forward to the pavement, already running with Collins' blood. He lay there
beside her as she plucked helplessly at the shaft of a second deathbird
projecting from between the swell of her breasts. He heard the wet rasp of her
breathing and saw her frantic writhing weaken from instant to instant. He did
not know why they did not fire again and let him share her pain.
Then
someone was shouting at him in Gnivan, and a pair of strong hands was hauling
him to his feet. He stood frozen for a moment, staring at the wall from which
the attack had come. Then the insistent hands jerked him along, and he suddenly
understood the shouted words, that he would die lying there beside her if he
did not run.
And,
understanding that if nothing else, he ran before the birds could fly again.
REGRETS
(fromMerritt Thackery's
JIADUR'S WAKE)
. . . There is no greater
pain than the pain of avoidable failure...
chapter 8
A Coin For Charon
It was barely fifty
metres to the end of Broadway, but to Thackery it was an infinite expanse of
pavement which he had neither the right nor the hope of crossing safely. Fear
crawled in the middle of his back and guilt churned in his bowels as he ran,
barely aware of Sebright following close on his heels.
The
crowd of spectators meant sanctuary to Thackery, a place where the deathbirds
could not find him. But even as he neared them and began to think yes YES I'm going to make it, Thackery
could find little compassion on the faces of those who watched. A few even
called out to him, jeering, taunting:
"Ne corti lormo e huji lormo. The
blood of your wives runs in our streets and you run from the fight."
At
the same time, there was a roaring in Thackery's left ear, noise that was
without meaning until Thackery forced himself to concentrate on it. Then the
roaring became Guerrieri's insistent, anxious call, "Contact-1, report,
report."
From
the ranks of the spectators a tall man stepped forward, his face grim. He wore
the vest and leggings common to the rurals, plus a red scarf knotted around his
right bicep. If the clothing had not marked his class, his sun-browned skin and
laborer's physique would have.
"You
have broken ten muri
of gtorman
by your foolishness. Why did you not heed the warning?" he demanded as he
stepped into their path.
Thackery
looked helplessly to Sebright. "We heard no warning," the veteran
said.
"Is
it beyond you to raise your eyes and read?" their accoster demanded,
gesturing at the terra cotta plaques. Then he craned his head to look to either
side and called, "Mamet!"
"Here,
Par," said a whippet-like woman, moving into view a few steps away.
Thackery stared. It was the woman to whom he had called a greeting.
"Why
did you not stop them?"
"Look
at them," she pleaded. "They are not from the Green Lands. Therefore
they are Gnivi. How could I know they did not have safe conduct?"
"Clearly
they are not Gnivi," Par said with hard scorn, turning back to Sebright.
"You did not have safe conduct, and you did not heed the warning of the
gate. Where are you from that you want death so badly?"
Sebright
parried the question with one of his own. "Our people," he said,
sweeping a hand toward the crumpled, now-still forms of Collins and Tyszka.
"Can anything be done?"
"Are
the bodies of value to you?" Par asked with surprise.
"Yes."
Par
studied Sebright with a hard look. "You speak with the clumsy tongue of a
Gnivi, yet you are not Gnivi. You are not Green, yet you claim to share our
death-customs. I look forward to explanations." Gesturing to Marnet to
follow, Par turned away toward the plaza.
Guerrieri
had fallen silent during the conversation, but in the momentary lull took up
his page. "Contact-1, Contact-1, come on, Mark, give us a word. Contact-1,
are you still receiving?"
"Shut
the hell up," Sebright snapped, reverting to English.
"Contact-1, Descartes observers report
two of your team down. On my way for a pick-up. I'll put the gig down in the
East Gate plaza. Estimate four minutes max."
"Absolutely
not," Sebright barked. "Stay the hell away."
"This
is straight from Neale, Concom, no options."
"Goddamnit,
you keep that thing away from here," Sebright barked. "I'm on the
scene and you'll take your orders from me. If we need a pick-up we'll call for
one. You bring that thing in here now and you'll put us that much farther
behind."
Catching
Sebright by the elbow, Thackery protested, "We've got to do something for
Jael and Mike."
"Something's
already being done," he said, pointing.
In
the middle of the plaza, Par and Marnet had commandeered a two-wheeled dray. As
Thackery watched, they tipped it on its side, spilling its load of foodstuffs
across the ground. Each taking one side of the T-shaped drawbar, they dragged
the dray toward Broadway at a trot, calling
"Dar mator! Let us pass!"
Thackery
retreated out of the way as the dray rumbled by. As he did, he realized that
the crowd had thinned dramatically, and all those around them now wore the
stamp of the rurals— make that the Green Lands. The Gnivi who had jeered and
taunted them had slunk away in the wake of Par's arrival.
"Pan tura! Pan tura!
For the dead," cried Par as the dray advanced. He held his free arm
upraised, his hand open, and Marnet did the same.
There
was a grinding sound, and beyond the bodies a block of pavement as wide as the
street rose up as though on hinges, forming a waist-high barricade from wall to
wall. Several armed men rose up behind it and pointed their crossbowlike
weapons directly at Par and Marnet.
"This
whole damn city is a fortress," Thackery exclaimed under his breath.
"I know," Sebright said, tight-lipped. "Tell me why and you'll
have done me a favor."
"Contact-1,
Contact-4," Guerrieri paged. His voice had lost its impatient edge, lost
all expression whatsoever. "Just thought you might like to know. Descartes says negative,
negative, negative on both Mike and Jael's vitals." The next sound might
have been a sigh or an instant of interference. "I'll hold at angels 20
until you need me."
"Acknowledged,
Flight-1," Thackery said when Sebright was silent. "It shouldn't be
long."
Par
and Marnet took no note of the guards and the barricade except to direct their
pleas of "Pan tura!"
in that direction, and advanced until the dray was within a few steps of where
the bodies lay. Then, while Marnet held the dray level, Par bent down and
picked up Tyszka, cradling him a gentleness that betokened respect. When Par
had placed the corpse on the dray bed, he retraced his steps and gathered up
Collins with equal reverence.
As
they turned the dray to begin their retreat one of the Gnivian guards raised
his weapon to eye level and loosed a deathbird. It flew between Par and Marnet
to impale itself in the dashboard of the dray with a chunk and the sound of
splintering wood. The Gnivian laughed, and Par and Mamet quickened their pace.
But the attack ended there. As the dray reached the plaza the guards descended
into their warren, the barrier was retracted, and normal traffic resumed, the
dust of their passage muddying the blood of the dead.
Thackery
rushed to the dray and leaned over Jael, taking her clammy-cool hand in his.
The sharp stink of feces, her blank open eyes, the jagged bloody rent in her
clothing and chest, set Thackery to retching, and he turned away.
"Thank
you," Sebright was saying to Par. "You are a man of conscience."
"I cannot say the same of you. What was your purpose there, for which you
sacrificed half your party?"
"To
speak to those in the Atad. Are no outsiders permitted?"
"But rarely. I have been there,
and a few others. That you must ask the question tells me much about you."
"Then make us equal by telling me something of you." Par stiffened as
though insulted. "I am Par, of the Urmyk.
That has always been
enough to know." He nodded sharply toward the dray. "There is no
mystery in you. You are Gnivi, and you are mad, though I repeat myself too
obviously. Take your dead away," he said, and moved off to make a
settlement with the dray's owner.
Sebright
circled the dray and joined Thackery where he crouched. "I don't know how
far I can carry one of them," Thackery said pleadingly, the stench of
vomit still on his breath. "We need to bring the gig down."
"This
Par has influence. He knows things. I don't intend to let him get away."
"What are you thinking?" Thackery demanded shrilly. "We botched
the Contact, and Jael and Mike are dead."
"Hold
the postmortems until we're back on
Descartes.
We can't help the kids now. But maybe we can still save the Contact. Is there a
Gnivan word for priest? Do you remember hearing anything about their funereary
rites?"
"No
and no. What? Do you think he's going to get us into the Atad?"
"He
may not have to," Sebright said, and lift without further explanation.
Several long strides caught him up to Par, who had finished his negotiation and
was moving off. Sebright planted himself in Par's path. "If you are a man
of conscience, help us."
Par
scowled. "You require more help than I have patience for."
"A
simple matter for Par. We must go to the Atad, for we must speak with the
wisest of all men, the exemplar of conscience, he whose domain reaches from one
end of the Green Land to the other."
Par
spat at Sebright's feet. "You will not find such a man in the Atad."
"Where, then? We have questions for him, and news of places beyond the
Green Land." "You would pursue this while your dead wait for their
release?" Par asked, pointing back toward the dray. Sebright's face took
on a thoughtful expression. "I cannot give them release."
"You
have no tomen to
say the words over them?"
"None."
"Do
you wish the words said?"
"I
wish all to be done as prescribed."
Par
crossed his arms over his chest and studied Sebright. "I will take you to
Maija."
The
change in plans meant renegotiation of the settlement over use of the dray.
While Par attended to that detail Sebright returned to where Thackery waited.
"Switch your
transceiver to local send and receive," he said to Thackery, walking past
without stopping. Thackery slowly complied, raising his hand to his right ear
and pressing the short stub projecting from his ear canal.
"We're
going to have an audience from here on out, so I'm not going to be able to hold
long discussions with you or stop to explain everything I do," Sebright
said in his ear, taking up position on one end of the crossbar. "Keep your
eyes open and your mouth shut. Don't contradict me, don't question me. I need
as much status as I can get with these people, and I'm starting out pretty damn
low. If you spot something you think I need to know about, go off by yourself
and say it. I'll hear you fine and we won't give them a reason to be
suspicious. Understand?" '
The
request was reasonable, even prudent, but somehow still felt like this time, stay out of my way.
Thackery accepted the reproof as his due but could not stay silent. "Why
are you tying yourself to these people? That can't help us. Sometime we're
going to have to come back here and try to make Contact with the people behind
the walls, or at least their bosses."
Then
Par joined them, denying the opportunity for an answer. He circled around the
back of the dray, stopping when he reached the deathbird projecting from the
dashboard. With a yank and a twist, he pulled it free, then tossed it into the
dray with a clatter.
"That
way," he said, taking the free end of the crossbar and nodding toward the
gate.
Thackery
fell in behind the dray as they passed through the gate and onto the east road.
From there, Collins and Tyszka were always in his field of view, the shafts of
the deathbirds still projecting obscenely from their bodies. He forced himself
to stay there, to look at them, as a kind of self-flagellation.
If I hadn't been so eager to cozy up to
Neale—if I hadn't helped her pressure Sebright—you would still be laughing,
Mike, instead of lying on your face in a bouncing dogcart. Jael'd still be
making everyone crazy—and I'd still be the bright kid with a future. I f , i f
, i f . What a useless emotion regret is. As if the words "I'm sorry"
can banish guilt, or excuse stupidity. I'm sorry all the same—
There
were few interruptions to dislodge Thackery from his recriminations, for Par
showed no inclination to talk. Sebright took his cue from the Urmyk and did not
press him. Then, about an hour out from Gnivi, their guide suddenly became
voluble.
"You
were never in Gnivi before today," Par said.
"Yes."
Par
nodded approvingly. "I would have been told. We would have heard of your
death."
"How
often do such things happen?"
"From
time to time. Rarely in the Atad Corridor, because everyone knows it is
forbidden. Even the common Gnivi are barred."
"Then
you can be shot down on other streets as well?"
"There
is no public place where you are not watched, where they could not strike at
you if they so chose. There are a hundred tunnels and ten thousand
watchplaces." Par paused. "How can you know the Atad and not know
things that are taught to children?"
"We
have not yet had the chance to learn."
"You
are not Gnivi."
"Yes."
"You
are not Urmyk."
"Yes."
Par
banged the palm of one hand hard against the crossbar and shook his head.
"You're
presenting him with a paradox," Thackery offered. "Using their verb
formation, one and only one of those statements can be true. You just told him
they both were."
"Then
you do not even understand why you are alive to make this trip," Par said.
"Is
there a reason other than luck?"
"The
guardians prefer not to kill all of any party. That way there is someone to
carry back the word that Gnivi is strong." "I understand."
"They want to see fear. If you had not shown it, they would have killed
you as well."
"But
they did not try to stop you and Mamet."
"Because
we gave the sign of submission," Par said exasperatedly. "This is how
things are done." Releasing his grip on the shaft, he threw his hands up
in the air and took several long, angry strides that put him well out in front
of the procession.
"We've
got him thinking about us," Thackery said hopefully.
"They're
not all good thoughts. We put him in a position where he had to humiliate
himself to help us," Sebright said, shifting his grip. "Get on up
here and help with this, huh?"
The
Urmyk home to which Par took them was less than a village and more than a camp.
In a copse of smooth-rinded, waxy-leaved trees was an elevated platform for the
storage of food, under which were stowed an array of hand tools, two drays, and
a larger four-wheeled farm wagon.
Slung
between the surrounding trees in groups of two or three, often one above the
other like a multistory house, were some two dozen sleeping hammocks. Some of
the hammocks were rolled and tied, as though to keep them from collecting rain
and detritus. Other hanging places were empty, as though some of the community
were away for an extended time.
Leaving
the Descartes
men to stand by the dray and accept the questioning stares of the Urmyk, Par
went into a huddle with a wrinkle-faced gnome of a man whose silver hair was
combed straight back into what appeared to be a permanent tangle.
"This
is more organized than we had given them credit for," Sebright said.
"They aren't just gatherers. They've got to be doing some farming."
"They
also have to have some ground-living pests. Everything is up."
The
conference over, Par led the older man toward them.
"Maija,"
Par said, and walked away, his disgust evident.
The
old man reached out to finger the material of Thackery's allover, then stepped
back and squinted at them. "You are not of the Urmyk. Why do you ask our
death-customs be followed? Have you none of your own?"
"Our
friends died, in your lands and at the hands of your enemies," Sebright
said.
"They
died in the city of despair and at the hands of cowards," Maija said, more
a correction of fact than a reproof. "What are the names of the
dead?"
"The woman is Jael.
The other is Michael." Maija turned to the others looking on.
"Prepare canuta," he
ordered.
Because
of the difficulty the Urmyk women had with the zippers and stays, Thackery was
drafted to help undress and bathe the corpses. It was an exceedingly unpleasant
task, the more so since he had from time to time imagined undressing Jael in a
far different context and circumstance. Those pleasant fantasies were
irrevocably trashed by the sight of her brutally violated death-white skin, and
he found it difficult to touch her.
The
three Urmyk women, particularly a round-bodied middle-aged woman named Taj,
showed no such compunctions. It was Taj who wrestled the barbed heads of the
deathbirds from the two corpses and then neady tucked back in the ragged edges
of the wounds. Taj also took the time to take note of every subde evidence that
the Descartans were not-Gnivi, not-Urmyk: their teeth, their smoothly trimmed
nails, their thinly calloused feet, the transceivers plugging the left ears,
the small strawberry tattoo on Jael's hip, the appendectomy scar on Michael's
abdomen.
She
said nothing about her observations, either to Thackery or to her two
assistants, but she absented herself before the preparations were through,
disappearing in the direction Maija had gone with Sebright. Meanwhile, the
other women produced several lengths of coarse fiber rope, and proceeded to
tightly bind each corpse at the ankles, knees, wrists, and elbows.
"Contact-4,
got a moment here. Somebody just corralled Maija for a conference. He's been
showing me the fields," Sebright said in Thackery's ear. "The Urmyk
idea of farming seems to be to keep a natural mix of crops, not in rotation but
at the same time. So they don't really have fields, more like cultivated
foraging areas. They prune out the weaker plants and lay them out for the
pests. By the way, I got a glimpse of one, and if it wasn't a mouse, it was
something you wouldn't mind calling one. If you're free to talk, let me know
how things are progressing. Any idea yet whether we're looking at burial or
cremation?"
"Not
really," Thackery said. "Is that person talking to Maija a stocky
woman, forty-ish, wearing a vest a couple sizes too small for her?"
"That's
her."
"Then
the conference is about us. She gave Mike and Jael a real close going-over, and
she's probably giving him an earful about just how strange we are."
"Good,"
Sebright said, inexplicably. "Looks like we're going to head back. See you
presently."
As
dusk came on, the bodies were taken to the west edge of the copse, where they
were laid side by side near the base of a tall waxleaf tree. The Urmyk formed a
one-deep circle around the bodies, and Maija moved into the center. He stood
over the bodies and spoke to them.
"Spirit
of Jael. Spirit of Michael. Witness the service we now do you, that you may
depart to the place and condition where you now belong."
The
Urmyk then began to chant, voices hushed as though a group whisper:
Spirit
free Fly to heaven Leave friends in peace Accept your ending
Par
came forward as Maija retreated, knelt and grasped Jael's corpse in a headlock.
In his other hand flashed a small tool Thackery could not recognize. The
Urmyk's body blocked Thackery's view of what was happening.
"What
are they doing?" he demanded of Sebright, who stood at the opposite end of
the circle, chanting with the others as he looked on.
'Trephination."
"What?"
"Drilling
holes in the skull."
"That's
barbar—"
SPIRIT
FREE, FLY TO HEAVEN
The
chant suddenly grew louder as Par leaped to his feet and held the plug of scalp
and hair high above his head for the group to see. Then he knelt by Tyszka and
began again.
"Think
what you like, but keep it off your face," Sebright said. "If you
show disapproval, you may ruin what I'm trying to do."
"Which is
what?" "Win us an audience with the man we came to Gnivi to
see."
The
chant grew even louder as Par stood again with another trophy. Then he brought
the plug from Michael's body to Thackery, and from Jael's to Sebright.
"My
words, now," Sebright called out suddenly, and stepped forward. The chant
died away to a murmur, and both Par and Maija showed displeasure at the
interruption.
But
Sebright took no notice. Kneeling between the bodies, he bowed his head and
began to pray, "Creator of the numberless worlds, Architect of the design
of life, Guardian of our immortal souls, accept these Your servants into the
everlasting peace of death, preserving them in Your living memory for the
infinite time to come."
The
prayer was a double-barreled surprise for Thackery. The first was that Sebright
chose to say it loudly and clearly in English, though it was perfectiy
translatable. The second
was the prayer itself: It
was part of the Rite of Death of the Universal Creation Church. But the prayer
seemed to please the Urmyk, who cheered Sebright as he left the circle and came
to stand with Thackery.
"Was
that just for show, or are you a Creationist?"
"Most human cultures have an
abiding respect for mysticism, even someone else's mysticism." "That
doesn't answer my question." "I know." In the meantime, the
Urmyk had taken up their rhythmic,
poetic chant again.
Sebright joined in loudly, elbowing Thackery to do the same. They looked on as
two young Urmyk men came forward and hoisted the bodies pick-a-back, their
bound arms giving Collins and Tyszka an unflagging grip on their respective
bearers' necks.
"Pallbearers,"
Sebright said in an aside to Thackery.
Tl\en,
in a startling display of strength even for an 0.8 gravity field, the Urmyk
began to climb the tree, hauling themselves upward from limb to limb with an
agility that defied the dead weights with which they were burdened. Within a
short span of time, during which the chant took on a more belligerent tenor,
Collins and Tyszka were left hanging naked from a high branch of the tree,
dangling from ropes looped under their armpits.
The
sight of it brought all of Thackery's accumulated outrage welling up. "We
can't leave them there," he said angrily. "They were our
friends—shipmates. To see them like this—what kind of deal are you making with
these people? What can they do for you that will be worth this kind of
disgrace?"
Sebright
took Thackery by the arm and steered him firmly toward the yellow fires which
marked the heart of the copse, falling in step with the Urmyk who were
scattering, laughing and jabbering, to their chores and games.
"Disgrace?
Can't you see the beauty in the ceremony?"
"Boring
holes in people's heads!"
"Cro-Magnon
people did it while the patient was alive, to exorcise demons," Sebright
said. "With the Urmyk it's different. They seem to fear recrudescence, as
if the dead person has a choice between reanimating the body and passing on.
That explains everything we saw—binding the body, the trephination, hanging
them in a high place. They want the dead to stay dead, so they load the choice,
encourage the spirit to leave—think about the chant. All of which means they
have the profound self-awareness to know that something leaves the body at
death, and the humanity to wish well for it. You judge them too harshly."
"You
may say so—"
"Stop
introducing your cultural biases. Accept them on their own terms. You may see
things you can't now," Sebright said sharply. "Look, Maija has
provided a hammock for each of us. I'm going to make good use of mine. I
suggest you do the same."
But
before he could setde in, Sebright was intercepted by a young Urmyk girl.
"Maija wants you, at the tree of the dead," she said, then skipped
away.
A
crooked grin lit up Sebright's face. "I think this is it," he said,
and started back the way they had come.
"What
do you want me to do?" Thackery called after him.
"Eavesdrop,"
Sebright threw back over his shoulder.
Thackery
lay in his hammock and listened, feeling useless and extraneous.
—We
have all watched you, and none can say when they have seen such before. Par
believes you are spies from the Gnivi, that the Atad plots again to make its
dominion grow. Taj believes you are golem.
—We
are neither of those things. We are brothers. We breathe as one, our hearts
beat to the same rhythm. We are part of you, and you are part of us.
—So
my eyes tell me. But where have you come from? And why have you come here?
—The
last I have told Par already. We come to talk with the wisest of all men, the
exemplar of conscience, he whose domain reaches from one end of the Green Land
to the other.
—Then
talk, for I am he.
flraggarr.Thackery
thought.
—First
there are things I must understand. Why is the city armed against you?
—They
fear us because we are strong. They hate us because they must depend on us.
—For
food?
—Yes.
—And
you depend on them for your metal tools, for the wheels of your drays—
—We
depend on them for nothing. We need none of that for ourselves, only for what
we do for them. If you traveled farther from the city, you would see none of
these things.
—Why do you feed the
Gnivi? —It is the price of peace. So long as they need us, the Atad dare not
anger us too much. —Why do they not come out of the city and gather their own
food?
—Because
I will not permit it.
—You
could defeat them?
—In
our lands, as they could defeat us in theirs.
—How
long has this been the order?
—Thirty
generations.
—And
you arc content with it?
—They
see us come into the city, and know that we are free, and that they are not. In
time, the Gnivi will grow tired of their imprisonment, and place new leaders in
the Atad.
—What
about before?
—Before,
we built the city.
Thackery
sat bolt upright in his hammock, nearly falling out in the process. "These
are the real Gnivi," he exclaimed aloud.
—Who
was the first Urmyk?
—No
one knows.
—I
know. He was one of us.
—And
what is that? Where are you from? From the Lake of Salts? From the Brown Lands?
—If
you climb to the top of the highest tree, can you see all men everywhere? Can
you see to the end of a road when you stand on it? Or are there men and places
beyond seeing, even the sight of the wisest of the Urmyk?
—There are. —We are from
such a place, of such a distance that no Urmyk alive has ever traveled there.
—We have been the length of the river and the breadth of the Green Land.
—You
have not traveled into the sky.
Silence.
—Is
Taj right, after all? You come from the place of the dead? —The sky is larger
than you have imagined, and there is room enough for both the dead and the
living. Every light that
you see above us is a
land larger than that the Urmyk know.
—A
place too far to see—
—Yes.
—Each
star—
—Every
one.
—In
rimes recent, there was a new star—There. See it there.
The
canopy overhead was too thick for Thackery to see through, but he doubted Descartes was even a second
magnitude star. The fact that the Urmyk had noticed it said much.
—That
is our home. When the sun rises, I will call down a dray from it. My companion
and I are needed elsewhere. But if you will accept them, we will leave others,
to stay with you, to learn from you about you, to teach you of us. Will you
accept them? Will you make them part of the Urmyk?
There
was barely an instant's hesitation.
—We
will.
In
the morning, they waited for the gig in the field to the east of Marja's camp. Your finest hour,
Thackery thought as he looked at Sebright. You
plucked triumph out of the disaster I created.
Sebright
caught the look. "Regrets?"
"Jael
and Mike."
"They
bought us our introduction. You still regret leaving them?"
"No,"
he said truthfully. "They died here. Where else should they be?"
"Something
else, then."
Thackery
shrugged. "You didn't even need me."
"Because
you did your job right when we were still on board. I didn't want to need you here.
Or anyone."
Then
Maija joined them to watch the gig spiral down. As it grew nearer and its size
became clear, several of the Urmyk fled to the safety of the edge of the copse,
and when the noise of its engines reached the ground most of the rest joined
them there. Maija flinched but stayed at their elbow, and was the first to move
forward when the gig had come to rest.
Thackery
hung back as Eagan and Muir disembarked and Sebright made introductions. There
were muted words of congratulations and bittersweet hugs. Then Eagan pressed
past and came to where Thackery stood.
"You
screwed up," he said, his face hard and unfriendly.
"I know,"
Thackery said.
But his admission of
guilt did not end the chill. It lingered as they worked together to unload the
two trunk-sized cases containing the deep-space transmitter and the two
satchels of personal gear, and passed the equipment and their owners into the
custody of Maija's family. Muir did not speak to him at all.
All too quickly, there
was nothing left to do but board the gig and leave, nothing more to postpone
the accounting. Thackery had his hand on the ramp railing when one of the girls
who had helped prepare the bodies—Thackery did not even know her name—ran from
Taj's side across the field to him.
"You still
grieve," she said, breathless from running.
"Yes."
She pressed something
into his hand. "So that you might replace those who are lost," she
said earnestly.
He opened his hand to
find a black wood statuette, two-faced, Janus-like. One side was female, a
woman with a distended belly and pendulous breasts, the other male, improbably
gifted and triumphantly erect. The craftmanship was superb, the symbolism
obvious. It was a fertility icon.
The gift was a gesture as
poignant as it was pointless. His eyes moistening, Thackery closed his hand
over the icon and looked up at the girl's hopeful face.
"Thank you," he
said, and turned away to climb the ramp.
But his grief was not
over Jael and Michael, for their trials were ended. It was for himself, and for
the realization that in leaving Gnivi he was closing out his career, that he
would never walk on a world other than Earth again. His ambition had cost the
lives of two of his friends, and he could not imagine that either he or the
Service would be willing to forget that.
PARADOX
(from Mennitt Thackery's
JIADUR'SWAKE)
. . . The Service's
carefully laid out scheme of expansion very nearly came apart even as it was
coalescing. Problems of logistics, erratic morale at the Advance Bases, and a
shortage of ships to back up the advancing survey vessels were all factors. But
at the heart of the problem was communication.
For,
despite the fleetness of the AVLO-drive ships, communication between them, the
Advance Bases, and Unity was limited by the electromagnetic medium and its
300,000 kilo-metres per second speed limit. Through the first half of Phase II,
every advance in Service communications technology had to do with compressing
data, extending the useful range of transmitters, or increasing the operating
efficiency. Nothing could be done about speeding the message on its way.
That
created a curious situation wherein the fastest way to deliver critical news
was to send a messenger. There was no Einsteinian paradox involved, no more
than if you should mail an invitation to a neighbor, then walk next door to
cancel it before it was delivered.
But
there were problems all the same. Every base, every ship, was on its own time
zone, and the time zones were not hours but decades apart. A dialog between
installations was impossible when your nearest "neighbor" lived far
away in the past or in the future. Contemporaneity was fast becoming a lost
concept except to Service historians, to whom it was a
continuing nightmare. In
short, the vast expanses which the Service had conquered threatened to divide
and conquer the Service itself
chapter 9
Not On My Watch
When the gig docked,
Guerrieri did his best to make up with enthusiasm for what the reception lacked
in numbers. Later, there were many calls of congratulations from upship: Tefft
Voss, Jessie, Bayn Graeff, even Dunn. But the congratulations left Thackery
cold, unaffected.
1 have no claim to the success of Gnivi, only
to the disaster,
he told himself, and
there was no one to argue.
As
Thackery had anticipated, Neale was already preparing Descartes for a quick
return to A-Cyg with the Gnivi data. He had expected that they would at least
wait out the thirty-six hour post-Contact isolation period, giving the liaison
team a chance to settle in and report any problems. But within an hour of the
gig's return, the order was given which sent
Descartes climbing
out of ort>it to begin its return trip. Baldwin caught one encouraging
dispatch from the liaison team before crazing, but that was all.
With
two lost and two left behind and the isolation hatch still sealed, contact
country was suddenly a large and lonely place. Thackery rattled around
aimlessly, unable to concentrate on the work that needed doing, withdrawn into
himself. Even the sound of Guerrieri's hammer dulcimer, which Thackery had
always regarded as bright and joyful, seemed funereal and mocking instead.
But
when he stopped by the astrophysicist's cabin to ask him to stop or close his
door, Thackery found himself hungry for companionship, and instead walked in
and sat down.
"Hey,
an audience," Guerrieri said, the mallets light in his fingers, flashing
precisely against the taut steel strings. "Thack— I was wondering—do you
want to double up?"
"No,"
Thackery said, shaking his head.
"Like
the elbow room, eh?"
"I
just don't think it's a good idea."
"Post-Contact
blues?"
"How
many ships do you know have lost crew in landings?"
Guerrieri
stopped playing and considered. "I know
Hugin lost
one, because that's how McAullife's Planet got its name. Nestor's gig crashed, so
they lost half their team. Those were both survey landings, though, not contact
landings. Is this the first time anyone's lost people during a Contact?"
"Unless
someone has since we went out."
"Well—I
wouldn't dwell on it. We did find a colony. The Flight Office is going to care
a lot more about that than about Mike and Jael."
"That's
nonsense. They can't just shrug it off."
"I suppose not. Still—it wasn't
your fault, eh?"
"Wasn't
it?"
"No,
of course not. If you want to be fair about it, it was the Gnivi."
"But it wouldn't have happened if we'd waited until we knew more about
them." "Sebright made the decision, didn't he? And Neale was right
there."
"But
I made the recommendation," Thackery said sullenly.
"They
didn't have to take it." Guerrieri shrugged. "You don't need to worry
unless Sebright decides to pin it on you." "He's never said so much
as one word of reproof. I wish he would. Waiting for it is worse."
"Sounds
like you're going to be okay, then."
Thackery
shook his head. "You don't understand. I
am
responsible. I don't intend to duck it or fight it. I accept it."
Guerrieri
reached for the mallets. "You're too rough on yourself. Nothing's going to
happen. Don't you think they expected to lose some of us? Probably more of us
than they have. Back in the office this won't be seen as a screw-up. Back there
this is just kismet." He resumed playing, the haunting sound engaging
ambivalent emotions as it chased Thackery back to his cabin.
The
inquiry hearing was held behind closed doors in the library.
"TTiey're
here," Shaffer reported to the waiting board, which consisted of Neale,
Rogen, and Dunn. "Would you like them one at a time or together?"
"Thackery
first," Neale told the awk, raising an eyebrow in the direction of the
others. "Unless there are objections?" The others demurred, and Neale
nodded to Shaffer. "Show him in."
There
had been a change in Thackery, Neale saw immediately. As he walked in and took
his seat there was nothing of the eager-to-please lesser who had walked into
her Unity office for his first interview, nothing of the calculating new black
he had been for most of the mission to date. There was something new in his
bearing, something which suggested he would be less tractable. No great loss,
she thought. I'm almost done with him.
"You
understand that the purpose of this inquiry is to determine the circumstances
which led to the loss of Technoanalyst Michael Tyszka and Interpolator Jael
Collins during the Gnivi Contact," Rogen was saying.
"Yes,"
said Thackery.
"This
is not a fitness review nor a personal evaluation. This is an inquiry into the
performance of the entire team. It is not the role of this board to recommend
to the Flight Office any action on behalf of or against any member of the team.
This is purely an informational exercise."
"I
understand."
"Very
well. Commander?" Rogen said, deferring to Neale.
"Merry,
would you describe the events leading up to the attack by the Gnivi
guardsmen?"
It
was the first time he had been called that by anyone except Diana, and he
decided immediately he did not like it. He could not tell from Neale's
expression whether she used it knowingly, to goad him, or innocently, to relax
him. Either way, he hoped she would not make a habit of it. "There's not
much I can add to what's in the telecamera and transceiver recordings."
"Go
ahead anyway," Neale said pleasantly.
The
telling took several minutes, starting with the entry at the East Gate and
ending with the appearance of Par.
"Thank
you, that's enough," Neale said, cutting him off.
"In your estimation,
would an immediate pickup have afforded the injured members of the team the
medical attention necessary to save one or both of them?"
"I—don't know.
From what I saw of the wounds later, I doubt it." "The Gnivi weapons weren't
explosive, were they? You had no indication that a poison was used?"
"No."
"Then
they bled to death."
"I
have basic Service EMT training, that's all. I can't really say," Thackery
said. "I didn't see much of Michael. Jael was closest to me."
"But
they lived for several minutes."
"Those
aren't the easiest circumstances to keep track of time. I suppose they did.
Didn't the biotelemetry tell you what happened?"
Neaje
ignored the question. "In your estimation, wouldn't a more prudent course
have been to make a preliminary Contact with the pedestrians in the East Gate
plaza?"
"It
sure looks that way now," Thackery said. "But in my opinion, the
mistake was made earlier."
"Oh?
When?"
"We
landed prematurely. We should have taken more time to evaluate die Gnivian
society. As linguist, I should have insisted on planting peepers among the
rurals as well, as a cross-check on dialect and as a source of an alternate
perspective. If I had done that, Mike and Jael would still be alive. And we
knew that Gnivan was a written language, but I didn't think it was crucial to
the Contact. I was wrong. If we had been able to read the warnings at the
entrance to Broadway, Mike and Jael would still be alive."
"So
you blame yourself," Rogen said.
"I
do."
"Do
you have command responsibility, Mr. Thackery?" Neale asked lazily.
"No.
But the Contact Leader is obliged to rely on what we tell him. If we tell him
things that aren't true, or are only partly true, he can't be held accountable
for the decisions that flow from them."
"Thank you for your
thoughts," Neale said. "Do the rest of you have any other questions?
Very well, Merry, you can go." In the few moments between Thackery's
departure and Se
bright's arrival, Dunn
turned to Neale. "Very forward about taking responsibility."
"That's
Thackery's style," Neale said idly. "Very conscientious. We have to
remember, though, that he's also loyal to the Concom. Who wouldn't be, in that
situation? They were the only two to survive, and it was Sebright who got
Thackery out of danger. You have to expect him to feel an obligation."
The
door opened then to admit Sebright. When he had settled himself before them,
Neale rocked back in her chair. "All right, Mark. What went wrong down
there?"
"I
think it's pretty obvious. We walked into the middle of a jacquerie."
"How is it possible that we sent a team down there not knowing that?"
"The
Gnivi have had two hundred years of armed standoff to prettify their
fortifications so their populace isn't constandy confronted with reminders of
war and potential war. That concealment made it possible for us to misread the
balance of economic and political power between the city-dwellers and the
rurals."
"And
whose fault was that?"
"No
one's."
Dunn
leaned forward and rested his forearms on the table. "How can you say
that?"
"We
were forced to proceed on the basis of incomplete information." Neale's
eyebrow shot up. "Again, whose fault was that?" "You're always going to have incomplete
information from
an aerial survey.
Cultures don't assay as neatiy as rock formations, Commander. We made the best
guess possible under the circumstances. We were wrong."
"And
who was responsible for making that guess?"
"There's
no hard line in a contact team separating one person's responsibility from
another's. It's a group effort."
"Please,"
Dunn said tiredly, "let's not try to protect anyone, Concom Sebright. Who
was responsible for the miss?"
"Since
you insist," Sebright said, meeting Neale's gaze, "it was really Mike
and Jael's call. It was Mike's job to assess the technological level of the
culture. He underestimated the level of the rurals, which reinforced our
natural bias toward the city as the seat of power. And it was Jael's job to
read between the lines and see the inconsistencies in the model."
"Now
isn't that convenient, if the dead were responsible for their own deaths."
"You're
the one who wanted names. I don't look on it that way. Everything that
happened, good and bad, belongs to all of us equally."
"A
very egalitarian outlook," Neale said. "That will be all."
"Not
quite, Commander. I'd like a word with you outside."
After
a moment's hesitation, she pushed back her chair and followed him out.
"I
know what you were trying to do in there," he said, leaning close.
"You wanted me to name Thack. That stinks, Ali. You know the position you
put the kid in. How can you climb on him now for doing what you asked?"
"You
don't need to worry about Thackery," she said reassuringly.
He
squinted at her suspiciously. "I have your word on that?"
"You
do
When
they came out of the craze a fortnight later, it was impossible to see the base
they had left and the jewellike city revealed on the monitors as die same
structure. Cygnus had done more than grow—it had undergone a metamorphosis as
dramatic as that experienced by any hymnopeteran.
For
all Thackery could tell by looking, the original base had been either discarded
or completely disassembled. Instead of a slender spire, Cygnus now had a cubic
structure easily a hundred times the previous volume. Atop the base, extended
from the "roof" like antennae, were two tall docking masts. Slung
beneath the bulk of the station, also two in number, were the familiar
upside-down U shapes of shipways. One of the 'ways was occupied by some sort of
capital ship, though Thackery could not see enough of it to know even which
series.
But
Thackery could not spend too much time sight-seeing. Descartes had regained its
senses a mere five hours out, truncating the final leg of the journey. Just an
hour later, the word came down from the bridge:
"After
discussions with base authorities, Commander Neale advises that all personnel
will leave the ship at Cygnus. That's the good news, folks—a change of scenery.
The bad news is that you have to clean up after yourselves before you go."
TTiackery
had already anticipated leaving the ship, so his own quarters were in order.
But with that news, there were Michael's things to look after, and Jael's, and
an empty cabin to police, and samples to be readied for transfer, and a contact
lab to put in order. By the time Thackery and Guerrieri were ready, most of the
awks and techs had already departed.
Thackery's
last stop was his own cabin, to pick up his gear. On the way out, he paused at
the door, the duffle bag slung over one shoulder, and looked back at the
now-empty compartment. He thought about Danny McShane, his first cabin-mate,
and about Michael, his last, and he felt the sadness welling up from his chest.
It didn't go well for any
of us, did it?
A
few metres down the corridor, Guerrieri emerged from his cabin and joined him.
"Not getting sentimental, are you now? You'll be back," he said,
clapping Thackery on the shoulder. "No," Thackery said soberly as he
pulled the door shut. "Not to this cabin, or this ship. That much I
know."
A-Cyg's
port facilities had improved to the point that there was no need for Descartes to attempt to
maneuver its bulk in close to the fragile structure of the base. Instead, Descartes stood off a
thousand metres while a six-place people-mover shuttled back and forth between
the D-deck hatch and one of the docking masts. Except for the dour-countenanced
pilot, Thackery and Guerrieri were the only passengers for the ten-minute run.
On
reaching the docking mast, they squeezed into a tiny lift for the descent to
the top level of the base. Then it was down a long, brightly lit, gently
downward-sloping corridor which ended at a transfer lounge reminiscent of those
at Unity: plush seating and carpeting, comfort stations, skylights through
which the docking masts and the silhouette of
Descartes
could be seen. The expansive lounge was capable of handling fifty or more
people at a time, but the only other person there was a green-clad awk sprawled
in a chair and watching the basenet.
"Check-in
to your right," the awk called to them without looking up.
To
the right, three contiguous Synglas-enclosed offices under a TRANSFER PROCESSING
sign made a barrier to the concourse beyond, with broad red lines in the carpet
showing where queues should form. Beyond the offices, Thackery could see a row
of speedlift doors and what appeared to be a gift shop.
A young woman—hardly more
than a girl—sat behind the sickle-shaped desk in one of the offices, watching
the newcomers expectantly. They took the cue and headed for her.
"One
at a time," said the aide sharply as they tried to enter together.
Guerrieri and Thackery looked at each other. "You go ahead,"
Guerrieri said with a shmg, and retreated outside.
The
door slid shut with a hiss. "Have a seat," she said, gesturing. He
could not help but briefly stare at her legs, naked to the thigh except for the
Greek-style crisscross lacings which climbed upward from her sandals. When he
looked up, their eyes met, and he realized guiltily that she had noticed—and
probably misread—his interest.
"You've
done remarkable things here since we left," Thackery said as he settled in
the chair, trying to redirect both their thoughts. "What's the population
now?"
She
considered a moment before answering. "We just hit eleven thousand
permanent residents, plus a few hundred temporaries. Including you. What's your
name?"
"Merritt
Andrew Thackery."
"Assignment?"
"Contact
Linguist, Descartes."
"And
your Service number?"
The
question surprised Thackery. "I don't know. We don't use them on
board." She tsked and shook her head. "Better learn it. You'll need
it for everything around here. How long are you staying?"
"I
don't know."
"Well,
I just came on, so I don't know—." She glanced at a note posted to her
right. "Oh, here we are.
Descartes's
in for Kleine refit?" "I don't know what that is. We're just back
from the Gnivi colony." "I know. But you're still going to get a
refit. The schedule says thirty-one weeks."
"I
don't expect to be on her when she goes back out."
Her
instructions apparently left no room for variables. "At the moment you're
officially attached to her, right? Then you're looking at thirty-one weeks.
Which means I can get you a double-wide instead of the standard apartment, and
it'll only cost you another three hundred a week."
Thackery
gaped. "I'm supposed to pay for this?"
"Well,
of course. What did you think?"
"I
thought we were all Service—"
She
straightened up in her chair. "We are, but that doesn't mean we can afford
to give out free room and board. How do you expect us to earn our trade
credits, if not by servicing the ships and looking after the crews?"
"But I don't have
anything to pay with—" "Silly. Here's the balance in your Service
account," she said, rotating her display toward him. The figure was a
little over €600,000, which stunned Thackery to silence. "With that kind
of money, I wouldn't think you'd worry about the extra for a double-wide,"
she continued. "My account was being managed at Unity," he said,
confused. "When did they transfer it here?"
'Transfer
it? No, you don't understand, your account is updated every day. We're linked
to all the Unity records. Oh, wait a minute. That's right—Descartes doesn't have its
Kleine yet, so you wouldn't know about all this. See, we're in constant contact
with Unity. I can call them about as easily as I can call someone down on
Seacrest Level."
"How
is that possible?"
"Oh,
God, I don't know, I'mjust an Operations aide. We've had it for sixty years,
though. You'll be one of the last ships to get it."
The
proposition implicit in her words was so jarring to Thackery's sense of the way
the Universe worked that rather than deal with it, he set it aside. "This
can't be anything like a full-time assignment for you. How much traffic are you
folks getting in here these days?"
She
seemed not to mind the digression. "No, not full time. But we get a packet
every three months from Unity, plus the odd survey ship every now and
then."
"Every
three months?" Thackery thought a moment. "That means there'd have to
be forty or so packets en route at any given moment. Eighty, if you count the
ones on their way back."
"Why,
sure, I guess so."
"I
didn't think the Procurement Office would ever get us ships in those kind of
numbers."
"It
hasn't. The packets are operated by USS-Transport."
"Do
the crews wear the black?"
"Well,
sure," she said. She brushed her longish hair back and showed him her own
black ellipse, worn like jewelry on the collar of her blouse. "Everybody
out here does. What's the matter?"
"I
don't think you'd understand," Thackery said, subdued.
She did not notice his
change of mood. "Anyway, there's a packet due in about six weeks, so
you'll get to see one then." "How many survey ships are working this
sector now?" "Three, when they're all out: Tycho, Munin, and your ship.
But you and Munin are both here now. Tycho's about eleven
lights out. We don't hear much from them."
That
answered the question of which ship he had seen in the yard. Thackery pursed
his lips. "Look, try not to take this the way it sounds, but is everyone
taking the Contact with Gnivi pretty casually?"
She
laughed, a musical titter. "Oh, no, you're wrong. We were beginning to
think we'd be the last octant to find a colony—even to worry a little that
there might not be any out this way at all. We're really happy about you
people. This puts Cygnus on the map, and'll mean that much more traffic for us.
Honestly, we've just been scraping by with the Unity shuttle traffic. But now
we'll start getting noticed by the Intercolony Support Office, and that's where
the profit is."
Not
everything she said was meaningful to Thackery, least of all the last part. He
had never heard of the ISO, and the motive she cited seeming jarringly out of
place. "There wasn't much of a reception," he said, jerking his thumb
in the direction of the awk, now dozing in front of the screen. "It seems
like there'd be a little more fuss over the fifth colony."
"Fifth?
Try eighth. Gnivi is the third colony in two months. Don't worry, though. I'm
sure there's going to be a dinner honoring you, and probably some commendations
handed out, too."
"Oh."
Again, Thackery was brought up short by a reminder that time had not stood
still while Descartes
had been on station. "What about my room, then?"
"Your
apartment is on Scirocco Place, number 76," she said, handing him a
magcard that appeared at a slot near her elbow. Glancing at it, he saw that it
bore his face, name, rating, and Service number. "There's a help menu on
the basenet that will tell you all about'restaurants and recreation," she
went on, "just about anything you want. And you can always page the base
library
or our offices if you can't find what you need."
He
slipped the card into a pocket and stood. "Thank you."
"You were the linguist,"
she said, cocking her head to study him. "You went on the landing."
"Yes." "Look, I have to take care of your friend out there. But
if
you want to wait, I'll be
happy to help you find your apartment, show you around..." Her voice
trailed off, making the offer open-ended.
Memories
of Diana came rushing back, unpleasant, painful. "How old are you?"
"Nineteen,"
she said brightly.
"I'm
a hundred and sixty-six," Thackery said coldly. "I don't think we'd
have much in common." As he passed out of the office into the concourse,
he shut his eyes to the wounded look that appeared on her face.
Thackery
found his apartment without difficulty, and having done so found himself with
nothing to do but wait, wait for the bureaucratic wheels to grind round, wait
for the word to come down that would end this misadventure and give him a
chance to start again.
While
he waited he made use of the basenet to try to fill in the blanks remaining
from his conversation with the Ops aide. The biggest blank was the Kleine
transmitter, so he started there.
According
to the Worldnet announcement made some fifty-five years ago, the Kleine was
exactiy what Thackery had surmised: a transrelative deep-space communications
system. It was not instantaneous, but the lag between Cygnus and Unity, lying
some twenty-five light-years away, was a mere three minutes.
'Transmitter," however, was a bit of misnomer, since no one had been able
to measure or even detect anything physical being transmitted.
The
system was named for Arthur Kleine, the Technology Office drive engineer
credited with the admittedly serendipitous discovery, but the homonymous
suggestion of the crazy geometry of a Klein bottle was equally appropriate.
Kleine had designed new development instrumentation for a pair of identical
prototypes of the O-series drive. During the first field test of OX-l in deep
space beyond the Oort Cloud, the data meant for the screens of the test team
appeared almost instantly on the monitors before the techs preparing OX-2—half
a light-day away in the labs of the Technology Office research center. The
system seemed to have only two limitations: It only worked in conjunction with
an AVLO drive, and it, too, did not work during the craze.
"That's
too damn easy," Thackery protested aloud. "God knows the Service
needs it, but really—"
Indignation
sent Thackery in search of the technical reports on the Kleine system. To the
extent that he could understand them, he found no hard data, no cogent
explanations, only speculation disguised as theory. Just like drive theory.
The most frequently cited paper, by Walters and Highsmith, proposed that an
operating AVLO drive created "energy corridors" with every other AVLO
drive, through which the Kleine units propagated their transmissions.
But
there was vanishingly little evidence, experimental or mathematical, on which
to evaluate the Walters/Highsmith theory. In fact, considering its metaphysical
flavor and the impossibility of direct observation, the theory had all the
marks of being both unprovable and irrefutable.
Which is no doubt why it's so popular. Where's
Karl Popper when we really need him? Thackery thought wryly
as he cleared the screen to take up a new subject.
Thackery
found the "free enterprise" turn that Advance Base operations had
taken to be, after examination, equally incomprehensible. He freely admitted
that biases carried over from Georgetown and his first career track were at the
root of the problem.
Except
for the capital-formation mechanisms and a few independent corporations left
alone for efficiency's sake, the World Council had diligently rooted out the
profit motive from the Earth's economic life. The financial infrastructure that
remained, transfer payments and community service fees, salaries and prices,
merely provided a familiar handle on what was, in effect, a planet-wide barter
market.
With
a less complex system and a better educated population, the Survey service had
foregone even that crutch. Since boarding
Tycho
ever so long ago, Thackery had not once needed to think of money. His salary
was nothing more or less than a recruitment bribe, paid according to mission
elapsed time (but earning interest according to Unity elapsed time) and
collectible on his return to Earth and its monetized economy. He had never
expected to see a penny of it until then.
But
suddenly he was in a pay-as-you-go world, drawing against that account for
every minor service and amenity. There was an immigration fee, a lodging fee,
an environmental services fee, a net access fee, a maintenance and housekeeping
fee—Thackery had only begun to learn the variations, and already the list
seemed endless. Though the rates quoted by the Ops aide would hardly make him a
pauper, not even through the remainder of a full normal lifetime, Thackery
bitterly resented every debit and considered the entire practice piracy and
worse.
It
was obvious from the Ops aide that the residents did not share his outrage. The
four-place packets, their run sliced to eleven years actual, sixteen days
perceptual by the I-series drives, brought in trade goods, emigrants, USS
inspectors, even a few tourists. Cygnus Base could have anything Unity had to
offer—when they could pay for it.
Their
community-wide goal was full shipbuilding capability, the stated intent
building, staffing, and supporting a survey ship to be named Cygnus. But there were
also studies underway on the feasibility of opening
"corner-to-corner" trade routes with the Advance Bases in adjoining
octants, or, barring that, selling packets to USS-Transport itself.
If this is what the Service is coming to, then
it's past time I got out, he told himself lugubriously.
Dispirited,
Thackery asked for a summary directory of the colonies. The directory confirmed
that Gnivi was, in fact, eighth on the list. The new colonies were Daehne,
thirty-three lights out in the constellation Serpens, discovered by Weber in Magellan; Dzuba,
twenty-nine lights out in Canis Major, credited to Hiscox and Amundsen; and
an extinct colony on 22 Hercules5, uncovered by Higuchi and the crew of Hillary.
And
in none of the Contacts had any surveyors died.
Turning
off the display, Thackery settled back on his bed to mull over what he had
learned. And when he was done, he walked three blocks to a rec outlet and
brought back a jeroboam of the local sweet red wine.
When
the wine was half drunk and Thackery thoroughly so, he returned to the basenet
and tried to access one last bit of data to fill in one last blank. When he
could not, he corked the bottle, left the apartment, made an unsteady trip to
Castle Place to see the base librarian.
"This
may seem like a strange request," he said, his words less slurred than
they seemed to him, "but I wonder if you could get me some information on
one of the base's original crew."
"Of
course," the Com aide said brightly. "May I have your card,
please?"
Thackery
felt several pockets before finding the one to which he had consigned the hated
object. Extracting the card with some difficulty, he slid it across the
counter.
"That's
actually a fairly common request for people of your era," she said, clued
by his low Service number. She was unconscious of the insult in her words, but
at that point so was Thackery. "What's the name?"
"Diana
Marks."
"It'll
be just a moment, those records aren't kept online. When were you last
here?"
Thackery
had to make an effort to remember. "'13."
"Oh,
my, you have missed a lot. Here we are. Marks, Diana Elizabeth, chemical
technologist. Shipped to Cygnus in
Des-cartes
as part of the pioneer team, as you said. Productivity award in '19—not much
else. Had a daughter in '14, name of Andrea—make that Andra. Mother and
daughter both shipped out back to Earth in '21 aboard the packet Audubon."
The
alcohol coursing through Thackery's body diminished the impact of that news,
but it could not fully abate it. Leaning heavily on the counter, he closed his
eyes and rested his forehead on his folded hands. "Is there anything in
there about the father of the girl?"
"She
gave it as an M. Thackery, no further information. Apparently Vital Statistics
wasn't able to confirm that, because it's listed as anecdotal rather than
genetic." The aide's eyes suddenly widened. "M. Thackery—is that you?
Was that your child?"
Thackery
did not answer. He was already tottering toward the door with all the speed his
rubbery legs could muster, his stomach churning threateningly. He made it to
the corridor before the cramps won and dropped him to his knees in a puddle of
second-hand wine and tears.
"I
did it, too," he sobbed, his pain making him oblivious to the stares of
the library aide and the pedestrians in the corridor. "Freezin' Christ,
just like my father. I did it, too."
It
was a chastened and subdued Thackery that was released from the A-Cyg detox
center at eleven the next morning. He went direcdy home, curled up on the bed
fully dressed, and took a three-hour nap. When he arose from it, the lingering
effects of both the alcohol and the concoctions the center had used to banish
it were finally gone. The memory of what had triggered his display,
unfortunately, had not.
Declaring
war on self-destructive thinking, Thackery turned to the entertainment
channels, switched off his mind, and filled his eyes and ears with, in
succession, a flatscreen historical, "Gone With The Wind," a concert
by a long-dead folksinger, and a nude trio grappling on a grassy hillside, all
watched with equal detachment. The sex show had just ended, with everyone
except Thackery satisfied, when the door page sounded.
It
was Dunn, smiling familiarly and dressed casually in a V-neck shirt and
softskin slacks. "Heard you had a bit too much excitement last
night," he said, stepping past Thackery into the apartment. "I
thought I'd see how you're doing."
"I'm
just waiting for the word."
"What
word is that?"
"My
discharge from Contact."
Dunn
settled on the edge of the bed. "Why are you expecting
that?" "I earned it with my
performance at Gnivi, don't you think? Hell, you were on the inquiry
board."
To
Thackery's consternation, Dunn laughed. "Don't you understand? Neale can't
discipline you without bringing her own actions into question. It's Mark who'll
take the blame."
"Mark—"
"He's
the one she wants. You just made it easier for her. So perk up. When Descartes goes back out, I
promise you you'll be on her."
"I
don't want to be. If they don't release me, I'll resign."
"If
you feel that way, why haven't you resigned already? Wait—you'd have to forfeit
the compound interest on your salary, wouldn't you?"
"I
don't care about that."
"No.
Then what is it?"
Thackery
sighed weightily. "I just want to face up to it."
"Resigning
before they had a chance to can you would offend your sense of honor."
"I
guess that's what I mean."
"You
want to stand up straight when they shoot you. Won't even ask for a
blindfold."
"What—"
"Be
honest with yourself, that's what it amounts to. You feel responsible for the
people we lost. You made that clear enough at the inquiry. Do you think if they
run you out for it you'll feel any better about it?"
"That's
not what I want."
"Sure
it is. And it won't come that way."
"Don't
you understand?" Thackery shouted. "I'm responsible! I screwed up.
They didn't do anything to deserve what happened to them! They died, and I
didn't. I'm sure as hell not going to let someone else take the blame."
"It's
out of your hands," Dunn said. "Don't you understand? Neale knew what
you'd say. She set it up so Mark'd look bad—and he did. That wasn't an inquiry.
It was a hanging. Mark's gone, or as good as."
"That's
not right."
"But
you'll learn to live with it, and the guilt. Merritt, try to think straight for
once. Farther out in this octant are the Veil Nebula, the Cygnus Star Cloud,
the Great Rift—we've barely begun. How could you want to be anywhere
else?"
Thackery
shook his head grimly. "I'll wait until that next packet is ready to leave
for Earth. If they haven't removed me by then, I'll do it myself."
Thackery
vegetated five days away before he had another visitor. This time it was
Guerrieri.
"Hear
you're talking about leaving us."
"It's
not just talk."
"Heard
that, too. What's going on?"
"There's nothing complicated
about it. I've got no reason to stay in, not one. But now I've got a reason to
leave." "Which is?" Thackery hesitated, then told him about
Diana. "You're not the only one," Guerrieri said with a wry smile.
"Rogen left one—he's
been having lunch with his granddaughter. So did a couple of the awks. Even
Mike, which is kind of nice." He flashed his eyebrows. "Guess I was
shooting blanks."
"Diana
took her back to Earth."
"And
that's your reason for going?"
Thackery
nodded.
"Better
think that through. Unless one or the both of them kept moving, all you're
going to find is a grave."
"I
still have to see."
"They
can talk to Unity now."
"I
already tried."
"And?"
Thackery
sighed. "Unity says that Diana was released from the Service in '50. And
her Earth records since are protected by the Right to Privacy provision of the
Articles. They have nothing about her—our—daughter at all."
Guerrieri
frowned, then lifted his shoulders in a little shrug. "Guess you have to
make up your own mind. What do you think about this Kleine transmitter
business? You realize, if we'd had one we'd wouldn't of had to come back. Have
you been down to the yard? They've got the ship all torn up amidships."
"It's
crazy."
"It
works."
"It's
still crazy," Thackery said emphatically. "Do you realize that the
two inventions on which this whole business rests are a complete mystery to
everybody?"
"Not
to everybody"
"Everybody.
Did you ever study drive theory? What makes an AVLO ship go? The drive doesn't
provide the energy needed to create the gravity hole—it taps it. How? From
where?"
"The
multiplier effect—"
"Is
an invention of the physicists to preserve conservation of mass-energy. It's a
fancy fridge-factor." "Come on, you're no drive tech."
"McShane was. He told me that no one really knew where
the ship was when it
crazed—that it couldn't be in normal space, but that the drive couldn't
function in any of the postulated hyperspaces. And now we've got a com system
that uses shortcuts nobody can find and follows rules nobody can figure out."
He shook his head in disgust. "This is just insane, the whole thing."
"The
engineers are just a few steps ahead of the theoreticians, that's all."
"No,
it's crazy, all of it."
Guerrieri
said nothing for a time, then a sympathetic cast came into his eyes.
"What's up with you, Thack? Are you all right?"
A
bitter laugh answered him. "All right? My whole life is
screwed
up and I don't even know why. I can't even figure
out
how I got here. I mean, I can remember the events, but it
doesn't
feel like I was in control." He tried a smile, but it was
unconvincing.
"I just can't do this anymore. Do you under
stand?"
"I
think so," Guerrieri said, edging toward the door. "Look, I'm
expected—"
Thackery
waved a hand in the air. "It's all right."
"I'll
stop by and see you again. Or you could come out and
see
us."
"Bring
a bottle. I'll be better company."
But
Guerrieri did not return, and Thackery languished, counting down the days until
the arrival of the packet
Raphael and
waiting for the word that seemed would never come. But one morning, with the
countdown at seventeen, the page light on his apartment's netlink lit up at
last. The conversation was brief, but it was enough:
"Merritt
Thackery?"
"Here."
"Report
to Carl Heiser in the Flight Office at 10
A.M."
Lifted
out of his gloom, Thackery bounced around the apartment expending his resdess
energy in cleaning and straightening. An hour before his appointment, he
showered away three days' worth of olfaction and shaved off a six-day growth of
beard. Dressing in a clean allover—available thanks to a laundry services fee
ratter than his own foresight—he looked deep into the black ellipse for a long
moment, then pinned it above his left breastpocket for the last time.
Leaving
the apartment earlier than he needed to, Thackery found himself waiting outside
Heiser's office with Fowler, one of the awks from Descartes. Then when the
office door opened, it was Jessica Baldwin who emerged. Heiser appeared behind her only
long enough to call "Fowler," then disappeared inside again.
"Thackery,"
she said, with what seemed to be a genuine smile. "I'm glad to see you
here."
"Hello,
Jessie."
"Look,
all of the techs are getting together at Tom's apartment on Simonton Place to
talk this over. Why don't you come on up when Heiser's done with you?"
The
invitation puzzled Thackery, so the head bob that acknowledged it was reflexive
and perfunctory.
"All
right, then," she said brightly. T i l see you later."
Fowler
was inside some ten minutes, and then it was Thackery's turn.
"You
mind if I take a moment to get myself some coffee?" Heiser asked as
Thackery entered, waving him to a chair. "This has been a crazy
morning—appointments since 7
A.M.
and still half a dozen to go."
"No—"
Heiser
stirred something briskly into his cup and returned to his desk. "Well,
Thackery, how are you feeling? Ready to go back to the wars?"
"Excuse
me?"
He
pushed a piece of fax across the desk toward Thackery:
Unified Space
Service—Survey Branch Flight Office Cygnus Annex
Notice
of Personnel Transfer-
Thackery,
Merritt Andrew S.N 0001091
Current Billet: Contact
Team Linguist,
Descartes (USS-63)
Pay
Grade: C-4
New
Billet: Contact Specialist,
Munin
(USS-3)
Pay
Grade: C-5
Effective: As Dated
Term of Tour: Open. As
required by Mission.
"This
is a promotion," Thackery said, unbelieving.
"Of
sorts."
"I
don't understand. I don't even know what a contact specialist is."
"To
be honest, we're not quite sure either," Heiser said, rocking back in his
padded chair. "Munin
won't carry an ordinary crew—but that's only right, since her mission's not an
ordinary one either. Munin is
going to the colony Sennifi. If that name sounds unfamiliar to you, don't
worry. It was to everyone until a week before your arrival, and we've been very
closed-mouthed about it from the beginning—for good reason. This is a follow-up
mission. We're sending you out to try to pick up the pieces of a botched
contact."
Heiser
paused to sip at his coffee. "As far as your new assignment is concerned,
my understanding is that you won't be part of a contact team as you've come to
understand the term, but will serve as an aide to Mission Commander Neale.
Since she's directly responsible for the negotiations, that should put you
right in the middle of things."
"Why
was I picked?"
"On
Commander Neale's recommendation. You certainly would have been selected for
the mission in any event—your language facility and your Gnivi experience put
you well up on the list."
This is Neale's payoff to me,
Thackery realized suddenly. Dunn
was right. Oh, damn him, Dunn way right. "What about Mark
Sebright?" he demanded.
"What
do you mean?"
"Is
he on the crew manifest for
Munin?"
"No—"
"Then
that's my answer, too. No," Thackery said, coming to his feet. "I'm
not available for this assignment. I'm resigning from the Service."
"I
had no notice—," Heiser began.
"Here's
notice for you," Thackery said, tearing the black ellipse from his allover
and throwing it down on the desk. "I want out."
"I
don't understand—"
"All
you have to understand is the word 'No'. I'm not going," Thackery shouted,
and stormed out of the office past the questioning eyes of Guerrieri and
Taylor-White.
By
the time Thackery reached his apartment, there was already a Priority message
waiting on the netlink, insisting that he report to Neale immediately. Unable
to purge it from the system or silence the ringer, he ignored it. Twenty
minutes later, the door page began to sound. Thackery ignored it as well, until
the combined and continuing demands exhausted his minimal patience.
"Go
away!" he hissed, flinging the door open. "I'm done with you!"
But
it was not Neale. The strong hand that caught the door before Thackery could
slam it shut, the shoulder that pushed it open again, belonged to Sebright.
"My
turn to butt in," Sebright said, stepping forward without waiting for an
answer.
"What
are you here for?"
"You
know."
"To
break the news that they've found some way to keep me from resigning."
Sebright shook his head. "No. They know they can't make you stay."
"Then
they must have sent you to talk me into it."
"No
one sent me," Sebright said, crossing his arms over his chest. "You
insult me. Do you think I'd do anything for them now?" Thackery dropped
his gaze to the floor, and his shoulders slumped. "I'm sorry. I wasn't
thinking."
"You've
had that problem a lot lately."
"Then
what are you here for?"
Sebright
paused a moment before answering. "Derrel came by a week or so ago and
told me a lot of things you probably rather he hadn't. Tom filled in the rest,
or enough of it. When I heard what happened this morning, I decided it was time
to stop listening and start talking."
'Talking
about what?"
"I
think you should go to Sennifi. Not because they want you to, certainly not for
Neale. Because I think it's the right thing for you—and because I can't."
"They're
trying to give me a damn promotion. Neale's paying me off for helping her get
rid of you."
"I
know. But she's not the only one who recommended you."
Thackery
stared.
"This
is an important one—the most advanced society since Journa," Sebright
said. "The Sennifi have a unified planet-wide culture with a high level of
intellectual achievement. Their language is sophisticated, very subtie. And
they've told us to mind our own business."
"What
about you?"
"What
about me?"
"If
it's so important, why don't they want someone with your kind of
experience?"
"Neale
won't have me," he said easily. "She's probably right, too, though
for the wrong reason. I'm a good Contactor, Thack—"
"I
know. I've seen you woik."
"But
I'm a lousy Contact Leader. I don't delegate responsibility well, I can never
be bothered to explain myself, and I'm not interested in 'managing' people—only
in getting the job done."
"So
what are they going to do to you?"
"They
haven't decided yet. I'm not even sure what I want them to do. I'll never tire
of the work. Strange as it may sound, I loved every minute on Gnivi. But I'm
very tired of the bullshit that goes with it."
"Come
back to Earth with me in
Raphael."
Sebright shook his head. "That's
the wrong choice for you, Thack." "Why are you so sure?" He
sighed. "You once tried to get me to tell you what it
was like to be where we
are now. You're here now, and you still don't seem to see it. I don't know what
waits for you at Sennifi and beyond. But I do know what waits for you on Earth.
You've had a taste of it here on Cygnus, if only you'd realize it. Try to
understand what it would mean to see this kind of change when you have an
emotional investment. You think you're going back because of Diana, but what you're
really trying to do is go home. But home isn't there anymore."
"I
have to see for myself—"
"No.
I've been watching you ever since you came on board Tycho. You've spent all of your
life letting those around you define what you are and what you should do and
how you should feel. Isn't it time to take charge and do that for yourself? If
you go back, it's only because you're desperate to go back to an environment
that will treat you more gently than the Service has, flatter you and make you
feel good about yourself again. But that environment isn't Earth. It's
childhood, and there's no getting back there. Your eyes are open now. You can't
forget what you've seen. Life is short, brutish, and unfair—but it's the only
game in town. If you ever try to run from it, it wins, and you lose. Don't go
to Earth, Thack. Go to Sennifi."
Slowly
Thackery raised his head until his eyes met Se-bright's. "You're the only
one I would have accepted this from."
"I know." Thackery nodded,
his eyes growing wet. "All right. Sennifi, then."
Sebright
nodded approvingly. "Then you'll need one of these," he said, holding
out his hand and opening his fist. Lying on his palm was a black ellipse.
"How
did you get that back from them?"
"I
didn't," Sebright said. "It's mine." He stepped toward Thackery
and pinned the insignia on his chest, above the tear in the fabric. Thackery
looked down at it, then up at Sebright, and tried to speak, but his voice
failed him. In the next moment, naturally and unselfconsciously, the two men
fell into a long, emotional, and reassuring hug.
Thackery
could not say for certain, but he thought it was the kind of hug a father would
give a son.
II.
MUNIN
chapter 10
Sennifi
The first time Thackery
got a look at the Sennifi records, he understood perfectly why Neale had
insisted on leading the followup mission:
FC 09—Summary and Index (Internal Release
Only)
<=> Primary sun: 2 Aquilae <
= > Planet: Type B4N (Fe-silicate-oxide crust/active core/ N atm) <=>
Highest lifeforms: (Dreyer hierarchy) Homo sapiens
aquilae
<= > Civilization: planet-wide, city-based, geoforming <=>
Technological Scale Rating (preliminary): 7.48 <= > Social-Ethical Scale
Rating (preliminary): 8.10 <= > First contact: Tycho Brahe (USS-81), Cmdr.
L. Tamm A
-TOUCH
FOR MORE
The key was in the last
line: Neale could not pass up a chance for a final victory over an old rival.
As it turned out, Tycho had stayed at A-Cyg a
full six months after Descartes'
departure. The first third of the delay was apparently due to the distractions
of the base, the remainder by the installation of its Kleine system. Tycho's Kleine was the first in
the octant, trans-shipped aboard the first of the new packets and intended for
the base itself, but placed on
Tycho when
the opportunity presented itself.
But
after that bit of fortuitous timing,
Tycho's
luck turned sour, and its log became a record of unparalleled futility. Every
system they visited was painfully ordinary. Every planet they studied was
completely lifeless, either an inhospitable gas giant or a radiation-seared
rock nugget without so much as a protobacterium to call its own.
That
track record made the unexpected sound of Sennifi's planetary radio-band
communications a compelling siren song. Skipping over the four inner planets of
the 2 Aquilae system, Tycho
had rushed to settle in orbit around Sennifi. Her linguists eavesdropped on the
radio traffic, while her technoanalysts and anthropologists spied on the
cities—sixty-eight in all, scattered through the lightly vegetated temperate
zone. The physical scientists, forced for the first time to stand in line for
instrument and processing time, grumbled but were ignored.
Then
things started to go wrong. Without warning, the Sennifi transmitters fell
silent, after the general form of the language had been identified but before
much vocabulary or grammar could be deciphered. The population surveys gave
erratic, ultimately contradictory results. And when a four-man contact landing
team was set down outside one of Sennifi's cities, they entered it to find it
completely empty.
There
were no signs of the disorder of an evacuation, and every sign of a city in
use—except that there were no Sennifi. Yet the telecamera records from the last
light of the evening before showed normal street traffic. The only conclusion
possible was that the Sennifi had somehow known the team was coming, and had
gone to great lengths to avoid meeting them.
In
the grasp of both impatience and frustration, Tamm then made what proved to be
a tactical blunder. By asking the Sennifi for permission to land the contact
team at a site of their choosing, he gave them a chance to say "No."
They
said no. Firmly and unequivocally.
Nonplussed,
Tamm appealed to A-Cyg for guidance. Guidance came back in cold tone and
insulting detail. Finish geological and geopolitical mapping. Transmit all data
back to A-Cyg. Continue on to the next system. After a cooling-off period, a
special team will follow up on Sennifi.
It
was a double blow to Tycho:
having their sole discovery wrested from them, and locking in the ignominy of
their failure to complete the contact. Together, they would likely seal forever
her reputation as an unlucky ship.
Poor Lin Tamm—
It
was not really his fault. Six times, USS ships had appeared in the skies above
an FC
colony to say, in effect, "Hello—we're here—you're not alone." After
a varying period of shock, the answer had always been, "By our gods, it's
good to see you!"
But
the Sennifi had told Tycho,
"We know. Go away."
It
was upto Munin to
find out why.
"How
long?" Thackery called anxiously across the bridge of Munin. The gravigator—the
only other person present in the semi-darkened compartment—looked up
blank-faced. "How long?" Thackery repeated. "Till we come out of
this craze?" The gravigator checked his instruments unhurriedly.
"Thirty minutes."
"Not
enough," Thackery said under his breath, turning back toward his display
screen. Scrutinizing the rows of green Sennifi symbols—each a logogram, much
like in early Earth Chinese—he continued processing them though the linguacomp's
error-proofing program. The contact message had to be ready, and it had to be
right. Unfortunately, Thackery was behind his self-imposed schedule, and the
combined probability of error was holding at 19 percent—due, no doubt, to the
limited Sennifi vocabulary bank with which he had been provided.
"Mass-touch
on 2 Aquilae," announced the gravigator over the shipnet. Thackery sighed
and deleted a sentence from the message. The probability of error dropped
encouragingly to 12 percent. Close, Thackery thought. Better get it down to five.
As
he tinkered, the command crew began to appear on the bridge, manning stations
that had sat unused throughout the 32-day craze. Captain Russell Cormican
appeared presently and checked with each tech in turn, lingering at Navcon and
Communication. For Thackery, he had only a single question: "Is the
contact message ready?"
Thackery
touched a key and a small "4.7%" disappeared from his display.
"Yes," he said with a hint of a triumph.
The
captain nodded absently and moved on down the line.
A
winded Dr. Amelia Koi appeared at the top of the climb-way and looked
uncertainly around the compartment. Thackery beckoned the interpolator over.
"Where's
Commander Neale?" he asked as she neared him.
"The
Commander is in her cabin," Koi replied, settling her pert frame at the
open station to Thackery's right. "She asked to be called when we make
Kleine contact with A-Cyg or radio contact with the Sennifi, whichever comes
first. Speaking of which, did you get the contact message buttoned up?"
"After
a fashion. But to get the level of confidence Neale wanted, I ended up making
it very simple. Not much more than, 'Hey—you—over there!'"
Koi's
answering smile was friendly. "How much longer?"
Thackery
glanced at the clock. "Minute or two."
"Good,"
she said fervendy.
Thackery
caught the tone and realized she was avoiding looking at the two-metre wide
bridge display centered above the tech stations. "You all right?"
"I'm
one of the 'phobes," she confessed. "I don't like the craze. I know
better, but I can't stop thinking that the rest of the Universe is gone and not
coming back."
"Are
you tranqed?" he asked sympathetically. She pulled up her right sleeve so
he could see the medipump. "Not enough." "There—Navcom just shut
us down," he said, nudging Koi and pointing past her to a display at the
next station. "Here we
_ _ »»
"If
the Universe doesn't come back, I'm holding you personally responsible,"
she said with a nervous smile.
Thackery
looked expectantly at the imaging display, and when the dazzle cleared, found
himself looking at a splendid golden planet mottled with lacy white cloud
patterns. "Gorgeous," he said.
As beautiful as any since Jupiter, he added silendy.
"It
doesn't look inhabited," Koi said at his elbow.
"They
never do," said Thackery, surprised at her naivete. But a joking reproof
went unsaid as he saw on her face the same anticipation and excitement he was
happy to be feeling. Thank you, Mark. This
could be fun after all—
With
his long gray caftan sweeping the ground and with his long smooth strides,
J'ten Ron Tize seemed to flow, rather than walk across the chamber floor. His
caftan bore on its hip the three golden slashes that marked his rank among the
scholars: Tize, or "he of clear vision." Waiting for him at the table
beneath the highest point of the arched ceiling was the highest ranking scholar
of Sennifi, wearing the four-slash green caftan that no other was permitted to
wear.
"Sekkh quit e'nom,"
said J'ten as he reached the table. His use of Paston's Language marked the
seriousness of the meeting. "They have returned, as I predicted."
"There
is no glory in the successful prediction of evil," Z'lin Ton Drull chided
gently. "Sit, J'ten."
J'ten
settled in the empty chair. "We were wrong to send their first envoys
away. TTiey do not follow the courtesies of Kemar. Now we have gained
nothing—except perhaps their enmity."
"Either
your ize or
your memory fails you, J'ten. They chose to leave. We could not have forced
them to go. We have neither the means nor, I am afraid, the will. Not that it
matters. You begin to forget what we were once like. They are like that now.
They would come, and come, and come—." The Drull seemed tired; his head
seemed to teeter on his slender neck.
"They
again ask to meet with us, to share knowledge."
"And
nothing has changed. We must refuse again. We cannot let them see what we are,
know what we know."
"Or
become what we have become," J'ten said softly.
"Yes,"
Z'lin Ton Drull said slowly. "The knowledge would mark them, as it has us.
And yet, what can we do?"
"May
I presume—"
Z'lin
gestured his approval.
"In
these years, I have studied them, considered what might be done should they
return. You are correct to say we cannot refuse them. But there is another way," he
said with surprising vehemence. "We are not yet reduced to cowering in
their presence. We must test
their will.
If it is strong, then we must test their patience. But if we can make this
refusal theirs,
we may yet protect us both."
The
Drull was silent, thoughtful. "This is your kam'ru,"
he said presently, naming the work of advancement. A kam'ru would be judged by
the Council of Pad'on—three women and two men who had once held the rank of
Drull.
J'ten
squirmed, embarrassed. The only advancement open to him was to replace Z'lin
Ton as Drull. "That is not my intent. I was only pursuing a subject of
interest," he said beseeching forgiveness with his eyes. "I won't
submit it to the Council without your sponsorship—I misspeak, I will not submit
it at all. I wish only to be of service in this crisis."
The
Drull sat back in his chair, his folded hands tucked delicately beneath his
chin. "The Council will doubtless find your work too practical to be of
merit," he said at last. "But it may well have value to me. Tell me
your thoughts."
Thackery
had nothing to do until and unless the Sennifi answered the repeating contact
message, but the respite was a welcome one. With the haste and disorganization
that characterized the beginning of the mission, a period of relative inactivity
and tranquility was a blessing.
There
would have been less confusion had Neale not been so insistent on leading the
follow-up mission. Half of
Munin's
previously assigned crew was already at Cygnus. The remainder was inbound on
the packet Raphael,
on which Thackery had thought to return to Earth. Waiting for the Raphael would have added
only a few weeks to the timetable and kept the Munin's crew intact.
Transferring a handful of key
Descartes veterans
would have sufficiently reinforced the roster for the special requirements of
the Sennifi mission.
Judging
from what Thackery could glean from shipboard chatter, that had been the Flight
Office's original intent. Neale had lobbied for the Sennifi follow-up mission
to be delayed until Descartes
was ready to undertake it, and that
Munin
be assigned to continue the search program assigned to Descartes. The compromise
which evolved called for a special crew for Munin,
with Descartes to
follow her to Sennifi for a reshuffling of crews at the end of the Sennifi
mission.
The
aging Munin
was creaky and crowded, but thanks to her recent upgrade, she was as
operationally capable a ship as any the Service operated. But the same could
not be said of her hybrid crew. The more experienced Descartes personnel were
given precedence over that portion of the very yellow Munin crew which was available.
But to fill the gaps, the Flight Office had to turn to such as Koi, drawn from
the A-Cyg Archeology staff.
Thackery
did not question Koi's ability. She was a far more highly skilled interpolator
than Jael had been (an ability for which Thackery had the utmost respect—from
time to time his interpolation instructor would show up in a nightmare,
droning, "Every stated fact implies an n-dimensional matrix of related
facts"). But Koi's craze phobia had obviously prevented her from having
any field experience, making her less than an ideal candidate for the mission.
Nor
did Thackery think much of how the chain of command had been juggled. To soothe
ruffled feathers, Cormican had been retained as captain. To keep Neale
superordinate, as her seniority and experience demanded, the new position of
Mission Commander was invented. As near as Thackery could figure it, that
arrangement left Neale with the authority to do anything and the responsibility
for nothing.
Thackery's
own position was an uncomfortable one. As Contact Specialist, he stood between
Neale and the five-man strategy team, with a contact leader's responsibility
but none of the autonomy that customarily went with it.
Only this time, 1 understand the rules—
The
thought was interrupted by the yelping of the Com tech. "They're
answering!" he cried, as Sennifi symbols began to appear on Thackery's
screen. Koi quickly paged Neale, then came to stand behind Thackery and watch
over his shoulder.
By
the time Neale reached the bridge, her chest rising and falling from the
exertion of climbing the length of the ship, Thackery had the short message
translated.
"'Send
full language information,'" he read aloud.
"That's
all?" asked Neale, peering at the display.
"I'm
afraid so."
"I assume they're
talking about our language, rather than asking what we know of theirs."
"That'd be my assumption," Koi offered. "All right. Do we have a
Standard English tutorial bank
that's suitable? Something
that wouldn't confuse them more than it would help them?"
"I'm
not sure," Thackery said. "As far as I know, the first contact has
always been in the language of the colony. I don't think it ever occurred to
the previous colonies that we have our own language—at least not at this point
in the contact."
"It's
occurred to this one," Neale said, straightening up and brushing her hair
back off her face. "Send an acknowledgment,
tell them we're working on it, and
then see what you can come up with." Koi was openly horrified.
"Commander, we can't send them a language bank."
"Why
not?"
"A
language defines a people. With interpolation techniques and implication
analysis, I can tell more from a thousand words of a civilization's language
than I can from a thousand kilos of artifacts. Even without those tools,
they're going to learn a lot about us, and we nothing about them."
Neale
was unswayed. "If I were in their position, it would take a lot of information to
lower my anxiety level. Let's not forget—they're advanced enough to be afraid
of us."
"Then
give them just enough to talk to us, and make them work for what they can read
between the lines," Koi pleaded. "Give them a basic conversational
vocabulary, not the whole unabridged." She looked to Thackery for support,
but he made his face blank and avoided eye contact.
Neale
shook her head. "You forget, we want these meetings, and they apparently
don't. I'll agree to screening out technical vocabulary that's clearly beyond
their level—AVLO drive and other high T-rating items—but they get everything
else. Merry, see that it's taken care of. I'll be in my cabin." Neale rose
and left the bridge, leaving Koi wondering what she was up to and Thackery the
same about the Sennifi.
It
took nearly fourteen hours to transmit a 50,000 word language bank and
accompanying chrestomathy in a form and at a speed the Sennifi could accept.
The hours of silence which followed were broken at last when Munin was hailed from the
surface by a voice which was clear, mellifluous, and uncolored by any accent.
"This is J'ten Ron Tize," it said. "I speak for Z'lin Ton Drull
and the people of the autonomous planet of Sennifi."
"Damn
good English for a day's work," Neale said respectfully.
"It
has to be synthetic," Koi whispered, "generated through some sort of
data processor, their equivalent of the linguacomp."
"Why?"
"Nobody
masters a new language that quickly—"
"We'll
see," Neale said, and nodded to Thackery.
"This
is Merritt Thackery. I speak for Commander Alizana Neale, the crew of the
Unified Space Service survey ship
Munin, and
the United Community of Humankind."
"What
the hell is the United Community of Humankind?" Koi wondered aloud.
Neale
winked in her direction, a smile breaking through her pensive expession.
"We'll see their planet and raise them a federation."
"Merritt
Thackery. You have requested an exchange of knowledge."
"Yes,"
he said. "We believe that we have common interests. We believe that we
have a common heritage. Such meetings would benefit us both."
"Merritt
Thackery. No meetings are possible without a suitable gesture of friendship on
your part." Thackery looked to Neale. "Ask them what they want,"
she directed.
"J'ten
Ron Tize," Thackery said, turning back to his station. "We understand
that our presence may have alarmed you. We are willing to provide reassurance,
if you can tell us what would constitute a suitable gesture."
"I
can," said J'ten, then paused. 'TeH us the location of your home world and
of any space habitats with a population exceeding fifty. Identify, both in
three-dimensional celestial coordinates and travel time, the location of all
spacecraft capable of following you to Sennifi."
Thackery's eyebrows flew
up. "Could have asked for all the colonies," Neale remarked casually.
"We screened out all references to that concept," Koi said, her face
showing her shock.
But
J'ten was not through. "—Take up a geosynchronous orbit of our
specification and maintain it throughout your stay—"
"First-born
child of the Commander will be next," Koi muttered.
"Shhh,"
Neale chided without rancor.
"—Provide
us with the design and operating principles of the propulsion system which
brought you here. Details for the transfer of information can be arranged.
However, we require your decision within thirty minutes. We await your
consideration of these requests."
For
what seemed to be minutes but was not, silence reigned on the bridge.
"Well, there's one for the books," Thackery said finally.
Neale
shook her head, as though rousing herself from some trancelike state of
concentration, and turned toward Koi. "See to collecting the information
they requested and organizing it in some accessible format. Get what help you
can from ship's crew."
"You're
agreeing to their demands?"
"Yes,"
said Neale, unruffled by her accusatory tone.
Koi
stared at the older woman, disbelieving. "Someone has to say it," she
said finally. "Those demands are outrageous— deliberately so, I'm sure.
It's an asking price. We can't accept it—not without haggling first."
"Not
for discussion," Neale said curtly.
Koi,
stony-faced, would not be dissuaded. "I know that we provide all the
colonies with everything the Sennifi asked for, in one form or another—and
more. But that comes later, after we've had a chance to size them up and
prepare them for the cultural shocks," Koi said. "You're letting them
dictate to us."
Silently,
Thackery applauded Koi.
How much has Neale been authorized to give away?
he wondered.
"Yes,"
Neale was saying amiably. "They
can dictate
to us. All we can do is say, 'The price is too high.' It isn't yet. So please
get started on gathering that information."
Neale
turned then to Thackery, who was belatedly considering adding his voice of
objection to Koi's. "Call them back, Merry. Tell them we agree."
J'ten
Ron Tize and Z'lin Ton Drull met again at the table under the high arch ceiling
of the sjen,
debate hall, of the scholar complex of T'myima.
"This
is a large gift they offer us."
"By their measure, a very great
gift indeed. It expresses great inner confidence, and great desire."
"Was it your belief that they would refuse?" "No, though I may
be forgiven a measure of hope-without
basis."
"Of
course. Will we accept the gift?"
"We
dare not. They would see us as in debt to them, and not be content until that
debt were satisfied."
"Then
I must meet with them."
"I
regret the truth of that conclusion."
"We
are pleased by your willingness to make these small gestures," said J'ten
Ron Tize. His voice, emanating from the bridge's several speakers, seemed to
surround Thackery and the others. "Are you now prepared to make a more
tangible guarantee of your good conduct?"
"We
show weakness, and they up the ante," Koi said. "As I told you they
would."
"Pin
them down. Merry," Neale instructed.
Grating
his teeth at the nickname—which, absent a timely protest from Thackeiy, Neale
had permanently added to her lexicon—Thackery nodded and touched the SEND key.
"Please explain your question."
"We
are willing to place envoys aboard your ship to meet with your scholars and
answer your questions. You must guarantee their safety. For each of our envoys,
two of your number must agree to be our guests on Sennifi while the envoys are
with you."
"The
correct word is 'hostages', not 'guests,'" Thackery retorted, unthinking.
"Yes,"
was J'ten's calm response. "I believe you are right."
"Dammit,
Thackery, don't editorialize on the air!" Neale exploded.
Thackery's
quick finger on the Com controls contained Neale's anger to the flight deck.
Visibly chastened, Thackery shrank into his seat to await the next volley of
criticism.
"I
share your sentiment," Neale said with surprising gentleness. "But
our feelings have no place in this. Now, tell them we accept. Make it sound
like it's no big deal."
Thackery
took a deep breath, which seemed to puff him back up to normal size.
"J'ten Ron Tize."
"I
am here, Merritt Thackery."
"We
understand and admire your prudence, and we're willing to provide this
reassurance," Thackery said with fluid sincerity. "We are also ready
now to pass on the information you requested earlier, if you are prepared to
receive it."
"Thank
you," said J'ten. "We withdraw our previous requests, with one
exception—that you take up geosynchronous orbit directly above the city from
which I now speak to you, known to us as T'rnyima. This will facilitate
communications during our visit to your ship. Please prepare to pick up and
receive us at this time tomorrow."
One
of the techs laughed nervously, and another commented to no one in particular,
"They've got chungas
the size of grapefruit, don't they?"
Thackery
was bewildered by the Sennifi's sudden metamorphosis. "Thank you, J'ten.
We'll be in touch," he managed to say, then looked wonderingly at Neale
and Koi, as though asking for an explanation.
Koi
offered only a shrug. Neale appeared satisfied, almost vindicated. "Looks
like they're more interested in us than they first let on," was all she
would say on the subject. "Good work, everybody. Get some rest, and I'll
see the contact team on the rec level in six hours." She left the bridge
whistling.
In
the sjen,
J'ten Ron Tize and the Drull of Sennifi stood and faced one another.
"All
is as you predicted it would be. Your prescience is unmarred," Z'lin Ton
Drull said somberly. "You are clever, J'ten. Perhaps I shall sponsor your kam-ru to the Council after
all."
"We
must be clever," said J'ten, equally somber. "We have little else
left."
There
were few complexities to the exchange. The experience of the Tycho landing obviated any
need for isolation procedures, which simplified matters considerably. Munin's gig carried two
awks, the sociologist, and the technical analyst to the surface, where a
cottage on the grounds of the scholar complex had been prepared for their use.
The gig returned with Z'lin Ton Drull and J'ten Ron Tize, who were met by Neale
and shown to the adjacent double cabins on the F deck which had been prepared
for them. An hour later, all the principals gathered on die edrec deck.
"We
greet you as brothers," said Z'lin Ton Drull. "We greet you as
travelers asking guidance in an unfamiliar place. We greet you as scholars. We
know that you have many questions. We hope that those which we may be able to
answer will offer you something which you can fold into the substance of your
lives."
He
reached up with his right hand and pressed his open palm gendy against the side
of Neale's head. She did not flinch, for J'ten had forewarned them, explaining
the gesture as one which "expresses respect for a fellow scholar's mastery
of reason." Following J'ten's instructions, she reciprocated, and then the
Drull retreated a few steps to his chair.
A good speech well said,
Thackery thought. / wonder if we can believe
any of it. His
eyes followed Z'lin every second, as though by the force of his scrutiny
Thackery could pry loose some insight into the stranger. All Thackery had so
far were impressions: dignity, precision, self-confidence without ego. Anything
else that might be there was masked by the visitor's stoic reserve.
"Since
its creation, the Survey Branch of the Unified Space Service has had this as
its motto," Neale was saying. "'To teach if we are called upon; to be
taught if we are fortunate'. I hope that spirit will prevail in our discussions
here. It is also my privilege to welcome you and your people back into the
greater community of mankind."
As
Neale went on, sprinkling manufactured charm atop a benevolent portrait of the
USS, Thackery's attention and gaze wandered. The deck had been made over with
flags and tables into a conference hall. He and Neale had been made over as
well. The ship's inventory contained no ceremonial uniforms, because the
Service had never authorized any such frippery. But at Neale's insistence, a
ceremonial uniform had been produced all the same, cribbed from earlier Earth
designs and manufactured overnight by a pair of techs skilled with a fabtack.
There were even military-style service bars, each segment representing a star
system visited, and aiguillettes for the right shoulder.
The
idea of the uniforms chafed Thackery's sensibilities almost as badly as the
stiff material of them chafed his body. Still, there was nothing to be done. Be spending a lot of time in it,
Thackery thought, recalling the lengthy Contact Interrogative Plan they had
prepared during the craze. There were whole files of queries about Sennifi
history, designed to probe for First Colonization clues or knowledge without
every mentioning the colonies explicitiy. The various science disciplines
wanted Sennifi perspectives on the major theories they held dear: evolution,
big-bang open-universe cosmology, numbers, space-time relationships, even such
basics as conservation and parity. There was a grab-bag of questions from the
sociologists and psychologists which would do little more than generate journal
fodder: belief in one or more deities, family relationships and structure,
concepts of death, sexual behavior—
"—you
may begin now." The change to Z'lin Ton Droll's voice alerted Thackery
that Neale had finished, and Thackery glanced at his slate for the first
question. The session was on.
By
the end of three hours, Thackery had posed thirteen CIP questions and Neale
nearly twice that many follow-ups. They had received answers ranging from a
single word ("No" to "Do you pair-bond for life?") to a
fifteen-minute dissertation (on the meaning of scholarship). Z'lin Ton Drull
was patient, lucid, and cooperative. Thackery found himself tempted to trust
the soft-spoken Sennifi leader but managed to keep his skepticism alive—though
not without a struggle.
Then,
the Sennifi retired to the quarters that had been cleared for them downship in
Contact, while Neale and Thackery hurried upship to the library, where Koi and
her team had watched and recorded the session.
"I
think we made an excellent start," Neale said twice en route. •
But
Koi showed no such bouyant enthusiasm. "Positives. We have the Sennifi
power structure: the Drull, or 'decisionmaker'; Tize, or 'he who sees clearly';
Chen, or 'diligent one'; and Bazi, 'he who yearns'. As the titles suggest, it
shapes up as a typical meritocracy. The relative youth of the Drull— about
forty, if we converted correctly—confirms the selection procedure he described.
"As
for the rest, we can say that they answered, or attempted to answer, all the
questions we asked, from systems of measurement to diet.
"Now
the negatives. Your charm was wasted on them, Commander. There was neither an
immediate response nor a long-term thaw—facial expressions and emotive content
were the same from first to last. And, overall, there was very little
substantive information—their answers were- not very illuminating. That was to
be expected, since the first session questions were chosen particularly for
their low potential for controversy. But it also means that we haven't yet
found their uniqueness, their signature, and until we do we're going to have to
tread carefully."
"This
afternoon should take care of that," Neale said, unperturbed. "We
should begin the colony problem sequence sometime before the end of the
session. Break for rats and rest now—back here in one hour."
As
the others filed out Thackery held Koi in her chair with a wordless touch.
"I want to check something with you."
"What's
that?"
"That
the Sennifi didn't ask us a single question."
"What?
Of course they did."
Thackery
shook his head. "Run it up, please, and check. The only questions that
they asked were to clarify questions we'd asked them. They didn't show a tad of
curiosity about us."
Koi
squeezed her eyes shut as if to shut out distractions. "All right,"
she said finally. "You're right—"
"Thank
you," Thackery said, standing.
"Whoa,"
she said, reaching out and grabbing his wrist. "There are a lot of
possible reasons, and it isn't going to last. What's running through your mind?
Why do you think it's important?"
"Can
you think of any good reason why the Sennifi didn't take our concessions once
they'd won them?"
"Sure.
Because they didn't want them. They got the only one they really wanted, which
was to park this ship where they could keep an eye on it."
"Maybe."
"No
maybe about it. They wanted to test our interest. They were posturing, and we
caught them at it. You have a different idea?"
"I
can't reconcile the way they treated
Tycho
with them being aboard now. They can't both be honest reflections of what they
want."
"They've
had almost fifteen years to think it over."
"What
I can't stop thinking is, what if that was their real feeling—and this whole
exercise is posturing? What if they've just used that time to find a more
subtle way of saying no?"
Koi
tucked a stray strand of hair behind her ear before answering. "Have you
brought this up to Neale?"
"Do
you think she'd listen?"
Koi
considered. "Probably not, at this point. For that matter, you haven't
persuaded me. You can't argue with the fact that they're here, and answering
our questions."
Thackery's
expression turned dour. "'A civilization that will empty a city overnight
to avoid contact with outsiders won't balk at a little duplicity," he said
pointedly and moved toward the door.
Koi
sighed. "Thack—," she called after him, and he stopped to look back
over his shoulder. "I'll keep the suggestion on file. And if I see
anything that suggests you might be right, I'll see that you know about
it."
Thackery
nodded wordlessly and was gone.
It
took two hours and the conscious omission by Neale of several opportunities for
follow-ups, but at last they reached the first question in the colony problem
sequence. It was a simple question, and Neale preempted Thackery's role to ask
it.
"Who
was the first Sennifi?"
"The
question is without meaning."
Neale
looked to Thackery for help. "What is the earliest event recorded in your
histories?' he asked, stepping in smoothly. Z'lin Ton Droll's answer could
hardly have been more unexpected. "We have no histories."
Neale
spent several minutes establishing to her satisfaction that there had been no
misunderstanding, that the Drull understood both the purpose and nature of a
"history." Once over that hurdle, Neale asked the obvious follow-up:
"Why not?"
Z'lin's
involved answer consumed the remaining hour of the session, and painted a
picture of a society firmly rooted in the present. "When the nature of the
Universe is found in cycles," the Drull explained patiently, "what
point is there in arbitrarily selecting a starting or stopping point, then
tallying up the cycles as if each repetition were unique? It is an unworthy
formulation."
Steadfastly,
the Drull rejected the idea that life was a progression from some past origin
to some future ending. "My entire life has been spent in the
present," he said. "I have never left it for a moment."
But,
Neale protested, didn't great scholars of the past, now dead, contribute to the
present? Didn't what they accomplished shape the present?
"If
the creation of a person's mind—an idea, a work of art, a work of music—affects
today, exists today, then the creator is still with us. To say that this person
died in cycle one thousand or ten thousand is to say that he gave us nothing
and is remembered by no one. Tlie mind is only alive in the present, for the
present is all that there is."
A Hindu might understand, Thackery
thought as he listened. It was clear, however, that Neale did not, or did not
want to.
The longer Z'lin
explained, and the more reasonable his tone, the closer Neale came to losing
the struggle to keep anger off her face and out of her voice.
"Then
where did the Sennifi come from?" she asked sharply. "Why are you
here?" "The question is without meaning. We are here," the Sennifi
leader said simply. "That knowledge suffices."
At
that, Neale slumped back in her chair, her body language shouting her
frustration, and let Thackery carry the last few minutes of the session alone.
When it was over, she launched herself out of the chair and descended on the
library.
"Can
he be telling me the truth?" she demanded of Koi. "Can that really be
what they believe?"
"When
you pose questions under these circumstances, you tend to get answers that
reflect idealized understandings rather than operational truth—like the
difference between Service Protocols and how things are really done. But with
that caveat, yes, he probably is telling the truth, at least as he sees it.
They are not unaware of time, mind you—they showed that in setting a deadline
for us, and in scheduling their pick-up and the upcoming sessions. But that
doesn't contradict the likelihood that where we see ourselves moving forward,
they see themselves running in place."
Neale
threw up her hands in disgust and stalked out without a further word. Koi
sighed and looked to Thackery. "Is she always going to be like that?"
"More
or less."
"Then
I'll tell you and let you pass it on when the right time comes. I've got two
little things that might bear some closer examination."
"Shoot."
She
motioned him over to one of the terminals. "You might have noticed that
the Sennifi equivalents for 'hour', and 'minute', which are their only
quantitative units of time, both follow the rule of formation for words
indicating a subunit of a greater whole. Except in the case of 'hour', there is
no greater whole, at least not in the data they provided'us. It's as if we
called the second a milliday but had no unit called a day."
"I
see that. Their 'day' is a qualitative term, like our morning or twilight.
So?"
She
pointed at an expression in the midst of a crowded screen of numbers. "The
length of their 'hour' doesn't match up with any of the natural cycles of their
planet, in any multiple."
Thackery
frowned. "At the risk of being thought dim, so? Earth's basic time unit
doesn't, either. The second is defined as some 9-billion-odd periods of the
radiation from a transition in a cesium atom, or some such."
"Now. But at one time it
tied into other units that tied into Earth's rotation, and between that and
cesium is a lot of political and technological history. There is no system of
time that I'm aware of that did not begin with physical constants, usually
astronomical rhythms. So this might be a clue to where the Sennifi came from,
and maybe even when. I've got somebody checking to see if the Sennifi hour
correlates with any Earth rhythms or time-keeping systems."
Thackery
was disappointed, and let it show on his face. "What's the other
thing?"
"The
evacuation of the city of Rijala when
Tycho
was here. We've had a chance to completely review the Tycho observations, and
explaining how the Sennifi did it has become a bit of a problem. They can't
have gone out into the countryside, or the
Tycho
imaging team would have detected them. They weren't in hiding in the city, or
the contact team would have found them.. And we've found no roads or
mass-transit systems linking Rijala with the nearest other cities—which are a
good two hundred klicks away in any event. But the telecameras clearly show
people were there the evening before and two hours after the contact team's
visit. I recommend we ask the Drull about it. The answer should prove
interesting."
To
no great surprise, Thackery found Neale's cabin anteroom darkened and whirling
with stars. He had time to spot and silently name the nine green colony markers
before Neale brought up the lights.
"What's
on your mind, Merry?"
Thackery
took a step forward. "Dr. Koi had some observations we might want to
consider in relation to tomorrow's session."
Neale
listened attentively, nodded occasionally, as Thackery recapped his
conversation with the interpolator. When he was finished, Neale made a sound
deep in her throat and traced a fingertip along the line of her jaw.
"Let
me make this as clear as I can, Merry," she started slowly. "If we
never find out why they brushed off
Tycho—if
we never know why they upped the ante and then folded—if we never discover how
they can evacuate a city of fifty thousand overnight—but we get some light shed
on the colony problem"—she said each word deliberately, then paused for
emphasis—"then I'll go home happy. I won't take the chance of pushing on
what might be sensitive ground."
"After
today, you still think they're going to be of any help with the colony
problem?"
"We're
far from finished," said Neale, and Thackery realized that the impatient
Neale of an hour ago was gone. "We'll stick to the CIP. But Merry—I do
appreciate the way you're staying on top of this." Neale's smile was
pleasant but empty, and Thackery, realizing he was being dismissed, took his
leave.
But
each succeeding session with the Sennifi seemed to chip away at Neale's
determined patience. "We're getting answers— but are we getting
information?" she asked after one concluded. The question was rhetorical,
for everyone within earshot knew the answer was no.
It
was Koi who finally identified the problem, seventeen days after their arrival
and thirty-one sessions into the CIP. "We've all been asking, 'What's
happening here? Why are we getting so little new information?' It's almost as
if we're talking to ourselves.
"And
that is exactly the problem. We're getting our own language thrown back at
us—our concepts, our schema. Z'lin fits the best available Standard English
expression to a unique Sennifi thought, and we get an answer which makes sense
but has been filed smooth. We learn nothing, and I can't interpolate, because
the subtieties are lost in translation."
"Are
they doing this deliberately?"
"They
can't help but do it, as long as the sessions are conducted in English. They're
answering all our questions, and the answers are self-consistent. For instance,
their lack of histories was a major disappointment. But their science has a
similar present-focus, to the point that the cause-effect relationship is
blurred. They see change as the result of a loop of forces, where an effect can
be a cause, like a snake swallowing itself tail-first."
"So
they're not hiding anything."
"Unless
they asked for our language data exactly for this reason. The best way to find
out is to ask them to teach us their language."
The
question was put to Z'lin Ton Drull that afternoon. "We would be pleased
to teach you our languages. However, you should realize what such a task
entails," said Z'lin. "The language in which you first hailed us is
called haarit.
Itis a language used for formal communications, and mastering its inflections
takes a Chen seven years. Then there is Paston's Language, the semm, K'nau—all of which are
scholar's languages, all of which are more difficult than haarit. Our common
language, which you might well learn quickly, cannot express many ideas of
interest to us both."
A
sad expression touched Z'lin's features, a first. "It was to honor your
language's creator and to avoid this problem that I took for myself the
challenge of mastering your language. But it is clear my mastery is flawed. I have
failed to express myself tp your satisfaction. My inadequacy—"
"No,"
Neale said quickly. "You've given no offense. Your skill with our language
is considerable, and the creator is honored. Those who come after us will
return the honor by studying all your languages. But we will not concern
ourselves with that here." She smiled reassuringly, and let the matter
drop.
That
session was a turning point in Neale's attitude, and her interest commenced a
steady decline. She shortened pre-and post-interview conferences by arriving
late and leaving early. Eventually she stopped coming at all, depending on
Thackery to keep her on track in the CIP and on Koi for file summaries of the
results and analysis.
Before
long, she complained that the summaries were too lengthy, too tedious—and Koi
reluctantly shortened them. Eventually even the sessions with the Sennifi were
affected. Neale canceled one with no explanation, and ended another an hour
early. True to the pattern they had set in the first meeting, the Sennifi did
not ask why.
The
farther Neale retreated from the proceedings, the angrier Koi became with her.
"Is
she so set on the colony problem to the exclusion of everything else that she
can't see the other questions that need answering here?" she demanded of
Thackery.
"Yes," he said
simply. "The issue here is the Sennifi themselves—why they're the way they
are. Everything else is ordinary."
"You're
preaching to the converted," Thackery said, and gave a shrug that said it's out of our hands.
And
more and more, the crew of
Tycho
began to talk not of Sennifi, but of the rendezvous with Descartes and of moving on.
On
the twenty-sixth day at Sennifi, the Kleine transmittercame alive, and so did
Neale.
The
dispatch told of the spanking-new ship
Eiriksson
and its discovery, on its first craze, of a tenth colony on a planet orbiting 2
Triangulum Australis. The colony was extinct and the ruins crumbling, but there
were pictures which showed that the inhabitants had been human. There were also
writings, an entire library full of fragile ancient documents. The figure being
tossed around was 100,000 years—twice as far back as the Mannheim hypothesis
placed the First Colonization. If the date were confirmed, it would mean a lot
of rethinking was in order, even if the writings were never translated.
In
less than twenty minutes, everyone on
Munin
knew the gist of the lengthy dispatch—except the Sennifi, secure in their
cocoon of cabins aft. Within the hour, Neale summoned Thackery and Koi to her
cabin.
"Exciting,
isn't it?" Neale gushed, waggling a fax of the dispatch. "Especially
for Eiriksson,"
Thackery said carefully, nursing a suspicion of what was coming next.
"Worth
a dozen Sennifis," Neale said. "The most exciting find since the
Jouma colony. Unfortunately, I'm stuck here, playing word games with these
sterile-brained—." Words failed her, but her frustration was evident.
"But that doesn't mean I can't put in some time on this. So there's going
to be a little shuffling of assignments. Merry, you'll take over as our chief
representative. My position. I've already cleared the change with the
Sennifi."
Thackery
nodded, unsurprised.
Neale
went on, "Amelia, while the interpolation work's still thin, you should be
able to back Merry up."
"Yes,
Commander."
"How
long is this change for?" Thackery asked.
"I
expect until we reach a good stopping point and leave here. Which reminds me, I
want you both to give me your estimates of how long it's going to take to
complete the CIP.
It strikes me that with
the language problem we're facing, a lot of what's left might better wait until
a permanent liaison is established. I think we should start steering things in
that direction."
"Are
you thinking of cutting short our stay?" A faint hint of criticism crept
into Thackery's tone.
"It's
a possibility I'm considering. This assignment may not be the most efficient
use of this ship or its personnel." She turned toward the controls of her
projector. "Get back to me with those estimates by this time
tomorrow."
Before
they reached the doorway, Thackery and Koi were surrounded by stars—only this
time, there were ten little green pinpoints.
"Fry
her and her hurry," Koi fumed as she descended the climbway toward her
quarters. "She can't take us away from here now."
"Sure
she can," said Thackery, struggling to keep us. "She wants to go
home. With the craze, by the time we get back, ten years' work will have been
done on the Eiriksson
find."
"Fry
the Eiriksson
find, too."
"She's
not the first to get caught up in the colony problem," Thackery said.
"It's the intellectual challenge of the millenium. I sometimes think that
anyone not
caught up in it—myself included—betrays by that their lack of genius."
"You're
quite the apologist, aren't you?"
"I
manage."
"So
you're not upset by this at all?"
"No.
I'm glad the dispatch came."
They
reached the crew quarters level and swung off the climbway. "Glad!"
she exclaimed.
"Yes,
glad—because Neale's been keeping us away from the questions that matter, and
now she's out of the way. I've been sitting there watching those two session
after session and biting my tongue so hard I think sometimes I'm going to start
bleeding from the mouth, because I didn't dare raise anything not in the CIP.
There's been something wrong from the first day, and I told you about it then.
It's not what the Sennifi've done. It's something they haven't done. From the
beginning, something's been missing.
Curiosity.
They give every appearance of having none of their own, and they've done
everything possible to extinguish ours."
"What
are you getting at?"
"This,"
Thackery said, opening his cabin door. "The Sennifi have no intention of
giving us anything. They have no interest in what we know or in us. They're
simply waiting for us to get tired of this and leave. And now Neale has as much
as told them that they're very close to succeeding.
"That
much I'm sure of. The only thing I want to know now is why. They're hiding
something. And I think it's time we started looking in the closets."
READY.
The
word appeared silently on Thackery's slate, lying angled on his lap so that
only he could read it. It was Koi, two decks upship in the library, speaking
into her netlink. Thackery was alone in the conference hall, waiting for the
Sennifi. He had insisted on meeting them alone, and Koi had not fought him.
The
Sennifi filed in and sat down across the table: first Z'lin Ton Drull, wearing
the familiar green robe, and J'ten Ron Tize at his heels.
"Good
morning," Thackery said.
"Good
morning," replied the Drull. As Thackery expected, there were no questions
about the empty chair to Thackery's right. Z'lin simply waited for the first
question.
"We've
met here forty-six times now, over one hundred fifty hours," Thackery said
soberly. "We've asked you hundreds of questions, and you've answered every
one. My first question for you today is this: Why should we believe any of your
answers?"
WATCH IT appeared on the
slate almost immediately, followed by MAKE NICE. YOU STILL NEED A RIDE HOME.
"Whether
our answers are sufficiently congruent with your preconceptions to be marked as
truth is outside our concerns," the Drull said, his answer as immediate as
if it had been rehearsed—a possibility Thackery was still toying with.
"But a scholar prides himself on his scholarship, and true scholarship
requires answers without error or deception."
"Would
you lie to us if you saw us as a danger to you?"
"You
cannot endanger us," the Drull said without bravado.
NON ANSWER. FOLLOW UP.
"Then why are you
afraid of us?" Thackery demanded, leaning forward. "We are not afraid
of you." There was no more expression
in Z'tin's face or voice
than there had been for a discussion of mineral classification ten days
earlier. Koi noticed as well,
EITHER THEY CARRY A GENE FOR POKER FACEDNESS OR ??? WHAT THE HELL LET'S FIND
OUT. STEP ON
THEIR FEET SOME MORE—BUT GENTLY.
Inwardly,
Thackery smiled. Outside, he was rigid. Where Neale had approached the sessions
as though they were audiences with a king or pope, Thackery's demeanor was more
akin to a prosecutor quizzing a defendant. "When our first ship, Tycho, reached here, you
evacuated Rijala to avoid meeting with the contact team. How was that
done?"
"The
people of Rijala left by the tubes." To Thackery's surprise, Z'lin
deferred to J'ten for the rest of his answer. "I know only the means, not
the principle. Perhaps J'ten can provide the details you require."
AMBUSHED. HE WAS WAITING FOR THAT QUESTION.
J'ten
could and did, launching into a description of an ambitious system of
subterranean tunnels canying magnetically levitated cars and linking the
sixty-eight Sennifi cities.
DAMN DAMN DAMN,
Koi expostulated. I HATE SURPRISES.
A few minutes later she came back with,
FOUND CONFIRMATION IN TYCHO DATA. THEY'RE THERE, APPARENTLY QUITE DEEP AND
OBVIOUSLY
NOT OFTEN USED, SINCE WE HAVEN'T SEEN THE SAME
TRANSIENTS
IN THE MAGNETOMETRY. STILL CHECKING SOME
THINGS.
STALL, WILL YOU?
Thackery
let J'ten go on, offering more detail than he had use for but providing Koi
with the time she wanted. Before long the slate lit up again, and Thackery read
it in oblique glances that, although quick, did not escape the Droll's
attentive eyes.
PAYOFF AT LAST! TAKING POPULATION OF RDALA,
ESTIMATED
TUBE
CAPACITY, AND TIME AVAILABLE, EVACUATION COULD NOT
BE
ACCOMPLISHED EVEN IF THEY STARTED THE MOMENT LAMM
DECIDED
ON LANDING. SIC EM.
Thackery
pounced on the brief pause at the end of J'ten's next sentence. "We
detected your Tubes with our instruments some time ago," he said,
directing his words to Z'lin. "They could not have emptied Rijala in the
time you had available."
"Your
work contains errors," Z'lin said, undisturbed.
I THINK WE'VE BEEN INSULTED. STAND PAT. WE'RE
ONTO
SOMETHING.
,
"Our
work is without peer," Thackery said tartly but could not immediately
decide where to go from there. "There is another problem," he said
finally. "Why did you do it?"
"Your
intent was unknown. We did not immediately realize that you were scholars. You
have since shown both a dedication to knowledge and a willingness to share it
freely. Those are the marks of scholars everywhere."
THAT'S A BULLSHIT ANSWER. BUT HOW CAN YOU
ARGUE THEIR
MOTIVES?
Round to him,
Thackery thought. "We're pleased that you recognized those qualities in
us," Thackery said. "We've had difficulty with some of the things
you've told us, though."
"I'm
sorry that my explanations have been inadequate."
"There's
still time." Thackery hesitated, collecting his thoughts. "You could
begin by explaining on what units your system of measurement is based."
SWEETEST! I THOUGHT YOU'D
FORGOTTEN.
"I
am happy to repeat what I have said before. The basic unit of time is the z'su and of length the z'von,"
said Z'lin. "Surely—"
BEING INSULTED AGAIN.
"Yes,
yes, we understand that much. But on what is the z'su based?" "All
valid systems of measurement are based on fundamental physical constants."
GET HIM! GET HIM!
"Yes,
of course," said Thackery agreeably. "What constants?"
"I
am sorry," the Drull said. "As with the Tubes, I can use these units
without knowing the ways in which they are specified by our more technically
minded scholars. I will provide answers at our next meeting."
NO! DON'T GIVE HIM A CHANCE TO REHEARSE.
Koi's
comments were becoming an annoyance, especially when her urgings were echoes of
Thackery's own thoughts.
"Z'lin
Ton Drull, we have already compared your units with the fundamental physical
properties of matter and with the natural rhythms of Sennifi. There is no
correlation. Either you have lied to us, or this is not your home world."
"Our
home world is beneath us," said the implacable Sennifi leader. "I
have not lied. You are mistaken, Merritt Thackery."
THE HELL.IF WE ARE. I CHECKED SIDEREAL DAY,
APPARENT
EQUATORIAL DAY, MEAN SOLAR DAY, EPHEMERIS DAY.
Thackery
reached out and shut off the slate and the room's video monitors, cutting Koi
off from events in the room.
"I've
been mistaken from time to time, including about you," said Thackery.
"But I'm not mistaken about this—in all the time we've been meeting, from
the first moment Tycho discovered
you, you haven't cared to find out anything about us. Yet you claim to be
scholars, dedicated to knowledge. How do you explain this contradiction?"
Thackery's voice had lost its thin patina of politeness.
And
the Drull hesitated. Did a flicker of emotion, fear perhaps, or dismay, slip
past the mask of his face? No matter— he
hesitated.
"What little we wish to know of you, we know," he said finally.
Z'lin
Ton Drull rose, and J'ten rose with him. "What little we wish to know of
you, we know," the Drull repeated. "We see you as you are. We learn
of you as true scholars do, not with our mouths but our eyes. Your future and
past have no more reality than our own. Your world is beyond our reach. What
then should we ask you?" Without waiting for an answer, the Drull turned
and walked toward the climbway.
"Z'lin!"
Thackery called as the Sennifi began their descent. "One last question! Why do you want us to leave?" Z'lin
Ton Drull neither looked back nor answered.
"Freezin'
Jesus, Thackery, what did you say to them?"
"Leave
me alone," Thackery said brusquely. "I've got to think this
through." "You made them so damn mad they fucking walked out."
"No. I scared them. And the worst thing is that I don't think
I'm going to be able to
do it again. There was just a crack, but I couldn't break him. He won't let it
happen again, either. Damn! Go away," Thackery said as he slipped inside
his cabin. "I've got to think this through."
"Do
you realize what Neale's going to say when this reaches her?" "Neale
is not the problem," Thackery said, and slammed the door shut.
"There
is a disturbance in that one which will not be quelled by empty words,"
said Z'lin Ton Drull. "This was not planned."
"I
acknowledge the failure," J'ten Ron Tize said, his head lowered
contritely.
"I
do not charge the failure to your scholarship. This one is different. He is not
in balance."
"Do
you propose that he has the knowledge of the Mark?"
"No,
J'ten," said the Drull. "Can you not see it? This one bears the Mark
itself."
The
lifepod was cramped and smelled of plastic and oil, but then, it wasn't
designed for comfort. It was designed to hurl up to four crewmen a safe
distance from an ailing survey ship, if possible in the direction of another
ship or to the surface of a planet. Thackery had not been in one since Unity,
but he remembered enough, and the lifepods were smart—smart enough to let
Thackery choose a destination and tell him if it could be reached.
He
hesitated but a moment, to try to decide when he had decided. The decision was
one of synthetic inspiration, not lockstep reason. Reason said, climb out and
walk away. But he had nothing to show for the breach he had created, nothing
save proving that even the Sennifi could be badgered to the point of annoyance.
Nothing to show—and so something more to do.
With
a short, decisive motion of his hand, Thackery slammed down the mushroom-capped
firing switch.
A
moment later, he and the lifepod were falling toward Sennifi, leaving behind
only a circular wound on the hull of Munin
to mark where they had been.
Though
there was no telecamera to confirm it, Thackery knew that the lifepod was
arcing around the curve of the planet toward Maostri, a city of fifty thousand.
He also knew that alarms were sounding on
Munin's
bridge, and of that he soon got confirmation.
"Thackery,
this is Neale. Acknowledge."
Inside
the tiny obloid, Thackery steeled himself against the urge to return to the
approval of those who would judge him. There was no point in answering. The
lifepod was committed to the gravity well of Sennifi; in a few minutes he would
be on the ground. If they wanted him back, they would have to come and get
him—and they would, with little delay.
The
cabin's air was growing warmer, and Thackery could envision the skin of the
capsule glowing a cherry-red. As the air became more heated, so did Neale's
insistent calls. Blissfully, the ionization halo soon shut her out.
The
blind fall was discomfiting. Though Thackery could imagine the lifepod
beginning its intended spiraling descent, he could with equal ease envision it
falling unchecked toward the ground. So
this is what McShane and Koi feel. As anxious seconds
ground by, Thackery found himself finally grateful for the company of Neale's
livid expostulations. How long,
Thackery wondered—
And
reached Sennifi. The roar of the precontact retros deafened him, and the impact
of landing snapped his head sideways. Pain shot through his neck, and he bit
down on the soft inside of his cheek. The lifepod was well padded and the
harness holding him well designed, but Thackery nevertheless felt bruised from
the inside, as though his bones had turned against the soft tissues they
adjoined.
Maladroit
in his eagerness, Thackery fumbled at the hatch release, and crawled out into
the dust of a Maestri street. He looked up to a scene delineated by strong
sunlight and sharp shadows.
It
was a scene of stillness.
He
was in the midst of the city, its buildings rising all around him. Their soft
yellow color and rounded lines harmonized with the hills beyond the city,
though the material from which they were made was neither earth nor rock. No
curious faces peered at him. The street around the lifepod was empty.
Thackery
struggled to his feet and called a greeting. It echoed back at him from the
flat walls of far structures, but was not in any wise answered. On unsteady
legs, he tottered off to find those who had fled at his carriage's reckless
approach.
He
did not find them.
The
longer he searched, the more he denied the obvious; the more the hurt grew. At
last, he sank to his knees in a multitiered plaza, shaken by the truth. The
city was deserted. He could not deny the fact. He could not fathom its meaning. How did they know what he was going to
do—Where he would go— They couldn't have known—
The
drone of the ship's gig as it settled on a high platform at one end of the
plaza failed to penetrate to his consciousness. It was a quiet sound that
brought him back—the sound of cloth, folds rubbing against each other and
sweeping along the ground. Thackery turned and looked up, into the face of Z'lin
Ton Drull.
"They
were never here," Thackery said.
"No."
"And
Rijala?"
"Only
caretakers. We have a compulsion for order—it is part of our pretense that
nothing has happened." He extended a hand and helped Thackery to his feet.
"Do you understand what you see?"
"I
think what—but not why. You made us—and
Tycho— think
that your cities were full. Your population has collapsed, and you kept us from
seeing it. But you said you weren't afraid—"
"We
are not afraid of you.
We are afraid for you. You know the why as well. You asked why we wanted
nothing of you. It is true that we did not wish to place ourselves in your
debt, for you would have stayed till you thought it repaid. But my answer then
was truthful."
"You
already had the answers to anything you might ask," Thackery said with
sudden insight.
Z'lin
nodded. "We'were curious, once. Our curiosity was satisfied."
"How?"
"By
whom," Z'lin corrected, and began walking, out of the plaza and down a
silent street. Momentarily stunned, Thackery hurried after him.
"I
will answer your question now," Z'lin continued. "The z'von is based upon the
ultimate diameter of the Universe. The z'su
is
based upon its ultimate age. They are logical units, you will agree."
The
answer seemed to liquefy the bones in Thackery's body. "What science can
give you—"
"No
science. The D'shanna are beyond science." Z'lin stopped and closed his
eyes. "The D'shanna are the sword that cut us, that opened the wound that
never healed. In form, they are as amorphous as the lights one sees with the
eyes tightly closed—and as undeniably real." The Drull opened his eyes and
began walking again. "They came five times, the last a hundred years ago.
They destroyed everything we were, and made us everything we are."
"But
how?" Thackery's dry throat turned his question into a rasping whisper.
"They
answered our questions."
Thackery
grabbed Z'lin's arm and spun him around so they faced each other. "What
are you saying?"
"I
am near the point at which I will answer no more questions, not even for such
as you," Z'lin said calmly. "But this much we owe you—that you
understand us. The D'shanna are creatures of light and knowledge, acting in
real time yet existing timelessly. In your language, these are contradictions
and impossibilities. In the reality of the Universe, they are not."
And
then Z'lin smiled, sadly, self-critically. "We were bursting with pride
when they came, Merritt Thackery, flush with the certainty of our greatness. We
had only just completed the Tubes—had our lives in balance—were preparing to
step beyond this planet. We were what you are—and they shamed us. Shamed us
like the man who proudly calls on his neighbor to tell of the hut he has built,
only to find his neighbor completing a mansion.
"They
answered every question we asked of them. Like you, we made the mistake of
asking too many."
The
picture was suddenly complete in Tliackery's mind: avoiding a future known in
too much detail to be of interest, tending their slowly emptying cities,
playing intellectual games and copying the art of a more vital past. Contact
with the D'shanna had marked the Sennifi as clearly as a woodsman's blade marks
the side of a tree.
"Why
did they do it?" Thackery asked. "Surely they knew—" ..
Z'lin
nodded, too proud to acknowledge his tear-filled eyes. "That was one
question we did not know to ask until too late. But I believe I know the answer
now." He stared oddly at Thackery, wistful and angry in a single
expression. "This is the end, Merritt Thackery. As I have already
explained to your commander, we will accept no ambassadors, no membership in
your community. You are welcome to try to explain to her why, but she will not
believe you." He turned and started to walk away.
"Wait!"
Thackery said, leaping to block his path. "Why did you tell me?"
"Do
you truly not know, or is it only that you do not know the words to name
it?" Z'lin asked. "You bear their Mark, as deeply as we. We share the
curse of having known them. Search your memory and you will know the
time."
The
search was not a long one.
Jupiter...
"What
I have told you cannot harm you. Regrettably, it also cannot satisfy you.
Perhaps if you search with sufficient vigor, you will find them." Z'lin
looked away. "For my part, I pray that you do not."
With
that, Z'lin Ton Drull turned and walked off down the sloping street, away from
the plaza and into the heart of the dead city of Maostri. Thackery watched him
for a long time: a man more alone than he seemed, and seeming terribly alone.
But
for all his empathy, Thackery could not quell his growing excitement for long.
For he knew what Z'lin Ton Drull had known, knew the reason for the moment of
hate in the Sennifi leader's eyes. The D'shanna had left their mark on the
Sennifi deliberately, a living trail sign that Thackery could read more clearly
than any, an invitation that only Thackery could grasp the import of. He turned
away from the specter of Z'lin's dying world and began to walk, first slowly,
then briskly, back to the plaza, to the gig.
At
long last, his search was over, and there was purpose. For somewhere, the
D'shanna were waiting. And he would not disappoint them.
y
chapter 11
Alliance
The setting was
different, but the sight was distressingly familiar. Once again, Thackery
returned from the surface of a planet to find himself facing the questions and
skepticism of an inquiry board. But there was one change Thackery found
ominous: joining Neale and Rogen on the other side of the table was not Dunn,
but Cormican.
In
the brief time Thackery had known him, Cormican had shown himself to be solid
but unimaginative, a conservative ship's captain who liked rules and order.
Cormican would have little tolerance for the sort of free-lancing Thackery's
trip to the surface of Sennifi represented. Worse, the substitution meant that
the only officer who seemed to understand all of Neale's dimensions—and
therefore the nearest thing to an ally Thackery might hope for on the board—was
gone.
This time it's you she wants, was
Thackery's grim thought as he took his seat.
Neale's
preamble showed that she, too, had taken note of the parallel. "Well,
Merry," she said. "You must like these little sessions, eh? You're
two for two now."
"I've been
privileged to be involved in two of the most unusual Contacts on the
books," Thackery said agreeably. Neale propped her chin on her folded
hands. "You've certainly done your part to make them so, in any
case." There was no winning response to that, so Thackery made none.
"The
board has read your report on your—excursion—to
Sennifi,"
Neale continued. "Some of what you said cries out
for
explanation. Some of what you left out demands explica
tion."
Neale
had been rehearsing for the encounter, Thackery ob
served
silendy; that sort of thing did not fall naturally off her
tongue.
"I'll be happy to answer any questions you have, and
to
amend the report to make it more inclusive."
"The
answers will be welcome. The rest won't be necessary.
Those
portions of your report that are relevant will be incor
porated
into the overall contact report."
"I
see." And Thackery did see, very clearly.
She not only wants you, she thinks she has you.
"Let's
begin with yesterday morning, in the conference room.
You
deviated from the Contact Interrogative Plan. Why?"
"The
CIP hasn't been producing any real results for
weeks—"
"Oh?
Had the Sennifi been uncooperative?"
"On
the face of it, they were being very cooperative. That was the key to their
strategy—"
"Z'lin
Ton Drull disclosed their strategy to you?"
"Not
in so many words. But it's obvious in retrospect—"
"Let
the board decide what's obvious and what isn't. You're
here
to answer questions, not to make judgments."
It'll take more than interruptions to get me
to blow up in front of the others, Thackery thought
determinedly. "Dr. Koi and I had identified anomalies which I believed
were potentially more profitable than continuing lockstep with the CIP—"
"Measurement
systems and the evacuation of Rijala."
"The
presumed evacuation of Rijala," Thackery corrected.
"And
on whose authority did you take up those issues during
yesterday's
session?"
"On
my own as Contact Specialist. After the Commander removed herself from the
conduct of the negotiations, I believed I was within my authority. The
Commander might recall that she was the first to raise the possibility of
modifying the CIP." Thackery looked steadily at Neale, but his words were
meant for the rest of the board.
"But
you made no effort to confirm these 'beliefs.'"
"No."
"Nor
did you rethink the wisdom of your decision when it
became obvious that your
manner of questioning and the questions themselves were disturbing the
Sennifi."
"That
reaction was what I was most interested in."
"Ah—then
you intended all along to force the Sennifi to break oft negotiations."
She did not give Thackery a chance to defend himself, moving briskly to another
question. "Now, according to your report Z'lin said the Sennifi system of
measurement was based on"—she paused theatrically and glanced down at her
notes, and a hint of sarcasm crept into her voice— "the ultimate age and
diameter of the Universe?"
"Yes."
"And
you found that significant?"
"Yes.
It's consistent with the linguistic forms. And it tends-to support the rest of
Z'lin's account." "Did you trouble yourself to discuss this with
Guerrieri?" "Why should I have?" She smiled faintly. "He
would have reminded you that his
fellow
astrophysisicts long ago determined that the Universe is open, without any
'ultimate age' or 'ultimate diameter'. Perhaps you're aware that Earth
civilizations once used a calendar based on the years since the birth of Christ
and a measuring system based on the length of an Egyptian carpenter's forearm.
Do you think those facts prove the existence of a Garden of Eden, or that the
Pharoahs were gods? Your credulity would be heartwarming if you were a child,
but you're not."
Neale
wasjust warmingup. "That goes for therestofZ'lin's little allegory, as
well. I don't have any trouble accepting that Z'lin told you what you report. I
have trouble with how readily you apparently accept it. The one positive outcome
of your little expedition was that it showed us what arational mystics the
Sennifi are. You seem to have uncovered one falsehood one moment and swallowed
an even bigger one the next."
"The
Sennifi were lying to protect us from an experience that debilitated their
entire society."
"That
being Contact with these D'shanna."
"Yes."
"You
have no evidence that they're any more real than the angels and devils of our
own mythology. What's more, you can have no evidence."
"The
evidence is the Sennifi themselves. And what the D'shanna did to Sennifi, they
may have done to Earth. If you're looking to explain why the FC civilization
disappeared, that possibility has to be given some consideration."
Neale
sat back in her chair and nodded her head sagely. "Now 1 think we begin to
see why you're so eager to have us believe Z'lin's story. That would make you
the author of the new paradigm, wouldn't it? The Thackery Theorem topples the
Mannheim Hypothesis from the throne—"
It
was Thackery's turn to interrupt. "Not everyone thinks the way you do.
I've got no personal attachment to this idea."
"No?
Should I remind you that you were talking about second-species intervention a
year ago, when we were outbound on
Descartes?
Tell me this, Merry. If we did believe you, what would you have us do?"
"Look
for the D'shanna."
"I
see," Neale said slowly. "You'd have us commit the precious resources
of the Service to searching for beings which you cannot even demonstrate exist,
much less tell us anything useful about. And in your defense all you can point
to is the unimpeachable testimony of the Sennifi."
Thackery
said nothing. There was no point.
"As
it happens, there are simpler and more sensible explanations available,"
Neale said. "It seems that 2 Aquilae is a slightly variable star, now in
the active part of a roughly thousand-year cycle. I'm assured that the hard
radiation flux at the surface is sufficient to contribute synergistically to a
decrease in fertility. Of course, the Sennifi's naturalistic medicine offers
them no means of understanding that, much less coping with it. So it's no
surprise that they evolved a face-saving explanation for their loss of
virility."
"Is
that the explanation you intend to forward to the FC Committee and the Flight
Office?" Thackery asked, scowling.
"It
is."
"Permission
to file a minority report on the Contact."
"Denied."
And
with that, it was over. Rogen and Cormican had not said a word—it was as if
they were merely props for Neale's little stage show. All that remained was to
wait until the reviews appeared. And Thackery was more certain than he wanted
to be about just how his performance had been received.
Outside,
Koi was waiting for him. "How bad was the flaying?" she asked as they
started downship together.
Thackery
pursed his lips. "I'd say she took off about the first five layers of
skin."
"Ouch," Koi
said, and fell silent until they reached the privacy of Thackery's cabin.
"So she didn't believe you."
"She believed me.
She didn't believe Z'lin."
Koi sighed expressively.
"I thought as much."
"What's
all this about radiation, anyway? You never mentioned it."
"She didn't get it
from me," Koi said defensively. "She called in the science team one
by one last night and asked them if they had found anything that could account
for a population decline on Sennifi."
"So does it?"
"If that's all you
look at, yes. Look, it's a little hot down' there. Tycho picked up on it during
their landing, too. Now, you can graph those two readings as two points on an
upward curve, or as two slightly different peaks of a shorter cycle. If it were
the first, we'd see a whole pattern of effects, one of which could be a decline
in fertility. But that's not what we see."
"Didn't you explain
that to Neale?"
"She has a flexible
standard for evidence. When she doesn't want to be convinced, the standard is
very high. When she's eager to believe, the standard is low. I'm afraid nothing
I could tell her would help your case."
Thackery shook his head.
"I guess I knew that without asking," he said glumly. "1 was
hoping that she was doing this as a way of appropriating the credit for
herself."
"I
think you've presented her with something she's not conceptually equipped to
deal with."
"What about
you?"
"I don't know,"
she said. "I have to be generally sympathetic. I started you off on this.
But she's right. It's just a story. Extraordinary claims—"
"—require
extraordinary evidence. Yes, I know all that." He paused and looked at the
floor. "I also know that Z'lin's story is at least essentially true."
"Why?"
He
hesitated before answering. "Because of something I didn't put in the
report. I think I had a brush with the D'shanna myself, ten years ago."
'Tell me."
"I've only ever told one other person, and afterward I wished I
hadn't."
She
reached out and touched his hand. "I won't give you reason to feel that
way."
"I
guess I know that, too, or I wouldn't have brought it up." Somehow the
memory seemed clearer, sharper, as he retold it this time—if he looked away
from her and off into the dark corners of the cabin, he could almost place
himself back in the Panorama, and recapture the rush of feeling as the shield
rolled back to reveal the face of Jupiter.
"I
know my experience doesn't exacdy parallel what Z'lin said. I didn't see any
D'shanna. No one spoke to me. But I had an overwhelming sense of Contact with
alienness. I saw everything differently, more intensely, more emotionally. What
happened to me was all out of proportion with anything that came before or
after."
"And
that's why you joined the Service?"
"Yes.
It's shaped every important choice I've made for ten years. Jupiter changed me,
Amy—it pushed me sideways, and I've been out of balance ever since, without
ever understanding how or why. Even Z'lin could see it, and knew I would
understand. I don't think he would have told me what he did, except for
that."
"You
sound as though you're carrying a grudge."
"Don't
I have reason to, as much as the Sennifi do?" he demanded, pulling his
hand away and retreating across the compartment from her. "My life was in
perfect order, and they made it a disaster," he continued, his back to
her. "I've been miserable since I first set foot on a survey ship. I'd
have gotten out at A-Cyg if there were any point to it. But there's nothing to
go back to. The chance I had is already long gone." He turned back to her,
and his features were contorted by his anger. "Who has a better reason to
find them?"
"I'm
sorry—"
Thackery
blew a long breath through pursed lips. "You've got no reason to be."
"I
was going to say I was sorry I couldn't help."
"You
did help. I would never have gone to the surface if you hadn't noticed what you
did."
"I'm
not sure I did you a favor. D'shanna is a Sennifi word—"
"From
the haarit
language."
"Have
you had time to analyze it?"
"No,"
he said.
"I
have," she said. "It means, first order, life stealers— second
order, implacable enemy—third
order, totality of evil. These
are the things you want to go hunting?"
His
face reflected his childlike helplessness to control his own compulsions.
"I have to, Amy. I have to."
"But
Thack—if you're right, then the Sennifi may know the answers to all the puzzles
we've been trying to decipher. They may have the solution to the colony
problem."
Thackery
nodded vacantly. "The very highest class of scholars knows. Z'lin Ton
Drull knows, I'm sure of it."
"Then this is where we should be.
We need to stay here and persuade them to help us. Hell, we should move the
whole' Data Analysis Office out here."
A
tolerant smile played across Thackery's lips. "We could fill their skies
with ships, and I don't think they would ever tell us," Thackery said,
shaking his head. "I don't think we have any leverage with them
whatsoever. I don't think we could bribe them, or threaten them, or punish them
enough to get them to share what they know. They are an extremely moral people,
and they would view it as an extremely immoral act. They simply would not do
it."
"What
if we went in and seized their records? Took over their scholar complex and
their libraries? We could dig it out of there on our own."
"And
thereby demonstrate what
our moral
stature is? No, Amy, you've missed something. The whole function of the
scholar's languages in their society is to insulate the knowledge from all but
a few. The concept of the D'shanna, of a star-spanning civilization, of the
beginning and end of the Universe, can't even be expressed in their common
language. Without their willing help, a hundred interpolators working a
thousand years wouldn't have a prayer of sorting through—"
"Damn
it, Merritt, if they know what happened to the FC civilization, we have to
try!"
Thackery
shook his head slowly and emphatically. "It's better that Neale and the
others don't believe Z'lin's story, or they'd probably do exactly what you say.
No, Amy. If the Sennifi know, then the D'shanna also know. I intend to hear it
from them."
For
three days, Thackery remained in purgatory, hearing nothing from Neale about
the specifics of his ultimate fate. He spent most of that time with a siate,
searching the contact records from the other colonies in the faint and
ultimately fruitless hope of finding some evidence to corroborate his story.
The
remaining time he whiled away as pleasantly as possible with that portion of
the Munin's crew
who were willing to be seen with him. The division was, with one exception,
along operations-scientific lines. The science team insisted on regarding him
as some sort of hero; the command crew, as some sort of pariah. The exception
to the rule was Kellerman, the planetary ecologist, who saw the elevated status
which came with being Neale's new favorite as a license to sneer down at the
less fortunate.
Throughout
Thackery's term in purgatory, there was a steady flow of Kleine traffic back
and forth with A-Cyg. Unfortunately, Thackery was neither a party to it nor
privy to its contents. Doubtless, most of the dispatches concerned the Sennifi;
a large fraction of the rest, the imminent arrival of Descartes. But just as
certainly, some of it had to do with Thackery himself.
Sentence
had still not been pronounced when
Descartes dropped
out of the craze a few light-hours away. The rendezvous and the expected crew
transfer to follow quickly became the primary topic of conversation, even among
those not expecting to be affected.
It
was Guerrieri who came looking for Thackery with the news. He found him curled
up in a chair in the edrec room, all alone watching a recording of a
pre-Restoration absurdist drama about a family facing a New Ice Age.
"Have
you heard?"
"Heard
what?"
"Descartes
will be alongside in an hour."
That
interested Thackery enough to press the PAUSE button. "Have they posted
crew assignments yet?"
"No.
Do you mean they haven't told you yet what they're going to do with you?"
"They
haven't. But that doesn't mean I don't know. Neale's going to continue on with Descartes, and I'm going to
be sent back with Munin."
"Well—at
least you won't have to deal with her anymore."
"You
will. You'll be going over to
Descartes."
Guerrieri
admitted sheepishly, "That's kind of what I'm expecting. I haven't had any
problems with her, though. You've been kind of like a lightning rod—kept the
rest of us safe."
It
was clearly meant as a joke, to relieve the astrophysicist's embarrassment over
what would in all likelihood be a very final separation. "Glad to have
been of service," Thackery said in similar spirit, but his mind was
elsewhere. / don't know how to say
good-bye to you, Derrel. We've skirted around the fringes offriendship, and I
don't know what that calls for. But there's someone else to whom I know just
what / want to say—
"Where arc you
going?" Guerrieri asked, making Thackery aware that he had risen from the
chair. "To see Neale. To say all the things I bit my tongue over at the
inquiry."
"Aw,
Thack, why bother?"
"Because
this is my last chance. And because I've got nothing to lose."
When
Neale's cabin door opened, Thackery was pleased to see by her tousled hair and
reddened cheek that his page had roused her from sleep.
'Tell
me, are you incapable of learning shipboard etiquette, or do you just think
it's all a bore?" she asked icily.
"I
want to talk to you."
"Well,
whatever Merry wants, Merry gets. Come in, come in," she said
sarcastically, stepping aside and gesturing with a sweeping motion of one arm.
"What can I do for you?"
"You
can stop calling me Merry, for one thing," he snapped. "My name is
Merritt Thackery. I'm not your son, or your pet, so if you want to address me
you'll use my given name and not invent new ones for me."
"Forgive
me—I didn't realize that you were above nicknames," she said, closing the
door behind him.
"My
friends are welcome to call me Thack."
"And
of course, you don't count me among them."
"You're
damned right I don't."
"Trying
to display all your social failings,
Mr. Thackery? Your attitude's a bit lacking in command
respect. If I were a disciplinarian like Cormican, I might be tempted to—"
"You've
given up the right to respect by your conduct here."
Neale
laughed. "My conduct here? Which one of us stole
a lifepod and made an
unauthorized contact landing?"
"I
didn't ask for this post, and I wouldn't have picked myself for it. You chose
to leave a better man back at A-Cyg. If you're not happy with my performance,
you have only yourself to blame. Not that you're very good at accepting blame.
You ducked responsibility for what happened at Gnivi."
"As
your beloved mentor Mark Sebright took pains to point out to me, when a survey
ship is in-system the Contact Leader is in charge. The blame for those two
perfectly preventable deaths fell exactly where it belonged."
"Is
that why you enlisted me to help pressure him into an early landing? You were
thinking about your career then and nothing else."
"You
didn't have to say yes. And what do you claim to have been thinking about? The
greater good of mankind? You were being just as self-serving as you say I
was."
'True.
And I'm honest enough to admit it, and have conscience enough to regret
it."
"Oh,
I see! That's
where you acquire your moral superiority—by wringing your hands after the fact.
Now all we have to decide is where you lost your judgment. I hear you're still
pushing your D'shanna fantasy downship. Tell me, how long have you known you're
the only one gifted with the wisdom to point out our errors and save us from
ourselves?"
"Dammit,
I only want a fair hearing—"
"You
had it. And if you keep identifying yourself with this nonsense, you just may
invite a psychological evaluation and a fitness review."
"Is
that how_you've decided to get rid of me?"
"I
have no interest in 'getting rid of' you. You haven't proven yourself
particularly useful, but that's hardly the basis for a vendetta."
"I'm no use to
you because I've found out what kind of person you are—a selfish, amoral
opportunist—" She smiled slightly. "You need to be getting more
sleep— fatigue is making you testy."
"—who
doesn't belong in command of a survey ship."
"I
agree," she said, nodding gravely. "As does the Flight Office, you'll
be pleased to hear. You see, Merry, I've been appointed to fill a vacancy on
the FC Committee."
Thackery's
eyes widened in dismay. "What?!"
"I
knew you'd be pleased. Of course, I can't discharge that responsibility and
hold down a full-time ship billet at the same time. So I'll be returning to
A-Cyg in Descartes."
"But Descartes is continuing
on—"
"Oh,
no, that was before this news. Now it's
Munin
that's continuing on. Oh, and Merry—you'll also be pleased to know I
recommended you for Contact Leader, and the Flight Office found that agreeable.
So you're staying with Munin,
along with Commander Cormican and Dr. Koi and the rest of the science team—now
the survey team. Except Kellerman, of course. You do have one body to spare,
and I'm going to need a new executive assistant."
"No!"
"Oh,
yes. Oh, you'll want to know that the clock goes back to zero for you. It'll be
a three-year tour contract, with no allowance for your time on Descartes. It's only fair.
Most of the crew is new, and we can't let one or two individuals dictate the
timetable of an entire survey ship, can we? I hope you enjoy your new assignment,
Merry. I know I'm going to enjoy mine."
The
encounter left Thackery shattered and emotionally empty. Eventually he found
himself standing outside the closed door of the science lab, without quite
knowing why and without the will to either leave or enter.
Then
the door opened and he was nearly run down by Barbrice Mueller, the young
technoanalyst. "Mr. Thackery," she said in surprise, and sidled past,
leaving the door open for him.
At
the mention of his name, Koi glanced toward the door from her station. Seeing
the look in Thackery's eyes, she left her work without a word.
"She
did it to me again," he said helplessly as she joined him.
"Let's
go to my cabin," she urged, and he followed her suggestion docilely. Once
there, he sat round-backed on the edge of her bed, staring down at the floor.
"You
went to see Neale?"
"It
was like arguing with Andra—and I never won those, either. I never even reached
her." He craned his head and found Koi, still standing, by her desk.
"I don't think I inhabit the same world as people like that."
"Unfortunately,
you do."
"No,
I mean it. It's like there are two realities. In one, I screwed up at Gnivi and
broke all the rules at Sennifi. In the other, I distinguished myself at both
places and earned promotions."
"History
belongs to she who writes it."
"But
she had me set up. With the stunt I pulled, she didn't even have to work hard
to do it. Now I'm going to be Contact Leader on Munin."
Koi
showed no surprise at the announcement. "Her priorities have
changed." "But after tearing me to pieces in front of Cormican, to
transfer me to his crew—"
"She
probably managed to make it look like the Flight Office's doing. Look, she's
not doing you a favor. From her point of view, this is a better way to get rid
of you. She can go back to A-Cyg and enjoy the fruits of your success, while
making sure that you're not around to compete for the credit. And if she
publishes a second-species proposal, it'll be all hers."
"I
thought you said she couldn't cope with that idea."
"She
adjusted quickly. I did some poking around in her nedink's activity register.
She's been looking into the whole history of the idea, back to Von Daniken
himself."
"I
don't understand. When I talked to her about this once before, she laughed it
down, called it wishful thinking. Are you saying she believes me?"
Koi's
voice was gentle, soothing. "Maybe she believes you despite herself. Maybe
she's finally decided that the colony problem won't be solved in her
lifetime—which means that she wouldn't be proven wrong in her lifetime, either.
There are no serious second-species theorists. If she could pull something
sound out of that psuedoscientific mishmash, that'd establish her as someone of
substance on the committee. Or maybe she plans to write the definitive refutation
of the second-species hypothesis—which might accomplish the same thing.
Whatever her plans are, she's going to make sure that you're not around to gum
them up."
He
shook his head despairingly. "I understand what she's doing to me. I
expected it, or something like it. But she's hitting at you, too—why? Because
you weren't smart enough to keep your distance from me? She's got no right to
put you where you're going to have to go through the craze time after
time."
Koi
took a step toward him and tentatively stretched out her hand. "Don't be
angry with her about that."
"I
can't help it."
"No—I
mean it. I requested the assignment."
Beyond
surprise, Thackery mustered only a feeble "Why?"
"The drugs make
the phobia manageable. I think I can cope with it." "But why even
try?" "I want to go where you do." "I don't
understand." She came and sat beside him, and he let her take his hands
in hers. "Thack—I
don't know how to be shy about either part of this. Professionally, I find the
possibility that you're right more interesting than the probability that you're
wrong. And personally, I like you. I think you need an ally, a friend—. maybe a
lover. I think maybe I could be all three."
He
wanted to warn her off, to make her understand how twisted and pointless his
relationships with women had been.
They
all wanted something from me—Andra, Diana, Neale— always wanted something more
and gave so little back. I don't even know you enough to know what it is you
want. How can 1 trust you? How can I trust any of you?
But
he also wanted her to hold him, to let her pull his head down to her shoulder,
to have the comfort of her arms around him and her warmth close by. And in the
end, that urge was stronger. He reached out to her, and found her embrace a
better refuge than solitude or bitterness.
Only
after the anger and frustration had drained from him did the embrace turn
sexual. It did so fitfully, each of them self-conscious, neither of them
certain that they were ready to face that complexity so quickly. Not surprisingly,
they were awkward with each other, tentative and unsure. But for all that,
their lovemaking was also tender and affectionate, a combination Thackery found
he preferred over the memory of other more practiced partners. By the time they
lay snuggled against each other afterward, her head resting on his chest, the
self-consciousness was gone.
"What
do you really want?" she asked, almost in a whisper. "If you were
making all the decisions, what would you give yourself?"
He
did not hesitate. "Operational command of a ship—so I could follow the
trail wherever it leads." "Then work on it," she urged him.
"Figure out what angle will get them to go for it." His finger traced
its way lazily down to the warm hollow at the base of her spine. "Ships
are too scarce, and they're
always going to be
scarce. They'll never turn one over to me."
"No,
of course they won't," she said, rolling over and propping her chin on her
hands to look at him. "But they might commit one to a new strategy, if
they thought it had potential. They're looking down the road to Phase Three,
and I can tell you on good authority that they have serious doubts whether
they'll be able to muster the ships and crews it will require. If you can make
them believe you can make the search more efficient, they'll listen."
"But
what I want to do would probably be less efficient— taking a ship out of the
comprehensive search program to chase down loose ends."
"That
doesn't matter until after the fact. Look, if the billet you want doesn't exist
yet, you have to try to get them to create it. You've got three years by our
calendar, seventy or more by theirs to make your case, and then we'll be back
at A-Cyg and you can try to claim a place in whatever's come of it."
"But
three years wasted—"
"They
won't be wasted. There's a lot to do."
He
nodded and kissed her forehead. "I just wish I could somehow get my
version of the Sennifi Contact into the record."
"Already
seen to," she said with a mischievous smile. "It's part of the
anecdotal sociology file in the scientific dispatch. Neale won't catch it, and
the Analysis Office won't make much of it—but it'll be there when you need to
go back and point to it."
Cocking
his head, he gazed at her fondly. "You're really looking after me, aren't
you?" "I'm going to try," she promised. "I'm going to
try."
chapter 12
The
Lesson of Delphinus
Though he had been aboard Munin nearly two months,
Thackery had never been in Cormican's quarters until called there the first
morning out from Sennifi. He found the compartment spartan, practical, and
uncluttered, more a place to sleep and bathe than a personal living space. That
reflected the long hours required by the man's command style, which was to make
individual Contact with every member of the operations crew at least once in
the course of a four-shift, 24-hour cycle.
After
admitting Thackery, Cormican retreated to the doorway to the bathroom, where he
resumed shaving his stubble-darkened jowls. "I don't make a habit of going
out of my way to have private conversations on professional matters," he
said without preamble. "If I can't say what I have to in front of anyone
who might be around, I figure I probably don't need to say it at all. But I
thought we should get a few things settled before any more time passed. You've
got a lot of experience* Merritt, a lot more than me, but the fact is, you
don't seem to have picked up any good sense along the way."
"Go
on."
"The
fact is, I don't believe in heroes, and I've got no time for grandstanders.
People in positions of authority don't have more freedom than the people they
supervise, they have less. That's the price of responsibility. The more there
is at stake, the more cautious you have to be. Am I coming through?"
"Yes."
"Good. Then you
understand that I'm not impressed with results. What I mean is, they won't keep
me from looking at what was done to get them and sounding off if I don't like
what I see. As far as I'm concerned, there's always more than one way to
achieve a goal, and I expect you to take the path of least risk. Clear?"
"Very."
"Now, this business
back at 2 Aquilae—you did make a breakthrough, but we'd eventually have found
out what the Sennifi were all about some other way, without stretching the
Protocols past the limit. I'll tell you this, I'd damn well not have let you
off with a verbal reprimand. I'd have paid off your contract and sent you
packing. But that's past and this is present, so I'll say no more about it.
That goes for the rest of your disagreements with Commander Neale. I'm not an
appeals court. Ican'tchange anyofherdecisions,andI'mnotinterested in hearing
arguments on why I should try."
"I didn't intend to
offer any."
"Good. You make sure
you understand this—you pull that kind of stunt under my command and you'll
find yourself on a nice desert planet with a canteen and a canister of protein
paste, waving good-bye as we craze. I won't have it, you understand? I won't
have it. By the Protocols, Concom Thackery. And if you get into a gray area,
you come tell me what you're going to do and why. No surprises. I hate
surprises."
"By the
numbers," Thackery acknowledged.
"All right. I've had
my say. Now you take your shot, and make sure you get it all, because I don't
want to be sorting this out halfway to Deneb."
Thackery shook his head.
"I don't have much to say. What you described is exactly how I want to
work. I should tell you I intend to make rehearsal landings at the first
opportunity, on worlds where the risk is minimal. There's a big difference
between training and reality, and I want the contact team to know that right up
front. I also want them to learn the limitations of orbital surveying. You have
any problems with that policy?"
Cormican twice ran his
fingers back through his thinning silver hair as he considered. "No. That
seems prudent," he pronounced at last. "Fact is, if it goes well, I'd
like to see if we couldn't get everybody down at least once in the course of
this mission—techs, awks, the whole crew. Seems to me that standing on an alien
planet ought to be part of the payoff for giving up a normal life. We ought to
send them all back with at least one good story for their descendants, don't
you think? And I'd hate to see anybody get the idea that the survey team is
better somehow, that they get all the privileges and perks. What do you say to
that?"
Thackery
did not welcome the prospect of looking after what amounted to tourists, but it
was too early and the ground too soft for a pitched battle. "I say the gig
is rated for six people," Thackery said, "which is two more than we'll
routinely take to the surface. Those seats are at your disposal."
"Good.
Maybe we'll be able to work with each other after all." "I hope
so."
Munirt's first stop was 26
Sagittae, a cool red M-class dwarf too dim to be seen even from A-Cyg without
optical aid. By the time she came out of the craze there, Thackery had
completed what he expected to be merely the first installment of a continuing
series of theses and position papers, this one an overview entided PHASE ID
ALTERNATIVES: THE CASE FOR SELECTIVE SURVEYING.
Oh
the bridge to supervise a priority dispatch of the paper, Thackery was among
the first on board to learn from the update dispatch that while the ship had
been out of touch an eleventh colony had been added to the human community. At
the earliest opportunity, he and Koi curled up together on his bed to review
the Liam-Won contact report.
"All
I've heard was that it was the
Edwin Hubble," she said, tugging at the slate he held so
that she could read its display.
"The
colony's on a free-water planet orbiting 85 Monocerous."
"What
kind of spectrum on the primary?"
"F5
HI."
"That's
right on the Galactic equator," she said, noting the celestial
coordinates. "A very popular choice this season. So is Gnivi. So is
Sennifi."
"Actually,
that's seven colonies in or near the plane of the Galaxy, with only two
colonies each in the whole northern and southern galactic hemisphere," she
mused. "There might be a
case there for focusing the Phase III
search in the plane, maybe pulling ships out of the Bootes and Eridanus
octants." 'Tech rating of 3.1," he read. "Another Bronze Age
civilization."
"That's four in that
range."
"Another
very popular model. Yelp if you see anything new—I'm beginning to think I've
seen it all before." They scanned the remainder of the summary at a fairly
fast scroll, then laid the slate aside and reflected. "What's your gut
feeling?" Thackery asked. "Have we found most of the colonies, or
just scratched the surface?" "It would be easier to say if we had any
idea what the FC starships were like."
"Is
that the only answer you're going to give me?"
"No.
That's the excuse that comes before the answer. I suspect we've found almost
all of them. I've always thought of forty light-years as about the outside
limit for most of the possible non-AVLO technologies, and most of our ships are
pushing that now."
"And
when we've found them all and we still don't know any more than we do
now—" "I thought you were counting on the D'shanna sorting it all
out." "You don't expect me to not think about it until then, do
you?" "If you're so jaded about having a live, warm woman in your bed
that you're so easily distracted—" A sharp poke in the ribs interrupted
her teasing. "Don't you know, I'm attracted to you for your brains, not
your body?" She sat up, shucked off her blouse, and struck a pouty,
bare-breasted pose. "Really?" That precipitated a forty-minute
interruption that was as much playful as passionate.
"I
was serious, though," he said when they settled back into a more restful
embrace. "How much more do we really know now than we did just after Jiadur reached Earth? Not a
hell of a lot. In fact, the problem's worse now than it was then. Every colony
we find makes it that much harder to believe that the FC civilization just up
and vanished. The farther each new colony is from Earth, the harder it is to
explain how they accomplished the colonization. I think our search has been too
narrow in scope. The answer has to lie outside ourselves."
She
shook her head. "I can't agree. The difference between
one
colony and ten is incremental. But the gap between a planet-
bound
civilization and an interstellar one is several orders of mag
nitude.
You're just experiencing a kind of delayed incredulity. If
the
Forefathers could do it once, they could do it a dozen times.
If they could reach
Journa, they could reach Sennifi."
"Whereupon
they abandoned any traces of the level of technology required to get them
there."
"You
mean that the colonies lack spaceflight capability? What point was there in
retaining it once they reached a suitable planet? And they wouldn't have had
the technological base to sustain it. There's a limit to how much you can bring
with you, even in a starship the size of
Jiadur."
"If
they had starships at all."
"What
do you mean by that?"
"Just
that I don't find any of the alternatives convincing. If they used small
slowships, then how did they manage to live long enough to start colonies this
far out? If they used generation slowships, then why haven't we found at least
some remnant or wreckage of something that large? And if they used fastships,
why isn't that level of technology reflected in the colonies they
founded?"
"The
colonies had to
fall back to a simpler lifestyle. You can't expect them to start their new
society at the same level as the one they left."
"Of
course not—but it's been thousands of years since then. The knowledge base that
they brought with them should have put at least some of the colonies on our
level by now."
"That's
a fair argument," she conceded.
"Here's
another. Consider it from the point of view of the FC civilization. How many
ships did they send out? How many could
they before we have to think that, glacier or no, they'd have to have been so
large and so powerful as to necessarily leave some traces? There's another
variable that's even more disturbing. Did every ship survive to start a colony?
Highly unlikely. Then is there one colony for every ten ships that set out, or
one for every hundred? That gets us into some very difficult numbers."
"So let's hear some
answers." "I'm only good at the questions," he admitted.
"That's why this whole tiling is going to make me crazy."
26
Sagittae offered only a pair of small moonlike planetoids, suitable for
rehearsal landings but of no other value. Thackery went on both landings,
nominally to supervise the command crew hitchhikers. His real purpose was to
flesh out his Service record as favorably as possible; each landing was entered
as a discrete item, while he received no specific credit for directing a landing
in which he did not take part.
So
he continued the practice in the next system and the next, stretching the
definition of a suitable planet from min-E to E1 and even E-2 where necessary. Hard
work and Koi's company made the time go fast. After each craze, he would send
out the latest addendum to his growing treatise on high-probability searches.
Only once was there any explicit response, and that was a copy of another paper
refuting most of the points in Thackery's last exposition. He shrugged it off
and proceeded to refute the refutation.
As
the count on his personal scorecard climbed into double figures the worlds he
had seen and walked all began to merge together in his mind. Was the patterned
tundra ground they briefly mistook for evidence of human engineering on 27
Sagittae-5 or 5 Serpens-5? Was it 61 Aquilae-6 which had the great white
kaolinite plains? Where was it that Barrister nearly put us down in a bog?
Only
Thackery's growing collection of memorabilia kept the record clear. There was
one object from each landing: the Gnivian fertility icon, a scrimshaw-like
mosaic tile pried from the plaza on Sennifi, a spike-leaved flower (encased in
a block of clear preservative) picked on 12 Vulpeculae-6, a chunk of glittery
itacolumite from 26 Sagittae, and more—each with the standard A.R. date on which he
acquired them engraved on the underside.
They
were his memory crutches, without which he doubted he would remember in detail
much more than the two contact landings. Rehearsal landings and survey landings
alike were, by necessity, made on worlds which fell into a narrow range of all
possible worlds. He was not geologist enough to read a planet's morphology and
see not just a landscape but an unfolding drama, nor biologist enough to see in
each organism a unique natural history and ecology. He knew that those things
existed, and learned of them through the team, but even so,
the
worlds without man made little impression on him. Until 61 Delphinus-5.
Afterward,
Thackery blamed himself. He had not conducted the time-consuming prescribed
inspection of his E-suit after each decontamination procedure. In retrospect,
he knew that the right glove had gone on too easily as he dressed for the
landing on Del-S. That was the telltale sign of a degraded binding ring. That
should have been all the warning he needed.
But
the string of unremarkable landings on forgettable worlds had made him casual
about safety and contemptuous of the risk. After sixteen planetfalls, he had
come to regard the descent and ascent as the only potentially dangerous part of
the landing ritual.
Del-5's
largest continent had a drier climate than might have been expected on a planet
four-fifths covered by water, but a range of rugged, geologically new mountains
along the eastern coast stripped most of the moisture from the prevailing sea
breeze. Nevertheless, the interior savanna was home to a variety of simple
lifeforms, some plant-like, some animal-like, and some of uncertain
classification.
The
most interesting of the last group were the colorful, lichen-like autotrophs
which clung to the near-vertical surfaces of crumbling volcanic dikes and sills
throughout one 500-hectare region. What made them interesting was that they
were motile, migrating slowly across the barren rock in the course of each day,
trying to avoid being caught in the shadows.
Though
a full study of Del-5's ecology and of the autotrophs' niche would have to wait
for later visitors, Norris was set on adding one of the creatures to Munin's storehouse of
geological and biological samples. Capturing one for examination meant a bit of
rock-climbing, however, since the most accessible ground the team spotted while
scouting in the gig was some sixty metres up on the side of a well-weathered
scarp.
It
was Thackery who volunteered to accompany Norris on the hunt. Together they
went scrambling up the sloping talus pile of rock litter to the bottom of the
sunbattered rock face on which the creatures were arrayed. The talus was
composed of fine bits of weathered quartzite, banked to the limit of the local
gravity, and the climbers started minor landslides with each step.
When
they reached the top, Guerrieri moved in with the gig and maneuvered it so that
its wedge-shaped shadow fell over a cluster of some twenty of the autotrophs.
Those in the middle of the shadow simply froze where they were, while those
farther out began to move toward the sharply defined edge of the shadow. With
Thackery and Norris directing, Guerrieri eventually herded three of the
creatures down within reach of the long-handled specimen scoop, and Norris
swept two of them into the scoop's pouch with a single practiced motion.
Then
it was back down the slope to where they had left the back-pack sized Specimen
Preservation Unit. All that was left to do was transfer the specimen from the
scoop to the holding chamber of the SPU, wherein a blast of liquid nitrogen
would render the specimen ready for examination. For fast-moving organisms, die
scoop could be attached directly to the SPU. But when the specimen allowed, it was
decidedly simpler to open the top of the SPU chamber and place the specimen
inside by hand.
Using
the latter method, Norris quickly transferred one of the autotrophs. But the
second specimen resisted, clinging by some means to the inside wall of the scoop
like a cat with its claws dug into a bed. Watching the struggle with some
amusement, Thackery suddenly noted movement at the lip of the SPU chamber as
the first autotroph began to crawl? glide? wriggle? over the edge.
"Trying
to get away," he warned.
The
two men reacted with incompatible responses: Thackery reached out to brush the
creature back into the chamber, while Norris reached out to slam the chamber's
lid shut. Having seen the motion first, Thackery's reaction was the faster but
also placed his hand in peril. He snatched it away as the lid came down, but
not fast enough to keep the tip of the middle and index fingers of his right
glove from being pinched between the metal edges.
The
thin, flexible fabric showed the strength for which it was reputed, and did not
tear. Instead, the wrist ring of Thackery's glove popped loose, and the glove
was left dangling from the seam of the closed lid, while the skin of Thackery's
right hand felt the warm sunlight and gentle breezes of 61 Del-5.
It
was a matter of only five minutes to free the glove, call the gig down, and
retreat to the safety of its flight deck. There Connolly bathed both the bare
skin and the glove with a powerful cell-disrupting antiorganic. The chemical
caused a burning sensation which grew steadily more intense until washed away
under a water jet a short time later.
"That
antiorg will kill off the first layer of your epidermis, along with anything
that might have climbed on for a ride, so you might feel just a little itching
a few hours from now," Connolly advised him as he fitted the glove back in
place. "If the itching is bad, or you get any other symptoms, don't be
slow about telling me."
Back
on board Munin,
Thackery experienced the itching as predicted—a gnawing, maddeningly irresistible
sensation that he responded to with scratching. But he made no point in
mentioning it to Connolly or even Amelia, since it seemed a nuisance he could
tolerate until the irritation passed.
But
by that evening, his right hand had begun to puff up, and several other spots
to itch: the fingers of his left hand; several patches on his right forearm; an
area low on his left cheek, near the jawline. The moment he became aware of the
new outbreaks, Thackery went searching for Connolly.
"Could
I be having an allergic reaction to the antiorganic?" Thackery asked,
holding his swollen hand up for the biologist's inspection.
"No,"
Connolly said, his voice and expression betraying his concern. "You were
tested for it when you signed on. We'd better get you isolated."
Very
shortly thereafter, Thackery was ensconced in cabin F5, which was equipped with
the special ventilation, door seals, and other facilities needed to turn it
into a negative-pressure Level II isolation chamber. Following Connolly's
instructions, Thackery took skin scrapings and blood and urine samples and
passed them out through the small double-doored transfer lock. Later, dinner
was passed in to him the same way.
"No
matter what this turns out to be, the best thing you can do for yourself now is
rest," Connolly advised via the shipnet. "You just rest while we look
into this."
As
usually follows such prescriptions, Thackery slept poorly. By morning, his
fingers resembled fat sausages, and he could not bend them enough to make a
fist. The skin over the swollen areas had begun to harden into a scabrous
crust, and as he tried to wash and dress, the crust split open and oozed a
watery fluid. Connolly demanded samples of the crust and the fluid as well, and
took them without offering either information or encouragement in return.
For
those Thackery had to depend on Koi, who kept an open line between her cabin
and his prison and used it as often as her schedule allowed.
"You
can beat this," she assured him. "You're going to be all right."
Thackery
wondered if she believed it. He himself was not so confident—it was his body
that was under attack, his body that was changing hour by hour, his body that
was being violated in unpleasant and unpredictable ways. A survey ship's lab
wasn't equipped to be a medical research facility, and Connolly wasn't trained
as a medical researcher. Lying alone in the room, regarding his affliction with
both disgust and dismay, Thackery remembered the hated gnotobiotic screening
back at Unity.
Like issuing a warrior a paper shield and a
rubber sword and saying, Sorry, best we can do for you.
No
new outbreaks appeared, either on Thackery's body or among the rest of the
survey team, but as the day wore on those which were already underway brought
increasing misery. Presently Thackery began to pester Connolly for something to
reduce the swelling, to end die itching, to blunt the growing pain.
"You've
got active antibodies in your bloodstream for anything we already know how to
treat," was the unencouraging answer. "I can't give you anything else
until I know what I'm trying to fight."
By
the end of the second day, the crusting skin on Thackery's right hand had
oxidized to an ominous black, and the other patches had begun to darken as
well. The sores seemed to be drying out; each new crack no longer bathed his
hands in slippery fluid. But all the same, his hands were nearly useless.
That
evening, Connolly came by and joined Thackery in the isolation cabin, taking no
special precautions to protect himself.
"This
must be good news," Thackery said hopefully.
"It
is," the biologist said with a cheery smile. "This problem is not an
infection. There are no active Del-5 organisms in your system or on your skin.
So we don't have to keep you here any more."
"Wonderful,"
Thackery said, and held up his hands. "What about this, then?"
"Ever had toxin dermatitis?"
"No."
"You've
got it now. Your body is reacting to an alkyl produced by one of Del-S's
single-celled inhabitants. We found them by the millions on the rock
crawlers."
"A
poison?"
"Looks
like an internal product or structural element rather than a defense mechanism.
The antiorg pops cells like balloons, which is how you got exposed to the
compound. From there on, it's just a bad match between its biochemistry and
yours. Which we can do something about now. Roll up your sleeve."
But
the freedom to leave F5 meant less than it might have. With his hands as they
were, he could not negotiate the climb-way, and so was restricted to F deck. He
could not make love with Amy, and he would not let her make love to him, would
not accept her willingness to give without receiving, for he projected onto her
the revulsion he felt at the sight of himself.
That
was the worst part: the constant reminder of vulnerability, of mortality,
represented by the repellant disfigurement he carried everywhere with him. For what? he demanded of
himself. Why am I taking these
risks? His
own attitude shamed him, and he would not talk about the feelings with Amy.
Instead, when she came downship to see him he found himself talking about a
world she had never seen: Earth.
Munin was ten days into the
craze before the black scabs began to break away, revealing large patches of a
fragile-looking reddened skin which wrinkled strangely when he moved. In time
the red blotches became white, the skin thickening into keloids like those of a
burn victim. Hair would never grow there again, nor would his normal, lightly
tanned coloration return. But at least there was no longer any doubt that he
was going to recover.
In
retrospect, the Del-5 episode ended relatively well. The discomfort and
disability were temporary, the disfigurement minor. Thackery's worst fears were
not realized. He had not infected the crew. He had not died.
But
he was left changed, all the same.
Thackery
was sure that Koi would notice—sure that, as close as they had become, she
could not avoid noticing. That was the best way. He wanted her to notice, and
understand, and accept, so that he never need to defend it, so that it would
never be an issue between them. It did not happen that way.
The
last night of the craze, he and Amy sat arm-in-arm among a dozen so sprawled in
chairs and on the floor of the edrec deck. A clear-voiced awk named Johnna had
coaxed Guerrieri into bringing his dulcimer and his music upship for an
informal concert. Since neither knew the other's repertoire, they took turns
singing old ballads and new chanteys, songs of Earth and lost lovers, of
selkies and starships. When Guerrieri played alone, there was a reverent
silence as the scythe-shaped hammers flashed in his hands and the steel strings
rang.
Presently
a tech named Kemla joined them, offering what seemed to be an endless treasury
of quaintly bawdy songs in a sonorous voice which made up with enthusiasm for
what it lacked in training. Norris absented himself for a few minutes,
returning with an accompanist's Key tone on which he displayed unexpected
skill. The rest, including Thackery and Koi, contented themselves with joining
in whenever the chorus of a given song permitted, at first tentatively and
half-throated, later confidently and vigorously.
Whether
it was the songs themselves or the spontaneous, familial way in which they were
shared, Thackery was drawn under their spell. It was one of the songs sung by
Johnna that stayed with him the longest, a wistful century-old wish-song with a
haunting melody and a poignant vision:
Give my children wings,
but not the ghosts of wings
I
have found in the words of the dreamers
Let them fly away to a world so far
away
from
the fools and the cruel and schemers
Give
my children life, a vast eternal life
And
a universe teeming with wonders
Continents
and skies, a million different skies,
Full
of rainbows and snowflakes and thunder...
Lying
in bed with Koi afterward, Thackery was suffused with an uncomplicated
sentimentalism that brought him to the brink of whispering / love you, words which to
him carried such a burden of risk and commitment that he had never before used
them. But Koi's mind, he soon learned, was occupied with very different
thoughts.
"I
can't find your new dispatch anywhere in your personal
library," she said
as she snuggled on his shoulder. "Haven't you been working on one?"
"What are you doing poking around in my library?" he demanded,
pulling away.
She
sat up in bed and turned to face him, making no effort to cover up. "You
always have me review your work, and we reach 29 Sagittae tomorrow. I thought
you'd just neglected to transfer it to my library."
"I'm
not working on one."
"I
figured that out by now. It's not too late. I can help you. We can have
something ready before we're finished in this system."
He
shook his head and avoided her eyes. "I don't think I'm going to be doing
any more of them."
"Having
trouble hitting your stride again? I said I'd help—"
"No.
It'd be a waste of your time and mine." He looked up and met her
questioning gaze. "I don't know what I was thinking—what kind of Messiah
complex I had. I'm never going to get a chance. My papers come in at A-Cyg six,
eight, ten years apart—they aren't going to make any impression. I'd have to be
there, fighting for what I want when the opportunity came up—if it ever
did."
She
cocked her head to one side and studied him. "So what do you plan to do
instead?"
He
reached out and enfolded her hands in his. "Leave the Service. Go back
home, with you. With you there it wouldn't matter how much it'd changed."
She
reclaimed her hands. "What's happened to you?"
"Nothing's
happened. I've just reevaluated my priorities. I've realized that I'm a fool to
take time away from being with you for a long shot."
"That long shot is
part of why I'm here to spend time with." "I know that. But we have
more going for us than the D'shanna, don't we?" "We do—but that
doesn't mean this isn't a problem for me."
Thackery
sighed. "Amy, I've never really been sick before. I didn't like it. What
if I'd inhaled the Del-5 cells, or ingested them? What if that alkyl had had a
chance to work on my digestive tract, or my lungs, instead of my hands? I'd be
dead now. I had a good reason to think about how I was spending my life. And I
decided that the next chance I have, I'm going to take some time for
myself."
"But
the D'shanna—"
"Let
someone else find them," he said, more harshly than he intended. "Let
someone else worry over it. I've done my part, and more. It's time I was a
little selfish. It's time I stopped taking silly risks, like the Del-5
landing."
"How was that a
silly risk?" "I had no good reason to be involved. I didn't
contribute anything unique, or do anything that others couldn't have
done." "So what, then? Are you going to stop making landings because
of what happened?"
"Yes."
She
looked at him with surprise. "You're afraid."
"I'm
afraid of losing you. I haven't had that much happiness, Amy. You can't blame
me for wanting to hold onto what I have."
"If
you had died, you wouldn't feel the loss—I would. Only the living grieve and
regret. The dead are spared the necessity. Look, Thack—you'll lose a lot more
by living afraid than you would by dying."
"Like
what?"
"Like
me." She patted the medpump strapped to her bicep. "I'm not out here
filling my veins with drugs every time we craze so that you can have a
convenient playmate. If my being here for you has made you so comfortable that
this is the result, then I'm not doing right by either of us."
"What
are you talking about?"
She
laid down with her back to him and pulled the sheet up over her shoulder.
"I'll move my things out as soon as I talk to Barbrice about moving
in," she said, naming the surveyor who had been enjoying a single cabin.
"Dammit,
Amy, I love you! I don't understand what you're angry about!"
"I'm
not angry, Thack. I'm disappointed. Love isn't something that you drop out of
life to enjoy."
"Look,
I didn't mean—"
She
rolled over to face him. "Yes, you did. And it isn't the way I want to
live, or to see you live. I love you, too, Thack. I just can't do it the way
you want me to."
"I
don't know why you're doing this."
"If
you did, I wouldn't need to."
Thackery
knew there was no point in arguing. Koi was not negotiating to gain
concessions, or asking to be dissuaded, or inviting Thackery to plead. That was
not her way. She had made a decision, and anything he might have said had
already been taken into account.
chapter 13
Recall
As Koi slept, as Thackery
lay in the darkness and listened to her breathing, as Munin sped onward through the
AVLO night, far away in the Lynx octant the Pathfinder Dove was dying.
The
trouble began in a field coil, one of forty arrayed in a ring around the Dove's drive halo and
linked by dozens of thick cables to the fore and aft field radiators and to the
deck grids which provided the ship's gravity. The coils were where the flux
built up, each an instant later than one neighbor and an instant earlier than
the next. That rigid sequential pattern smoothly induced the multiplier
effect—forty coils behaving as though they were fully energized, even though
only a single coil was at any given instant. It was from that illusory energy
that the illusory mass of the drive's phantom gravity well proceeded.
Each
coil was a complex structure of insulated wire as fine as hair and
fast-response capacitors as massive as logs, linked by a microprocessor
controlled bank-switching system which assured that, picosecond to picosecond,
the accumulated charge was in balance. Unless electrons could be considered
exceptions, there were no moving parts in the entire 200-kg mass of each coil.
But
that did not mean that there was no wear. The AVLOD coils, unlike those
powering later survey ships, were not chilled by exposure to space to
superconducting temperatures, and so the fine niobium-zirconium filaments were
subject to Joule heating each time the drive was used. Of course, the alloy had
been chosen with that in mind, and no detectable damage resulted from the
subatomic stress.
But
that did not mean that there was no damage. With each flux cycle, random
microscopic hot spots were created at the sites of tiny metallurgical
imperfections. Over time, the imperfections grew to flaws, and the flaws to actual
breaks. Even that had been foreseen, for the bank-switching system simply
readjusted the coil's output to a slightly lower level, the central controller
brought the other coils down accordingly, and the drive continued to operate,
albeit at a fractionally lower efficiency.
What
the engineers who built the drive did not anticipate (and could not have been
expected to) was how long the Pathfinder
Dove
would remain operational and how often its drives would be called on to hasten
it to one or another new destination. In carrying out the fault-test modeling
to twenty-five craze cycles, they were confident that they were providing at
least a twenty-cycle margin of safety.
But
that margin had been reached and substantially surpassed long ago. Two major overhauls,
five tear-down inspections, and three hundred eighty-one years after it was
first placed in service, thirty-eight of the forty original coils were still in
place. When Commander Dylanna Lapedes, the first Journan to achieve command
rank, pronounced the survey of 61 Canum Venaticorum complete, it was those
coils which responded to the gravigator's call and started Dove smoothly on its way.
And
less than an hour later, as
Dove
reached a velocity of some 100,000 kilometres per second, it was coil Twenty-Eight,
built in a Copenhagen assembly plant and installed on-orbit by the grandson of
a New York street merchant, that failed.
It
failed suddenly and spectacularly, with blue-white gigawatt arcs dancing inside
the cylindrical housing, leaping from one subassembly to another. Within
seconds, the superheated gases generated by burning insulation and vaporized
wire filament exploded outward, and the starboard half of Dove's drive halo became an
inferno. The skin of the ship bulged, then split open in a great tattered rent.
An instant later, the conflagration was out, deprived both of spark and
oxidizer by its own violence.
The
pressure vessel which comprised the climbway and the adjacent living spaces had
not been broached, and though everyone was shaken, no one aboard Dove had been killed. There
was still light, and air, and food, and those systems not dependent on the
drive still functioned. But
Dove
herself was mortally wounded, and the velocity at which she was moving
condemned her crew to death.
For
without the protective bow wave of the AVLO drive, the smallest bit of space
flotsam would strike Dove
like a bomb, turning the energy of
Dove's
own motion against it. Neither the gig nor the lifepods, their hulls and
propulsion systems equal only to the modest demands of in-system flight,
offered any hope of escape. And the cometary cloud belonging to 61 Canum
Venaticorum lay but a few minutes ahead. Under the AVLO drive, the cloud was a
triviality, a tissue of microscopic dust and infinitesimal ice crystals. With
the drive destroyed, the cloud was an impassable mine field.
There
was enough time only for a brief final dispatch, transmitted by the tortoise of
radio rather than by the rabbit of the drive-dependent Kleine, and for a few
hapless tears and desperate prayers.
For
a long minute it seemed that luck had favored
Dove. Then
a kernel of icy dust no larger than a pinhead intersected Dove's trajectory. The energy
of the collision sheared off half the forward radiator and shattered the bridge
deck. Dove began
to slowly tumble end for end, its atmosphere and crew spilling out through its
wounds. Then, disemboweled and beheaded, the aging Pathfinder finally died.
Dove's last transmission was
first received by the survey ship
Edmund Hillary, some twelve light-years away in the same
octant. The transmission was not a plea for help, for Commander Lapedes had
known, and Hillary was
forced to acknowledge, that
Dove
and its passengers were beyond helping. All
Hillary
could do was speed the news of its destruction to A-Cyg, Unity and the rest of
the fleet.
By
that time Munin
had finished its work at 29 Sagittae and was more than halfway to its next
destination. Deafened by the craze,
Munin
did not catch Hillary's dispatch. Consequently, it was not until they regained
their senses inbound to the next system that they learned of Dove's fate.
The
news came in a Priority command dispatch, which Cormican shared over the
shipnet a half-hour after it was brought to him:
To:
Russell Cormican, Commander
USS 3 Munin
From: Berylina Maggis, Director
Flight Office, Unity
Classification: Commander's Discretion
You
are hereby directed to discontinue your current operations and effect the
return of Munin
to Advance Base Cygnus. Your immediate acknowledgment of and compliance with
this directive is required.
The
Technology Office evaluation of the circumstances surrounding the loss of USS 4
Dove concludes that said incident was related to catastrophic failure of AVLO-D
drive S.N.
101-044. This failure has been judged to be non-anomalous and all similarly
equipped vessels are considered AT RISK. All due discretion is recommended for
your return, including restricting drive output to 30 degrees or less and
continuous monitoring during the acceleration and deceleration phases.
Appended
find copies of the relevent accident report, accident inquiry, and technical
evaluation.
"Personally,
I don't see any reason we couldn't complete a survey of this system,"
Cormican concluded, "but the orders don't seem to leave any room for that.
I've asked the gravigation and engineering staff to conduct a full diagnostic
test of the drive. They have advised me that will take most of the rest of the
day, so I am tentatively scheduling us to begin the acceleration phase of our
trip back to A-Cyg for ten tomorrow morning.
"I'm
as sorry about this as you are, but it does seem the prudent thing to do. I
haven't been told how your contracts will be handled, but be assured I intend
to make a case with the Flight Office that our return be considered end-of-tour
and that everyone receive a full payout. Thank you for your attention."
Thackery
was alone in the survey lab when the announcement began, and afterwards headed
upship to find someone to talk to about it. He found that a half-dozen of the
crew had already gravitated to the edrec deck, and a loud and multifaceted
discussion was already underway. Thackery joined the gathering and listened.
"But, good Christmas, a
thirty-degree slope—," one of the awks was saying, "It'll take us ten
days just to craze." "Ron's already worked it out—fifty-seven days
back to A-Cyg." "See? That's got to be the slowest leg anybody's run
since Pride of
Earth went
out." Connolly said, "It'll make it tough on Amy—running that long in
the craze with an iffy drive to think about."
"I
heard that," Koi called as she stepped off the climbway to join them.
"Don't listen to him, folks. I happen to know he's been holding a tranq
pump in reserve for himself."
There
was laughter, and she came and stood by Thackery, close but not touching,
friendly but reserved, just as she had been since moving out at 29 Sagittae.
"What do you think?" she asked quietly.
"I
really don't know yet." He expected her response to be
You should be happy—here's
your chance to go home early, or how did
you arrange it? I don't want to go home, he was ready to answer. Not now. Not alone.
But
all she said was, "I feel bad for
Dove's
crew. They had a little more time to think about what was coming than I'd like
to have." And then she moved off to sprawl in an empty chair opposite from
where Thackery stood.
Thackery
did not, in fact, know how he felt, which was why he was listening, and not
talking. He was somewhat surprised that most of the others seemed to be taking
it as an interruption, a bureaucratic annoyance, rather than as a respite or an
early furlough. Gwen Shinault, the senior tech. was actually angry.
"This
is totally unnecessary," she proclaimed loudly. "If they would just
let us program the controller to shut the drive down instead of trying to
juggle an unbalanced flux, there'd be no need to recall us. If Dove's controller had been
wired that way, I'd wager she'd still be in one piece."
"And
stranded way the hell out in Ursa Major."
"I'll make you a bet you won't
take that Dove's crew'd have been glad to have that
choice if someone'd offered it." The loudest part of the conversation
shifted to another part • of the room. "What do you think they'll do with Munin?"
"You
mean if we get it back?"
"Oh,
hell, we'll get back," said one of the awks cheerily. "I'm with Gwen.
I wouldn't have second thoughts about ignoring the directive and just
continuing on."
"You're
not smart enough to have second thoughts" was the response, to general
laughter. "They'll scrap her, of course. What else can they do?"
"Why
not replace the drive?"
"If
you ever wondered why you're still an awk, it's because of bone-headed
statements like that one. Why do you think the Pathfinders still have AVLO-D drives? They're
building Cygnus
with an AVLO-M, for crissakes. If replacement was a workable proposition, it'd
have been done a long time ago. Bennie's right. The only thing to do is scrap
her. She's expendable."
No, no, ho—not if I have anything to say about
it,
Thackery thought with sudden elation. He tried to catch Koi's eyes, but she was
looking in another direction.
Just as well,
he thought, catching himself.
It'd be wrong to say anything. She's made clear she's not interested in being
won back—not that I ever "won" her in the first place.
With
a nod of acknowledgment to those who noticed him leaving, Thackery slipped away
and headed downship, his thoughts still racing.
She'd only think you were doing it because of
her, anyway, and there'd be nothing gained from that. That's not the reason.
That never was the reason. I have to do it for myself.
He
reached D deck and hastened along the short corridor to his cabin, where he
took up his slate and curled up in the only chair.
No. That's the wrong
reason too, he
thought as he accessed the ship's library. / have
to do it because I'm the only one who can. I'm the one who knows. I'm the one
who sees. If I don't do it, no one will—which just maybe is what she was trying
to say.
There
was no desk in the putative office of the Cygnus liaison of the Committee on
ReCreation of First Colonization Planning, making Thackery wonder briefly if he
had been led merely from one waiting room to another. Then a short, slender man
swathed in a silky amber wrap rose from a chair facing the greatport and turned
toward Thackery.
"Mr.
Thackery. I'm Eloi Zamyatin. I'm very pleased to have the chance to meet
you." The liaison extended his hand palm-up in the Daehne gesture of
greeting that was current at A-Cyg, then settled back in his chair.
"Why
is that?" Thackery asked, choosing a seat opposite the director.
The
question both surprised and discomfited Zamyatin, suggesting Thackery had
broken a rule of etiquette either by questioning the compliment or by not
responding in kind. "Well, of course, your name is all over the contact
records for this octant," Zamyatin stuttered. "You have quite a
reputation here."
"Good
or bad?"
"That's
a matter of some disagreement," Zamyatin said, regaining his poise.
"You seem to polarize opinion rather sharply. As a matter of fact, your
Sennifi Contact is the model for a decision-making simulation in the Command
training curriculum, and it almost always generates an animated discussion. I
would have known you in any event, of course—you fairly papered this office
with your proposals and theses during your last tour."
"Have
you read any of them?"
"Why,
yes, one or two."
"Then
you already have a pretty good idea what I'm here for."
"Your
argument, as I understand it, is that we need experience with a selective
search mode before we are forced into such a strategy by the sheer numbers of
candidate stars in Phase 01."
Thackery
nodded emphatically. "Let me put some specifics on the table. The census
of the galactic disk tells us we're looking at over four thousand stars in the
Phase III, 50-to75 light-year, shell. That's two and a half times as many
systems as in Phase II. Even with the forty survey ships we've been promised by
the Procurement Office, it'll take a minimum of four and a half centuries to
complete a comprehensive survey."
"And
so you are arguing that we should give up our commitment to a comprehensive
survey."
"As someone who has
been out there, I can testify that there's no need to survey most of those
systems. We've already surveyed more planets than we can reasonably exploit in
the foreseeable future. The Analysis Office has a tremendous back-, log of
Phase II data, and even the most interesting discoveries aren't yet scheduled
for a follow-up visit. Use of high-probability search criteria is incomparably
more realistic."
Zamyatin
nodded thoughtfully. "These are Planning Office decisions, of course, not
Committee decisions. Nevertheless, I agree completely that to conduct Phase III
the way we've conducted Phase II would be either unacceptably expensive or take
unacceptably long. You may not be aware that the Planning Office is already
leaning toward another solution. We now have a compact AVLO drive. More
importandy, we have the Kleine. Those two facts mean that robot probes are now
feasible. The Kleine makes the necessary remote monitoring and teleoperated systems
possible."
"So
the decision has already been made?"
'Tentatively.
We'll build perhaps a hundred robot probes with teleoperated landers, and only
a few additional survey ships. The robot probes will perform the comprehensive
search, and the crewed survey ships will follow up on the most promising finds,
be they colonies or organisms or something else of significant scientific
interest. The result should be a more efficient search in a substantially
reduced time frame. You see, technology has changed the strategy."
Thackery
was dismayed but undaunted. "Have any robot probes been field-tested
yet?" "No. I believe the first ones are under construction now at
Advance Base Lynx."
"Then
there's no assurance that they'll be able to perform as required. You're
talking about an extremely complex system and an extremely difficult
task."
"That
is why the decision is still considered tentative," Zamyatin admitted,
"and why none of the Cities-series survey ships have been cancelled. But I
have no doubt that our engineers will eventually be able to make the probes
perform as required."
"Eventually,
I agree. But the fact is that if you're only just getting around to building
the first operational probes, there've been problems already. And there's a
real possibility that you'll be looking at starting Phase III with survey ships
alone."
"I
admit to some finite possibility that may happen. But the point is moot. I
strongly suspect that your high-probability strategy consists of educated
guesses hidden by a smokescreen of interpolation. And even if I felt
differently, there are no ships available to test your theories."
"There's Munin."
"Munin is to be
deactivated. The Flight Office has decided that the risk of continued operation
doesn't justify the gains. Cygnus is
ready, so there'll be no loss of coverage in this octant. Arid the cost of the
kind of thorough overhaul that
Munin
needs is so close to the cost of building a new ship that there's no sense to
it. Look, the ship is a bloody Pathfinder, for goodness' sake. Let her
rest."
"Who
owns Munin?"
"Well—the
Service, of course."
"Not
the Flight Office specifically?"
"No—the
Procurement Office assigns each ship to one command or another as they're
completed."
"So
what the Flight Office is saying is, this ship has no utility for us in our
present search strategy."
"They
haven't scrapped it, no, if that's what you mean. But it's only a matter of
time."
"Requisition
it."
"What?"
"How
did you get the deepyachts the Committee uses for colonial visits?"
Zamyatin
bobbed his head. "We do operate a few ships for our own purposes, you're
correct. We prefer not to depend on the Flight Office for transportation. But
what makes you think that we would be any more willing to assign valuable
personnel to a ship as unreliable as
Munin?"
"I
have it on good authority that the drive controller can be modified to assure
that a Dove-type
failure doesn't result in the loss of the ship."
"I've
heard some discussion of that option. But it doesn't meet the Flight Office's
safety criteria. The crew could be stranded for twelve to fifteen years until a
rescue mission reached them."
"The Flight Office won't be
operating
Munin." "You're
still asking us to assign valuable personnel to a highly speculative and
unnecessarily risky enterprise."
"There's
no need to assign anyone. She can be crewed by volunteers—starting with me. My
tour contract has been fulfilled. I can go where I please."
"I
understand Flight would like very much to have you for
Cygnus."
"They're
not going to get me, regardless of your decision."
"Um.
A commander doesn't make a crew, though."
"There
are others who'd be willing to go. Post a notice of opportunity. Put Munin's name and mine in
it."
"And
I'm sure there'd be many applicants—I said you had a reputation. But most of
them would be kids eager for any billet and not really equipped to evaluate the
risk."
"I
wouldn't object to restricting the notice to vets."
"Of
course not—that'd put you in a position to coax your crewmates into going out
with you instead of Cygnus.
That'd make us popular with the Flight Office."
"If
I had the right people, I wouldn't need the full complement of twenty."
"How
many do you need?"
"If
they were the right people—twelve. A three-person Strategy Team under my
direction, and a seven-person operations crew under a competent Exec like Gwen
Shinault."
"I
see." Zamyatin rested his chin on his steepled fingers. "Concom
Thackery, there remains a rather delicate issue I was hoping to avoid getting
into—"
"Say
it plainly."
"As
you wish. Even if we were agreeable in principle to this kind of exercise,
nothing you've said argues very strongly that this is the right time or, to be
painfully blunt, that you're the right person."
Thackery
gazed steadily at his host. "Mr. Zamyatin, what year were you born?"
"Why—'24."
"Do
you mean 424?"
"Well,
of course."
Thackery
laughed lighdy and smiled tolerandy. "Mr. Zamyatin, when you're talking to
a vet, you automatically give the century as well. I was born in A.R. 163. I've been a
contact linguist, an aide to Committeewoman Alizana Neale, and a contact
leader. I've completed two survey tours and taken part in sixteen landings.
I've been in the middle of the first Contact with the Gnivi and the first
productive Contact with the Sennifi.
Now, who do you think has
a better perspective, someone who's lived Service history, or someone who's
read about it?"
"That's
not relevant—"
"It's
the only
thing that's relevant. You have no concept of how badly the Service needs to
begin finding final answers. Why do you think we've been so compulsive about a
comprehensive search? Why do you think pushing back the frontier has been given
priority over everything else?"
"But
look at how successful that policy has been."
"Successful?"
Thackery snorted. "There hasn't been a single fundamental discovery in
two-hundred fifty years, not one. And the way we've gone about it has something
to do with that record of failure. We've been so single-minded, we ended up
narrow-minded as well. We need to break out of the sterile thinking that's
dictated strategy up till now and try something else—anything, so long as it
creates new possibilities and lets us start thinking in new patterns."
"In essence, you're
asking for a ship and a free hand." "And I've given you more than enough
reason to approve the request." "Concom Thackery, I don't have the
authority to make that requisition."
Thackery
exploded out of his chair. "Then why am I talking to you?" he
demanded. "Tell me who does so I can get on with this."
"The
Chairman of the FC Committee has authority over all nonstandard research and
flight activity related to the colonies."
"So
who is it, and where can I find them?"
"The
Chairman is on Liam, in the Lynx octant. But surely you know who it is."
"If I did, would I ask?" "Why, I assumed since you served under
her—the present
Chairman is Alizana
Neale."
Thackery
stared and his face went slack. He dropped heavily back into his chair, covered
his eyes with one hand, and let out a long, frustrated sigh. "Of all
the—"
Unexpectedly,
Zamyatin broke into a broad grin. "I can't take this any further. Concom
Thackery, please relax.
Munin is
yours."
Thackery shot the Director a
poisonous look. "Then what—" "In truth, you had it when you
walked in," Zamyatin said
quickly.
"Someone else filed this same request yesterday, so I had already run it
up through channels to find out what the policy would be. Chairman Neale
contacted me personally with the answer. She said that if you were involved,
you were to be allowed to have
Munin, but
to make you sweat a little first. She said to make sure you really wanted it.
There's a message, too—" he paused and glanced down at the slate lying
beside him. " 'I've been unable to prove you wrong. Now see if you can
prove me wrong.'" He hesitated, then added timidly, "Does that make
sense? I hope I didn't take this too far—"
"No.
No, it's all right," Thackery said distractedly. "You were just doing
what she wanted. You said someone else had made a request—"
"She's
probably outside now. I told her I'd have an answer for her this morning."
It had to be Koi, and was. Ignoring Zamyatin at his heels, he guided her by the
elbow out into the corridor. "What were you doing there?" she asked
when they were alone. "The same thing you were. I didn't do it to get you
back," he said.
"I
know," she said.
"But
I do want you back."
"I
want to come back—as long as you understand that it's because of what you are,
not because of what you did. It doesn't matter what they decided. It matters
that you tried."
"I
understand," he said.
"So
what did they decide?"
He
grinned. "They said yes."
She
took his hand. "Then come on—let's go see if we can find an appropriate
way to celebrate."
"My
preference will depend on which bit of good news we're celebrating," he
said, starting them toward the lifts.
"Let's
be creative and try to cover both."
Koi
was in her shower and Thackery relaxing by the apartment's greatport when the
knock came. Reluctantly, he disengaged both eyes and mind from the star fields
of Sagittarius and the heart of the Galaxy hidden therein, and went to the
door.
"Hey,
Derrel," Thackery said on seeing the caller.
"Hey,
yourself," Guerrieri said, stepping inside. "Is this where the
Merritt Thackery Travel and Tour Company hangs its hat nowadays? I couldn't get
an answer at your place or find you around the Planning Office, so I tried a
long shot."
"Just
visiting."
"I'll
bet." He nodded toward the greatport. "Haven't you seen enough of
that for a while?" "I was doing some thinking." "You've got
a lot to do, from what I just heard—congratulations."
"Thanks."
"So
where are we going?"
"We?"
"Were
you planning to leave without me?"
"You're
senior on the Munin
survey team. You're probably a lock to move over to Cygnus and become Concom."
'Too
much responsibility," Guerrieri said with a shrug as he settled in the
upholstered pit by the greatport. "Besides, I told you once—you're a
lightning rod. I like to be around to see the fireworks. That is, if you'll
have me," he added, with a raised eyebrow.
"I
could use a good dulcimer player."
"You
forgot to list it in the Notice of Opportunity. So where are we going?"
"I
don't know," Thackery said, joining him in the pit.
Guerrieri
laughed in a friendly way. "I thought you'd have it all figured out."
Sighing and stretching out his legs, Thackery said, "The temptation is to
go back to Sennifi."
"Sure.
But Z'lin Ton Drull is long dead."
"More
importantly, the D'shanna are finished there. They won't be coming back."
"They didn't succeed, though. The Sennifi are still holding on, even
though they still refuse any help or contact."
"I've
been wondering if maybe the D'shanna did accomplish what they wanted to. Maybe
they didn't need to completely wipe out the Sennifi."
"What
do you mean?"
Thackery
frowned. "The Drull told me that they were on the verge of space
travel—'preparing to step beyond this planet' was how he said it."
"And
after the D'shanna came they gave it up."
"Exactly."
"So?"
"So
all three of the extinct colonies were technologically advanced. Every one of
them grades out on the Jouma-Sennifi level—tech ratings over six."
"I'm
no expert on FC analysis, but you can't be the first one to make that
discovery." Thackery shook his head. "It's one of the most elementary
correlations."
"Is
there an elementary explanation?"
"A
good one," Koi said, appearing at the bathroom door wearing a fluffy torso
wrap and nothing else. "There she is," Guerrieri said. "Hello,
Amy." "Hello yourself." She came and sat behind Thackery on the
edge of the pit, keeping
the wrap secure with one hand and playing with Thackery's hair with the other.
"About the extinct colonies being advanced—only a fairly advanced
civilization leaves enough of a stamp on the environment. The 6.0's and above
build the large permanent structures that tell us a hundred, a thousand, ten
thousand years later that they were there."
"So
the assumption is that there probably were other extinct colonies on some of
the planets we've surveyed?" Guerrieri asked.
"Yes,"
Thackery said."Which will remain undiscovered until we put an
archeological team down on every livable planet to look for middens and
graveyards."
"That is a good
explanation."
"I
know. And probably the reason why nobody's ever gotten very exercised over the
fact that all the extinct colonies were advanced."
"There's
a 'but' or 'until' rattling around in there somewhere."
Thackery
nodded. "If you don't assume that we missed some extinct primitives, if
you turn it around and think of it as all the advanced colonies are
extinct—"
"And
then there's room for another explanation."
"Like
maybe the D'shanna picked off all the colonies on the verge of acquiring space
technology."
"After
having done the same thing to the FC civilization—," Koi said slowly.
"Why didn't you mention this before?"
"It
came to me while we were making friendly," he said, craning his head to
the left to look up at her. "I didn't think it was the right time to bring
it up."
She
gave the top of his head a sharp, playful slap while Guerrieri looked on,
amused. "And I thought I had your full attention. You're hell on a woman's
ego, Thackery."
"Just
think of yourself as an inspiration to me."
"I'd
give you my full attention," Guerrieri volunteered.
"Mind
your fantasies," Koi said good-naturedly, and directed her attention back
to Thackery. "And you, you mind your thoughts."
"Yes,
ma'am."
"Don't
call me ma'am," she said, slapping his head again. "We'll need to
find proof—evidence they interfered with the other colonies."
"I'd
rather find them."
"To
do that, we'll have to find an advanced colony before they do," Guerrieri
said. "We were only a hundred years behind them at Sennifi," said
Thackery.
Guerrieri's
expression darkened. "Slow down a moment— I thought the D'shanna knew
everything. What chance do we have to find a colony ahead of them?"
Koi
shook her head. "All they had to do is be able to make the Sennifi believe
they knew everything—and I don't have to remind you how gullible even Galactic
Age humans are. If the D'shanna were everything the Sennifi said they were, the
name for them would be God."
"More
aptly Satan, when you remember what they've done to us," Thackery said
with an edge to his voice. Koi began to rub his shoulders soothingly. "The
nearest extinct Colony is 7 Herculis, in the Bootes octant." Reaching up
to clasp her hands, Thackery said, "I was just thinking that very
thought,"
"So
when do we leave?" Guerrieri asked.
"As
soon as Shinault has Munin
ready and I have a complete crew."
"Good,"
Guerrieri said as he stood. "Then I've got some time to see to some
business. Watching you two is hell on a single man."
chapter 14
Antinomy
Munin's
new crew shaped up much as Thackery had projected. The strategy team was
composed entirely of Munin
veterans: Koi, Guerrieri, and Barbrice Mueller. Challenged by Thackery to make
good on her boasts that
Munin
could be made safe, Gwen Shinault accepted the Exec position, and brought with
her two Munin
techs—astrographer Joel Nunn and gravigator Elena Ryttn. The remaining five
slots, four awks and one tech, were filled from the base's QCAN list.
Within
three months, Munin was
orbiting 7 Herculis-5 and the strategy team on its way to the planet's surface.
As Guerrieri guided the gig down to the landing site Thackery and the others
could see that the dome of the city had collapsed and lay in the streets with
the rubble of the buildings on which it had fallen. Both suns were in the sky,
the yellow subgiant high in the southwest and the small reddish dwarf low to
the eastern horizon. Their rays created overlapping and discordant shadows on
the manscape.
Twin
air skiffs, small agile craft with the Analysis Office logo on their V-tails,
sat at the north end of the tarmacadam. A reception committee of one waited for
the visitors at the edge of the field, wearing an E-suit against the Sulfurous
smog which now tainted a once-breathable atmosphere. Inside the suit was a
young research aide with a shock of almost white hair, an affable grin, and the
name Kevin Jankowski.
"Welcome
to 7 Hereulis-5, Commander Thackery," Jankowski said, almost shouting as
though he needed to be heard through the E-suits without benefit of the
transducers.
"Thanks
for coming out to meet us."
"Well,
you almost have to have a guide to find your way through the city to our
hidey-hole. I'm afraid we haven't put very much effort into making things ready
for visitors. Which reminds me—I hope you don't have any heavy gear that you
need transferred to the Annex. Our only ground transportation is a
crane-and-cargo wagon we use for excavations, and it's out of action until our
mechtech can nurse it back to life."
"Just
a couple of portable netlinks for now," Thackery said, nodding at the
small cases being carried by Koi and Mueller.
"Okay,
then—let's head on in."
The
steel ribs of the dome still arched over the city, but most of the material
which had spanned between them was gone, like an umbrella stripped of its
fabric. Only near the ground, where the curvature of the dome approached
vertical, did the clear panels and their supporting structures still stand.
"The
dome was added after the city was built?"
"That's
right—sometime during the early phases of the volcanic episode that transformed
the atmosphere. It isn't completely over, by the way. We get a little quake
about once a month, and there've been two sizable eruptions in the midlatitudes
in the last year."
"How
long ago was the dome built?" asked Mueller from behind.
"About
six thousand years. But our surveys have turned up earlier habitations all over
this area. They were here a long time before that."
"Anticlinal
valley," Guerrieri said, craning his head to look at the parallel ridges a
few kilometres to the northwest and southeast. "Probably pretty fertile at
one time. Topography doesn't seem to have been much influenced by the volcanism."
"That's
right, too," Jankowski said. "This region never got more than a bit
of a dusting of ash. But going by the Wenlock— that's the name of this
city—going by the Wenlock records, we've found and excavated parts of three
other cities that were hit a lot harder."
"If
they'd known how to make synglas, that'd still be standing," Koi said with
a nod toward die dome.
"Probably
so," said Jankowski. "Still, theirplaz wasn't bad. We think it took a
pretty good earthquake to bring the dome down."
Jankowski
led them into the city by means of a hundred-metre long tunnel through the base
wall of the dome. The tile-like floor of the tunnel was masked by a thick
coating of windblown and foot-tracked dust and ash. Grooves five centimetres
wide and equally deep encircled the passageway at three points, marking where
airseal doors, now permanently retracted, had once separated the city's
atmosphere from the planet's.
"We
call this the Anjur Gate," Jankowski advised them. "There's
twenty-six gates in all, spaced about a third of a kilometre apart. The whole
area enclosed by the dome is just a shade over seven square kilometres."
When
they emerged and looked back, they saw that the tunnel had brought them through
a terraced earthen bank which climbed at least fifty metres up the inside wall
of the dome.
"That
was apparently their last major engineering job, moving their agriculture
indoors," Jankowski said as he followed their gaze. "They took the
base material from the western cliff and the topsoil from the river's flood
plain."
"I
don't understand," said Mueller. "There's a fair amount of flora in
the valley even now—"
"All
native. Their basic food crops—"
"Do
you know what they were?" interrupted Thackery.
"Artificially
selected variants of Triticum, as
on the other colonies. Actually, they had bred the parent material into four
distinct subspecies, one of which apparently could be raised in aquaculture.
The terraces were just part of the agricultural system. There's a square klick
of tanks one level down."
"Down?
That'd be some engineering job."
Jankowski's
grin was clearly visible through the Synglas faceplate. "Just because
they're dead doesn't mean they weren't smart. Sir, could we keep moving? Dr.
Essinger instructed me to bring you in directly. I'm sure there'll be plenty of
time to see everything later—"
"Of
course."
Jankowski
led them through a maze of short streets lined with low buildings. The streets
branched diagonally from one circular courtyard to another, and the view down
almost every street was blocked off by the three-and four-story structures
which
occupied the center of the courts. The structures were as different from each
other as a slender spire of steel, a marble colonnade, and a great bronze
sculpture of a beclawed bird of
prey
"They
made very good use of their space," Mueller commented as they passed
through one court. "This street plan makes the city seem much larger.
Every major artery has a focal point, every vista terminates in the foreground
instead of running to the horizon. That reduces the confining impact of the
dome."
But
for all its praise worthiness, the Wenlock handiwork bore everywhere the stamp
of decay: the spire corroded and listing, two columns from the colonnade lying
on their sides in pieces, the thin wings of the bird eaten through in a hundred
places. The streets they took were littered with debris. Many others were
blocked by twisted metal and tumbledown masonry.
"This
isn't what I think of when I hear the word 'ruins,"' Koi said to Thackery.
"I think of the Acropolis, or Stonehenge, or Chichln Itza. Not rusting
girders and shattered glass and broken concrete. This is what I think of when I
think of war."
"The
only war here was the one they fought against the planet itself,"
Jankowski said, overhearing and dropping back beside them.
"Are
you people confident that that's what killed off the Wenlock?" Thackery
asked. Koi caught the faint hint of worry in his voice.
"Just
look around you," Jankowski invited as an answer. "Look at what they
were up against. I'm continually amazed that they lasted as long as they
did."
The
7 Herculis Research Annex occupied four contiguous homes on the Avenue of
Flames, in a section of the city left virtually untouched by the travails of
the rest. The entrances to the Annex had been replaced with lock chambers and
the outer walls and windows coated with a sealant, together rendering the
buildings a controlled environment.
But
inside, the Wenlock presence remained strong. Ramps, which the Wenlock seemed
to have preferred over stairs, linked the lower level with the upper. The
architecture was open and flexible, the interior screen walls little more than
columns, the doorways wide Tudor arches spanned by tautly stretched panels of
patterned fabric. Thackery was brought up short by the sight,
set into
the masonry floor of the entryway, of the imprints, of
five
human hands.
"They're
in all the homes," Jankowski said, placing his helmet on a nearby rack and
beginning to strip off his E-suit. The others removed their helmets and tucked
them under their arms. "Since in most of the homes the prints were all
made at the same time, we think it was part of a ceremony associated with
moving in. Sometimes you find a print fllled in, or a new print added. Whatever
other meaning they may have had, they sure make taking a census easy."
"How
many lived here?" Thackery asked.
"About
eighty-five thousand, peak. That may sound like a lot, considering how small
Wenlock is, but there are lots of urban areas on Earth with higher population
densities. And as your aide there noted, they did know how to make good use of
space."
"Barbrice
Mueller," Thackery said, realizing that he had been deficient about
introductions. "Where to now?"
Jankowski
stepped out of his suit and hung it beneath his helmet. "If you'll go up that
ramp, you should And Dr. Essinger in the first alcove to the right at the top.
I'll take the others to the room that's been cleared for you."
"That's
fine."
The
rampwell had been turned into a small gallery, hung with framed faxes of
Wenlock portraits labeled with the grid numbers specifying where they had been
found in the city. As Thackery climbed, he lingered briefly to study each. The
Wen-lock had clearly disdained artistic license, even in the service of
self-flattery: The faces that stared out at Thackery bore the lines, flaws, and
scars which made them unique, and made them human.
Dr.
Essinger made no effort to hide his unhappiness with Munin's presence. His greeting
to Thackery was polite at best, and his mouth was puckered by annoyance.
"I
really don't see why we should be expected to put up with a continuous stream
of sightseers, and not get any work done. It's bad enough dealing with the ones
who come on the packets. Now the sightseers have their own ships," the
research director complained as they sat down on the woven bench facing him.
"I thought for sure when Higuchi found his second colony that we'd be rid
of the interruptions."
Thackery
started. "Commander Higuchi of the
Edmund Hillary?" he asked.
"How
long were you in the craze?" Essinger demanded, squinting at him. "Of
course that's who I mean. Is this a surprise? Do you mean to say you don't know
about 16 Herculis?"
"We
came from A-Cyg," Thackery said. "We're nineteen years out of
sync."
"Well,
you could at least review your damned library updates when you come out,"
Essinger muttered. "Yes,
Hillary
found another colony, on 16 Herculis, five years ago."
"Extant?"
"No,
extinct, like this one."
"What's
the tech rating?"
"Six
and a half, preliminary," Essinger said grudgingly, then
seemed to perk up.
"You know, Hillary's
already moved on, and the 16 Herculis field team hasn't been sent out yet. If
you went out there now, you'd have the jump on everyone. It's not even ten
lights from here."
"We
appreciate the information," Thackery said. But not the suggestion. "You
can be sure we'll go over the 16 Herculis contact report carefully. But we have
things to take care of here before we go anywhere else."
Essinger
peered narrowly at Thackery. "What exactly is your status? How much help
are you expecting from us?"
"We're
trying to establish criteria for a high-probability colony search program.
Within that objective, we've been given a fairly free hand. As far as help from
you, we'll be doing our own field work. I don't think we're going to be in your
way."
"No
digging," Essinger warned. "You do any digging without my
authorization and the supervision of our chief archaeologist and I don't care
who you are, we'll bundle you back on your gig and send you home. We've got
responsibilities here, you know. We're the ones who're accountable."
"I
doubt we'll be doing any digging. We're most interested in the last days of the
Wenlock, so we'll be working right here in the city."
"What
the hell are you looking for?"
"Evidence
to support or refute a theory."
"I'm
not an idiot. I figured that much out. What kind of evidence?"
"We'll
know it when we find it," he said.
"Wonderful,"
Essinger said in a voice heavy with sarcasm. "You know, this is my third
rotation here. I've seen all kinds of people come out from the Planning Office
and the FC Committee who thought they just had to see it themselves, or had
some pet idea that they just had to check out personally. Do you know what?
They didn't find a damn thing they couldn't have gotten from our reports."
"Are
you trying to say that we're not welcome?" Thackery asked, raising one
eyebrow questioningly.
"Since
you bring it up, that's exactly what I mean," Essinger said gruffly.
"I can almost understand that the Analysis Office has trouble saying no to
the Committee. But I don't know why they can't at least protect us from our
own. Unless maybe this is actually some sort of inspection visit? If so, you'll
soon see we're not out here partying. This is hard work, and we're working
hard."
"We're
not here to check up on you."
"No?
Then, frankly, I don't know why you just didn't stay on A-Cyg and consult the
Analysis Office. They know everything we know. We're not holding anything
back."
"You've
done nineteen years' more work while we were in the craze," Thackery said
pleasandy. "That's why we came."
"You
wouldn't have had to come here to jump ahead. You could have gone to A-Boo, or
even to Earth. No, you're not telling me everything."
"It's
not our job to tell you everything," Thackery said calmly. "But as
long as we're here, it's part of yours to tell us everything we want to know.
So why don't you put a lid on your professional pique, and tell me about this
earthquake that supposedly finished off Wenlock."
Thackery
found Koi alone in a small room on the second level of the next house, sitting
crosslegged on the floor with a portable netiink on her lap. She looked up and
her face brightened as he entered.
"Where
are the others?" he asked.
"Got
an invitation to lunch. I decided to wait for you."
"Thanks.
Is this our workspace, or our quarters?" Thackery asked, surveying the
bare walls and floor.
"Both.
They're going to try to dig up some spare foldaways and a table or two. Did you
find out anything?"
"I
found out the Universe didn't stop while we were en route." "I know.
I was just looking over the library update. Pull up a piece of floor," she
invited with a sideways jerk of her head.
There
were, in fact, two new colonies. Three years before the 16 Herculis find, the Francis Bacon
had discovered an active agricultural settlement on 66 Tauri-7C, a satellite of
a brown dwarf orbiting an F-star in the Hyades. Though Essinger hadn't thought
it important enough to mention, Shinn was the first human habitation, FC or
otherwise, to call a secondary satellite home. It was also the first find in
the Perseus octant since Journa.
Thackery
stretched out his legs and leaned back against the wall. "You know,
considering that I've spent nine-tenths of the last two hundred years in the
craze, it's perfectly reasonable that every time I come back down to normal
time a new colony's been found—"
"Life
goes on."
"—but
damned if it doesn't make me feel like I'm always behind and never going to
catch up. I thought you said the list was about complete."
She
shrugged. "Thought it was."
"So now we have eight colonies
in the northern hemisphere and five in the south." "Baker's
dozen." "What are you so cheerful about?" "Just eager to
get to work," she said, kissing him on the ear. "Did Essinger have
anything substantive to say?"
"I
asked him about the earthquake. All the evidence is indirect. No firsthand
accounts." "You sound relieved." "Maybe I am, a
little." "The D'shanna don't have to be responsible for all the ex
tinctions. There can be
colonies that failed without their help."
"I
know. But if the D'shanna weren't involved, then we won't find out any more
about them here, or get any closer to finding them."
"True
enough. But from what I've seen already, we're going to have to make a hell of
a case for ourselves to convince anyone the earthquake wasn't
responsible."
"But
wouldn't an earthquake strong enough to bring down the dome have damaged these
buildings as well?"
Koi
took a moment to consider before answering. "That depends. If the dome
wasn't designed to damp out harmonic oscillations, it could have been the first
thing to go. Just like soldiers aren't supposed to march in step while crossing
bridges. It may have been checked out already. If it hasn't, I'll see to it. By
the way, are you hungry? I know they're not waiting on us, but we're probably
welcome anyway."
"What
I really want is to get a good picture of Wenlock in my mind. What do you
think?"
She
set the netlink aside and started to scramble to her feet. "I think we
should go get Jankowski and have a look around."
They
found Jankowski sitting with Guerrieri and Mueller in the small dining room of
the fourth house, laughing with them over some story Guerrieri had just
finished telling. "Sure thing," was Jankowski's reply to their
request. "Just let me clear it with Dr. Essinger, make sure I'm not needed
anywhere else."
While
he was gone, Thackery and Koi had time to share one of the sugary wheatrolls
sitting in a basket on one of the counters.
"Do
you want us to come with you?" Guerrieri asked.
"No.
Dr. Essinger isn't too happy with our presence, so I want us to become as
independent as possible. Spend the afternoon poking around here. I want to know
where everything is and who to see about getting it. If you have time, you can
change our 'links over to the local frequencies, too, so we can access their
files directly."
"Will do,"
Guerrieri said with a nod as Jankowski returned. "Any problems?"
Thackery said, twisting toward the young archaeologist.
Jankowski
shook his head and grinned crookedly. "No. In fact, he was looking for me,
to tell me that I'm assigned to you until further notice."
"A combination guide
and keeper?" "I guess. You ready? We'll lose the light of the primary
before too long." "Then let's get going."
The
dividing line between the relatively well-preserved buildings at the rim of the
city and the ruins at the center was a sharp one. Jankowski led them down
streets which had obviously been cleared of their rubble, for brightly colored,
numbered stakes projected from the pavement at regular intervals, marking the
corners of the excavation grids. The buildings on either side were
battered-looking, with collapsed roofs and bulging walls.
"We've
got two teams working, one here in Wenlock and one in Wemo—that's the city
about two hundred klicks southwest," he said. "I'll take you to the
local site first, and then over to the artifact warehouses."
"How
long have you been out here, Jankowski?" Thackery asked.
"I'm
in the second year of a five-year rotation. I'm afraid that makes me about as
junior as can be on the staff here— most of the others have been here at least
two rotations. There isn't much turnover in the colony Annexes, especially in
Bootes—retirement or death, that's about it. I replaced a senior archaeologist
who was killed in a cave-in over in Wynea. Of course, there'll be a lot of new
faces if the Office ever gets around to putting together the 16 Herculis
followup. I think five of the staff members have applied for it."
"So
where are you from?" Thackery asked.
"Oh,
A-Bootes, of course. First generation native. My father was born on
Earth." He laughed. "My mother was born on a packet, during the
craze. Called herself a 'tweener."
Stopping
at an intersection with an uncleared street, Koi picked up a palm-sized
fragment of plaz and turned it over in her hands. Though the edges of the
fragment were ragged, they were not sharp, and there were no fracture lines
through the body of the fragment.
"What's
this made of?" she called to Jankowski.
He
stopped and came toward her. "I'm not a chemist, so my answer may not
satisfy you. If it contained more silicon and calcium and had a less ordered
structure, we'd call it glass. There's also a surface coat, a long-chain
polymer coating a few tenths of a millimetre thick—like a plastic. That's why
we call it plaz—a slightly bastardized acronym for polymerized glass."
Koi
tried to flex the fragment, to no noticeable effect. "Ugly coinage—good
engineering."
"Good
chemistry, actually," said Jankowski with a grin. "The Wenlock were
crummy engineers. Just try one of their flush toilets if you need proof."
Since
the archaeological work had begun nearly a half-century before, three of
Wenlock's seven square kilometres had been fiilly excavated, and the collection
of artifacts had long ago reached the point of diminishing returns. There was a
houseful of skeletons, bagged, tagged, and lying in stacks; thousands of
24-page pamphlets Jankowski called chapbooks, diligendy sorted and cataloged
but untranslated; an enormous variety of small machinery and housewares, from a
wishbone-shaped razor missing its blade to a kitchen canister which still held
several hundred grams of caked einkorn flour.
"We
photograph everything with a pan camera, holo and high-res," Jankowski
explained, "and then there's not much else we can do with it except store
it in the event that somebody somewhere decides they have to see the
original."
"How
often does that happen?"
"Not
very. Considering the time problem, they just about have to come here. I
understand we've had about one on every packet, and the packets come every six
months. Most of them take care of their business during the two-week layover
and go back on the same packet. This isn't exactly Vacationland, as you may
have noticed."
"But
you like it here?"
"Oh,
sure. It's—." His gaze wandered as he searched for the right words.
"I guess it's the way everything these people did became intertwined with
this planet that fascinates me. I'll give you an example. There used to be a
native plant—I say used to be because we haven't been able to find any living
specimens—which had bioluminescent nodules that it used as part of its
reproduction strategy, the way Earth plants use flowers to attract insects. The
Wenlock grew it in those long channels you've seen along the face of the
buildings, like window boxes, to light the streets at night. And they copied
the chemistry to use in their own homes in the cold-light lamps."
"You
don't see that kind of synergy on an Advance Base," Koi said with an
understanding smile.
Jankowski
nodded. "The last Wenlock died before the first pyramid was built. I can
hold in my hand the skull of a man who lived before Greek culture named the
constellations. I guess I feel more in touch with my human heritage here than I
do anywhere else. Being here makes time real for me. Do I sound crazy?"
"No,"
Koi said and patted his arm through the suit. "Not at all."
Jankowski's
guided tour consumed nearly two hours. Toward the end, Thackery became less and
less communicative, with fewer and fewer questions and less to say about the
answers. By the time the trio started back toward the Annex, Thackery had
withdrawn completely. Even the voluble Jankowski seemed to notice, and took the
cue to be silent himself. Then, as they left the collapsed roofs and bulging
walls and blocked streets of the center city behind, Jankowski came up
alongside Thackery and touched his elbow.
"Did
Wenlock bote you or disappoint you?" he asked.
The
question recalled Thackery from his inner retreat. "I've insulted you
somehow, haven't I? Please don't take my lack of enthusiasm personally,
Kevin," Thackery said. "It has nothing to do with Wenlock, and
certainly nothing to do with you."
"I'm
not insulted. I'm just wondering if there isn't some way I could have spent
your time better."
"You
showed us exactly what I wanted you to. It's not your fault if what we saw
didn't satisfy our need. You know what we're here for?"
"Generally."
"If
you do, then you know that we're looking for what no one else has seen, or what
they saw and didn't think important. We're playing a guessing game, and we're
dealing with impressions. We can't have them if we don't go out and see things
firsthand."
For
a time, no one said anything. Jankowski made a halfhearted game out of kicking
a pebble-sized chunk of masonry ahead of him as they walked on.
"Kevin,
you have a good feel for these people—," Koi began.
"I
think so."
"Since
you've arrived, have you seen any sign that they considered returning to space
to avoid what happened? Any evidence that they had kept that capability or
could have stretched themselves to reacquire it?"
Jankowski
stared intently at the ground before him as he thought. "No. They were
tip-top farmers. They were pretty good chemists. They were fair breeders—they
created varieties of Canis
for everything from food to draft animals to pets. But the kinds of technology
required for space travel, the metallurgy, the electronics—no. They just hadn't
taken things in that direction very far at all. I don't guess that's what you
wanted to hear," Jankowski added apologetically.
"No,
we want honesty above all," Thackery said.
"I
know. I just wish I could be more helpful to you." Despite his helmet's
faceplate, Jankowski's frown and furrowed brow were evident to both Koi and
Thackery. "If it's oddities you're looking for, about the best I could do
is take you out to see the delta-wing at Site 241."
Thackery perked up
noticeably at that. "Wing as in aircraft?" "Sort of. It's just a
name, really, for about 300 kilos of metal—" Koi was frowning. "I've
been over the archaeological reports pretty.thoroughly—"
"You
won't find it there. Frankly, it's a bit of an embarrassment, not being able to
explain it. Every dig has its little mysteries, as Dr. Essinger says. But don't
let me lead you on— it's not a real aircraft, just shaped like one—"
Thackery
would not hear Jankowski's qualifications. "I want to see it. Is it back
at the warehouses?"
"No,
it was left in situ."
"Where?"
"North
of Wynea. We'd have to take one of the skiffs—"
"What's
the problem, do we need a pilot?"
"Oh,
no, I can fly it—"
"Then
take us there."
The
primary sun had set by the time they reached Site 241, but the dwarf provided a
bright twilight in the great pit. Thackery was out the door almost the moment
the skiff landed on the barren volcanic plain, and Koi was not far behind.
"They
found it about eight years ago, during an aerial scan," Jankowski said as
he joined them on the rim of the pit. "But you see what I was trying to
tell you. It's not really a plane. It's just a skeleton of something that
looked kind of like one."
Thackery
had already come to that unhappy conclusion. The artifact consisted of three
S-shaped ribs of bluish-tinged metal, each a few centimetres across and perhaps
thirty metres in length. All three ribs came together to form the
"nose" of the plane. Two of the ribs, one reversed from the other,
lay flat on the floor of the pit and formed the oudine of the
"wings."
The third rib, partially
supported now by a truss added by the excavators, swept up and back along the
centerline of the "fuselage" to form the leading edge of the
"tail." A conical piece of the same bluish metal reinforced both the
triple joint and the suggestion of an aircraft nose.
"This
is all that was found?" Thackery asked, his disappointment evident.
"Oh,
no. But all the small artifacts were removed and stored. I think there were
over a hundred of them, all found within the area marked out by the boundaries
of the wings."
"What kind of
artifacts?" Thackery asked, more from reflex than real curiosity.
"Metal. Little things, the size of your palm or smaller. Pieces from some
kind of machinery."
Koi
asked, "Can we go down in the pit?"
"Sure.
There's some footholds cut in the wall at the far end." "I'll
pass," Thackery said, and sat down where he had been standing.
When
the others reached the bottom, Koi went first to the nose and examined the
joint there, then stood and walked toward the back, running her gloved fingers
along the spine-like center rib until it was too high for her to reach.
"Why did they stop digging?" she wanted to know when she straightened
up.
Jankowski
frowned. "They went all the way down to the A level. You can see by the
ash layers in the wall of the pit all the episodes of volcanism. Ash,
pyroclastic flow, tuff breccia, ash again, basaltic lava—we're standing on what
was the valley floor when the Wynea lived here."
"So
we're looking at the whole thing? There's nothing buried?"
"No."
"And
no other structures in the area?"
"No."
"Anything
else like this on the whole planet?"
"Not
that we've found."
"So
what do your bosses think it is?"
"A
range shelter."
Koi
regarded him dubiously. "Really?"
"They
modeled the prevailing wind patterns in the valley prior to the volcanism and
found that the small end faces upwind. If you span the area between the center
rib—think of it as a ridge pole—and the ground ribs with fabric, like they do
with the arches inside their buildings, you'd have a good-sized protected
volume inside."
Thackery called down
into the pit, "You almost finished, Amy?" "Almost," Koi
answered. "Why aren't you sure?" she asked Jankowski.
"Mosdy
the fact that we haven't found any more of them yet—though Dr. Essinger expects
to, eventually. 'Find one, it's an oddity—find two, it's a commodity' is how he
says it."
"And
that's why it hasn't been included in the Annex's reports?"
"You
have to understand that everything we find spends some time on the Interim list
before any report is filed. This one's just been there a little longer than
usual."
"Because
you can't find another?"
"I
guess. And because of the way this one was found. It was solid pyroclastics and
lava right down to the spine—and then nothing, right down to the original
valley floor. The other artifacts were just lying on the A level, on the floor
of the shelter, as it were."
"There
was a cavity in the deposits?"
Jankowski
nodded. "The center rib was part of the roof of the cavity. Whatever the
fabric was, it was apparendy strong enough to hold out the lava until it
cooled—which the other fabrics we've found indoors wouldn't have. Dr. Essinger
would like to find a sample of it before he closes the books."
Koi
looked up to where Thackery sat on the lip of the pit. "What do you
think?"
His
face devoid of interest, Thackery clambered to his feet. "If you folks can
get out the way you got in, I think it's time we headed back."
"You are disappointed, no matter
what you told Kevin," Koi whispered to Thackery when they were alone that
night, squeezed together onto a one-person foldaway in a test of both agility
and companionability.
"I'mjust
afraid you're right—that the colony failed without any help from the
D'shanna."
"Did
you ever really expect anything different?"
"All
the way over to Site 241,1 was thinking that Sputnik followed Kitty Hawk by
only about fifty years. If the Wenlock had achieved flight, then the D'shanna
would have had reason to come here."
"Kevin
tried to tell us it wasn't a plane."
"And
I wouldn't listen, I know. Well—there's two new colonies waiting for us.
Essinger says we could probably beat the followup mission to 16 Herculis. Or we
could go all the way across to the Perseus octant and drop in on the
Shinn."
"Or
we could always just get into
Munin
and go out to the rim of the Galaxy, and come back a few thousand years from
now when somebody else has sorted it all out."
"Don't
think the thought hasn't crossed my mind."
"I
was joking," Koi said, pulling away from him. "Besides 16 Herculis,
there's still Ross 128 and 2 Triangulum Australis. And I'm not ready to write off
this planet yet."
"Oh,
we'll stay a while yet. But I can't see much reason to hope for anything."
"Do
me a favor?"
"What's
that?"
"Don't
be with us like Neale was with you at Sennifi. Let me tell you when I'm
finished, and not the other way around." His smile was rueful.
"Sorry." "You haven't done it yet," she said, and kissed
him. "I just
want
to make sure you don't."
A
night's sleep seemed to restore Thackery to his former state of enthusiasm and
optimism. He was the first up of the Munin
team, and had cleaned and inspected all four E-suits by the time the others
dragged themselves down to breakfast. "I've asked Kevin to take us out to
the Werno dig," Thackery told Koi when they settled at a table.
Her
face wrinkled unhappily. "Why don't you take Derrel, or Barbrice?"
"Why,
what are you going to do?"
"I
want to look a little more into this business of the 241 artifact. Besides, we
don't want the others to think that the only way to get to go on a field trip
is to sleep with the boss."
"You
think they might think that, eh? Then I guess I'll take
Barbrice." Koi
glowered threateningly, then relaxed into a smile. "That's all right.
She's gay."
"Figures.
Listen—there's no need to get hung up on the 241 artifact just because I was
for a while." "No danger," she said cheerfully. "We'll see
you in a few hours."
Now
that she knew it was there, Koi had no trouble extracting the data on the 241
artifact from the Annex's Interim files. The abstract contained a variety of
information which Jankowski had not provided, including one intriguing fact: an
assay showing that the ribs were made of tantalum-niobium alloy.
That
one discovery made the range shelter idea fallacious on its face. Tantalum and
niobium were both refractory metals, relatively rare in the crust of 7
Herculis-5—in fact, the orbital assays suggested that the source minerals,
tantalite and samarskite, were even less common on 7 Herculis-5 than they were
on Earth. Abundance aside, together tantalum and niobium made an alloy with
outstanding corrosion resistance, high-temperature stability, and tensile
strength—hardly the alloy of choice for something as mundane as a shelter.
This wasn't part of their working technology,
she thought triumphandy. And
Essinger must realize it too. That's why they haven't said anything. He's in no
hurry to look stupid.
After
a few minutes of further checking, Koi confirmed that except for Site 241, no
tantalum-niobium artifacts had been uncovered anywhere on the planet. That
might have been of minor significance, except for the level of skill the
Wenlock had evinced as chemists.
For
tantalum was resistant not only to ordinary atmospheric corrosion, but to acids
and alkalis as well, even to highly reactive fluorine. Had tantalum been
available in quantity from some local deposit or ore, now hidden from the
surveyors by layers of ash and lava, the Wenlock would surely have found a
variety of uses for it. But even in those applications where its properties
would have been valuable—surgical instruments and implants, cutting tools,
chemical equipment—the Wenlock had employed more conventional alloys, such as
iron-chromium steels.
This isn't proof, she
told herself sternly, trying to constrain her deductive leaps. But there was no
resisting the central conclusion: Whatever
the 241 artifact is, it wasn't made on this planet.
Koi
turned next to the photographic records of the artifact.
"Model," she instructed the
netlink, and a three-dimensional solid graphic replaced the actual image.
"Hold foreground and abstract," she instructed, and the pit vanished
from the display.
"Rotate
left and down. Stop. Draw," she said, and touched a stylus to the screen
to trace a line closing the double-S base and another vertically from the back
end of the center rib. That looks good—
"Fill,
using Class A aerodynamic parameters," she said, and the skeleton acquired
flesh.
"Rotate
right and up."
The
modeling program obediently complied, and Koi sat back in her chair and
steepled her fingers against her lips. On the display before her was a
persuasive side view of a hightailed, delta-winged aircraft.
Aircraft?
High tensile strength—high melting point—high corrosion resistance—just like
you'd need for— "Evaluate: atmospheric entry, multiple-skip aerodynamic
braking, unpowered descent to flight-normal altitude."
NOT
POSSIBLE UNDER CURRENT PARAMETERS.
"Modify."
As
she watched, the trailing edge of the wing lengthened, . the fuselage tapered
to a point at the base of the tail, and the vertical stabilizer grew larger.
The changes affected only the portion of the shape which the modeling routine
had created; the three tantalum-niobium ribs remained unchanged.
MODIFICATION COMPLETE.
No,
not an aircraft—a goddamn spacecraft. A winged reentry vehicle. These people
found the skeleton of a goddamn transonic spaceplane sitting under eighteen
metres of pyroclastics in the middle of nowhere on a colony planet and didn't
even know what they'd found.
"Save
model," she said grimly, and folded the netlink's display flat against the
controls. There's one big problem,
Amy dear. The Wenlock couldn't have built it. The D'shanna, at least Merritt's
D'shanna, wouldn't have needed it.
As
far as Koi knew, that left only one possibility. And that one was so fantastic
that she could scarcely bear to entertain it.
Guerrieri
did not share her enthusiasm, and was loathe to share her conclusion.
"That's
not a spacecraft—it's a shell," he complained when Koi showed him the
model.
"That's
what I want your help with—fdling it."
He
shook his head. "You're as bad as the paleontologists who reconstruct an
entire skeleton from half a jawbone."
"This
'jawbone' has a melting point of over 1600 degrees Celsius, a perfect airframe
profile, and an extremely suspect genealogy."
"But
it's still just a jawbone. Don't you realize how complex even a dead-stick
glider is? Where's the load-bearing stringers and truss spars? Where're the
control surfaces? Where're the avionics and navigation packages?"
"Some
of those may be in the Annex warehouses. That's why I want you to go out there
with me and look at the rest of the Site 241 artifacts."
Guerrieri
sighed expressively. "You won't let me rest until I say yes, will
you?"
"Nope.
Best you surrender now."
Guerrieri
raised his hands over his head. "I'll get my E-suit."
The
241 artifacts were together in one storage crib, the smaller ones individually
bagged and filed, the larger ones individually boxed and stacked. Each object
and container bore a glittery scanstrip, on which its file number and the
location in which it had been found were encoded.
Inside
the containers, Guerrieri and Koi found an array of metallic objects which
might have come from an exotic hardware shop. Nearly all had moving parts—bits
of tubing with integral flutter valves, variable-angle Y-connectors, pinless
shear hinges, interlocking mushroom-shaped anchors. Yet the artifacts bore
little evidence of use or wear, and their surfaces gleamed the same burnished
blue-silver as the larger pieces still at Site 241. Guerrieri shook his head as
he turned one over in his hand.
"Barbrice
would be a lot more use to you with these than me," he said, wearing an
almost comic expression of befuddlement.
"She's
with the boss," Koi said with calculated offhandness. But her mind was
busy. You know Thackery in a
way she doesn't—better maybe even than I do. You share a survivors' bond, from
Descartes and Gnivi—it's why you
came on this tour, whether you realize it or not. You knew him before the
D'shanna took hold. You may be the only one who knows whether he'll be able to
give them up.
"Lucky
her," Guerrieri said, returning the object he held to its envelope and
reaching for another. With Koi looking on but saying little, he continued that
process for more than an hour, even to uncrating the larger objects, though
they proved no more illuminating than the small ones.
"I've
seen enough if you have," Guerrieri said when he had repacked the last
case.
"I'm
done," she said agreeably. She did not mention that she had visited the
storage crib electronically that morning, using the archival recordings of each
object which Jankowski had mentioned. It's
different when you hold them in your hand. More real—more convincing—I hope.
"Can
we head back now?" Guerrieri asked.
"Sure,
if you promise to spill your thoughts on the way."
"I
was afraid you'd expect that."
"Why?"
Guerrieri
closed the warehouse door behind them, then
stopped to turn up his
suit ventilation and thereby dispel the fog that had formed on the inside of
his faceplate. "There's not much question that they go with the big artifact,
and with each other," he said as they started off down the street toward
the Annex. "And they're mechanical, structural—they were clearly meant to
do things. But they don't
make
anything. I don't know what else I can say."
"That
may be enough."
Guerrieri
shook his head. "Don't you understand? It's still just bits and pieces.
Where's the rest of it? Unless your picture of what happened here includes
street thieves and chop shops?"
"Hardly."
"Then what happened to the structural material? The control surfaces, the
spars, the stringers, the skin?"
Inwardly,
Koi smiled. That's the first
step—now you want to know what happened to something that two hours ago you
said didn't exist. "It's gone."
"Gone
where?"
"Into
the ground."
"What
are you talking about?"
"The
artifact was buried in basaltic lava. Even three miles
from the nearest vent,
that lava had to be a thousand degrees Celsius. The heat destroyed everything
except what we've seen—everything that wasn't made of tantalum-niobium."
"You're
saying it survived the heat of a free-fall reentry and then was destroyed by
the lava? That's nuts."
"Not
at all. The nose cap and wing leading edges are the only areas which experience
temperatures in the thousand to fifteen hundred degree range. All the other
surfaces see less than a thousand degrees—most less then five hundred, and that
only for a few minutes. But the lava would have taken days to cool. I ran the
numbers."
"And
by the time it does, the rest of the spacecraft is gone— leaving the cavity the
dig crew found," Guerrieri said slowly. "So what did they use, then?
What was the magic material?"
For
an answer, Koi bent down, picked up a fragment of plaz, and handed it to him.
He
ignored it and stared at her. "A glass spacecraft?"
"I
wish it were that simple," she said with a shake of her head. "That
isn't glass. It isn't even almost-glass. There's almost no silicon, almost no
calcium, almost no sodium."
"So
what is
in it?" .
"Oxygen
and hydrogen, in a ratio of 8 to 1 by molecular weight and 1 to 2 by molecular
count. And a few minor impurities—"
"Oxygen
and hydrogen—that's water."
"Arranged
in a long-chain tetrahedal crystal structure, with each oxygen atom bound to
four hydrogen atoms."
"Crystal
structure—," Guerrieri gaped at her. "That's ice, goddamnit. What the
hell are you trying to tell me? That's ice, goddamnit all."
"That's
what I'm trying to tell you."
Guerrieri's
protests ceased then, and he took a seat in the doorway of a ruined Wenlock
home. "You choreographed this all very nicely," he said in a subdued
voice.
"Thank
you."
He
looked hard at the piece of plaz in his hand. "I assume you ran through
all my immediate objections yourself." "I went through a lot. I
probably have you covered." "Not conventional Ice-1, of course. You're
talking about a
metastable polymorphic
form."
She
nodded. "Just like diamond is a metastable form of carbon— and as unlike
the parent material as you could ask for. I'm glad I don't have to give you a
course in chemical polymorphism."
"Oh,
no—I spent a long night sweating over the phase diagram for water back in my
Institute days." He turned the
plaz
over and over in his hand slowly. "I can tell you this,
nothing
like this was on it."
"Call
it Ice X. Or maybe the impurities are important, and we should call it an alloy
instead. We need to put a good X-ray crystallographer to work finding
out."
"It's
just possible. Just barely possible. Which means that maybe the Wenlock did
build spacecraft after all—at least one."
"No,"
she said firmly. "This is not a Wenlock artifact."
"Then
what?"
"You
know what it has to be."
Guerrieri
let the plaz slide from his hand to the pavement, and cocked his head to stare
at her. "Please be gentle with me. My head hurts already."
She
smiled at his joke. "I'm trying, but it isn't easy."
"You're
going to make me say it, aren't you? That this is an FC spacecraft?"
She came and crouched
before him, at his eye level. "What if Mannheim were just just a little
bit wrong? What if the FC civilization existed not during an interglacial
stade, but during ~ one of the glaciations? Couldn't an inventive culture
deprived of what we consider the crucial metals develop an entire technology
based on what was
available to them?".
"A
technology of ice?"
"That's
one pretty remarkable product of it lying there by your feet."
"It's
a long way from a city dome to a starship."
"It's
a long way from a DC-3 to an orbital shuttle—but it's a straight line. Earth
only has knowledge of one kind of technological society. That makes it hard to
judge the limits and capabilities of other kinds."
"A
ship this size couldn't carry enough fuel to go from planet to planet, much
less star to star. It couldn't even carry consumables for the six or eight
people who could fit in it."
"It
wouldn't have to, any more than the Munin's gig has to. Not if the 241 was a
rarasite lander attached to a much larger starship."
Guerrieri
just looked down at his feet and kept shaking his head.
"The
point is, we don't know what's possible, because we've never thought like
this."
"And
the crew—or should we call them passengers?"
"Call
them colonists," she said. "They could have been dropped off in small
groups as the mother ship flashed through each system at five or eight or ten
percent of c."
Guerrieri
pulled himself to his feet. "Let's walk," he said, and started down
the street.
They
went several blocks before Guerrieri spoke again. "I'll say this, you've
certainly managed to break out of the straightjacket of conventional FC
theory."
"Why,
thank you," she said, answering his wry flattery with false gratitude.
"You've also connected a very few facts with a great deal of
speculation." "I know. But that's the way I've been trained to
think—to see what isn't there from what is."
"True
enough. I'm just not used to hearing it on this scale."
"I'm
not used to doing it on this scale."
"I
suppose not. So you're not claiming to have solved the riddle of the
Sphinx—"
"No,
of course not. I'm saying it bears looking into—especially since conventional
theory has been at a dead end for two hundred years."
"You'll
get no argument from me on that," Guerrieri said. He took the next few
steps more slowly, then stopped. "Do you know what happens if you're
right?"
"Yes."
"You
have a lot of questions to answer. But you may also have answered a lot of
questions. Why the FC civilization disappeared. Why the colonies don't reflect
their founding technology. Why their populations are still relatively small.
Why some colonies are on less-than-desirable worlds. Even why they forgot their
origins. And you've done it all without resort to the D'shanna."
"You
sound more amenable to the idea than you did a little while ago."
"I
sound that way because I feel that way. But, Amelia— I'm not the one you have
to convince. And I don't much want to have to be the one to tell him."
"You
won't be."
"I
never knew exacdy how it was we were supposed to find the D'shanna. But this I
know how to check. There are things we can do to either prove or disprove your
scenario. We have something tangible to look for."
"That's
what I hope to make Thack see."
Guerrieri
nodded thoughtfully. "What if he won't listen?"
"Is
that what you expect?"
"I
don't know what he'll do."
"I
think he'll listen," Koi said without conviction.
"I
hope so. But if he won't?"
Eyes
downcast, she did not answer immediately. "I'll have to think about
that," she said, and turned away toward what passed for home.
Jankowski,
Thackery, and Mueller returned from Werno in late afternoon. Though burning to
unburden herself, Koi waited until after the evening meal, when the team
returned en masse to their quarters.
"I
found out some things today that I think we need to deal with, as a group and
in terms of our objectives on this tour." she said, pulling the fabric
wall over the entry arch to provide a privacy that was more illusory than real.
"Is this a good time, or should we schedule a team meeting for sometime
tomorrow?"
Thackery
stretched out on one of the foldaways. "Now is fine with me. Anyone else
have any firm plans? Derrel, you didn't plan any erotic assignations for
tonight, did you?"
"No,"
Guerrieri answered with a crooked grin.
"Go
ahead, then, Amy. The floor is yours."
It
took Koi the better part of an hour to lay out the facts, the inferences, and
the speculations for Thackery and Mueller. Guerrieri concentrated on watching
Thackery, his expression, his body language, the little eyebrow flicks and
absent-minded finger play that might provide the cues to his thoughts. He was
less concerned about Mueller: after the first few minutes, she had pulled a
netlink onto her lap and from that point on divided her attention between the
display's images and Koi's words.
When
Koi finished, there was silence as everyone looked to Thackery for his
response. Staring down at the middle of the floor, and thereby avoiding their
eyes, he swung himself up to a sitting position, and then shook his right arm
and grimaced.
"Damn
thing fell asleep," he said. The uneasy laughter emphasized the tension
rather than dissipating it. Thackery grinned ruefully and looked to Mueller.
"Barbrice, you've been busy there. Any thoughts?"
"While
I was listening I skimmed the 241 archives. The artifacts are definitely
anomalous." She pursed her lips, then shook her head. "I can't
comment on the rest."
"Derrel?
Are you up on this? You have an opinion?"
Guerrieri
pursed his lips and thought a moment. "About all I can say with confidence
is that we wouldn't have done it this way. But then, we didn't do it."
Thackery
turned to Koi. "I guess we know what you think."
"We've
discovered some very exciting evidence that could lead to a final solution of
the colony problem," Koi said. "On the other hand, we've found
nothing to support the notion that the D'shanna have been here or had anything
to do with the loss of this colony."
"Tell
me, why didn't the permanent staff pick up on this?"
"I
can answer that," Mueller said. "The technoanalysts finished their
work here more than a decade ago, before the 241 dig took place. The staff now
is composed almost exclusively of ethnologists."
"Besides
which. Dr. Essinger's handling of the find shows he knew there was something
different about it," Koi added.
Thackery
scratched the crown of his head, then clapped his hands together once and
interlaced his fingers one at a time. "I'm sorry," he said finally.
"I can't go along with that."
On
hearing that, Koi hooked her hands behind her neck and bowed her head, missing
a sideways glance of sympathy from Guerrieri.
"I'm
absolutely delighted by what you've found out about the 241 artifacts,"
Thackery went on. "I have no doubt that the plaz material could be used
structurally in a winged vehicle, be it aircraft or spacecraft. And whether the
plaz is Ice-X or some other metastable polymorph doesn't really matter in that
context. The fact is, you've made a very plausible connection between Wenlock
technology and a set of anomalous artifacts. But the rest of what you say is
positively Byzantine. I don't really know why you went to the trouble."
That
brought Koi's head up and a cross expression to her face. "The Service
spent a lot of time and money training me to think synthetically. That's what
interpolation is all about."
"And
you're good at it, no doubt about that. Amy. But you're a long way out on a
very skinny limb here. On the other hand, you
have
convinced me of two things—that the D'shanna were
here, just as we expected them to have been. And that it's pointless for us to
stay on 7 Herculis any longer. They were here, but it's been six thousand
years, and the trail is too cold to be of any use to us. But we now know where
to look for them—on a world rich in refractory metals. We know their
signature—tantalum."
"You
think the 241 artifact was a
D'shanna
ship?" Koi asked, making no effort to mask her incredulity.
"Absolutely,"
Thackery said, coming to his feet. "Just think what a powerful motivator
the decades of unending volcanism, the destruction of the other cities, would
have been, what a spur to space. Escape, escape—that's what the Wenlock had to
be thinking, how can we escape? That's when the D'shanna came. That's when they
showed them how to make plaz and to put this protective dome overhead. The
earthquake finished off the Wenlock, all right. But it was the D'shanna who
made sure they were still here when it hit."
Koi
said nothing, but her expression spoke volumes about her disagreement. But
Thackery seemed not to see it. "Have you talked to any of the Annex staff
about this?" he asked. Koi looked at Guerrieri, who shook his head.
"No," she said.
"Don't."
"We
have to at least alert Dr. Essinger to what he has here," Koi protested.
"Why?
He's been sitting on this for eight years. If he hasn't the wit to figure it
out for himself—well, let him wonder why we left so quickly. We owe him
nothing."
"So
where to, then?" asked Guerrieri. "16 Herculis, to look for another
iceship?"
"No,"
Thackery said, shaking his head. "Now that we know for certain that the
D'shanna are bound by conventional technical limits, we know we have a real
chance of finding them. We know they couldn't have swept through the Local
Group and killed off all the colonies in a few dozen or a few hundred years.
I've thought all along that we're catching up with them. Now I'm wondering if
we already did."
"What
do you mean?"
"Dove. Where was Dove when she was destroyed?"
It
was Mueller who answered. "In Ursa Major, headed for Talitha."
"Then
that's where we're going. And when we get there, don't be surprised if we find
both a colony and the iceships of the D'shanna."
A
short time later, with Mueller poring over the 241 archives in detail and
Thackery the astrography file on the Ursa Major moving cluster, Koi slipped
away. Guerrieri followed her to a darkened second-floor terrace which looked
out onto the moonlit ruins of Wenlock.
"Well?"
"Do you want to
say you told me so?" she asked irritably. "Then do it and be
done." "You didn't press him." Koi scowled. "You weren't
much help, either." "My advice to him has to be more conservative
than my
brainstorming with
you."
"I
suppose," she said wearily. "This is just the first round. If I'm
right, there'll come a time when I can prove it and he can accept it. I can
wait until then. I'm asking you to wait, too."
"He
sounded like Neale used to—the secrecy, the singlemindedness."
"He
isn't like that."
"Do
you think so? Do you really think so?"
She
looked at him with an uncharacteristic look of helplessness in her eyes.
"I have to."
Guerrieri's
mouth was a thin line. "I wish I could," he said, then hesitated
before continuing. "When I thought he was right about the D'shanna, I
admired his dedication. Now that I think he's wrong, I'm beginning to wonder if
the right word isn't obsession."
Then
he saw what his words had done to her, and remembered that for her, matters of
human as well as cosmic scale were in the balance. He could not take back the
words, but he could hold her, and he did—and wondered for the first time if
there were any way the flight of
Munin could
end well for all aboard her.
chapter 15
In a Dying Place
Three days out from 7
Herculis, the first defection took place. The occasion was a pre-entry briefing
on Munin's
destination star, the setting the C deck wardroom. The audience included not
only Thackery and the strategy team, but Shinault and Joel Nunn, the ship's
astrographer, as well.
Nunh
stood in the midst of the astroprojection, the stars like a halo of fireflies
around him, as he spoke to the darkened room which hid his audience. "The
Ursa Major Moving Cluster is the nearest star cluster to Sol, only slightly
more than half the distance to the Hyades. The nearest members are some
sixty-five light-years from Sol, and the cluster is scattered over an
elliptical volume of space some thirty light-years long and eighteen
light-years wide."
A
touch of the control wand displayed the nineteen members of the cluster in
bright green. From where she sat, Koi could see clearly how several members
formed most of the Big Dipper: Merak and Phad, Megrez and Alioth, and the
triple double Mizar and Alcor. Only Benetnasch, the tip of the Dipper's handle,
and Dubhe, the northernmost of the pointer stars, remained white.
"The
cluster members all share a common proper motion eastward and south toward
Sagittarius," Nunn went on. "Talitha is not considered a member of
the Cluster, but it is a member of the larger Ursa Major Stream which occupies
a region of
space several hundred light-years
across, and which includes Sirius and 1 Ophiuchi." Another touch on the
wand, and Talitha brightened as though it had gone nova.
'Talitha is part of the Ursa Major
asterism, marking one of the front feet of the Bear. At a distance of fifty
light-years, it lies right on the Phase II boundary, and consequently was the
most distant system Dove
was scheduled to visit. Like the members of the Cluster, Talitha—or 9 Ursae
Majoris, in the Kalmar system—is a main sequence star, spectrum A7, luminosity
about 11 Sol. There's a dwarf binary companion at a distance of about 70 A.U.,
with a period of more than six hundred years. With that separation, the
presence of the companion probably doesn't rule out a stable planetary system,
although the A-Lynx observatory has been unable to establish that one is
present."
"Thank
you, Joel," Thackery said, sitting forward in his chair. "Does anyone
have questions?"
"Is
this trip necessary?" Guerrieri said under his breath. Koi heard and shot
him a venomous look, but Thackery seemed not to notice either the comment or
the rebuke.
"That'll
be all, then, Joel. Thank you," Thackery said, and took the astrographer's
place as the lights came up. "The fact is, none of the Cluster stars have
been surveyed, and very few members of the Ursa Major Stream. Yet as one of the
most striking constellations as seen from Earth, Ursa Major was certain to have
attracted the attention of the FC planners. No colonies have been found among
the nearer, unassociated stars— in fact, Ursa Major lies at the center of the
largest region of apparently uncolonized space."
Thackery
touched the control wand, and a standard plot of the northern octants appeared.
"Please note that if you draw a line from Journa to Ross 128, and another
from 7 Herculis to Liam-Won in Monoceros, the lines cross here, in Ursa Major.
These are some of the reasons I expect to find a colony in this region. It may
not be orbiting Talitha. Even though I'm optimistic, I want you all to realize
that Talitha's only a starting point for what could be a long search. 5 Ursae
Majoris, the brightest cluster member and thereby a likely candidate in its own
right, lies seventy light-years out. If we come up empty at Talitha, 5 UMa will
be our next stop."
"I
can't listen to any more of this," Guerrieri muttered, this time loudly
enough to be heard. He threw down his fax of the briefing agenda, folded his
chair back into its bulkhead recess with a clamor, and stalked from the
compartment.
Thackery
knit his eyebrows in puzzlement. "What's the matter with Derrel?"
"I'll find out," Koi volunteered, and hurried away before her offer
could be refused.
She
caught up with Guerrieri three decks downship, as he was about to enter his
cabin. "What the hell was that display all about?" she demanded,
grabbing him by the arm.
Wordlessly
jerking free of her grasp, he turned away and slipped through the doorway.
Uninvited, Koi followed and closed the door behind them.
"Now
explain," she demanded.
"I
don't think you're in a position to demand explanations from me." He
sighed weightily. "I wish Thack'd come, instead of sending you."
Koi
sighed and settled on the edge of the unmade bunk. "You may still get a
chance to explain it to him—he didn't send me," she said. "I came
down here to let you vent gas at me, so maybe you wouldn't feel the need to do
it at him."
Guerrieri
snorted and shook his head. "If that was all I wanted, I could have stayed
upship and said my piece there."
"Then
what is it?"
Before
answering, Guerrieri pulled his dulcimer case from its storage niche and began
to undo the latches. "I just cannot sit there smilingly while he goes on
and on about the inner thoughts of FC planners and the secrets of Ursa
Major," Guerrieri said. "This trip is a complete waste of time. We
should be on our way to one of the colonies, not heading as far as possible
away from them."
"We
agreed we were going to be patient until we had more evidence."
"I
said nothing of the sort. The only promise I made was to myself, to bite my
tongue until it hurt too much to keep doing it. Well, it's hurting pretty good
now. Haven't you been talking to the rest of the crew?"
"What
do you mean?"
"Maybe
they think you're too close to him, they don't dare ask. That's not the case
with me. I must have had four or five people already question why we're going
to Talitha. It's still polite, like they're curious about something that just
hasn't been explained to them. But it'll get worse. They know that something's changed—he's
drawn inside himself, like he doesn't see us anymore. Don't tell me you haven't
worried about it yourself."
"Aren't
you being a little hard on him—"
"Did
you read his 7 Herculis exit dispatch? There isn't a word in it about the
iceship or the tantalum signature. Who's going to collect the evidence, with us
here and no one else even having had a chance to hear your ideas?"
"When
I talked about waiting for him, I didn't mean a week. We aren't facing any
deadlines." Guerrieri stopped in the middle of removing the instrument
from its case to stare at her. "What do you mean?"
"I
mean it doesn't make any difference whether the colony problem is solved two
years from now, or a hundred years after I'm dead."
"Of
course it matters—"
"Not
to me."
Guerrieri's
gaze narrowed. "You're afraid."
"There's
nothing for me to be afraid of," Koi said, stiffening.
"Sure
there is. What if you get the evidence and he still won't listen? Or maybe
worse, what if you have to force him to realize he was wrong and you were
right? How's he going to react to that?"
/ don't know,
she thought unhappily. But she said nothing.
"You've
got to push him," Guerrieri said, his tone changed from demanding to
coaxing as if he sensed her ambivalence. "You're the only one who has any
real influence with him."
"I
won't use our relationship that way."
He
scowled. "You mean you won't risk your relationship."
"That's
not why."
"Then
tell me what the reason is."
Oh, there's a reason,
she thought, a good one.
But all she said was a curt, "None of your damn business."
"Fine,"
Guerrieri said, turning his back on her and setting up the dulcimer on the
desk. He lowered the working surface to a comfortable playing level and reached
into the case for his mallets. "Just as long as you realize that I'm not
going to tiptoe around him any more."
There
was no point in her staying: Each had said what they had to say, yet left the
other unconvinced. She walked out with the sound of steel strings in her ears,
conscious that Guerrieri's usually precise mallet strokes were marred by the
ragged edge of his frustration.
The
wardroom was empty when Koi returned there, so she continued upship to the
cabin she and Thackery shared. There she found him stretched out on the bunk,
hands folded behind his head and one leg hooked over the other.
"Did
you folks finish?" she asked.
"I
postponed the briefing to tomorrow morning. With half the strategy team
missing, there didn't seem to be much point in continuing. What's the story
with Derrel?"
"Mostly
impatience, I think."
"He
has doubts about what we're doing."
She
admitted, "If he were calling the shots, we wouldn't
be
going to Talitha." "If he wanted to call the shots, he should have
signed on a different ship," Thackery said harshly, and closed his eyes.
"You two go back a long way together," Koi said, surprised by his
tone.
"True
but not relevant," Thackery said, opening his eyes and propping himself up
on his elbows. "So what do you think I should do about him?"
"Does
something need to be done?"
"If
he keeps challenging me in front of the crew, it will."
Cautiously,
Koi asked, "What are the options you're con
sidering?"
"Going to A-Lynx and releasing him from his contract. I wish I'd left him
in Wenlock," he said bitterly. Koi stared at Thackery curiously. "Did
you come downship after us?" she asked with sudden insight.
He
nodded wordlessly.
"Ah,"
she said, understanding. "How much did you hear?"
"I
was a few minutes behind you." Thackery sighed. "I heard enough to be
grateful to you for supporting me. And enough to know that I can't count on him
anymore."
"Because
he thinks for himself? Come on, Thack. Isn't that why he's here, to provide
another viewpoint? If not, then what do you need the rest of us for?"
"Are you siding with
him?" "Do I have to choose sides? Look, I've got a better option than
leaving him at A-Lynx. Why don't you talk with him?"
Thackery
lay back and looked away. "No."
"You're
making more of this than it is."
"Am
I?" Thackery said, sitting bolt upright. "He doesn't believe, Amy. He
wants us to turn back. He tried to turn you against me. Isn't that enough? It's
almost as if he wants us to fail."
"I
think he wants very much for us to succeed," Koi said, as soothingly as
she could. "Talk with him, Thack. This isn't personal. It's professional.
You should still be able to talk about it."
Thackery
shook his head emphatically. "No. I see no reason to give him a free shot
at me. If he continues to be a problem, then I'll have to do something. But
until then, he can talk to the freezin' walls."
"Barbrice?"
The
technoanalyst looked up from her lunch to see Guerrieri at her shoulder.
"Yes?" "Come by my cabin when you're done there."
"Sir?" "We need to talk," Guerrieri said soberly. "As
soon as you're
finished,
all right?" Far from certain that it was, she echoed, "All
right." A few minutes later, she followed him downship.
"I
feel very uncomfortable doing this," Mueller said nervously. "But I
thought you should know." "Go on," Thackery said, resting his
folded hands on his knee.
"At
first I thought he was going to try to lean on me for favors. Not that he has a
reputation for that, but he seemed so—imperious, like he knew he was senior to
me and he wanted me to remember it, too."
"So
did he ask you for—favors?"
"No.
He asked me how I felt about the mission."
"And
you said?"
"I
told him the truth—that I'm very happy to have been picked and have a chance to
be part of this special project. Then he asked me what I thought about Talitha,
about our chances of finding anything there."
"And?"
"I
told him I was very hopeful, that the way you had figured out what happened at
7 Herculis had given me even more confidence in you. Then he said, 'There are
some things I think you should know about Commander Thackery.*"
Thackery
listened impassively as the young surveyor recounted the rest of her
conversation with Guerrieri. Twice, when she became embarrassed at repeating
Guerrieri's catalog of unflattering anecdotes, he calmly encouraged her to
continue. Otherwise he was silent.
",..
that you couldn't work with either of your commanders, and that the main reason
you were given Munin was
that it was a convenient way to be rid of you, that the Analysis Office didn't
take you seriously and that I shouldn't either," she concluded.
"That's when I walked out."
Eyes
downcast, Thackery rolled a touchscreen stylus between his fingertips.
"You're right—I should know. And I thank you."
Her
worried eyes flitted from one focus to another. "Will he know I told
you?"
"I'm
afraid he probably will. But I can protect you from any repercussions. And I
want you to know that I appreciate your loyalty, and I'll remember it."
She
smiled a nervous smile. "That's not necessary, Commander." "But
it is appropriate," he said. "You can go now, Barbrice. I have some things
to think about."
For
the showdown, Thackery chose the more formal surroundings of the ship's library
over the informality of his cabin. Guerrieri entered with his face cast into an
emotionless mask, but his eyes were wary and alert. "You wanted to see
me?"
"Close
the door," Thackery said with a nod.
"Oh—this
is going to be one of those," Guerrieri said as he complied. "Should
I stand against the wall, or would you prefer a moving target?"
"Just
sit down." Thackery waited until Guerrieri was settled, then continued.
"I understand you're having some trouble with what we learned at 7
Herculis."
"I'm
having trouble with what
you
think you learned there."
"Tell
me."
"Gladly.
Amy did a beautiful little piece of work pulling together the threads of what
happened at Wenlock. She may have done enough to start a revolution in FC
theory. But you've twisted around her findings so they support your notions
instead, brainwashed Barbrice into believing you, and intimidated Amy into
backing off on her own discovery. On top of which, you've committed Munin to the least profitable
search possible—nothing more or less than the kind of plodding, random survey
we did on Descartes. We
should be looking for Amy's iceships, not your D'shanna."
"I
thought you were with me on this. I thought that's why you were along."
"Then
I left you with a misimpression," Guerrieri said, regarding Thackery with
a level gaze. "I came not so much because I thought you were right, but
because it seemed right to be going where you were going."
"So
you never believed in the D'shanna?"
"As
an influence on the Sennifi, yes. As a galaxy-roaming superspecies trying to
impose quarantine on human settlements, no. If the D'shanna are so afraid of
letting us have spacecraft, explain why they let the Journans build Jiadur. Explain why they
let us build Pride of Earth and
the Pathfinders and all the ships that came after."
"Jiadur was a fluke.
There was no evidence they were going to do such a thing until it was done—it
happened in a span of forty years. As for us, they did stop us—the first time.
They just didn't do a thorough enough job to keep us from having a
revival."
"It
doesn't wash, Thack. We've been all over the map now for four hundred years. If
they were sharp enough to get to Sennifi and Wenlock at the right time to
castrate them, they have to have taken notice of our 'revival' by now. Why are
they leaving us alone?"
"We have attracted their attention
again—that's why this is so urgent. Look at what happened to Dove."
"Dove had a freezin' drive accident, for life's
sake. We have her own captain's word for that. There's no ambiguity in her last
dispatch, nothing about any external causes. Why do you have to keep bending
and stretching the truth?"
"Why
is it so important to you that I be wrong?"
Guerrieri
sighed. "It's not important to me that you're wrong, but you are wrong. The 7 Herculis
and Sennifi civilizations died of natural causes, and so did the FC. I know
it's not as dramatic, but goddamnit, that's the way it is."
"If
I'd known you weren't committed to the mission, I don't know if I'd have picked
you—"
"If
I'd known that was the only reason you picked me, I don't think I'd have
volunteered. Have you looked around yourself lately? You and I are the only
ones of our generation on board. We're the vets now, Thack. You never quite let
me close enough to be your friend, but we still share something that no one
else on board understands, not even Amy."
Seeing
Thackery's blank and uncomprehending expression, Guerrieri continued in a softer,
sadder voice. "Or am I the only one who feels it? Am I the only one who
remembers Rajesh and Queen Maud Land, or crowding into Tycho's library to get
our black ellipse? Am I the only one who remembers Mike and Jael? Damn it, I'm
the last person you know from home."
"That has nothing to do with
Wenlock, or Talitha—" "It has to do with how you've stopped listening
to us since the Analysis Office put you over us."
"I
haven't stopped listening to you," Thackery said defensively. "Damn
it all, I was counting on you—you, and Amy, and Barbrice. That's why this hurts
so much."
"Then
why bring us to Ursa Major? Why not follow up what Amy found? Why not look for
the iceships oh other colonies?"
"We are looking for the iceships. That's why
we're on our way to Talitha." "Not the D'shanna, damnit—the FC. We
know they existed." "I'm not
interested in beginnings," Thackery said stiffly. "I
only care about the
endings."
Guerrieri
stared. "Since when?"
"Since
Sennifi."
"So
you'll look for the D'shanna to the exclusion of all else,
no matter what else we
might find or where else the markers might point." "When we find the
D'shanna, we'll get the answers we need, and more." "More? Like
revenge? What would you do if you should find them? How would you settle your list
of grievances?"
"I'm
not afraid of them. They didn't make war on the colonies. They manipulated
them. All we have to do is find them and expose them, and we'll eliminate their
power."
Guerrieri
shook his head. "No. No matter what you had in mind, Munin was sent out to try to
pave the way for Phase III. When you get back to that responsibility, 1*11 work
harder for you than anyone. But I have no intention of contributing to this
exercise."
"Are
you on strike, then?"
"Call
it what you like."
Thackery
studied his hands as he considered. "I think you've come up with a
workable solution," he said at last. "You're restricted from the
bridge and the survey lab. You'll be locked out of sensitive files in the
library. And I'll instruct the rest of the crew to treat you as though your
clearance has been dropped from Active to Non-Service."
"You
haven't the authority to do that."
"If
you'd prefer, I think we could manage to lock you into Level II isolation in
F-5 for the duration. As far as you're concerned, that should be authority
enough."
"You'd
go that far to insulate yourself from criticism?"
"I'd
go that far to protect myself from an unpredictable threat to my command and
this ship."
"Locking
me away won't be enough."
"You're
the only one who seems to find what we're engaged in intolerable."
Guerrieri
shook his head. "I'm the only one who's spoken up."
"Who,
then? Who else?"
Guerrieri
only smiled. "You'll hear from them, eventually."
As
near as Thackery could tell, the pronouncement about Guerrieri sent a ripple of
surprise through the ship, but created no real disruption. It could have been
worse, except that Derrel himself respected the lines Thackery had drawn,
apparently unwilling to sacrifice all his freedom to principle. As for the rest
of the strategy team, Barbrice seemed more than willing to shun the new pariah.
Even Amy had little to say, save regret that the split had become necessary.
Though caution was still in order, it seemed the crisis had been averted, the
disrupting influence banished.
From Guerrieri's
perspective, the situation was very different. Being an outcast from the
strategy team actually raised his status with the regular crew, with whom he
began spending his time. Taken into their confidence, he learned the true depth
of their misgivings. Thackery still had his defenders, but even they yearned
for clearer explanations and more concrete goals Among the others there were
one or two vocal detractors, and the rest were nervous, full of disquiet. As
though placed on probation, Thackery was being watched closely, his every order
analyzed and dissected, almost as though die commander's paranoia were feeding
back on itself in self-fulfilling prophecy.
Guerrieri
did what he could to put minds at ease, even to expressing more confidence in
Thackery than he was sure he felt at the moment. But even as he did. he knew
that he would not be able to keep the lid on. Unless Thackery regained their
confidence, truth, half-truth, and rumor would simmer and bubble until they
boiled over into fear.
And
what a frightened crew might do, Guerrieri did not want to consider.
One
week after Guerrieri's demotion, Thackery and Koi were cuddling together, using
each other as excuses not to rise and begin the day.
"Can
we talk about what happens after Talitha?" Koi asked, her head resting in
the crook of his arm.
"That
depends on what we find there."
"What
if we find nothing?"
"As
I said the other day, there are some excellent candidates for colonies in the
Ursa Major Cluster.""
"All
of them well beyond the Phase II boundary. I don't remember anything in the
expedition Protocols that would allow us to take Munin out there."
"There
isn't that much of the Phase II zone left unexplored to test our ideas in. I'm
sure the A.O. expected us to go beyond fifty lights."
"If
so, wouldn't they also have expected us to do it in the Cygnus octant?"
She
felt, rather than saw, Thackery's slight shrug. "If we bring them back
what they wanted, they won't care where we've been."
"Even
so, I think we should use the Kleine to get explicit authorization before we
leave Talitha."
"Uh-uh.
I won't give them the chance to say no," Thackery said, gathering her in
closer to him. "I won't let the Committee or some A-Cyg bureaucrat stop me
when I'm this close."
"Is
that why you sent the dispatch you did from 7 Herculis?
You hardly told them
anything—"
"Because
I want to get there first. If we'd told them everything, they could have
diverted Newton
or Hubble
from their A-Lynx missions. It isn't enough to be in the right place. It has to
be the right person, with the right understanding—or all we'll have is another
fiasco like Tycho
at Sennifi."
Koi
said nothing, and rolled on her side to turn her back to him. Thackery took it
as an invitation to cuddle spoon-fashion, and reached around her to cup one of
her breasts in his hand. He expected her to wriggle her buttocks against him,
the next step in one of their patterns of foreplay. When she did not, he slid
his hand down her belly toward the apex of her thighs. Just as his fingertips
reached fine, downy hair, she turned again, this time onto her stomach, arms
wrapped around the pillow on which her chin was bolstered. Puzzled, he drew
back and propped his head on one elbow.
"What
are you thinking?"
"That you once made me an offer
I wish you'd make again," she said. "I probably should have taken it
the first time." "What are you talking about?" "About going
back to Earth with you." Even before he responded, she could sense his
withdrawal. "That's not possible now," he said. "Isn't it? When
we're finished at Talitha, we could go back
to A-Cyg. Derrel could be
released from his contract, and you and I could take some time for ourselves.
I'd like you to show me Earth. What Jankowski said about heritage struck home
with me."
"This is too important to go
waiting." "To me, you're more important. We're more important."
She hoped against hope that he would respond in kind. Thackery said nothing for
a time. "You sound like you don't think we'll find anything at Talitha."
"I
don't think we will."
"And
you want us to turn around and leave empty-handed?"
"I
want to get you out of the Service while you're still a whole person, while I
can still see the person I saw at Sennifi," she said, sitting up and
facing him. "Don't you see what you're doing? Keeping secrets from the
Planning Office—exceeding your authority—taking every disagreement as a
betrayal— what's happening to you?"
"That's
not the way it is at all."
"It is. Open your eyes, Thack.
Look at yourself."
"He meant you,
didn't he? You're the one he was talking about." "What do you
mean?" "Derrel. He said there were others who agreed with him. I
didn't think he meant
you. Everybody wants to keep me from going on farther into Ursa Major. Don't
you realize that that only makes me more determined?"
"We're
your oldest and best friends—"
"That's
why I can't believe you. You wouldn't do this, unless you'd been influenced by
the D'shanna. I may have been wrong about Wenlock. They may still have been
there. If we hadn't left when we did, they might have gotten to me, too. Where
did you two go that day? Think about it. Try to remember anything strange that
happened—"
Koi
bounced angrily out of bed. "That's just perfect," she said as she
began to pull on her allovers. "You've now got anyone who disagrees with
you or does anything to interfere with you working for the D'shanna."
"Amy—it's
not personal. It doesn't change how I feel about you," he said pleadingly.
"I just can't let myself be influenced by what you say about the D'shanna
and Ursa Major. Not when you could have been influenced by them. It's my fault,
Amy. I wasn't careful enough about security at Wenlock. I assumed the staff
there was on our side, but maybe they weren't. I don't know whether they worked
through Jankowski, or Dr. Essinger, or both—we don't know enough of how they
work, only the results. This is a whole different kind of contamination
problem, and I didn't think it through."
Hooking
the closures on her clothing as she went, Koi headed for the door. "The
only part of that I can agree with is the last—that you haven't thought it
through," she said tartly.
Thackery
looked at her plaintively. "I don't understand what you want from me. Once
you left because you said I was being too selfish. Now I'm doing what you asked
and you're leaving again."
Koi
sighed and regarded him sadly. "You still insist on trying to understand
me in terms of Andra and the others. I'm not like them, Thack. I don't want
anything from you. All I ever wanted was for you to be true to your best qualities.
And more and more these weeks, you haven't been."
But
even as Koi left the cabin and headed downship toward deck E and Guerrieri, the
end of the mission was beginning.
It
began with a dimple, which appeared on the mass detector at the gravigator's
station on the bridge. The dimple was the footprint of an object ahead of
them—the space-time distortion caused by its mass, which the detector noted,
measured, and reported to its caretaker, Elena Ryttn.
"Mass-touch,"
Ryttn said aloud, alerting the others on the bridge. The navcom was already
deciding whether the object was small enough to be swept aside by Munin's bow wave, the
protective cocoon created by the AVLO field. If not, the navcom would adjust Munin's course. No human
intervention was required. On any survey ship other than Merritt Thackery's Munin, no human notice was
required.
"Astrography,"
Gwen Shinault called across the bridge to another tech. "Verify and
identify."
"Verified,"
Nunn answered. "Masses about ten to the twenty-first tonnes—a
Mercury-class planetoid. True space velocity— whoa, this can't be right."
"What
can't be right?" the exec demanded.
"The
damn thing's pushing two-thirds of the speed of light."
Shinault
was frozen for an instant by her astonishment. Then she shook her head, as one
might kick a balky machine, and reached for the shipnet controls.
"Commander Thackery to the bridge," she paged, then crossed the
bridge to the communications station. "Can you get anything else?"
"Not
while we're in the craze."
"Whatever
it is, we'll be right on top of it in about six minutes," Ryttn announced.
"It's crossing right in front of us— angle to our bow of about thirty-five
degrees."
Thackery
appeared at that moment at the top of the climb-way, still bearing the
dishevelment of sleep. "What's up?" "We're about to overrun an
object of planetary mass with a space velocity of .6c."
There
was only a moment to weigh the options;
Munin
and the mystery object were moving too quickly for long deliberation.
"Navcon, let's get out of the craze," Thackery said, settling in at
his station.
"We'll
be by her before we regain our senses," Ryttn warned.
Thackery
shook his head. "Maximum braking—fiftydegree slope. Let's rattle the
dishes."
"But
the safety restrictions limit us to thirty degrees—" the tech at the
gravigation console protested. "Do it," Shinault said. "I
altered the controller at A-Cyg. We won't lose the drive."
The
tech's face was ashen, but he turned back to his console and began the
procedure that would bring
Munin
back into normal space. The astrographer and comtech stared at each other in
disbelief, all their doubts about Thackery brought to the forefront. Only
Shinault seemed sanguine about stressing Munin's
drive with maximum flux.
"All
stations, alert for high-G transition," Shinault announced over the
shipnet. "One minute."
Throughout Munin, crew members scrambled
to find comfortable positions to be in when the nearly doubled gravity induced
by the AVLO braking hit. Those who were close enough to do so crawled into their
bunks.
"Begin
braking," the gravigator said without enthusiasm, and almost immediately
the whine of the inductors jumped an octave.
Munin
shuddered, a new and unpleasant sensation, and then settled down into a
harmonic vibration which would have been strong enough to make limp fingers
dance on a countertop, except that the increase in G-force which came with it
precluded such gymnastics. Aft, the drive's dissipators crackled as they bled
off the energies racing through the coils of the core.
The
noise from the climbway shaft and the shaking went on for nearly five minutes.
To Thackery, thinking of their enigmatic quarry, and the bridge crew, thinking
of Munin's
ancient drive coils, the time seemed much longer.
Then finally, blessedly, space
reappeared. "You can back her off to thirty degrees now," Thackery
said, and the gravigator gratefully complied.
Radar,
laser ranging and communication, telescanners, and Kleine transceivers all
looked toward the unknown object. The energies they captured carried back
confirmation that Thackery's first instinct had been right.
"Regular
profile—no rotation—comes up almost like a ship." The astrographer
stopped, puzzled. "It's accelerating— very high delta vee. Crossing our
bow now. Sweet life, it is a ship!"
"On
the window," Thackery snapped, and the telecamera view came up on the
central bridge display. The other ship was a point of light, skimming across
the star field a hundred thousand klicks ahead of Munin.
For
a moment, Thackery locked his eyes on the dancing, indistinct image as his mind
raced. D'shanna—FC—which are
you? Then
he saw what most of the others had already seen, the only real information
which could be gleaned from the display: that the image had the hourglass
profile of a survey ship.
"What
the hell is another Surveyor doing out here?" Thackery expostulated.
"What's their transponder identification?" "It's probably Lynx," Shinault said.
"She could be out here by now."
"Or
it could be Higuchi in Hillary.
He may have learned at 16 Herculis what we did at Wenlock." Thackery made
a growling sound deep in his throat. "Goddamnit, if they beat us to
Talitha—see ifyoucanfigure out wherethey'recoming from."
"No
transponder identification," the comtech reported.
That
was a puzzling development, since every Service vessel used its Kleine to
continually relay position information to the Flight Office.
"With
that apparent mass, it has to be running under AVLO drive—which means it has to
be one of ours," Thackery said, and gestured at the screen. "Can't
you give me something better?"
"Not
at this distance."
"There's
no hull markings on survey ships anyway," Shinault reminded them.
"About all we could tell is what series she belongs to."
Thackery
nodded. "Navcon, let's go after her. A thousand klicks isn't too
close."
"If
I can," said Ryttn.
"What?"
"Her
acceleration profde—it's steeper than an L-series drive. Fifty-seven
degrees."
"Maybe
it's a robot probe, with the AVfcO-M," said a new voice. Thackery twisted
in his chair to see Koi emerging from the climbway.
"Amy—I'm
glad you're here."
"I'd
have been here sooner, but it's a little hard to negotiate the climbway in two
G's."
"Things
have been a little hectic up here."
"Is
that your excuse for risking everyone's life?"
"The
best intercept was to drop down as quickly as possible. If we'd kept to the
Flight Office limits we'd have been hours getting back to them. And the way
they're accelerating, we might not have gotten back to them at all. And I
wanted to get our scanning capacity back as quickly as possible."
Koi
studied the telecamera view and the superimposed navigational plot. "Can't
we catch it?"
"That
may depend on whether it wants to be caught."
"I
have a new delta vee," Ryttn sang out at that moment. "Her
acceleration curve is flattening out." Koi pursed her lips. "Looks
like she wants to be caught."
As
the minutes slipped by,
Munin
first matched the trajectory of the mystery ship, then began to slowly narrow
the gap between them. The two vessels raced on in tandem for more than an hour
with Munin
shouting entreaties and the other vessel answering with silence.
"Why
wouldn't they be responding?" Thackery wondered aloud. Koi shook her head.
"No transponder, no radio, no Kleine— it's hard to believe they could all
be out." "Can't you give us something sharper?" Thackery called
across to the comtech.
The
comtech threw up his hands. "I can correct for blueshift, but I can't
correct for the smearing of the image, even with computer-guided optics,"
he said apologetically. "A survey ship moving at these velocities isn't
exactly the ideal telecamera platform. If you want better resolution, you'll
either have to get much closer or talk them into slowing down."
"New
delta vee," called Ryttn. "She's starting to decelerate."
"Let's
do the same. Bring us up alongside, in parallel," Thackery directed.
With
painful slowness, the telecamera view gained focus and detail. As it did, the
bridge crew saw that the ship that grew to fill the display might have been Munin's twin—the double
bell of the field radiatiors fore and aft, the rounded bulges of lifepods
protruding from the hull amidships, the seams of the gig bay.
"Pioneer
class," Shinault muttered.
"No—look
at the open gridwork at the lip of the drive radiators," Koi said.
"Pioneer-class Surveyors didn't have that. That's a Pathfinder-class
ship."
"There are no other
Pathfinders," Shinault protested.
"Munin s the only one."
Both
women were right, so the argument ended there, in impasse. The celestial pas de
deux ended with the ships crawling to a stop a mere thousand kilometres apart,
their hulls reflecting red starlight from an M-class giant less than half a
light-year away.
"Still nothing?" Thackery
asked the comtech. "Nothing the whole length of the electromagnetic
spectrum," was the answer. "Not even infrared. She's stone
cold." At that, Thackery's expression turned grim. "Gravigation, take
us over top of her. Dead amidships, and close."
As Munin turned toward the other
ship and began its deliberate approach, the angle of view changed with painful
slowness. "Hie only indicator of their progress was when, by degrees, one
set of lifepods disappeared out of view on the lower side, while the second set
came into view on the upper side.
Only
when Munin drew
closer and moved to pass over the motionless vessel did the angle change more
and more rapidly, bringing into view the far side of the ship and a sight that
sent a chill through everyone who saw it. For the hull of Munin's companion was torn
open from above the bridge to the drive core below D deck, the edges of the
aluminum honeycomb skin curled back like paper in a fire. A dark maze of
twisted metal was all that remained of the upper decks exposed by the wound.
Once that sight impressed itself on the stunned surveyors on Munin, there was no
longer any question about their companion's identity.
"My
God," Ryttn said, rising from her chair on unsteady legs. "It's Dove!"
chapter 16
Summit
For a long minute after
Ryttn's pronouncement, no one spoke. The words froze them in place, staring at
the screen as though to force the dissonant evidence to either vanish or
harmonize. Ryttn brought folded hands to her mouth as though praying,
and
her eyes showed the fear they had heard in her voice.
Shinault frowned,
and her gaze flashed angry challenge.
Koi's face was slack
with shock, as though her mind were
too fully occupied with constructing
an explanation to trouble itself to animate her features. Nunn was radiant with
wonder, and wore a hint of a foolish, delighted smile. Thackery bit at his
lower lip, his heart full, his eyes brimming. Shinault was the first to find
her voice. "That's crazy. Her drive was destroyed—how can she
maneuver?"
"We
saw her maneuver, therefore the drive wasn't destroyed," Koi corrected.
"The damage must have been repairable. Communications are still out—"
Then suddenly everyone
was talking at once.
"Repairable? Look at
her—"
"There's nothing
left of the bridge—"
"The ship can be run
from the survey lab—"
"There
must still be at least some crew aboard, downship, in the lower decks—"
"No,"
Thackery said sharply. "You're not thinking clearly. We've made three
crazes since we heard about
Dove.
It's been more than fifty years since the accident."
"Someone has to be aboard,"
Ryttn insisted. "Yes," Thackery said. "Someone. But not a
Service crew. Something else."
Koi
stared at him uncomprehendingly, and Thackery answered the stare with a tight
smile. "Elena, hold station with Dove,
five
hundred metres away and facing the damage," he said, then toggled the
shipnet. "Barbrice, to the dress-out compartment, ASAP."
As
the page echoed back up the climbway to the bridge Thackery pushed back the
mike wand and stood. A moment later he was gone, the climbway vibrating from
descent. He was halfway downship before what he had said penetrated to Koi's
consciousness.
"No!"
she cried out in sudden anguish. "No, you can't!"
Mueller
was already in the dress-out compartment when Thackery reached it. "I'm
going across to Dove,"
he said, opening one of the storage bins. "I'll need an E-5, helmet
camera, light pack, and maneuvering unit."
"Yes,
Commander," Mueller said, turning away and opening the equipment rack.
By
the time Koi arrived with Guerrieri in tow, Thackery had donned the white
double-layer E-S suit, and Mueller had the rest of the components laid out and
waiting for him.
"Thack,
how about letting me go on this one?" Guerrieri asked. "Your skin's
too valuable, hey?"
"No,"
Thackery said curtly.
"Thack—you
know the EVA Protocols specify pair work."
"No."
"Merritt—please,"
Koi said. "There's something'very wrong about that ship being here. Don't
go." "Did you tell him about
Dove?"
he asked with a nod toward
Guerrieri.
"Yes—"
"Then
you've forfeited the right to ask that of me."
Koi's
eyes flashed anger. "Damn it, Thack, this isn't a schoolyard fight over
who makes the rules. Don't you realize that if something happens over there,
there's nothing we can do to help you?"
"Do
you think it's an accident that
Dove
intercepted us, that we've been diverted from Talitha? Don't you realize? It's
me they want. Ever since the Drull warned me about them, they've been trying to
stop me. They're waiting for me. I won't disappoint them."
With
a sudden movement, Koi looked away, as though avoiding the sight of him.
He
took his helmet from Mueller, tucked it under his arm, and took a step toward
Koi. "I have to do this, Amy," he said plaintively. "If I don't,
then die last ten years don't make any sense at all. I have to do it."
"Why?"
she demanded. "Who are you trying to impress this time? Who do you think
expects this? Andra, or Sebright, or Z'lin Ton Drull? You don't owe them—"
"No,"
he said softly. "This time, it's for me."
/
When
he and Mueller were gone, down into the gig bay to the small personnel airlock,
there was silence in the dress-out compartment.
"They
have a stronger hold on him than I do," Koi said finally. "I guess I
always knew that." "He'll be all right," Guerrieri said,
touching her arm solicitously. "Sure," she said bravely. "But
would you suit up anyway, and stand by here? In case—" Guerrieri nodded
his agreement. "Amy—I don't understand."
"What?"
"Why
you wanted to stop him. We were wrong, Amy, and he was right. Nothing else can
explain why that ship is out there."
She
cast her gaze downward. "Because I'm afraid," she said softly.
"Because I'm afraid he's right, and because I don't know what's waiting
for him. Nothing more or less than that." She hesitated a moment, then
headed for the climbway. "I'll be on the bridge."
The
video from Thackery's helmet camera shared the bridge display with the output
from Munin's
own electronic eyes. From one point of view, Thackery was a solitary white
figure growing smaller and smaller as it jetted away; from the other, Dove was a dark, ominous
metal corpse looming up ever larger against the backdrop of stars.
"Switching
on spots," Thackery said, and two overlapping circles of light pierced the
gloom inside Dove's
hull. Only a single bridge station, dark and inert, and a few square metres of
the flooring remained. Below it, somewhat more of B deck was intact, though the
damage extended down through the systems corridor to the operations decks and
the vicinity of the chive.
Exposed
throughout were the hidden places of the ship, those known only to those who
had built her: the conduits and cabling secreted into bulkheads, the plumbing
and die gravity gridwork underlying the floors, the anonymous electronics
packages nestled wherever space had allowed and function had demanded.
Integument, axon, sinew, and skeleton were rent alike. It was a disturbing
sight, far more disturbing than the simple news of Dove's fate had been, for it
drove home the reality that
Munin's
crew were themselves living inside a fragile machine.
"There's no way she
held any atmosphere after this happened," Thackery said, directing his
spots toward the center of the ship. 'The inner cylinder was breached along
with the rest." He drifted in closer, and added, "I think I can get
to the / climbway through B deck."
The
white figure disappeared from
Munin's
view, and the attention of the spectators shifted to the relay from Thackery's
camera. They watched as he gave the ragged metal at the edge of the damaged
area a wide berth, then reached out for an exposed conduit and began to move
himself inside from one improvised handhold to the next.
"Dove's moving
again!" Ryttn cried out suddenly.
The
briefest glance at the display provided confirmation.
"Thack,
get out," Koi radioed frantically.
'Too
late," came the answer. "I'm too far in. Better come along."
"Thack!"
"Sorry."
"Navcon!"
Koi barked. "Keep us alongside."
Ashen,
Ryttn looked back at her. "We can't run with her.
I don't know how she does
it, but she's got a fifty-seven degree gradient."
"Then
do the best you can, goddamnit. Maximum slope. She let us catch her once,"
Koi said, unaware of how tightly she was clenching the armrests of her seat.
"Oh, Thack—"
Picking
his way along one of the radial corridors to the climbway, Thackery looked down
through the twisted metal to the far end, and his breath caught in his throat.
Twenty metres downship, in the long enclosed tunnel between Operations and
Survey, one of the drive access panels had been either removed or torn away. A
pale light from the opening played over the ladder rungs and the opposite wall.
"Are
you still monitoring me, Amy?" he called.
"Voice
and video. Thack—we can't stay with you. We're already a hundred klicks
behind."
"What's
the range on a suit transmitter?"
"About
a thousand klicks. The signal is already weaker."
"I'm
going downship, while we're still in touch," he said, and reached for a
rung. "I love you, Thack," she said with despair. "I love you,
too," he said, and started down. As he descended the last few rungs to
where he could look
through
the access panel, Thackery's heart was in his throat. It was a struggle to
force himself to look through the panel. When he finally did so, he saw that
the core was enveloped in a soft blue glow that danced and clung like jellied
fire. Even where three of the coils were missing, the light conformed to the
shape of what should have been there, forming an unbroken band around the rim
of the drive core.
"Do
you see it?" he demanded of his audience. "Do you see it?"
"Yes,
Thack," came Koi's voice. "We see it. It looks a little like St.
Elmo's fire."
"I'm
going to go inside."
The
expected protest did not come, and Thackery clambered awkwardly through an
opening which had been intended for a maintenance tech in coveralls rather than
an E-suited visitor. Once inside, he could see that the blue glow enveloped the
entire drive core, forming a complete circle. He also saw that the glow was not
static but dynamic—he perceived it racing across the surface of the coils just
as currents had once raced inside them.
"Is
Gwen there? Can this be what's making her move?"
"Here,
Commander. Yes, it would have to be," the exec said. "But don't ask
me what it is. I don't do metaphysics." "Could it be something
residual—spontaneous?" "No, sir. No drive damaged like that should
run at all, much
less more efficiently
than it did before the accident. If your D'shanna are doing that, then they're
magicians. Commander—I don't want to presume, but if I were you I'd get out of
the core. If that field is the source of the energy that's driving Dove, I wouldn't want to
predict what'd happen if you came in contact with it."
"I
think I'll take that suggestion," Thackery said. "There's no one
here, anyway."
But.as
Thackery turned to go, a tongue of jellied blue fire grew out toward him from
the gap between coil 17 and coil 21 like an amoebic pseudopod. Deep in its
substance appeared ghosdy schlieren, like embedded threads of energy.
"Get
the hell out of there," Koi shouted in his ear, half order and half plea.
But
Thackery was paralyzed by childish wonder. There were colors in the.pseudopod
too, scarlet and canary and rust, whorls of inner light made pale by the blue
glow in which they were embedded.
Like Jupiter—
"No!"
Koi screamed as Thackery reached out a gloved hand toward the projection. The
instant they touched, the light raced up his arm, enveloping him in its
substance, spreading across his torso and down his legs, crawling across his
faceplate. Koi screamed again as the display screen on Munin shpwed nothing but blue,
but the sound died in Thackery's ears as the blue light and the ship around him
both disappeared.
He
was surrounded by currents of color, each different from the next in hue, in
density, in brightness, in scent, in sound, in taste, all senses confused, all
sensations mixing immiscibly in great swirls and whorls, both distant and near,
both surrounding him and enveloping his—
His—
His
body did not exist. He regarded the place he seemed to occupy and found
nothing. He opened his mouth but heard no sound. He brought his hand to his
face, but his eyes saw nothing, his hand found nothing to touch.
=
You are locked into the patterns of your material existence. Release them.
Reach out to me and I will show you. Reach out to me and I will help you.
The
knowledge that he was not alone sent Thackery twisting and jerking in a frantic
effort to find his enemy. But there was nothing to push against, nothing to
push with, and his most energetic contortions created not the least disturbance
in the ebb and flow of the currents around him.
=
You have been here before—you have been here before—do not be afraid—you have
been here before. I have bound you to the spindle.
There
was no climactic event, no clear moment of transition, but presently calm and
reverie washed over Thackery, and his struggles ceased. He saw that there was
order in the currents, and great energy. And he became aware of his companion
as a complex resonance hovering nearby.
-You
are D'shanna.
Thackery
saw the thought enter the flux as a pattern, weakly formed but of clear
meaning. Strangely, it had been stripped of the emotional overlay which he had
thought integral to the concept. It was a label, not an accusation.
The
answer came in the same wise, childishly simple and achingly complete. = I know
and answer to that name, though it is not a part of me.
-What
do you call yourself?
=
We know each other in other ways.
-Others
. . . -The incomplete thought was barely an outline, and vanished almost the
moment released. Thackery reached out past his companion and saw a hundred
resonances, a thousand, ten thousand, in the infinite expanse of his new
universe.
-I
have never been here before.
=
You have. Once before I brought you across. Once before I bound you to the
spindle. The memory of it has driven you to seek it again. But it was nowhere
in your matter-matrix to find. Only here.
-Why
me? Why did you choose me?
=
You must stop. You must stop. = The patterns were bright and insistent. =1
cannot do it. You must stop them.
In
the pattern of the thought Thackery saw its meaning: the survey ships turning back,
retreating from the frontier. -You destroyed four civilizations.
=
I did not know that would happen. I saw only their yearning and that their
yearning would carry them to danger. I meant only to fill their need. I meant
only to protect you.
-That's
not true.
=
A false thought will not form long enough to be perceived. A false pattern is
destroyed by its own dissonance. You know this already. You thought us the
destroyers, but you know now that it is not so, because you could not make it
part of our namepattem.
Thackery
could not argue; the very substance of the spindle enforced the truth of the
being's response. -Then what danger? Why did you bring me here?
=
I do not understand what moves you. I have been watching you across ten million
fibers of the spindle. When I look on the matter-matrix of your existence, I
see the shadows of what it was and what it will be. The full Greatcycle is
contained in the thing itself, its origin and destiny. But you are different.
The origin is there to see, but I cannot see the destiny.
-Are
you...- The word "God" had never come easily to Thackery's lips, but
in the ideogrammatic communication of the D'shanna it could barely be formed at
all.
= You wish me to be more than I am.
-You are not the force to which so many of my kind have , looked.
=
Iam and am not. I am only what you see, not the answerer of orisons nor the
bestower of eternal life—except that those pleas helped stir me to take note of
you.
Not God—Thackery felt emptied,
deprived of the only label he had which seemed appropriate for the being before
him.
-Gabriel,-Thackery
said on a sudden impulse. -I will call you Gabriel.
=
When I first looked out and discovered you, the idea that matter could be
animate and self-directed was beyond formation. It took much time to find the
pattern and confirm that it was a true-thought. Even then, as I watched you and
came to know you, I believed that the consciousness of those like you was
imprisoned in the matter-matrix. I tried at first to free you. But when I first
brought your kind across, they could not keep themselves whole. Their energies
lost coherence.
-They
died?
=
Some died. Some I returned to the matter-matrix, but even there they could not
restore their coherence.
-Will
I die? Will I go mad?
=
No.
-Why
not?
=
Because you have come ready. You have prepared yourself in the searching. I
knew one would come looking, and not die.
-Then
I am not the only one?
=
You are the one who came.
-But
there were others.
=
In a thousand ways, a thousand others were touched. Some were touched too
deeply, and they lost their coherence. Some were touched too lightly, and were
not changed. In the craze these last sense the nearness of the spindle and
remember.
-Amelia—McShane—
Each
name was a tiny resonance in the greater dynamic.
=
Yes.
-We're not in control—we never were.
You've been watching us, guiding us, manipulating us—what are you? = I am as
you perceive me. Nothing is hidden. -But what are you? What is this place? =
This is the other face of reality. The birth and death of
your matter-matrix are
linked here, in the fibers of the spindle. We ride the fibers of the spindle
and draw our energies from the cataclysms at both ends.
-If
you can do that, then what use are we to you?
Thackery
sensed puzzlement. = I have tried to protect you.
-From
what?
=
Look outward and find it. The spindle holds the reflections of the entire
Greatcycle.
-Is
this what you did to the Sennifi? When I look will I know what Z'lin Ton Drull
knew?
=
You will know more.
-What
the Drull knew destroyed him and his kind.
=
If you are not ready, then I will wait for another to come. If there is time.
-Time
before what?
=
Look and you will have the answer.
-I
am afraid.
=
You do not yet know why you must be afraid. Look.
It
was like learning to read all over again. Just as there was far more contained
in writing than the simple black marks on white paper suggested, so too there
was far more to seeing than the eddies and currents he had perceived so far. He
opened himself up and the Universe poured into him, finite in extent and
infinite in detail, bursting with energy and activity. He saw the Universe for
the first time as alive and interconnected, not hostile and empty.
-I can see the ships! The sudden
thought was jubilant, a glittery grid of harmonic energy. = Yes. Your vessels
draw their energy from here, disturbing the spindle at the interface.
Thackery
perceived each ship as a snag, an imperfection, where the fibers of the spindle
were drawn outward across the boundary between Gabriel's universe and
Thackery's. He saw each ship distinctly: the packets shuttling between Earth
and the Advance Bases, the survey ships scattered beyond. How tiny is the part
of it which we know, how tiny the steps we have taken. But he swelled with pride
nonetheless as he found Dove
and Munin
playing fox and hound among the stars of Lynx.
-You
always knew where we were.
=
But you guided your own ships, set your own destinations—as did your
Forefathers.
-Can
I see them?
=
You must.
-Where?
How?
=
Each fiber encircles space and partitions time. If you would look elsewhere,
then you must move in-matrix toward centrality or out-matrix toward horizon. If
you would look elsewhen, then you must move uptime toward origin or downtime
toward terminus.
-I
can go to any time or place? = If you can find the proper place in the spindle
and can look with sufficient skill. I will guide you. -No,-Thackery said,
retreating. -If I am to believe what you show me, there are things I must see
alone first. = 1 will wait for you here.
Moving
required Thackery to employ a conception of direction. Unconsciously, Gabriel's
ideograms had already tapped Thackery's library of schema for the words most
appropriate to describe the undescribable. Following that lead, Thackery completed
the image of a great translucent cell caught in metaphase, the birth and death
of the universe forming the poles of the mitotic spindle.
Time
flowed along the fibers of the aster, past to future, centriole to centriole.
Across the breadth of the aster stretched the expanse of space, its geometry
reflecting the slowing expansion and inevitable contraction of the cosmos. And
beyond the cell membrane lay the matter-matrix of Thackery's Universe.
The
image was incomplete and imperfect, but it sufficed. He crossed space in great
dancing leaps. His self-resonance propagated from one fiber to the next to the
next. The leaps were made with more confidence than was justified. Deceived by
his own heliocentric mentality, having forgotten that the shape of the Universe
reflected not human coordinate systems but the dictates of the physics which
spawned it, he quickly became lost, looking out on nameless suns with no
conception of which of the Galaxy's billions they might be.
His
very conception of Gabriel's universe buckled at the realization that, again
the victim of ethnocentrism, he had failed to factor in the infinitude of
galaxies. Burdened by that complexity, he lost his perception of order, and
with it very nearly lost the coherence of the resonance which was his entire
existence.
-Gabriel,
help me. Guide me to Earth.
The
call did not bring Gabriel, but other D'shanna came to cluster around him as
though examining a curiosity. They sent thought-pictures to each other, but not
to him.
<
Another discordancy.
>The
matrix is disturbed here.
<1
will erase it,> one thought, and stirred up a swirl of ocher energy which
crashed down on Thackery and further weakened him.
:It
persists.
-Call
Gabriel, Thackery pleaded.
>See, you have
disturbed the disturbance into an imitation of life. A good joke, -namepattem-,
I will remember to speak it when I return downtime. With that, the D'shanna
moved off. Thackery was too feeble to follow, his resonance half the amplitude
and a far paler hue
than it had been. He did
not know how much time passed while he languished that way, carried toward
terminus by the current of the fiber.
=
Merritt Thackery.
The
ideogram came out of the distance, bright and clear. Thackery seized it and
molded what remained of his self to its contours.
=
Merritt Thackery.
=
Merritt Thackery.
Each
repetition strengthened him, for the name was more than a label—it was the
pattern of his consciousness, taken in totality. It came to him that the
D'shanna were not immortal, that they required the mutual reinforcement which
came from other-recognition to persist as coherencies. As he thought that, his
own resonance acquired a new harmonic.
-Gabriel,-
he called as the alien appeared in the distance. It was thpn that Thackery
realized Gabriel's resonance was far more complex than those of the D'shanna
who had found him a curiosity and nothing more.
=
Have you found what you wanted1?
-No.
I was lost.
=
Show me where you wish to see.
-Earth.
The
glittery thoughtpattern was blue, brown, and white, as beautiful as the planet
itself. = I will take you there.
Together,
Thackery and Gabriel flew across the aster, a hundred thousand light-years
compressed into a thousand multifilamented fibers.
-Where
are the. people?- Thackery demanded as he looked down on a world of stone and
ocean and cloud".
=
You came a long way downtime in your wandering.
-This
is the future?
=
You can see only the impulse of the inanimate future. Extend yourself against
the current and we will find the present.
Though
the fiber itself was tranquil and turgid, unlike the leaps across the aster,
there was resistance to their passage uptime. As they neared the present, the
complex turbulence which had surrounded Thackery in the beginning began slowly
to reappear.
-Is
this why some D'shanna live downtime?
=
Not some but most, living between the boundary of now and the terminus of the
spindle. In the far downtime the spindle is undisturbed. It demands less of
them and offers freedom to construct a self of such form and dimension that
could never exist here.
-But
you choose to be here.
=
It is the only place where your world and mine can touch.
They
soon reached a point where Thackery could look out on a populated world astir
with activity, and did so without Thackery requiring further reinforcement from
Gabriel.
-Let
me go on alone, Thackery said, his confidcnce restored.
=
1 cannot make you see what is not there, nor stop you
from
seeing what is. -I am not finished. = Time passes both here and in the
matter-matrix. = The thought was tinted gray by Gabriel's ill ease. -I will not
be long.
The
old woman in the chair was dead, her face a cold blue and drawn tight in the
rictus of rigor. Except for the light from the video screen, the room was dark,
the environmental system having noted the lack of movement and followed its
energy-conserving instincts. On the top of a nearby bureau, a photograph of a
boy and the boy-as-man gathered dust.
-Andra...
But
he could not complete even the namepattern, because he did not know its shape or
details. He no longer saw her with the clarity the ideograms demanded, and she
could no longer remind him of what he had forgotten or never known.
Mourning
without tears, he drifted downtime until the body was discovered, then followed
it through autopsy and cremation in the hope of learning where she rested. It
was a shock to discover there was no marker, no memorial, because nothing but
energy proceeded from the combustion chamber, energy to brighten hallway lamps
and power the lifts that brought the next cargo of bodies to the processing
center.
Anguished,
he scrambled uptime until he found her alive. Watching her eat a meal, then
fall asleep watching the NET in the chair where she would die, brought paltry
comfort. And so he crawled still farther uptime, until he found her standing in
a field of Queen Anne's lace, milkweed, and wild wheat, gazing up at the sky
with an expression that was both wistful and peaceful. That was when he
constructed the namepattern to which he would cling, and that was where he left
her for the last time.
Withdrawing
from all but the most superficial contact with the matter-matrix, Thackery
drifted downtime, past the departure of
Tycho, past
the death of his mother, watching the comings and goings of the packets serving
A-Cyg. Presently he drew in closer as the packet Audubon docked at Unity
and disgorged its human cargo. Hovering over the proceedings, Thackery watched
as a tall, raven-haired woman led a buoyant, gap-toothed eight-year-old girl by
the hand down the walkway.
-Diana...
Andra...
Suddenly
it was not enough to watch. With a fury fueled by anguish, Thackery drove
himself downward against the barrier, meaning not only to draw close but to
cross, to leave the spindle and enter the scene presented so vividly before him.
He drove himself down again and again, summoning not only his own energies, but
momentarily marshaling the currents of the aster itself against the obstacle,
reaching out with both love and guilt to take the girl and her mother in his
arms.
But
the only result of the effort was to weaken him. Failure slowly but patiently
taught him that Diana and Andra were in a place that he could not reach, that
he was seeing not reality, each microsecond frozen and preserved in an
infinitude of Universes, but waves of causality—that what propagated across the
barrier to the spindle was not a reflection of a substance still existing, but
an echo of energies past. That which could be seen from Gabriel's spindle was
true but not real. Only the present, from which Thackery had come, was both
true and real. And realizing that, he had a sudden hunger to be finished and
return there. .
-Gabriel,-
he called out in despair. -I am ready. Show me what you must. = I am here, =
Gabriel said, gliding out of the colorclasm toward him. = We must go farther
back.
The
planet he looked down on was Earth, but it was not Thackery's Earth. It was the
Earth of the geologists and paleontologists, the Earth of first chapters and
prehistories. A heavy cloak of ice and snow covered its surface well into what
Thackery had learned to call the temperate latitudes.
On
the face of the great glacier were the cities of the FC.
They were not cities as
Thackery conceived them, with spires of steel and roads of stone. They were
cities the way a sponge is an organism, thousands of small structures conjoined
to form a greater whole, but each still capable of existing apart.
The
cities of the open ice were carried along southward by its inexorable but
fitful advance, reforming and reconnecting as fissures and ridges spoiled the
neat tickweave pattern. The heart of each city was comprised of hundreds of
domed storehouses, containing the harvests of the past held for the hunger of
the future. Of the cells surrounding the core, some held the tools of their artisans,
some the creations of their artists. The remainder of the shells were home to
the city's inhabitants. From them came the people who manned the hunting
sledges and snowboats, who kept the great articulated infrastructure of the
city in repair, who bore children, laughed, and drank wine over the dead.
The
cities of the mountains were anchored to the rock side walls of their valleys
with cables of tantalum, each shell gliding in place on its runners and
clinging to those around it as the glacier slid by underneath. By that means
they held station with the honeycomb of mines from which one city extracted
coal, another tantalite, and a third ortholite. Gasified, the coal provided the
energy to warm the shells and run the myriad engines. The tantalite and
ortholite together had built the cities, the former yielding the metals used
where stress or heat was greatest, the latter the catalyst for the icesteel
used everywhere else.
Seeing
them, he could no longer think of them as the FC. The name was hollow and
faceless, a linguistic convenience inadequate to their humanity. What did you call yourselves?
he asked, but his seeing was too unskilled for him to have an answer. The Weichsel was the last of the Pleistocene
glaciations—the name belongs to your time, at least, if not to you. You are the
Weichsel.
The
Weichsel had not fled south ahead of the ice but had adapted to it. The
adaptation had taken two thousand years; the glaciation had now lasted ten
thousand. In the face of it, they had retained their culture, their staunch
meliorism, and their sense of community. But they had been forced to give up
something in exchange: horizons. With the food resources limited, the cities
could not grow. With material resources limited, their technology was frozen.
It would be that way until the ice retreated.
The one horizon lay
overhead, in the night sky. The Weichsel learned of hotter suns and warmer
worlds, and yearned for
freedom from the bondage
of the ice. In time, there came a
generation for whom
yearning was not enough.
And it was they who built the iceships.
Amy—Derrel—I'm sorry. You
were right.
But
only partly so, Thackery learned as he watched. The iceships did not go out in
clusters attached to a single mother ship. Each iceship was an entity to
itself, attached only to a great interstellar bus which was little more than a
great block of icesteel encasing the hardware of propulsion.
For
what the Weichsel could make, they could also unmake. Using solar heat to begin
the process, and chemical catalysis to continue it, the icesteel reaction mass
was reduced to hydrogen and oxygen. In perfect proportion, fuel and oxidizer
flowed through tantalum tubing to an array of combustion chambers, where
pressure switches and spark generators turned them into the explosive pulses
which drove the iceships up out of orbit and toward the stars.
But
that was not what struck Thackery dumb with awe. That was not what made a
mockery of the exploits of the Service and the putative courage of its
surveyors.
For the Weichsel had
learned not only how to live on the ice, but had been forced to learn how to
live through it. Despite their best efforts, over the centuries the pressure on
the population of the cities had continued. A lesser culture might have <
clamped a firmer public hand on private matters of reproduction, or consigned
the excess infants to the glacier. But in their mastery of chemical
polymorphism, the Weichsel had found a way to make room for the new young.
In
every city, there were dozens of shells which held nothing but bodies—the cold
bodies, not of the dead, but of the waiting. The water of their cells, though
supercooled, had not frozen. The blood in their veins, though sluggish, had not
stopped flowing. Their hearts beat once a minute, their minds dreamed languid
dreams. They were fathers, mothers, and just ordinary people, stepping aside in
favor of the new generation, and then waiting for the sun to grow warm again.
And it was thus that the Weichsel
made their journey. Each
crew
of twelve chose its own destination star according to its
own
criteria, then boarded an iceship and settled in for the
coldsleep
with the gray wolves they regarded not as pets but
as companions. It was
audacity that powered their ships, Thackery thought, the audacious confidence which
allowed them to set off believing that somewhere, sometime, the warmth of
another sun would awaken the engines of both the ship and their bodies. And the
knowledge that, for many, their journey would end otherwise raised rather than
lowered Thackery's profound esteem for them.
So
it was with both shock and horror that Thackery watched the black star enter
the solar system and rain death on the cities of the Forefathers.
The
moon-sized ebony sphere with the indistinct surface was not a star, and yet he
could not find another name by which to describe it. Nor could he name or even
categorize the weapon, except by its effect. As though it were tuned to their
resonant frequencies, the intruder's weapon splintered the Weichsel structures,
then vaporized the splinters. A filthy gray steam rose in great clouds, and the
ground shook as the Weichsel cities fell. One orbit sufficed to destroy that
which had survived all challenge for millennia.
On
the second orbit, those humans who had not drowned in the sudden floods or been
perforated by exploding icesteel found themselves torn apart from inside by
energies they could neither feel nor flee. The blood of an entire civilization
ran together to tint the newborn rivers red. Nor were the Weichsel the only
life affected. Everywhere the great beasts were falling, mastodon and cave
lion, megatheroid and dire wolf, glyptodont and short-faced bear. And when the
black star left and the clouds vanished, the places which the Weichsel had
called home were bare and dead.
-Why?-
After witnessing the carnage, even mustering the control to ask that simple,
poignant question was an all-consuming effort for Thackery.
=
For that answer, we must go elsewhere.
To
Thackery's relief, they began to move uptime again. But the sight of the
gallant Weichsel restored to life was hollow and bittersweet, for there was no
erasing the memory of what lay in their future.
=
That one, Merritt Thackery, Gabriel said, directing Thackery's attention to a
departing iceship. =The answer lies with that one.
Crossing
the spindle at an angle that carried them both downtime and across space, the
D'shanna and the human followed the tiny Weichsel iceship through the void. As
they left Earth behind, the vividness of what Thackery had seen mercifully
began to fade as his consciousness edited away the intolerable details. But he
could not stop thinking about it or, when he grew stronger, talking about it.
-Gabriel—did they all die?
=
There was a great dying.
-But
not the plants—the sea animals—the equatorial life—
=
The sudden changes pressured many. Most survived.
-But
none like me.
=
No.
-Then
how did there come to be people there again? Did one of the iceships return? =
No. Men returned to Earth because, at long last, I ceased only to watch.
-You?-
The query was colored by both wonder and gratitude.
=
When the colonies were strong enough to give back to their home world. It was a
difficult thing for both them and us. Many died, and their deaths created a
great disturbance in the spindle, a disturbance which began the migration of
the D'shanna into the far uptime and which weakened me greatly. Those who did
not die lost coherence and memory. When they weakened I brought more, until in
time they bred and survived. They were your Forefathers, not those who lived in
the cities of ice.
The
tiny-ship and its frozen cargo raced on, until it neared a place where five
suns whirled in a graceful ballet: greater twins at the center, so close they
nearly touched, and orbited by a lesser trio. The iceship's engines, facing the
brightest of the suns, began to slow her, and its crew began to stir.
But
before they could even have discerned whether the complex system before them
harbored planets, a black star rose up from the neighborhood of the twins to
meet it. The encounter was brief, silent, and telling. One moment the iceship
was diving toward the system, the engines giving it an orange halo as they
contributed their braking force. An eyeblink later it had been reduced to a
spreading cloud of disassociated molecules which glittered prettily in the
light of the five suns.
Thackery
cried out in pain and turned away. Why the loss of a single ship cut him more
deeply than the ravaging of all Earth he did not clearly understand even later,
except perhaps because it was the second blow. But at that moment, he was
consumed by an excruciating dolor.
-They
were so close— = This happened first, = Gabriel said. =This is what led
to the greater dying.
-There
was no reason, no need...
=
You have seen the reason.
-For
trespassing?
=
For invading. As they did once. As you stood ready to
do again.
-Why?
Where are they now? Where are the Sterilizers?
=
Where they have always been.
-Where
is that?
=
Look. You know the place.
Compelled
despite himself, Thackery dragged himself back uptime and watched again as the
Weichsel ship neared its destruction. A double star orbited by a triple—
He
drew back along the ship's line of approach and considered a larger volume of
the matter-matrix. Close by was another bright binary, and far beyond a
delicate whirlpool of stars. A spiral galaxy, viewed from above, the most
spectacular vantage—but there are galaxies in
every direction. Have / seen this one before, or does the clarity of seeing
deceive me with
false
familiarity— That's M101—
-Gabriel—I
do know this place. Gabriel, you have to tell them.
=
If you have seen, then I have told them.
-You
have to stop them.
=
How, Merritt Thackery? How can I quell this impulse in your kind, that rises up
again and again? After all this time, I still do not understand you, what
drives you. You
must stop them. If I knew the way, it would be long done. I have done
everything I am able to. I stopped the Sennifi. I stopped the Wenlock, too well
as you saw. Yet even as I saw to it that there was no danger from the colonies,
you came out again from Earth. There are too many of you, and I am much
diminished now. You must stop them. I have stayed here amidst the disturbances
which I created too long already. I cannot do it. To bring you here and teach you
is my last service. Through the spindle, you have the ear of all your kind. You
must stop them, Merritt Thackery. It is why I touched you. It is why you came
here. You must stop them.
Gabriel's
insistent repetitions battered at Thackery until he was forced to close himself
off, to shut down the new senses he had only just learned how to use. There was
too much power in the D'shanna's ideograms, the waves of energy too threatening
to his coherence. He turned away and folded himself into a ball of cold light
as tenuous and fragile as a soap bubble. But as he huddled there, keenly aware
of his mortality, he sensed Gabriel's resonance enveloping him, cocooning him
once more.
And
when Thackery at last felt strong enough to unfold again and look around him,
it was the inside of Dove's drive core that he welcomed back with joyful tears.
chapter 17
The
Horse by the Door
For a long time, Thackery
did nothing but shake inside his E-suit and cling with an iron grip to the
reassuring solidity of the drive core bus conduit. His body was numb and
unfamiliar, yet his nerves jangled with intense sensory messages.
While
he struggled to reassert control over his physical self, Thackery was also
fighting wave after wave of unchecked primal emotion. Bound to the spindle, he
had had no outlet for the intense feelings evoked by what he had seen and heard
there. Without a physical existence through which to cry, shout, strike out, or
flee, the normal homeostatic mechanisms were short-circuited.
Now
those bottled emotions broke over him in concert, terror and awe, anger and
grief. Later, Thackery would wonder if that were not the explanation for what
happened to the unprepared who found themselves in Gabriel's universe. Strong
emotions could be debilitating enough in the matter-matrix world. On the
spindle, they were a short road to death or madness.
But
for the present, Thackery simply clung to his handholds in a state of agitation
for which he had no name. He kept seeing the black star and the Earth wearing a
deathmask of gray steam, and the glittery remnant of the Weichsel iceship.
Presendy
the blue glow still dancing over the drive core reminded him of Munin, and he came to
understand that the presence of the intrusive energies meant that Gabriel was
still
in control, slowing Dove and bringing her to a second
rendezvous with her sister ship. "Did you get it?" he paged eagerly.
"Amy? Gwen? Derrell? Did you see? Did you tear?"
There
was no answer, and Thackery's mercurial spirits fell precipitously. If Munin were not close enough to
hear him and answer now, then
Dove must
have kept her distance throughout Thackery's time on the spindle. Or did it matter? Would the suit cameras or
transceiver have relayed anything of what I experienced?
That
line of thought led Thackery to wonder how long his communion with Gabriel had
lasted. Subjectively, there had been no reliable indicator of time, and even
recalling the sequence of events he could not say how much time they seemed to
require. The suit chronometer showed something less than two hours had passed,
which jibed with the healthy oxygen and water reserves reported by the
environmental monitors. But he could not say how much of that time he had spent
cowering after his return, or even be confident his body had stayed behind while
his consciousness had crossed over.
Unable
to cope with the uncertainty required to further pursue the question, Thackery
shifted his attention to more concrete matters. His body was still conspiring
to overload him with input—the variation in temperature between his torso and
feet, the smell of his own fear-sweat, the hundred1
and one places the suit bound or chafed or pressed against his skin. It was as
though every set of nerve endings which he had learned through years of living
to ignore was suddenly clamoring for attention.
Trying
to give his thoughts focus, Thackery repeated his call to Munin. There was no response. If only some of this power were available for
the ship's systems—then maybe they could hear me—
The
idea of asserting himself by taking action, even in pursuit of such an unlikely
goal, appealed enough to Thackery to loosen his grip on the conduit and send
him out into the climbway and down. Though each step, each individual
volitional movement, seemed to require a distinct decision, his progress filled
him with confidence all out of proportion to the achievement.
Three
bodies were drifting free on E deck, all bearing stomach-tuming witness to the
sudden decompression Dove
had undergone. Barely aware of what he was doing, Thackery brushed past the
corpses and moved toward the contact lab. The lab was deserted, the equipment
intact but inert.
There
was one last possibility. The gig should be undamaged, and its communication
systems were far more powerful than an E-suit's. If there were still power, he
might reach
Munin—
Returning
to the climbway, Thackery continued his deliberate descent. From there he could
see that the pressure hatch at the foot of the climbway was sealed.
It
took nearly five minutes to manually retract the outer hatch and enter the
dress-out compartment. There he found the suit racks full, and two more bodies,
both wearing blissful expressions that suggested a quiet drug-aided death.
Thackery
pressed on into the gig bay, where dozens of pieces of equipment loosened from
their tiedowns by the collision floated in the open spaces. He made his way
through them to the gig itself, which he found still held a pressure-normal
atmosphere.
It
had also retained the bodies of two men and three women. This time Thackery
could not help but take note of their open-eyed stares and shrunken, gangrenous
skin. Cocooned in the protective shell of the gig, the corpses had had days or
even weeks to decompose before the systems failed and slowly falling
temperatures halted the process. Thackery did not even trouble to try the gig
radios; it was clear that the gig's final task had exhausted its power
generators. Fighting a rising gorge, Thackery fled the gig and the bay.
As
revolting as they were, the corpses were as a bright light to Thackery's mental
fog. In their blank, decayed faces he saw Jael and Mike, lying dead on the
boards of a Gnivian dray, hanging naked from the branches of a wax tree. The
emotional jolt of that reminder awakened Thackery's somnolent faculties. None of this matters,
he chided himself as he climbed upship. Why
are you avoiding what does?
The
blue light still filled the drive core, but Thackery climbed past it until he
reached the open expanse of the edrec deck, where he used a short tether to
secure himself. Only then did he begin to try to come to grips with the
responsibility with which Gabriel had charged him.
He
soon began to wonder whether his earlier dimness hadn't been a defense against
thinking about what seemed an insolvable problem. Yes, the Kleine would allow
Thackery to reach the other twenty-four survey ships. But that was meaningless,
for he did not have anything approaching the authority to recall them. Only the
Central Flight Office could do that, or the Chairman of the FC Committee above
it, or the Director of the Service above it.
What
all three had in common was that they were based at Unity, a fifty light-year
craze away. Would Munin's
log records of the encounter with
Dove be
enough to persuade them to call a halt? Thackery decided it would have as much
impact as throwing a marshmallow at an advancing tank. He did not even know yet
if he would be able to convince Amy and Derrel, his closest friends and the
nearest witnesses.
Hell—I barely can believe it myself, and I'm
the one that has to do the convincing. If I wanted to, I could probably
persuade myself that I'm suffering from a nasty shock to my nervous system and
the disorientation that goes with it. I can't even prove to myself that that
experience was real.
Those
thoughts reflected despair, not real self-doubt. Just as he had admitted,
Gabriel clearly did not understand the human mind. The D'shanna did not realize
that human communication was not restricted to true thought, or that others
Thackery tried to tell would require proof. Waiting for the welcome sound of Munin's page, Thackery
started numerous imaginary conversations, none of which he could make end
satisfactorily.
(Supervisor,
there's an alien species inhabiting the Mizar-Alcor system which poses a threat
to all the human settlements.)
(Very
interesting theory. Any evidence?)
(There's
my testimony on the subjective out-of-body experience I had aboard a derelict
survey ship, culminating a period of erratic behavior that began when I
threatened to lock up one of my officers—)
(Next!)
On
top of all the other problems, the unhappy fact was that Thackery could not
even be sure that the Sterilizers were still in, or only in, the Mizar system.
What if, just like humans had, they had gone through a period of expansion?
What if they were now scattered all through the Ursa Major Cluster, or even
farther afield? If so, then any ship could stumble on them—not just in Lynx,
but in any neighboring octant. It's been twenty thousand years or more. Where
might they have gone in that time?
(Chairman,
you have to recall all the survey ships.)
(Why
is that?)
(Because
the Sterilizers could be anywhere.)
(Well,
now, that seems a little extreme. I'll tell you what, we'll just send a ship on
out where they were last to collect some more data—)
No,
that would not do. The survey ships had to be recalled, or someday they would
find—and arouse—the Sterilizers again. Thackery had witnessed their savagery,
and knew that there could be no halfway measures, no investigations, no
studies, no indecision. That meant that the person he had to deal with was the
Director. That way Thackery would only have one performance to give, only one
person to persuade. The Director was the highest authority in the Service;
decisions bearing that office's stamp were final.
Now, if I only knew who the current Director
was,
Thackery thought, and laughed sardonically. The Director's authority reached
out into the Service's operating theater impersonally, through channels—the
same channels Thackery was determined to bypass. The last Director Thackery had
taken note of by name was Anton LeGrande, and that only because it was
LeGrande's name which appeared on Thackery's commission.
His
ignorance on the subject was not a source of concern. Accessing a complete
biography of the Director would be a matter of only a few seconds with Munin's library. But
Thackery's thoughts kept returning to an obstacle that did concern him: space
itself.
Whoever
the Director was, Thackery would have to make his case with him through the
Kleine. That was a far from ideal situation; though the lag was only a matter
of a few minutes, it was enough to kill off the rapport and feedback a
real-time link provided. But there was no other way. Thackery could not even
consider taking Munin
back to Unity for a face-to-face encounter. The ships were already too far out
for that. Every second Munin
was traveling inbound, the other ships would be forging farther and farther
into unexplored regions, at terrible risk. It had to be the Kleine. As Gabriel
had warned, time was short.
Gabriel—Thackery had a momentary
impulse to blame Gabriel for not arming him with some bit of knowledge so
compelling that no one could fail to believe him. That was followed by an
equally brief urge to blame himself for failing 1b ask the right questions—the
location of the undiscovered colonies, or the exact year of the Sterilization,
or some less dramatic but more readily verifiable fact which he could not have
learned except through Gabriel.
But
he quickly saw that both impulses were wrong-headed. In his own way, Gabriel
was as limited in what he knew as was Thackery. Gabriel had all of time and
space open to him— but he was not omniscient. As powerful as he had seemed, he
knew only that which he had sought to learn and then made a part of his
pattern. To know all there was to know about the Universe, Gabriel would have
to become
the Universe.
As
for himself, Thackery found it hard to envision what he could say that would
have die desired impact. How
can I ever make them believe me? I feel as helpless to stop us as Gabriel did.
I can't take the Director where I've been, and 1 don't have the first bit of
tangible evidence. How can I make anyone believe?
And
even as he thought the question, he suddenly saw a way—a way so simple, so
certain of success that he wondered why he had not devised it sooner. He has to do it. He owes me.
Suffused with hope, Thackery unhooked his tether and started back down the
climbway once more.
The
glow in the drive core had grown pale and weak, and fluctuated alarmingly as it
coursed around its path. Thackery stood where he had stood the first time and
called out, "Gabriel! I need to talk to you." When nothing happened,
he moved to the gap in the damaged core and bravely placed his hand in the
flux. For a moment, he stood straddling the two realities. —Gabriel!
=
I am here, Merritt Thackery.
Thackery
was shocked at Gabriel's appearance. The sharp definition and strong amplitude
of his inner resonances were almost completely gone. Thackery formed the most
perfect namepattem he was capable of for the D'shanna and sent it in Gabriel's
direction. When it was received and absorbed, Gabriel seemed to flicker, then
reformed into a better likeness of Thackery's memory.
-I
need your help, Gabriel.
=
Your ship and companions are near. You will rejoin them
soon.
-Not
that. Something else, Gabriel.
Thackery
made the name the center of every thought, and each time he did the D'shannan
grew incrementally stronger.
=
Show me.
-Gabriel—when
I transfer back to Munin, I
want you to take Dove
to Earth through the spindle, the way you did the Weichsel for the reseeding.
- No, Merritt Thackery. I cannot.
-Why, Gabriel? = Look at me, Merritt Thackery. Look at me. You ship has
great mass. It would have
been a difficult task for me then. I am too weak to even attempt it now.
-Gabriel—are
you dying?
=
I need the sharing of other D'shanna. As soon as you have rejoined your kind, I
must go downtime.
Thackery
thought furiously. The Dove
was a unique and unmistakable artifact—to have it suddenly transported fifty
light-years, to have it disappear from the screens of Munin and reappear moments
later in the skies of Earth, would have given Thackery's message all the
credibility that it required.
But
the bodies downship were likewise unique and unmistakable, and could serve the
same purpose. Eagerly he posed the question.
The
answer came back tinted a ruddy red. = No, Merritt Thackery. You have lessened
the task, but you have not strengthened me. When I have brought Dove to its rendezvous, I
will have only enough coherence remaining to reach the D'shanna downtime. I
have stayed too long and done too much already.
Both
chastened and profoundly discouraged, Thackery withdrew from the flux. He
hooked an arm around a brace and remained suspended there, shaking his head and
muttering, "How, how, how, how? Oh, Gabriel, they won't listen to me. I've
tried before to tell them things they didn't want to hear. And there's nothing
that they're less eager to believe than what I have to tell them now."
But
Gabriel had made clear that the most Thackery could expect now was to be
reunited with Munin.
Coordinating and channeling the energies required to stand in for the damaged
drive had already taxed Gabriel to an alarming degree. I sup
pose / should be grateful if he isn't forced
to abandon what
he's doing for me now.
Wait—that's the key. If Gabriel didn't have to
exert himself
with Dove—if he weren't transporting inert mass, but
another
intelligence from which he can draw
sustenance—
A
hateful thought brought Thackery up short.
You'll pay the
cost that he doesn't,
he reminded himself sternly.
Or rather Amy will.
It isn't a choice. There's no other way to do
the thing.
There's no other way you'll
be believed. She would understand—just one more Hobson's choice in a life of
them. The truth is that you won't be hurt by it, she will. You'll know why. She
won't.
A
tone sounded inside Thackery's helmet, but he ignored it. It has to be done now. If I wait until I can
explain it to her, Gabriel will be too weak, or will have gone downtime, out of
reach. The window of opportunity is closing quickly—not just
for me,
but maybe for all of us. The truth is that I love her, and I don't want to
leave her. But I also don't want to fail and know that there was more that I
could have done, except that I was too selfish or too frightened to try. And
I.tcan't have it both ways—
So decide! goddamn you, decide!
A
grimness had gripped Munin
since Thackery had entered the derelict three hours earlier, a grimness which
set jaws in hard lines and put an edge on every utterance. The tension was
greatest and the accompanying silence the most inviolate on the bridge, where
Koi and the command crew continued to track their decelerating quarry. The two
ships were moving toward an intercept less than thirty minutes away.
But
that was not enough to relieve the crew's concern. Lying ahead of both ships on
their current course was the system 211 Lynx with its red supergiant, six
planets, and halo of minor bodies. If for some reason Dove again changed
velocities, as it had already done four times since it was first detected, it
would smash through the system like a self-destructing battering ram,
completing the job started years earlier and light-years away at 61 Canum
Venaticorum.
So
when the comtech saw an encouraging change on his displays, he offered the news
in a cautious tone. "We're back widiin range of the Commander's
transmitters. I've got a weak locator signal and some telemetry." Everyone
turned toward the comtech as he studied the incoming data. "And he's
alive," he added at last.
The
words swept away the tension like soap touching water. "Thank God,"
Koi said fervently. "Heartbeat and respiration are elevated—," the
comtech went on.
"Are
you paging him?"
"Auto
repeat, every fifteen seconds. It's on general relay, so you'll all hear him
when I do."
Silence
returned to the bridge, but it was a new kind: hopeful, anticipatory. The
comtech turned up the gain until they could hear Thackery breathing and the
grunts of exertion deep in his throat as he moved.
"Why
doesn't he answer?" Koi demanded plaintively. "Why doesn't he say
something?" The comtech raised his hands in a show of helplessness, and as
he did Thackery spoke at last.
"GABRIEL!"
he cried.
Koi
stabbed for her com controls. "Thack! Are you all right?" But there
was no answer.
Thackery's
plan was a thought of greater complexity than he had yet given form to. But at
its heart was a strong and simple image, rich in shades of blue and pristine
white and smelling of forest.
Gabriel
answered: = You are bound by time just as I am. There is no undoing what has
happened.
A
torrent of ideograms, insistently colorful, poured out of Thackery. -Not the
past. The present. Not to prevent. To prevail.
For
a long moment, Gabriel did not respond. = Yes. I understand. Will you stop
them?
-I
will, Gabriel. I swear I will.
=
Then come to me.
Ryttn
hated being the one to have to say it. She hated the look that she knew she
would see on the others' faces, especially Koi's. She hated having to follow
the Commander's strange outburst with unwelcome news. But it had to be said,
nonetheless. "I mark a change in Dove's delta vee," she said with
effort. "She's no longer decelerating—holding at four percent, zero slope.
I read normal displacement mass only— no AVLO field. No power generation."
Emotionlessly,
Koi nodded acknowledgment. "Come on, Thack," she urged. "Come
back on and tell us what's happening."
"I
don't think he's going to answer," the comtech said slowly, sitting back from
his station. "I've lost the Commander's biotelemetry."
"That
could be anything—"
The
comtech shook his head, his expression pained. "I'm still receiving
telemetry from the suit." He swallowed hard. "The environmental
monitor suit just reported a sudden drop in internal pressure."
Refusing
to credit the comtech's pessimism, Koi prolonged the pursuit. Munin paced Dove until, five hours later,
deflected by the gravity of the largest planet, the derelict slipped into the
gravity well of the massive blood-red star and dove inward toward its seething
surface.
"Commander—with
that much velocity, there'll be a major flare, and probably some X-ray activity
when she hits," Joel Nunn said gently. "We shouldn't hang
around."
It
was the use of the title as much as anything that forced the truth on Koi.
"All right."
"Where
to, sir?"
Koi
was slow to answer. "I don't know. Poll the crew and see if there's any
strong sentiment against going back to A-Cyg." Then she bowed her head and
covered her face with her hands. "Oh, Merry," she whispered
plaintively. "Good-bye."
chapter 18
Monody and Monition
Sunlight from a familiar
yellow star warmed his naked body. Hot white sand scorched his feet, and the
roar of the surf and the pungent salt smell curled his mouth into a grin. He
was home, and he reveled in the thought for a long moment. Then he remembered
why, and the grin faded.
The
minor thunderclap that accompanied Thackery's appearance on the Cape May Point
beach had been swallowed up by the white noise of the modest breakers churning
the water just offshore. Moreover, the beach was crowded enough that relatively
few noted that, in the infinitesimal crack between one moment and the next, the
population of the beach increased by one. Nor did Thackery's nudity create any
stir, for a healthy minority of the vacationers shared his condition—though he
was by far the palest of the lot.
Only
a few lying close enough to be dusted with the blast of sand which came as
Thackery's materializing body threw back the blanket of air, and a few more who
happened to be looking in the right direction at that instant, noticed anything
out of the ordinary. Yet even those who saw did not quite believe, and turned
to those around them in a fruitless quest for confirmation. Very quickly, they
concluded that they had seen nothing at all.
But
witnesses were not critical to Thackery's purpose, and he made for the stairs
leading to the street as oblivious to those around him as they were to him. His
mind was filled with
thoughts of credit—netlink—transportation.
He did not see the
beach police angling across the sand to intercept him. "No beach pass
today, mister?" said one, catching him by the arm.
"Beach
pass?" Thackery suddenly became aware that everyone was wearing a plastic
wristband, most of them green, a minority red. "No. I'm afraid not. But
I'm leaving—"
The
second officer had withdrawn a wallet-sized case from a pocket and flipped it
open, unveiling a keyless comlink complete with tiny screen. "It's pretty
clear you're not carrying your cards, either," he said. "Your Citizen
Registry Number, please."
"I'm
afraid I've forgotten it. I can give you my Service commission number—"
The
first officer squinted at Thackery. "You a starvet?"
"Yes,
I—"
"It
figures," said the other. "Four times out of five when you find
somebody walking in circles, it's a starvet. How long you been back?"
About five minutes,
Thackery thought. "Not lonj*."
"I
think you'd better come with us."
Thackery
nodded agreeably. "That might be the simplest way, after all."
Thackery
would have preferred to make the call himself, but the district supervisor of
the Atlantica Peace Force had other ideas. Instead, Thackery provided the
supervisor with the necessary numbers and names, and received in return a plain
brown detainee's wrap.
Several
minutes later, the supervisor returned to the holding room. "They're going
to send somebody. You can wait in the lobby."
"Thank
you."
"And,
Commander Thackery—next time you decide to take one of these little excursions,
make sure you've taken the trouble to learn the local laws, all right?"
"I
will," Thackery promised.
Nearly
two hours later, a two-seat air skiff bearing the Service's emblem set down on
the Peace Force's flight pad. From the excitement the sleek little vehicle engendered
among the staff, including the clerk who came to fetch him from the waiting
room, Thackery knew that he was getting special treatment.
Inside,
the skiff was quiet and comfortable, and seemed capable of largely flying
itself. The only thing the young awk did after keying in a destination was to
make a brief report.
"Ellit
Donabaw reporting. I've picked up Commander Thackery and we're en route to the
Wesley Space Center. Estimate arrival in one hour." Switching off, he
setded back in his seat and cast a glance sideways at Thackery. "This is a
pretty silly place to be caught, don't you think?"
"Excuse me?"
"They were
talking about you around the office before they sent me out. I heard you were
on contract to
Munin." "That's
right." "Commander of the Munin." "That's right."
"They're going to hit you hard, then—AWOL, dereliction
of command—you'll be
looking at a fitness review the minute we reach Unity."
"Don't be dim."
"I'm
not kidding. You should have been smarter."
"Can
you access Flight Office files with that?"
"Yes—"
"Why
don't you find out where
Munin
is?"
Donabaw
narrowed his gaze questioningly, then turned to the comlink. "Way the hell
out in Lynx," he said presentiy. "So?" "So how am I
supposed to have accomplished this dereliction?"
"On her last call
here—"
"Munin is a survey ship,
not a goddamn packet. She doesn't come to Earth." That stumped the runner.
"I don't understand." "You're not supposed to. I suggest you get
on your little
box there and alert the
Director that I'm on my way to see him. Time enough's slipped by already. I
don't want to have to wait while he digs the sleep out of his eyes."
"You mean the Director? Of the
Service?"
"Of course."
"Then
you're dreaming. The Director doesn't drop everything to see any old person who
asks for an appointment." "I'm not 'any old person,'" Thackery
said. "I'm Com
mander
of a survey ship. There are only twenty-five of us. The
Director
will see me."
"Uh—sir,
I don't even know if she's on station at the mo
ment."
"Then
you'd better find out, hadn't you? Because if the Director's not at Unity,
we're sure as hell not going there." He crossed his arms over his chest,
snuggled back into the comfortable seat, and directed his attention outside, at
the surface of the ocean flashing by beneath the skiff.
"I
can't say I ever thought to see you again," said Alizana Neale, placing
her folded hands in her lap. Apparently she had been on station for some time,
for the gap in their ages had widened. She had let her hair go to gray, and
there were soft but definite lines in her face, but her eyes were as steely as
ever. "And I'm a little confused about why I am. When did Munin put in?"
"She
hasn't."
"That
was my understanding. So how are you Jierc?"
Thackery
smiled. "There are two parts to the answer. The easy part goes: by way of
the Cape May Shore Patrol, the Atlantica Peace Force, Wesley Space Center, and
the shuttle Ticonderoga. The
hard part I'd like to leave until I've had a chance to tell you why I'm here."
"That's
no surprise. You've always preferred drama to straight answers. Well, go ahead,
then," she said, settling back.
Thackery
took a moment to collect his thoughts. "When you allowed me to have Munin, you hinted that
you had become frustrated with the colony problem—as I did, and as everyone
before us had," he began. "But it wasn't our fault that we couldn't
make the puzzle come together. We knew that some of the pieces were missing.
But we had no way of knowing that it was the most important ones.
"I
have those pieces now. I know what happened."
In
simple sentences which had sweeping power, Thackery proceeded to tell the story
of the beginning—but not its end— of the First Colonization. He spoke of cities
on the ice, of tiny ships and their crews, of a will for life so strong and a
meliorism so great that those who possessed them dared to vault to the stars.
"In
all, they sent out eighty-two ships before their time ended. Just seventeen of
those ships founded colonies—the
rest perished. Even so,
they did more with less than I ever dreamed they could." "You are
something of a master of that yourself," Neale said dryly,
"considering what you are able to do without proof."
"If
you mean physical evidence, you can start with the 241 artifact on 7 Herculis.
I'm sure we'll find more like it quickly, now that we know what we're looking
for. Very possibly there are discoveries to be made among the archeological
reports that have already been filed. And there are four more colonies. I'll
provide the Flight Office with the information they'll need."
"How
is it that you've come to be so blessed with knowledge? —Let me say in advance
that I regard your answer with some dread."
Thackery
smiled faintly. "I made contact with a D'shanna."
"Ah.
Like your friend the Drull, who tried to tell you that the Universe is
closed?" "As it happens, it is." Neale sighed. "I would
have thought that in all this time,
you could have taken the
trouble to check your claims against the facts. The Universe is open,
expanding. There's not enough mass to stop it."
"No.
The Universe is closed. The Greatcycle will have an ending—just as the Sennifi
told us. The missing mass-energy is in the spindle, in the energy-matrix
inhabited by the D'shanna.
"How
does the AVLO drive make phantom matter? The energy required for the feat flows
to us from the spindle. What magic ties the Kleine transmitters together? The
shortcut which allows us to call across the light-years leads through the
spindle. It has to be considered the other half of reality. The spindle exists.
I know. I was there."
"Invited,
I presume."
"Yes.
Not by the D'shanna collectively. By a singular individual I call Gabriel. He
is—or was—an extraordinary representative of his kind. Alone among them, he
took note of us, and realized what we were. Gabriel has watched us, worried
over us, and been our friend.
"And
we badly needed a friend. I haven't yet said why the Forefathers ended their
period of colonization. It came because we're not alone in the Galaxy. One of
the Weichsel iceships stumbled into the space another species regarded as its
own— the Mizar-Alcor multiple system, in Ursa Major. The Weichsel vessel was
destroyed. Then these—I name them for what they did—these Sterilizers followed
its trajectory back to Earth, and coldly and efficiently eradicated all human
life here. Nor were we the only victims. We've known for a long time of mass
extinctions of megafauna at the end of the Pleistocene Epoch. Now we know
why."
Thackery
labored to make Neale see the images which were still so clear to him, to make
her feel the horror. "Strange, isn't it? For twenty thousand years we've
been pointing out the Big Dipper to our children without realizing what
happened there. Those stars signify above all our greatest humiliation, and the
beginning of the blackest chapter in our history."
There
was a catch in Thackery's voice as he spoke those last words, and he paused.
When he continued, it was in a softer voice. "When the Sterilizers struck
at us, Gabriel was consumed by a moral dilemma. He could not stop the attack—
just because I've named him for an angel does not mean he has the powers
imputed to one. But he did have the capacity to intervene. He thought on it a
long time, and in time decided that there was a wrongness in what had happened
to us.
"Mind
you, that was as much a revelation to him as was our existence. From what I saw
of them and gleaned from Gabriel, the D'shanna do not have a particularly
elevated moral sense even as regards each other. But Gabriel rose above that
denominator. It was Gabriel who reseeded Earth, giving us back our home
world."
"But
the colonies were never touched?"
"The
Sterilizers destroyed us as casually and reflexively as you might swat a fly.
It did not occur to them to see if the fly had left any eggs."
"And
now the eggs are hatching."
"Yes.
As the colonies grew and flourished, Gabriel tried to protect us from
ourselves. It was he who stopped the Sennifi and the Wenlock and the other
advanced colonies from regaining space travel. But he wasn't here when he could
have stopped us."
"And
now he can't, is that what you're saying?"
"His
final gift was the knowledge of what will happen if we don't cancel Phase III,
if the ships aren't recalled." He leaned forward earnestly. "Alizana,
we have fifteen hundred stars and five hundred thousand cubic light-years of
space. That's enough for us, isn't it? Worlds enough? We've been in such a
hurry these last five hundred years, always pushing on to the next star. It's
time to go back to some of those worlds. It's time for us to rest."
Neale shook
her head slowly. "I will give you credit, Thackery. The story has grown in
the telling. I am impressed. Or perhaps 'entertained' might be a better
word." She spread her hands palm-up in a gesture of resignation. "But
how can I believe you? How can you expect me to?"
Thackery
nodded. "I understand that you have to object.
-I'm grateful to you
for hearing me out before you did. We're back now where we started. You asked
how I came to be here. Because I knew that I would need proof, I had Gabriel
bring me here, through the spindle. I'm sitting here with you now, but less
than eight hours ago I was aboard Munin." Neale regarded him with an expression that was both
affectionate and sad. "Is it that you can't realize how insane that
statement is?" she asked gently. "Or is it that you think that I'm
insane enough to believe it?" Thackery smiled knowingly. "If all I
had to go on was my word, I don't think I'd believe me either. But you don't
need to take my word for it. You have a netlink there. Use it. Call Munin. Ask them where I am, when they last
saw me. Ask them what happened to their ship's Commander," Thackery said,
standing as if to leave. "Don't you want to stay for the finale?" A
wistful look came into Thackery's eyes. "No. You'll need some time, as I
did. And I left some people I cared about back there, under circumstances not
of my choosing. I can't go back the way I came, and I can't rejoin them. So I
think I would rather not hear their voices again. If possible, I would ask that
you not tell them that I'm here on Earth. It would just be the cause of
unnecessary pain." Neale nodded. "Where are you going, then?"
"On the way in from the shuttle I saw a restaurant that claims to serve
'traditional' meals—which I presume means food recognizable to people of our
vintage," Thackery said with a weak effort at a grin. "The
Archives." "You know it, then. I'm running short about three meals,
so I'm going to go back down there and test their authenticity. When you're
ready to see me again, you can find me there."
The
restaurateurs were not immodest—their
bill du fare featured everything from Italian garlic bread
running in melted butter to a pot roast containing potatoes which had been
grown in soil, not aquaculture tanks. Thackery ordered impulsively and
eclectically, as though he had to make up for all his deprivations in one
sitting.
But
when the food came, it passed through Thackery's mouth tastelessly, as though
it was just another shipboard platter in which no real pleasure could be taken.
The fault was not in the food, but in Thackery. His mind was full of thoughts
of Amy. He wondered if what he had said to Neale was really true. Was there no
way that they could be reunited? If he were to board a ship and head for Lynx,
and she were to turn Munin for
home—yes, it was possible. TTiey could be together again.
But
even without having heard from Neale, Thackery knew that that option was not
open to him. He would be needed here. There were things he knew that would have
to be recorded, decisions to which he would have to cpntribute. He could not
drop this on them and then scamper away. The Service was poised for change, and
he would be expected to take part in the transformation. He did not belong to
himself—in truth, had not since Jupiter. It was a fact he had both fought and
fled, and now, finally, accepted.
"Commander
Thackery?"
Blinking,
Thackery looked up into the face of a young awk. "Yes?"
"The
Director would like you to meet her in Gallery B of the Service Museum."
"The
Museum?"
"Yes,
sir. In Kellimore Place."
Thackery
wiped his mouth and pushed himself away from the table. "I'm afraid you'll
have to show me," he said with an apologetic smile. "The last time I
was here, there was no Kellimore Place."
The
museum was putatively closed, but that was no obstacle for the Director of the
Service. Neale was waiting in the entry rotunda, in the star-dome of which hung
models depicting the long-ago encounter between Jiadur and Pride of Earth.
The awk delivered Thackery there, then silently excused himself.
"Walk
with me this way, will you?" Neale asked, and they started down the
leftmost of the three broad corridors leading out of the rotunda. "I could
not reach Munin—"
Thackery's
face whitened with sudden panic, but Neale placed a comforting hand on his arm.
"She's in the craze, legging from 211 Lynx to A-Cyg. But there was an exit
dispatch—in which you figured prominently. There was sight-and-sound of you
boarding the wreck of Dove—all
time-stamped, of course. And video of what's left of Dove falling into a star, as
well."
Calmed
by the news, Thackery nodded his approval. "1 asked Gabriel to leave her
on a course that would make that happen. I didn't want them to keep chasing it,
or risk someone's life trying to board her. I wanted them to think I was
dead."
"You
succeeded," Neale said succincdy. "Do you know why I asked you to
meet me here?" A small smile creased Thackery's cheeks. "You have a
display of antiques you want me to be part of?"
"There's
something I want you to see."
They
walked until they reached a spot where several life-sized photographs had been
melded to the wall in such a way as to make it seem that the people represented
were actually standing there, engaged in conversation with each other.
"Do
you know who she was?" Neale asked, stopping in front of the figures and
gesturing at the proud, haughty face of an aged Oriental woman.
"No."
"Her
name was Tai Chen. Five hundred years ago, she was one of the three most
powerful people on Earth. She was instrumental in Devaraja Rashuri's struggle
to build and launch Pride of Earth. But
unlike Rashuri, she believed the aliens were a threat—that Pride should be not an envoy
ship but a warship. She was overruled—no, better to say outmaneuvered. It was
the residue of that xenophobia that saw to the arming of the Pathfinders."
"Is
this why you asked me here? For a history lesson?" Thackery asked,
bristling. "Or are you comparing me with her?"
"No,"
Neale said, shaking her head. "I asked you here to tell you that I believe
you. The survey ships will be recalled. The orders should be going out even
now."
Thackery
sighed, and allowed his shoulders to slump. "It had to come, in time. The
farther out we went, the more ships we would need. We couldn't have continued
the way we were forever, Sterilizers or not."
"Nor
can we stop cold out of fear. Merritt, you understand the situation of the
moment perfectly. But have you looked past the moment, and thought about the
impact news of the Sterilizers will have?"
"It
will have to be carefully handled—possibly restricted—"
"And
say what about our sudden loss of enthusiasm? No, Merritt. It's not possible
for us to simply call the ships home and hide. We'll end up destroyed by the
fear that they would find us again." Neale shook her head. "No—if
we're going to keep what we have, we're going to have to go looking for
them." She looked up at the picture of Tai Chen. Her eyes were wet, and
her next words were directed to the lifeless image, not to Thackery. "It
seems we must build your warships, after all."
For
a long moment, Thackery said nothing. "I won't enjoy seeing that."
"It
won't happen quickly. Nevertheless, I share your sentiment," Neale said.
"I've postponed retirement a half-dozen times already. Now the problem
that has been keeping me here has been solved, and I do not find much appeal in
the one that will replace it. I've seen enough time and enough change. So I
have already decided I will be resigning in short order."
Thackery's
eyes flicked back to the portrait of Tai Chen. "I'm going to need to stay
a while, at least."
Neale
nodded. "Then you will need one of these," she said, and extended her
closed right hand toward him. When she uncurled her fingers, she revealed a
black ellipse lying in her palm. "I presume that if yours had come through
the spindle with you, you would be wearing it?"
Thackery
stared at her, then slowly reached for the emblem.
"No,"
Neale said, "Let me." She stepped toward him and pinned the emblem on
the left breast of Thackery's collarless wrap. "A lot has happened since
the first time I did that," she said, backing away. "I told you then
that you didn't deserve to wear it. Today no one deserves to wear it more. You
did a hell of a job, Merritt. They'll remember your name for a long time."
"I
never wanted that," he said hoarsely, fingering the black ellipse.
"I
know," she said. "But for a long time I thought you did— because I
did." She smiled wanly. "I can still remember how excited we all were
when Jiadur
came. It was like the whole world had changed. We just couldn't stop talking
about it. I wanted to know everything, stayed up through the night to watch the
net when the first exploration team boarded. I wanted to be the one who was
first—the one they were talking about.
"It
wasn't until I was back here the first year after joining the Committee that I
realized how little the citizenry cared, how little notice they took of what we
were doing. That was when solving the colony problem began to matter
most."
"Is
that why you let me have
Munin?"
She
nodded. "I wanted to see them shaken out of their complacency. I wanted to
make them raise their eyes from their own little comfortable nests and come to
grips with the new history. It didn't matter to me who accomplished it.
"And
now you have. The changes
Jiadur
brought are nothing compared to what your news will. The discovery of the
colonies is nothing compared to the discoveries you've made. We now know that
we are just one of three great intelligences in the galaxy, three intelligences
which stand isolated from each other by their very essence. You've brought us
knowledge of both a friend to whom we have a debt we can hardly begin to
discharge, and an enemy against whom we have a grudge we can hardly begin to
assuage. No one man will ever change the world more."
"The
World Council I knew frowned on hero-making."
"It
still does—except when there is no choice, as now. The Service will start it,
and the nets will do the rest. I'm afraid you are to become one of those
historic figures you learned about in school, the ones who always understood
what was at stake, seized the moment, and never had any regrets."
"That's
not the way it was," he said softly, remembering.
She
smiled wistfully, sharing his pain, and took his arm as they started back down
the corridor. "It never is, Merry. It never is."