
* * * *
ANALOG SCIENCE FICTION AND FACT
Vol. CXXVI No. 6, June 2006
Cover design by Victoria Green
Cover Art by Jean Pierre Normand
SERIAL
A New Order of Things, Part II of IV by Edward M. Lerner
NOVELLA
Puncher's Chance by James Grayson & Kathy Ferguson
NOVELETTE
Original Sin by Richard A. Lovett
SHORT STORIES
Preemption by Charlie Rosenkranz
The Door That Does Not Close by Carl Frederick
SCIENCE FACT
Solar System Commuter Trains: Magbeam Plasma Propulsion by
James Grayson & Kathy Ferguson
READER'S DEPARTMENTS
The Editor's Page
In Times To Come
The Alternate View by Jeffery D. Kooistra
The Reference Library by Tom Easton
Brass Tacks
Upcoming Events by Anthony Lewis
Stanley Schmidt Editor
Trevor Quachri Associate Editor
Click a Link for Easy Navigation
CONTENTS
Editorial: Can't
Argue With That by Stanley Schmidt
Puncher's Chance by James Grayson
& Kathy Ferguson
Science Fact: Solar System Commuter
Trains: Magbeam Plasma Propulsion by James Grayson & Kathy Ferguson
Original Sin by Richard A. Lovett
Preemption by Charlie Rosenkranz
The Alternate View: My Mysterious
Father by Jeffery D. Kooistra
The Door That Does Not Close by
Carl Frederick
A New Order of Things: Part II of
IV by Edward M. Lerner
The Reference Library by Tom Easton
In Times To Come
Brass Tacks
Upcoming Events by Anthony Lewis
* * * *
Editorial: Can't Argue With That by
Stanley Schmidt
In the fall of 2005, the Kansas Board of Education
outdid itself. Not only did it (again) welcome creationism into its
science classrooms, but it did so in one of the most arrogant
imaginable ways: it redefined science, removing the reference to
"natural explanations" of phenomena as the central goal of science.
As if the opinion of six members of the Kansas Board
of Education will have any effect on what scientists think or do.
Nonetheless, most scientists cringed at this
decision, albeit for other reasons, and they weren't all outside
Kansas, looking in. There's a tendency in some circles to snicker at
Kansas as "backward" when it does things like this, but it's important
to remember that the state is not a monolith and not everyone there
agrees with the decision. One of the four dissenting members of the
board, Janet Waugh, was perceptive enough to say, "This is a sad day.
We're becoming a laughingstock of not only the nation, but of the
world," a fact you can easily verify by sampling what foreign news
media think of these matters. And it was a University of Kansas
physicist, Adrian Melott, who said pointedly, "The only reason to take
out 'natural explanations' is if you want to open the door to
supernatural explanations."
Which, of course, is exactly what proponents of the
changed standards want, and most scientists vehemently oppose. It
undermines the very foundation of science, which is the idea that what
happens in the world follows logically coherent rules and can, at least
to a very large extent, be understood by figuring out what those rules
are. It has specific methods of trying to do that, and science classes,
to be honest, should not attempt to deal with anything beyond what
those methods can determine.
But none of that is my main subject today. Even
though I obviously have opinions about it, my main goal here is not to
debate the rightness or wrongness of the Kansas decision, and I'm
certainly not going to rehash well-worn and scientifically unresolvable
arguments about whether there is a God or an "intelligent designer."
That's a subject on which I (unlike some) freely admit I have no real
knowledge and can offer no scientific proof one way or the other. What
I do want to talk about is the nature of the "debates" leading up to
this decision, and what it says about how debates are conducted--and
whether, in some cases, they can't be. This is an exceedingly important
issue, and it goes far beyond the question of teaching evolution and/or
intelligent design. Whether and how people can have meaningful
arguments has direct bearing on their ability--or inability--to resolve
any
question about which emotions run high.
Yes, I've often said that anything is open to
question, and to the extent that this magazine has any fundamental
tenets, that's one of them. But that doesn't mean that all ideas are
equally valid (an assertion which the universe emphatically and
consistently refutes), or that we welcome with open arms any idea that
anyone cares to propound, whether or not they can make a sound case for
it. Pretending that every opinion is just another point of view, as
valid as any other, is demonstrably false and does no one any service.
Some things are simply nonsense and deserve to be called such, without
waffling or apology. In principle, it would be nice to always be able
to show the holders of such beliefs why they are nonsense,
without personal animosity but with solid evidence and consistent logic.
Which is why I had very mixed feelings when, during
the months before the Kansas board redefined science, hearings to
debate the question were boycotted by many organizations of scientists
and science teachers. Admittedly nobody has time to craft a careful
response to every odd idea that might come down the pike, and as one of
the scientists appalled by the Kansas decision, I appreciate the
concern of some of the boycotters that the subject of the debate was so
utterly foreign to the mainstream of science that their presence might
give credence to something that didn't deserve it. As Harry McDonald,
president of Kansas Citizens for Science, said, "Public hearings and
votes are not how the 'truth' of science is determined. We don't have
to lend the credibility of science to the hearings."
But at the same time, I realized that this wasn't
just any uncomfortable idea, but a biggie: a fundamental attack
on science as a part of people's education, being pursued aggressively
by people determined to have their way and quite likely to get it.
Might the scientists' refusal to participate in the hearings be taken
as conceding the point? Some people took it exactly that way, and made
political capital of the claim. Brian Sandefur, a board member of an
organization called Intelligent Design Network, asked, "Are they afraid
to show up? Are they afraid to defend themselves?"
I knew they weren't, but it did occur to me that, in
addition to not wanting to dignify the proceedings by acting as if they
took them seriously, they might have been inclined to stay away because
they figured participating would be a waste of time. I could well
imagine that they believed that the hearings were just for show and the
outcome predetermined--that it wouldn't matter what logical arguments
they gave, because the decision-makers' minds were made up and they
would not have listened seriously to anything the "evilutionists" said.
Over the ensuing months, I became increasingly
convinced that such a suspicion was well-founded, and increasingly
sympathetic to the boycotting scientists. Quite likely it would
have been a waste of their time to participate in the "debates." I
reached this conclusion partly because of continuing news coverage on
the deliberations in Kansas and related ones elsewhere, and partly
because of some of the discussion I saw on the "Readers' Forum"
section
of Analog's own website, growing out of my October editorial on
"Cowardice in the Classroom." That editorial was about de facto
suppression of teaching about evolution even in places where it was
officially in the curriculum. The forum discussion started there, but
eventually drifted far afield, with a considerable stretch of it
occupied by people arguing about the existence of God and possible
reasons for accepting or rejecting it.
Some sensible, thought-provoking things were said
there, covering a wide range of views, but I also saw a good many
examples of some dismaying and unfortunately widespread tendencies.
Misrepresenting or twisting what another person said, for example, or
jumping to conclusions logically unrelated to the premises, and in
general presenting arguments that superficially sound reasonable but
aren't, and don't even present a target clearly enough defined to aim
logical arrows at. Several times I found myself tempted to respond to
something (a temptation I generally try hard to resist, because getting
drawn into an argument at one point is likely to make it hard to avoid
responding again and again and again). And several times I resisted the
temptation, not only for my usual reason, but because the thing I
wanted to refute was too inherently illogical to lend itself to a
logical response, and context suggested that even if I tried, the
effort would be futile.
Let me describe one example, without naming any
names, just to illustrate the kind of thing I'm talking about. One
forum participant suggested that it would be interesting to compile a
list of Analog authors who believe in God, but then said that
probably wouldn't be a good idea because, in his opinion, I would
probably blacklist them. This did require a terse, pointed, and frosty
response, because his conjecture was totally groundless and totally
false: nothing in my editorial either explicitly or implicitly
suggested such a thing, and it's not even remotely true. If I saw
anything to be gained by it, I could easily start his proposed list for
him; I can easily name regular Analog contributors who
represent several branches of Christianity and a couple of Judaism,
others who are agnostics, still others atheists, and still others whose
religious beliefs or lack thereof I neither know nor care about. His
allegation fell short of the legal definition of libel only because it
was a false speculation that I might do something rather than a
false allegation that I did do something.
What was interesting, for purposes of this
discussion, was his response to my brief note explaining all this. Very
politely, in a perfect textbook illustration of disingenuousness, he
said that if he had misconstrued anything in my editorial, he would
appreciate it if I would point it out. Very briefly, I was tempted to
try, but quickly decided there was no point in it. There was no
specific thing in the editorial even remotely related to the conclusion
he had drawn. I couldn't point to a sentence and say, "This is where
you went wrong." He had misconstrued the whole thing, and somehow
jumped from the totality of what I said to an offensive conclusion in
no way related to anything I'd said.
And you can't argue with that--literally. That
statement is not an admission that he's right; it's just an observation
that the logical disconnect between what I said and what he said is too
complete to bridge logically. You can't criticize the logical steps in
an argument that doesn't use any.
Moreover, had I tried, I saw no reason to believe
that anything I said would have any effect. The gentleman in question,
in other parts of the discussion, repeatedly made reference to things
I'd said, but in each case he twisted them into things I would never
have said. Why should I believe that anything new I might say would
fare any better? It seemed clear to me that his opinion was set in
stone, and he simply wasn't going to hear anything anyone said that
didn't harmonize with it.
Again I stress that my intent here is not to pick on
this gentleman, who is certainly welcome to hold whatever beliefs he
wishes; or even on the Kansas Board of Education, which is less welcome
because it's imposing its beliefs on thousands of schoolchildren. I
cite both of them merely as examples of the kinds of difficulties we
face in getting people to hold a rational discussion of any emotionally
charged issue. Those difficulties are themselves a major problem,
because we're surrounded by such issues, and our future will be largely
shaped by what kinds of decisions we make about them.
We need to get a lot better at doing that.
One of the skills we all need in order to do so is
saying exactly what we mean and listening to exactly what others say.
Another is critical, logical thinking. Science courses should be one of
the best places for learning both those skills. Six members of the
Kansas Board of Education are not enough to prevent that from happening
in the nation as a whole, but there is disturbing evidence that they
are just one of the more extreme manifestations of a trend. There is
also evidence, more encouraging, that that trend is not yet anything
like unanimous: voters in Dover, Pennsylvania, soundly voted out a
school board that wrote intelligent design into the curriculum there.
Let's hope that might set a trend--because
if
we don't keep the science in science classes, and non-science out, it
doesn't bode well for the future of science in this country, and
perhaps for the future of the country in general. Stem cell research
and other areas that will play a large role in shaping the world's
future will not grind to a halt in other countries just because this
one turns its back on science. If we do that, we may be left behind in
far more ways than we realize.
Copyright © 2006 Stanley Schmidt
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Puncher's Chance by James Grayson
& Kathy Ferguson
Sometimes playing it safe is not an
option....
* * * *
* * * *
Illustrated by William R. Warren, Jr.
* * * *
David gazed out the station window, searching for a
glint of sunlight off the Low-Earth-Orbit MagBeam platform. It was
impossible to spot from this distance, especially against the mottled
blue and white backdrop of the Earth, but he searched nonetheless. He
made out the shape of North America through murky clouds. Three years
before, on a day much like this, his father had perished down there, an
infinitesimal speck of humanity buried under a mountain of volcanic
ash. He turned to see Gin Fukazawa's face appear on his desk monitor.
He grinned at the sight of the Space Transit System's LEO supervisor,
twenty years his junior, and shuffled through the piles of tools on his
desk for the connection switch.
"Hey, Gin, couldn't wait four more hours to see me?"
"You wish. Looks like three weeks before our paths
cross again."
David sighed. "Let me guess. Your boss wants some
Martian ice to cool wine at a political function?"
"We all have to please our masters, which is why
today you'll be pleasing me by conducting an inspection tour of the
High-Earth-Orbit MagBeam platform with a top official from the White
House Office of Science and Technology Policy." She wagged a finger at
him. "And you'll be on your best behavior."
David groaned. "Another VIP shuffling through? Do I
kiss his shoes first, or curtsy? I never remember."
"I'm serious, David."
"So am I. How often do I get real space work these
days? I signed up as an engineer, not a desk jockey or nursemaid. At
least give me something worth doing while I'm up here."
"Well, I'm very sorry your work's not all fun and
games, David, but this is important. This woman wants to tank the
appropriation budget for the new colonization shuttles and shut down
the Mars colony. Why else the surprise visit? She appeared out of
nowhere, stuck her nose into every nook and cranny, requisitioned our
manifests and incident reports. She's looking for trouble--and the way
she's looking, she'll find it."
Gin's serious brown eyes glowered at him from the
monitor. She never looked better than when she scolded him. The
prospect of weeks away from her made him frown. Soon enough, her
promotion to Mars Colony Coordinator would take her from him
permanently. David didn't want to think about spending his retirement
on Earth without her.
"You run a tight ship, Gin. I'd sail anywhere with
you."
Gin frowned. "If today is any indication, we're all
about to drown."
"What's up?"
"The incoming transport is having computer trouble,
so we're bumping the McAuliffe from the maintenance schedule."
Gin raised a hand to stop his protest. "It's not like the old boat
doesn't get regular maintenance. You spend half your time on platform
tinkering with it."
"Gin, this is the third time! What's the point of
having an emergency rescue ship and then letting her rot? Tinkering's
one thing, but she needs proper maintenance. Surely the transport can
wait a day while the McAuliffe gets a thorough overhaul?"
"No can do. I need to turn it around pronto. Your
VIP should just squeeze in before all hell breaks loose. There's been a
little accident on Mars."
"The control room crew doesn't need me there to run
the magbeam. Or for much else, either. What's the matter on Mars,
anyway?"
"A check valve malfunctioned, and some hydroponic
fungicide siphoned into the water supply. A couple of the colonists
bathed in it."
"With what effects?"
"Just irritation and rashes so far, but we're
concerned about long-term health consequences if they're left
untreated. We're shipping antidote immediately. The sooner they get
treatment, the less likelihood they'll suffer any permanent damage. If
we wait a day now, it'll cost us a week in arrival time."
"Thank you, Gin. I think I remember reading
something similar in Orbital Mechanics for Dummies. All right,
the McAuliffe can get her makeover another time. God forbid I
should prevent the colonists getting their aspirin."
Gin's shoulders slumped. "Sorry you won't make it to
LEO today. I had a bottle of wine cooling." She sighed. "Run along
now;
your VIP will arrive in about two hours." She cut the connection.
David left his office and tramped along looping
metal corridors. Outside, the Earth and stars wheeled dizzyingly as the
station's gravity centrifuge revolved slowly. David ignored them. His
inspection produced its usual array of irritations, bugs, and
blemishes, but nothing dangerous. The whole station needed an overhaul,
but with space-hating bureaucrats like Gin's woman from OSTP sniffing
everywhere, no one dared put their head above the parapet to request a
budget increase, leaving David to waste his few precious days in space
on janitor's work. His father would laugh; he'd left the old man's
wrecking yard behind for the thrill of space exploration.
He caught sight of a young woman poking inside a
wall panel with a voltage probe.
"Ellen! Anything going on I should know about?"
Ellen Francis smiled at her supervisor. Almost
impossibly beautiful, but seemingly unaware of it, the redheaded
engineer left lovestruck astronauts in her wake wherever she went.
David smiled paternally.
"Hi, David. No, just glitches. Nothing worth
bothering Maintenance about."
"Glitches?"
Ellen proffered him her portable toolkit. "The
flammable gas sensor flatlines over point four percent concentration.
It's not really a problem: point four percent's well past the alarm
concentration."
David poked around inside a maze of wires. "Had the
same problem with these things in F-15 engines in Saudi a thousand
years ago," he said. "Turned out to be sand contamination of the
pellistor sensors. Chances are something's got in and decatalyzed it."
He kept probing around, occasionally holding out a hand for a new tool.
"So how did Timmy Weaver get along last night? It
was his title fight, wasn't it?"
David nodded. "Yeah. Wyoming Junior Light-Flyweight
Championship. I haven't checked in at the gym, but he ought to have
walked it. Kid's got talent like you wouldn't believe."
"Better than you?"
"Way better. Big and strong was plenty in the Air
Force championship, but Timmy's got such fast hands, and instincts to
go with it. Pride of the gym, he is."
"All thanks to you," Ellen said, with an
exaggerated
flutter of her eyelashes.
David fixed her with a look. "That's very nearly
insubordination, Ellen. No, I like helping those kids. I don't know
teaching them to box does much good, but anything must be better than
spending all day in an orphanage, right?"
Ellen said nothing. Her thoughts were clear enough,
though: Aren't you an orphan of Yellowstone, too?
Delicately holding a pasta-spoonful of tangled wires
aside, David extracted a tiny ceramic bulb. "Christ on his cross!"
"What?"
"Serial number 223-BR2Z. No wonder it's flaky; these
sensors were discontinued in 2011. Ten bucks they cost, but the
government still gives us equipment nearly fifteen years out of date."
Ellen yawned and massaged the back of her neck.
"You're on the mission crew for this medicine run to
Mars, aren't you?" David said.
She nodded.
"Well, go get some sleep, for God's sake. I'll
finish the maintenance checks."
"It's all right, really--"
He cut her off. "Don't make me order you, Ellen. It
makes me twitch. Go catch some Zs."
She scurried off. David shook his head. More work
he'd bought himself. Still, at least it wasn't paperwork, and at least
the outgoing shuttle would have someone competent and wakeful on board
during acceleration. He pushed the toolkit into his pocket and
continued his inspection, wondering how much of his time this VIP would
demand.
* * * *
David tried to mask his exasperation. He'd shown
Gin's bureaucrat around the platform and been as polite as possible. In
return, she'd spoken barely two words, spending their meeting
alternately nodding and snorting at his explanations of how things
worked, and taking notes on a handheld computer. Not even the
magnificent spacescape from David's office window served to soften her,
since she refused to look at anything except her handheld display.
After five hours, David could feel a headache building.
Her name was Dr. Victoria Porter. A severe bun of
dark hair gave her an older, all-business air, but only the tiniest of
lines showed at the corners of her large, dark eyes and pouty mouth,
and David guessed she might be in her mid-forties. High cheekbones and
an aristocratic nose echoed a tall, willowy figure. With different
hair, David could even have thought her attractive--until she'd spoken.
Now he only thought her a nuisance. A malignant nuisance. He'd rather
have been helping repair the Mars shuttle, not stuck in an office with
a bureaucrat firing pedantic questions at him.
"Dr. Porter, occasional minor discrepancies in
bookkeeping are unavoidable in any large organization. I can't tell you
why July's LEO manifest differs from what was loaded onto the Mars pod,
but most likely a breakage occurred and the schedule didn't allow time
for a replacement. It's not economically viable to replace non-vital
equipment on an emergency basis."
A message alert flashed on David's monitor. Porter
made no move to leave, but continued scowling at her handheld screen.
David keyed the message. Gin's face appeared, worry
lines creasing her brow. "Gin, good to hear from you. I'm with Dr.
Porter. What can I do for you?"
Her expression tightened. "David, the Mars shuttle
has an intermittent short in its navigation system. The technicians are
swapping out parts to nail down the faulty component."
David whistled. "A sequential fault check could take
days. No other indication of the origin?"
Gin shook her head.
David understood her frustration. A few days' delay
launching would mean arriving almost two weeks late. "Looks like
someone else will have to take the colonists their aspirin. What's your
plan?"
"We've no choice. The only other suitable shuttle is
twenty days away. We're sending the McAuliffe."
"Wait a minute. Six hours ago you bumped the McAuliffe
from the maintenance roster, and now you want to send her on an
emergency mission? What's wrong with this picture?"
"Come on, David, this isn't an emergency, but we
can't afford several days' delay. The McAuliffe's in shape,
isn't she?"
David snorted. "No thanks to Maintenance. Who's
going to fly her?"
"We're transferring the command crew from the Mars
shuttle, along with a replacement lander pilot. Karl Masters'll be
flying the front chair."
"Masters?" David exclaimed. "Give me a break. Just
because he's good in transit shuttles doesn't mean he can fly an old
tub like the McAuliffe. At least send someone qualified."
Gin's brow creased further. "I've contacted Earth.
Ben's down with the flu, and Seamus just left on vacation. As soon as
they locate him, they'll send him up to take the McAuliffe out.
I'd like you to get her ready to fly."
"Seamus O'Brien? A man who once quit a vacation on
Easter Island because it was too crowded? If he's vacationing within a
thousand miles of a launch site, it'll be the first time. Why not let
me take the McAuliffe over to Mars? I'm the best qualified, and
I can have her space-worthy inside two hours."
"David, is that sensible? How many flight hours have
you logged since your last assessment?"
"I designed half the ship, Gin. Do you think I've
forgotten how to fly her? Come on, it's a milk run. The planetary
alignment couldn't be better, so every minute waiting for Seamus is
about three lost at Mars." David glanced up at Dr. Porter, and leaned
close to his monitor. "Let me do some real work for once. May be my
last chance."
Gin threw up her hands. "All right, you've convinced
me. I'll change the crew roster, but you be careful."
"I'm sorry, Gin, okay? But you did say it was
important, right?"
She nodded. "Go on, get to work. Here's the Mars
incident report. I'll see you on the return run." She gave a weary
smile and vanished, replaced on-screen by a document.
David scanned it. "Dr. Porter, I must apologize, but
a situation has arisen requiring my attention. We can continue at a
later date, or you can address the remainder of your questions to one
of my colleagues. If you wish to leave immediately, we can beam your
shuttle down to the LEO Platform before accelerating the McAuliffe.
Otherwise, you'll have a four hour delay before the beam is available
again."
She set down her computer. "Mr. Longrie, has the
White House been informed of this 'little problem' on Mars?"
"Dr. Porter, my understanding is that someone in the
colony has spilled a drink, and they need us to deliver them some paper
towels, nothing more."
"I'm sure the director could give me a more detailed
explanation. It may have some bearing on my overall evaluation of the
program."
David sighed. "There's been a minor chemical leak;
just the kind of incident you could encounter in any lab. Some
fungicide siphoned into the water supply, and a few people bathed in
it. A couple of the scientists have a rash, and the colony medical
center doesn't have the medication it needs, so we're shipping some
over. It's just a routine supply mission with a tight time-limit, so if
you'll excuse me--"
David keyed the number for the shuttle crew station.
Ellen Francis' Botticelli countenance appeared on-screen. "Ellen,
you've heard the news?"
She smiled. "I've always liked riding in vintage
cars. I didn't realize we were getting a vintage driver as well."
"Thanks a lot. You'll be hearing about that one in
your APR. Look, we launch in three hours, so can you get over to the McAuliffe
and start packing her up? The cargo came with the maintenance crew,
along with some lander pilot. You can rope him in to help. I've got to
go through the preflight checklist, so I'll see you at the loading bay.
Okay?"
Ellen nodded. "Sure. I didn't plan on spending this
run in a flying toolbox; I'd better be getting time-and-a-half. You
must be mad as a snake."
David glanced aside as Porter looked pointedly at
her wristwatch. "Yeah, of course. I've gotta go; see you in a few." He
cut the connection. He wanted to call the gym to check on Timmy's
fight, and he knew he should apologize to Anna for missing the birth of
his first grandchild, but he couldn't spare the time.
* * * *
When David arrived at the docking bay an hour later,
his hackles rose. Gin hadn't mentioned the name of the lander pilot.
Threading between jumbled piles of net bags holding everything from
circuit boards to dehydrated fruit juice, and crates of medical
supplies, he made his way to the McAuliffe's loading bay doors.
Ellen, her arms full of bags, frowned up at another man dressed in a
flight suit with US Navy pilot's wings on the collar. A shock of blond
hair topped over six feet of muscle and sinew, and a pungent cologne
pricked David's nostrils.
Ellen set down her bags. "David Longrie, this is
Captain Xavier Beaume--"
"Yes, thanks, Ellen. The captain and I have already
met." Neither man extended a hand. David swept an arm around the
chaotic bay. "What is this?"
"We're loading the supplies," Beaume replied.
"Loading? It looks like my room in college. Why
aren't you using the pre-packed pallets?"
"They don't fit on this archaic rust bucket,"
Beaume
said. "Worthless piece of trash should have been scrapped years ago.
Which old geezer are they sending up to fly it?"
David's hands curled before he restrained himself.
One shot was all it would take, he was sure. Beaume was built like a
wrestler, but David would have bet a month's wages he was hiding the
glass jaw to end all glass jaws. What had Gin ever seen in him?
"This ship might be old, Captain, but if you treat
her with respect, you'll find she's more than capable of doing her job.
And if you look, you'll find her cargo bay stacked to the roof with
empty pallets made to fit her. I suggest you get a power loader and
bring some of them out, because those bags'll shift so much during
acceleration we could end up on Jupiter."
Beaume's color rose, but he cut off a retort when
Ellen slapped his arm.
"Sorry, David. I should've thought. Come on, Beaume,
let's get to it."
As his two crew members trudged off, David passed a
despairing eye over the chaotic loading bay. Why couldn't they have
assigned me someone useful? Beaume, a former test pilot and US Navy
Fighter Weapons School trophy winner, seemed to think his star quality
extended to areas he knew nothing about. The access door hissed open,
and Dr. Porter stalked in, suitcase in hand. The sooner she was
out of his hair, the better, too.
"Dr. Porter, your shuttle is waiting in Bay 7. You
can depart any time."
Her face set hard. "I won't be leaving on that
shuttle, Mr. Longrie, I'll be leaving on this one. I'm coming
along as an observer."
"You're what? "
"You heard me, Mr. Longrie."
David looked at the sprawling pile of supplies, then
at Porter's elegant business suit. "Forgive my asking, but are you
space-qualified?"
A genuine smile almost curved her lips. "My office
reports directly to the president, and she has personally
assigned me to this mission."
"The McAuliffe isn't a pleasure barge, Dr.
Porter. She's not got faux-gravity or mod-cons, and it's sixty days to
Mars and back. It isn't like taking the Atlantic tunnel."
"I am aware of that. If you wish to protest, feel
free to contact Ms. Fukazawa."
David marched to the nearest communications point.
Gin answered quickly. "I know, David, I know.
Instructions just came in from way over my head; there's nothing I can
do."
"Does she think the McAuliffe's equipped to
haul a passenger to Mars and back? Sixty days with her is not what I
need in my life right now."
"Then this should cheer you up--Seamus is at the
London spaceport. We can get him back in eight hours. He says he'll fly
the mission if you want."
David looked at Porter poking around among the
supplies, while Ellen and Beaume struggled to repack them. "Do you
really want to leave Seamus alone with Porter for two months? If she
wants to can the program already, I'm not sure Seamus 'Bungee Jump From
An Airplane' O'Brien is the best person to bunk her with. Tell him to
enjoy his vacation."
"You're sure?"
David nodded reluctantly.
Gin frowned. "Okay, I'll tell him. Did you call Mike
yet?"
"Next on the list. Thanks for keeping quiet about
the crew assignment, by the way."
Gin rubbed her eyes. "I'm sorry, David, it slipped
my mind. If it makes you feel better, Xavier's a jerk when I see him,
too. Just ignore him."
"I'll have to. Or commit the first murder in space."
She didn't smile. "Save the jokes, David. Call Mike,
then get back to loading. There's a launch schedule to keep." The
screen washed white.
David searched his wallet for the call code of the
Orphans of Yellowstone Gym, then waited several minutes before Mike
Parry's lived-in face filled the screen, blocking out the punching bags
and sparring ring behind him.
"Dave," said the big, black man, "you still in
orbit?"
David nodded. "Yeah, something's come up. I've got
to fly a rush mission to Mars, so I'm going to be off the map for a
couple of months. I'm sorry to spring this on you, but it just fell on
me this afternoon."
Parry grimaced. "Well, I can reschedule the other
volunteers to fill the training roster, but the kids are gonna be awful
sorry. Especially Timmy, after last night."
"I've been up to my ass in alligators ever since I
fell out of bed this morning. What happened?"
"Kid just wasn't there. Started badly and never came
back--lost his confidence. Got knocked down twice in the first round,
and I stopped it in the second. Leaned into a right hand he'd normally
slip blindfolded, and got cut under the eye. You know the kiddies'
rules when there's blood on the canvas."
"Damn! Timmy should have taken that kid to the
cleaners. What did you tell him at the end of the first round?"
"Not to go toe-to-toe with the other kid, keep to
the center of the ring and not get caught on the inside."
David shook his head. "Timmy's not a technical
fighter; he's heart and instinct."
"What else would I have told him?"
"Go forward, bet it all on one lucky shot. Take the
puncher's chance. It's what I would've done."
"He'd have got his head knocked off!"
David shrugged. "Maybe. Or maybe he'd have won. Bet
your life he'd have preferred going down swinging, though. How is he?"
"Not too hot. Feels like he let you down. I tried to
talk him up, but he went back to the shelter pretty unhappy."
"Christ, I should've been in the corner with him.
He's got all the talent in the world, but he needs help focusing. Tell
him--" David looked aside as Ellen gave him a piercing whistle from
the
cargo hatch. "Look, just tell him he didn't let anyone down, and I'll
bring him back a Martian rock, okay?"
Parry nodded, and Ellen whistled again.
"Damn. Look, Mike, I've gotta go. I'll see you when
I get back."
"Good luck, man."
David killed the connection and jogged across the
bay to Ellen. Concerns about the mission crowded out the vague sense he
was forgetting something.
* * * *
The clock counted down toward the end of their
acceleration phase. The mission clock ticked quietly alongside it,
depressing red figures announcing a twenty-six day wait until their
arrival in Mars orbit. David, restless after nearly four hours in his
seat, checked the voltage and current gauges attesting to the condition
of the acceleration magnets on the McAuliffe's underside. They
all registered normal, and the propellant and battery levels glowed
green. With the ship's attitude controlled by the navigation computer,
David felt like a fifth wheel, but he kept his hand hovering near the
manual override, just in case.
His earpiece crackled. "HEO to McAuliffe,
prep for beam shutdown in five minutes, over."
David thumbed the transmit key. "Copy that, HEO.
How're we looking?"
"We show you at thirty-eight point four clicks per
tick, McAuliffe, trajectory five by five. Mars concurs. Range
passing two hundred and seventy six thousand kilometers downrange.
Right on the money, over."
David touched the data onto the navigation computer
screen. "Copy that, HEO. Remind us to duck when the Moon comes along,
over."
Laughter rang in his ear. "Will do, McAuliffe.
Prep for beam shutdown in three minutes twenty. HEO out."
In a little over three minutes, the magbeam--a
three-hundred-thousand-kilometer-long bolt of lightning connecting them
to the distant HEO station--would shut down, ending their four hours of
acceleration. The cloud of argon gas ionized by the magbeam glowed
invisibly in their wake, the thrust it imparted on the McAuliffe's
acceleration magnets pushing David down into his seat with almost a
fifth his normal weight. It would be the last time he felt weight for a
long while. The Earth's heartbreakingly beautiful blue and white disk
receded in the viewer; Mars still lay invisibly distant somewhere ahead
and to the right.
Beaume grimaced in the copilot's seat, his muscular
frame too bulky for the cramped cockpit. He was wearing cologne, and
David wondered which of the women it was meant to impress. Even Beaume
must have realized Porter was way out of his league, and David smiled
as he wondered how long he would take to discover that the
preternaturally beautiful Ellen was also gay. He'd warned a few
optimistic, young astronauts off her in the past, but looked forward to
Beaume finding out the hard way.
David would have preferred to see Ellen in the
cockpit, but Beaume needed to get acquainted with the controls.
Interplanetary flight protocols just weren't part of the training for
lander pilots, however talented. Besides, Ellen was still orienting
their unwanted "observer" to the vagaries of life on the McAuliffe.
So far, Dr. Porter hadn't left the lav for more than fifteen minutes at
a stretch, and they weren't even at zero gee yet. If she didn't stop
heaving soon, he'd order her drugged up until she adjusted. He was
tempted to order it anyway, just to keep her out of his way. He ran a
hand through his close-cropped grey hair and tried to relax the muscles
in his neck and shoulders. His head throbbed.
"Past your bedtime, gramps?" Beaume said.
David shot him a savage look. "Do you intend to do any
work on this flight, or are you just gonna park your ass in front of
the vidscreen all day like you do on those landers?"
Beaume grinned and stretched expansively, his
shoulders muscles rippling.
David ducked aside. "And put your damn restraint
belt on. I don't need you bouncing around the cockpit when they turn
the beam off."
"Ooh, sorry," Beaume said, not moving. "This is so
much more dangerous than flying an F-18. Just imagine what could happen
if I got a jolt at a whole point-two gees. It could crush my eyeballs
to jelly and snap my spine."
No, asshole, but I could. "Just put
the damn belt on, or it goes in your performance report as a safety
violation."
The radio burst into life. "HEO to McAuliffe,
come in, over."
David touched his earpiece. "We read you, HEO, over."
"HEO to McAuliffe, prep for beam shutdown in
one minute, over."
"Copy that, HEO. Initiating shutdown procedure,
over." David thumbed the 1-MC control to transmit across the whole
ship. "Longrie to all crew. Brace for transfer to zero gee in
forty-five seconds." He slotted his headset into its receiver.
The overhead speaker crackled. "HEO to McAuliffe.
Shutdown proceeding in ten, nine, eight--"
David took hold of the jolt bar above the instrument
panel and looked levelly at Beaume. He held out until six, then reached
for his restraint belt and slotted it deftly home over his chest. On
zero, a slight jolt forward signaled the shutdown of the McAuliffe's
thrust. David flicked controls to deactivate the acceleration magnets
and propellant feed, set the batteries to begin recharging from the
solar panels, then unbuckled his restraint belt.
"Gin said something about you being too cautious,"
Beaume said. "Maybe that's why she asked me onto the crew: girl needs a
bit of excitement in her life again."
David stopped, one hand clenched white into the back
of his seat. Restraining himself, he reached for the communications
panel. "Longrie to all crew. Magbeam shutdown complete and propulsion
secured. Out."
David shot along the narrow aisle toward the galley
area, anger making him push off harder than he intended. He wanted an
aspirin and a bulb of coffee. By now he should have been lying next to
Gin in her quarters on the LEO platform. Maybe Beaume was right. Maybe
he was an old geezer flying an outdated bucket of bolts on a pointless,
cover-your-ass mission. Thirty years as an astronautical engineer, and
here he was, reduced to flying suitcases of itch ointment to Mars with
Gin's jerk of an ex-boyfriend. He could have been mopping the decks on
the platform for all the good he was doing.
He swung into what served as the McAuliffe's
kitchen and common area, hooked a foot into a toehold, and popped the
lid on the first-aid kit. A series of racks held an assortment of
medicines in single-use packets, all filled to the top--except the
aspirin rack, conspicuously empty. Cursing, he slammed the lid closed.
"That didn't sound good." Behind him, Ellen guided
Porter into the cramped space. The two women glided to the table, and
Ellen propelled Porter into a seat. The Assistant Director of Space and
Aeronautics at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy
looked green.
David rolled his head around to loosen the tension
in his neck. "Aspirin supply got left behind. Shipful of emergency
medication, and I can't get a damned aspirin."
"Just hook your foot under the bar down there."
With
her charge anchored at the table, Ellen glided smoothly from the room.
She returned a minute later and handed David two aspirin. "I always
carry my own, just in case."
David smiled wryly. "Remind me to give you a raise
when we get back. Do me a favor and go make sure Beaume doesn't
accidentally fire off the thrusters or jettison our water supply, will
you?"
Ellen gave him a grin and a mock salute. "Yes, sir!
And did you remember to tell Anna you'd miss the big day?"
David released a string of profanity. He'd promised
his daughter he wouldn't let space prevent him from attending the most
important moment in her life this time. So much for promises.
Ellen arched an eyebrow at him. "I'll enter that in
the logbook as a 'No.'"
As she floated away toward the cockpit, David
rummaged in a supply cabinet for a bulb of coffee. Sleep would have
been better than caffeine, but Beaume's taunt rang like a bell in his
head, precluding any chance of rest. He glanced at Porter.
The good doctor hunkered over the table, her
knuckles white. The dark, rich chocolate of her hair accentuated the
paleness of her skin. Not even her peach lip-gloss could mask a
bloodless face. She stared vacantly at the wall, her pupils bare
pinpricks.
"Can I get you some coffee, doctor?"
She shook her head without looking up. David tossed
his bulb into the galley's microwave, twisted the dial, and muttered in
frustration when nothing happened. He was damned if he was going to
spend twenty-six days on unheated STS reconstituted food, so he
snatched up a screwdriver.
Porter finally moved her eyes, watching him as he
probed around the back of the microwave. "If Beaume isn't qualified,
should you be letting him fly the ship?"
David left the screwdriver hanging in midair and
glided across the galley. "I'm not. We're on an inertial trajectory;
just coasting. We can't even change our course without a magbeam
powering us. Nothing much to do now but monitor communications and life
support and watch the batteries recharge."
He returned with a handful of tools. After a few
moments poking inside the microwave, he replaced the back, reconnected
the power, and smiled as it burst into life. "I take it you haven't
spent much time in zero gee?"
"It doesn't take a space jockey to decide whether a
system is running safely and efficiently, or whether it represents the
best use of taxpayers' money. And I do have a postgraduate degree in
physics."
The microwave pinged, and David extracted his
coffee. "If the politicians were worried about safety and efficiency,
we wouldn't be sitting in a geriatric ship headed out to Mars at twelve
hours' notice. We'd have a modern, properly maintained shuttle with a
dedicated crew on permanent standby for emergencies."
She took her eyes off the wall and met his, avoiding
the galley's tiny porthole. "Another fancy toy needing tens of millions
of dollars to maintain, just so a handful of 'special' people can play
at being pioneers."
"The Mars colony is run for the benefit of everyone,
not just the people in the space program."
"What nonsense. What would you say if there were a
catastrophic event like the '21 Yellowstone eruption, and the
government was too busy indulging your pipe-dreams to build safe
shelters on Earth? 'Sorry you died, folks, but we just had to
see whether there was life on Mars?'"
What would I say? How about 'Sorry I abandoned
you, Dad?' Maybe space wasn't worth it. David threw the
aspirin down his throat with a swallow of STS coffee substitute. "My
shift's over. If you're too sick to go to the exercise suite today, you
can skip it, but you'll need to be in there by tomorrow at the latest.
I'm going to get some sleep."
* * * *
David swore as the edge of the circuit board sliced
his index finger. He scrounged a rag from his back pocket and applied
pressure to the cut. The first-aid kit probably wouldn't have any
bandages. Like every ship, the McAuliffe boasted a thousand
different subsystems. Half of them he'd upgraded himself during his
years of tinkering, but the rest were as reliable as politicians in
election year. He'd spent almost every waking hour in the fortnight
since launch fixing niggles and glitches.
Ellen glided up and offered him a beverage bulb.
"How goes the repair?"
He took a swig and gave her a black look. "What the
hell is this?"
"Sorry, boss, it's the only caffeine we have left.
It's tea with cream, just the way you like your coffee."
"I take my coffee with cream and sugar."
"Not on this boat. And you'll be taking it black
tomorrow."
David sighed. No coffee, no cream, no sugar, but
enough chicken soup to feed an army. Heaven only knew what else had
been left behind between Beaume's junk sale and the scramble to make
room for the exalted Dr. Porter. At least she had the good grace to
stay out of his way. He spotted Beaume swimming along the corridor
toward them. If only we could have left him behind instead
of the coffee. His shoulders tensed as the pilot drew closer. He
wasn't sure he could make it another eleven days without slugging the
guy. Once Beaume realized David's authority over him didn't extend
beyond the end of the mission, he'd gone from being merely
insubordinate to openly offensive.
"Ship still falling apart faster than you can put it
back together, Longrie?" Beaume didn't quite stop in time to avoid
bumping against Ellen.
She slid away. "Anything else I can get for you,
boss?" she offered. "Need any parts from stores?"
"There aren't enough parts in the whole system to
fix what's wrong with this piece of junk," Beaume said. "Gin's crazy
thinking it'll get us to Mars. I sure ain't taking it coming back."
David glowered at the pilot. "You want to jump ship
early, the airlock's just behind you. Anyway, aren't you supposed to be
on watch in the cockpit?"
"Sure, but I came to tell you Gin's on the horn."
"You could have used the intercom."
Beaume raised his eyebrows in mock surprise. "You
mean it's working again?"
Ellen gave him a disgusted look. "Give it a rest,
you idiot. You broke it in the first place, trying to wire in your
stupid music system."
David gave the petite engineer a glance, wondering
if Beaume had finally made his inevitable pass at her.
The pilot snorted. "Don't talk dumb. I've done it a
thousand times before, and it's never caused trouble."
David pushed himself upright. "This isn't one of
your new commercial landers. You can't jump into the wiring without
checking the layout first. This ship needs care and experience, not
some cowboy fumbling around where he's not qualified to go."
Beaume stiffened. "Hey, who the--"
David cut him off. "Just keep your damn fingers out
of systems you don't understand, all right? I've got enough to do
without cleaning up your messes."
He finished tidying up the circuitry and pulled
himself in the direction of the cockpit. Beaume eased a shoulder
against the companionway wall, putting himself in David's path. With no
handhold to grab, David cannoned into him and spun away from the
pilot's greater bulk, rolling over and bouncing painfully into the
wall. Beaume laughed.
David's patience snapped. He checked his spin with
an outstretched hand, braced his foot against the wall, and thrust
himself towards Beaume, right fist first. With two hundred pounds and
an amateur heavyweight's technique behind it, the uppercut sank in
under Beaume's ribs and doubled him up. David took a wild left hook
easily on his guard, and responded with a sharp double jab to the
bridge of the nose. Beaume's head went back, setting him up beautifully
for the crunching right cross that followed the jab as night followed
day.
It didn't land. Ellen seized his arm on the
backswing and, her foot anchored under a trip bar, pulled him around to
face her. "Enough, both of you! David, stop acting like a kid and go
get Gin's message!"
Beaume recovered his balance, coughing. "Yeah, get
into your stairlift and go see what your night-nurse wants."
David tried to lunge for him, but Ellen kept him
pinned back. "Shut your face before it gets damaged, Beaume," she
snapped. "I'm sick of the pair of you."
David pushed off for the cockpit. A knot of wiring
lay draped across the cockpit deck, vanishing into the back of a
homemade stereo box. David yanked the wires unceremoniously loose,
booted the stereo into the companionway, and set about reconnecting the
intercom. The few minutes' work gave him time to compose himself before
he played the message from Earth. Gin looked years older. Dark
half-circles discolored the skin under her eyes, her mouth was pinched,
and her hair hung slack and dull.
"Bad news, David. We have new cases appearing by the
hour, and much more serious than before. Apparently some of the
contaminated water was used to brew coffee. When it's ingested, it
migrates slowly to the nervous system and eventually the liver and
kidneys, where it has devastating effects. Two of the early cases are
comatose, and the infirmary's medical supplies are running low. They
can keep people stable, but they need the antidote to flush the toxin
out of the tissues. We're sending more antidote on another shuttle, but
she won't arrive until two months after you. Once you dock at the Mars
orbital platform, get your supplies to the surface as quickly as
possible, to tide them over until the relief shuttle arrives. You'll
need Xavier to fly the station lander down. Both colony pilots are
grounded."
Surprised as much by Gin's appearance as her news,
David took a moment before sending a reply. "Message received, Gin.
Don't worry--we'll get the supplies there for everyone who needs them."
David swiveled up from the pilot's chair and came
face to face with Dr. Porter, drifting silently in the cockpit doorway.
"Still think it's just a milk run?" she asked.
* * * *
David tossed his soup bulb into the galley disposal
and drifted toward the door. It was his turn on the exercise wheel, and
he welcomed the diversion. After twenty-five days, they were all on a
short fuse. Porter remained sullen and uncommunicative, Beaume
obnoxious and cruising for another fight, and even Ellen's determinedly
cheerful humming grated on David's nerves.
"David?" Ellen's voice crackled over the intercom.
"Yes?" he barked. What's broken now?
"You have an incoming message."
He pushed off and cruised forward to the cockpit.
Ellen started to unbuckle from the pilot's seat, but David waved her
down. She snatched her handheld as it drifted away. He could make out
enough of the screen to recognize a graphic novel. What happened to
the days when people read real books written with real sentences and
paragraphs, requiring the reader bring some imagination? Now it's all
picture books with captions.
David switched on Gin's recorded message. If
anything, she looked worse than a few days earlier, when she'd reported
three more colonists slipping into critical condition--bringing the
total sick to thirty--and informing him the infirmary's medical
supplies
were almost exhausted. But this time a wan smile played across her
lips. "Congratulations, David! You're a grandfather! Jodie Melissa
Smith was born at 1:42 this morning, weighing eight pounds three
ounces. Mother and baby are both doing great. I sent a balloon bouquet
in your name. Take care. I miss you."
Ellen whooped and punched his arm. "Congrats, old
man! This calls for a celebration! And I know just how to do it. Follow
me."
She led him back toward the galley, pounding on
Beaume's door as she passed and disappearing inside the cabin where she
bunked with Dr. Porter. She emerged a moment later with two Hershey's
chocolate bars and Dr. Porter. Beaume, rubbing sleep from his eyes,
drifted sullenly behind them.
They all crowded into the tiny galley, where Ellen
announced the happy event. She passed out bulbs of juice, and proposed
a toast.
"To Jodie on her birthday. May she have a long and
happy life, and follow in her grandfather's footsteps." Grinning, she
rapped her bulb against David's and the others followed suit. Even
Beaume managed to raise him a convincing smile. After taking a sip,
Ellen unwrapped the chocolate and distributed halves around the group.
"Chocolate," breathed Porter, popping a piece in
her
mouth. She closed her eyes and a moan issued from her lips. David
tucked his own morsel of chocolate into his pocket and watched in
amusement while Porter savored the treat. Finally swallowing, she
opened her eyes to see them all gaping at her. Flame red shot up her
face.
Ellen coughed. "Well, I'd better get back to the
cockpit. Still my watch."
"Don't forget the battery level check's due this
shift," David said. "Earth'll want to know how much we've got in the
tank."
Ellen nodded and drifted out of the galley.
Beaume followed hot on her heels. "Hey, I'm claiming
the reader."
Their voices faded as they bickered their way
through the length of the ship. David shook his head. Good thing they
were only twenty-four hours from the Mars platform, or they might have
their space murder yet.
Porter cleared her throat. "If they're any
indication, we won't arrive a moment too soon. Now that I've made this
trip, I can't understand why anyone would put up with it."
David finished his juice. "It isn't all like this.
Sure, the travel can be a bit uncomfortable, but I warned you the McAuliffe's
not a pleasure barge. The vista on Mars will be worth it, though. It's
like nothing you've ever seen before."
"The cost for us to admire that vista is
astronomical. How can you defend that when so much remains to be done
on Earth?"
David sighed. "It's not just about admiring the
vista on an alien world. Earth's a dangerous place: war, famine,
disease, global warming, asteroid strike, supervolcanoes like
Yellowstone. We're just tenants on planet Earth, and the landlord could
evict us any time he likes. The rent's been rising for decades, and
it's time we took the hint."
Porter raised an eyebrow. "Is there a point to this
poetic aside?"
David tossed his juice bulb into the disposal. "Like
you said, the '21 eruption was a wake-up call. Self-sustaining colonies
would ensure the human race could survive another plague like AIDS or
the '09 flu pandemic, or the second coming of the Yellowstone
supervolcano when it happens."
"And how many lives will be saved in your colonies?
A few hundred? What about the billions on Earth who'd be better
prepared for a disaster if we spent the resources there?"
"I don't buy that. Our budget wouldn't save billions
of people on Earth. Magbeam's cut costs enormously. Sure, the colonies
aren't ready yet, but if we put the effort in, we avoid having all our
eggs in one basket if the worst happens. That's worth a little risk and
discomfort."
Porter laughed. "Maybe you space cowboys want to
risk your necks out here, but ordinary people don't give a damn whether
we have colonies on Mars."
David waved his hand at the walls around them. "This
ship's official name is just some six-figure project code, but years
ago I rechristened her with a tiny red ribbon and a champagne
miniature. She's named for a school teacher of mine, Christa McAuliffe.
She wasn't an astronaut or an adventurer, just an ordinary teacher with
a husband and two children, and an understanding of how space could
open doors for a kid like me. She inspired me to quit my dad's wrecking
yard and go to college, and later to leave a dead-end career in the Air
Force and go into space. She was one of the seven people who died when
the Challenger space shuttle exploded. She never saw space, so
I brought her name with me. Ordinary people do care."
Porter opened her mouth and closed it again. For the
first time, David saw her hostility melt, saw a soft, vulnerable woman
emerge, felt his own pulse quicken.
Ellen's leaden voice spoke over the intercom.
"David, we have another transmission from Earth. One of the Martian
colonists has died."
David's heart sank, and Porter turned sharply away.
"We don't belong out here."
* * * *
David came convulsively awake, adrenaline bursting
through him as the raucous blaring of the Master Alarm shattered the
silence. The lights flickered, and the rotating amber of the alarm
indicators turned the cabin into a chaos of shadow and light. David
wrenched at his sleeping belt and lunged for the door. The ship
lurched, and his head hammered into the bulkhead. Ears ringing, he
hauled himself into the corridor. The ship stopped shaking, but the
lights continued to wax and wane at half their usual intensity. As he
dragged himself toward the cockpit, the other cabin burst open to
reveal a half-dressed and disheveled Dr. Porter, naked terror in her
eyes. David ignored her, pulling himself forward hand over hand. He
wrenched the door open to find the cockpit empty, its darkness
punctuated by a flickering aurora of emergency warning lights, flashing
urgently in myriad colors.
"What's happening?" Porter screamed. Her eyes were
wide and white, and her hands shook.
"Christ knows!" David yelled back. "Some kind of
power failure. Any sign of Ellen or Beaume?"
She displayed enough self-control to shake her head,
at least.
David wormed his way into the cockpit and plucked up
an emergency headset. Its power lights remained dark. "Damn it!
Communications are down. Follow me!" He shouldered Porter aside and
thrust himself along the main companionway toward the engineering
spaces. At the first connecting hatch, he looked back. Porter clung to
the cockpit door, transfixed by the play of warning lights across the
control panels.
"Porter! Move your ass, damn it!" he shouted.
Shocked out of her inaction, she followed, fumbling
clumsily along in his wake.
As David thumped to a halt against the engineering
hatch, a fire claxon burst out, fast and insistent, louder even than
the Master Alarm. He seized a fire mask from the wall and pulled it
over his head, then grabbed an extinguisher and opened the hatch.
Banks of hulking battery cells stood in rows,
electrical relays and monitoring equipment sandwiched alongside. At the
far end of the compartment, from between two batteries, fire poured out
into the central walkway. Unconstrained by gravity, it dipped and
whirled, spreading and splashing outward like a liquid, bright oranges
fading to blue. And over the banshee screeching of the alarms a more
primal sound issued: the scream of a human being in agony and terror.
David thrust himself forward, arrowing along the
central walkway with the extinguisher held out. A quick burst of carbon
dioxide dashed away the drifting droplets of flame, and he thudded home
against the side of one of the batteries. He sucked in a deep breath
and pushed off for the center of the fire, spraying the extinguisher
indiscriminately before him. He hammered into something solid, and felt
choking heat below him. A globule of liquid fire splashed onto his
hand, and he roared in pain.
Another extinguisher opened up, bathing him in white
clouds of CO2, and the heat subsided. David spotted Porter anchored a
few yards from him, extinguisher in hand and a mask over her face.
Over the blaring of the alarms, he shouted to be
heard. "Porter! The fire's out! Just inside the hatch there's an
emergency venting control--a red handle. I can't see a damn thing in
here."
She nodded and dragged herself away. David pulled
himself down to the deck. Billowing clouds of gas masked everything,
forcing him to search by touch, not knowing what he might find. The
screaming had stopped. A sudden howl announced the activation of the
emergency venting fans--thank God they've got a stand-alone power
supply--and the clouds whirled away up to the extraction port in
the
ceiling. After a few moments, the room cleared enough for him to see
again.
"Porter! Get over here! We've got people down!"
* * * *
David stared down at the bundle of sheeting held
fast in a cargo net. Through the plastic, he could no longer see the
charred flesh that used to be her rosy cheeks, the scorched and
blackened teeth that had once been her vivacious smile, but they were
in his mind nonetheless. He'd suffered ten minutes of dry retching
before he'd been able to bag her up, telling himself the tears were
caused by pain from the convulsions in his empty stomach. Ellen Francis
had died on his watch--his watch. As the commander of the vessel
and leader of the crew, the responsibility was inescapably his.
But Ellen had been more than just a colleague. She'd
been friend, comrade, and confidant. She'd been the woman he wished his
daughter could become, from whom she could hardly have been more
different. Anna shunned him, blaming him for the divorce; Ellen always
wrapped him in warmth. Bold, courageous, always smiling, she'd thrived
in space. When the panel turned down her application to join the
Martian colony permanently, she'd just lifted her chin and soldiered
on, taking the rejection a thousand times better than he did.
David secured the cargo net and wiped his eyes.
There was work to be done. He floated into the engineering space where
Ellen had died, levered away an electrical panel, and lost himself in a
labyrinth of burnt wires and molten fuses.
Porter touched him on the shoulder, and he turned to
face her. "How's Beaume?"
She shook her head. "Not good. He's alive, but
barely. He has a burn on his right hand where the electricity entered,
and another on his right instep where it went to ground. If the current
had crossed his heart, he'd have died immediately. I administered drugs
for shock and started IV fluids. What happened?"
David gestured to the monitoring panel in front of
him, illuminated by a spacesuit's spotlight. Rows of charge gauges
registered zero. Even the warning lights below them were dark. "The
ship's entire electrical reserve shorted through them. Shouldn't have
been possible, but the safety interlocks isolating the batteries from
one another weren't activated. I guess it was Beaume who forgot; the
interlocks are automated on the modern shuttles he's used to."
"The charge must have gone through both of them,"
Porter said. "Beaume was lucky and Ellen wasn't. I hope she died before
the fire reached her."
David's jaw tightened. She didn't. I heard her
screaming. "These gauges are shot: I don't even know how much
power's left in the system. There's been charge backstreaming
throughout the ship: systems are shorted or fused everywhere I look.
I've cut us down to minimum life support to conserve what we have."
"We can recharge the batteries from the solar
panels, can't we?"
David squeezed his eyes shut. "There's a nominal
seventy-two hour recharge time. I've already started the process, but
we're not getting much power through, and we've only got sixteen hours
until beam pickup."
"What's the bottom line?"
"It takes about seventy-five percent of the total
battery capacity to run the magnets for a full four-hour deceleration.
The best I can figure, they're at about five percent capacity. They've
been recharging throughout the trip, using the excess energy from the
solar panels, but we lost nearly everything in the accident. Even with
life support at minimum, the panels are so damaged they're only
providing a trickle. Even if we turned life support off and took to
suits, the batteries couldn't gather enough power by the time we
reached the beam pickup point. There just isn't time."
Realization dawned. "Oh no--"
David met her eyes. "We won't have enough power to
decelerate. I'm sorry."
She slumped back, blinking away tears.
"Porter--Victoria, listen. We're not helpless. We've
still got supplies, and the panels are providing enough power to run
minimum life support pretty much indefinitely. They'll send someone out
after us."
"A rescue at nearly forty kilometers a second?" A
look of hope died, stillborn. "I'm not a complete fool, David. We're
not going to make it."
"Don't think that way. They brought Apollo 13 back
safely. We're not--" He stopped.
Porter blinked at him, then voiced his unspoken
thought. "Free return trajectory?"
David nodded, amazed the thought hadn't occurred to
him before. Ellen's dead, damn it. Get your mind back to the
problem. "It could work, too. I'd need to know exactly how much we
have in the batteries, and somehow get a transmission to the Mars
station. But if there's enough juice left, we could run the magnets to
slingshot us around Mars and back towards Earth. That's only a short
interaction: we've gotta be able to get enough power together for it.
By the time we get close to Earth, the batteries should have recharged
enough to decelerate at HEO station. If we can get the orbit right."
He
snatched up a scratch pad and grease pencil and started jotting
figures. "Ever done orbital calculations before?"
Porter shook her head. "I can do the mental
arithmetic if you want, though. I won a state prize for it once."
David grinned and thrust the pad toward her. "All
right, then. Check those numbers. Us engineers can't do big math
without taking our boots off first." He grabbed the access cover for
the battery control panel and scrawled on its surface.
Porter, more animated than he could remember seeing
her, jotted rows of tiny figures along the borders of the pad, brushing
her hair absently back from her eyes and muttering silently. David
looked at her and thought of Gin, whose same intensity had won her the
posting to the Mars colony. He slowed his own scribblings, then reached
out and touched Porter's shoulder.
"Porter, stop. It's no good."
"No, I think it'd work! We'd only need a velocity
change of one or two kilometers per second, and the trajectory's--"
He held up a hand. "I mean, what about the people on
Mars? We're supposed to be thinking about them, not us. Without our
medical supplies, most of them will die. We're on a rescue mission; we
can't just run away."
Porter stiffened. "Wait a minute, Longrie! You can't
just throw away a chance to save us because you think your heroics will
somehow resurrect the colonization program. You're beating a dead
horse. The president won't back the appropriations bill for colonist
transports. In another year, Mars will be abandoned."
"Maybe. But it's still there now. And nearly a
hundred people could die without our help."
"Well, that's tragic," Porter said, "but it was
their own mistake that put them in danger. We're on a crippled ship
with hardly any power. We'll be lucky to save ourselves, let alone a
bunch of colonists. It's simple common sense. If the lifeboat springs a
leak, you don't send it out in a storm. Let the relief shuttle rescue
the colonists."
"The relief isn't due for two months. Without our
supplies, the colonists will die long before it arrives. And what about
Beaume? Do you think he'd survive a two-month trip to Earth? Are you
ready to watch him die?"
"What the hell does it matter whether I want to save
him? You said it yourself: there's no power to decelerate. What do you
want to do--crash into the planet at forty kilometers a second and hope
the medical supplies survive?"
"What if I could think of something--build
something--to extract power from the magbeam?" David mused. "It's
essentially electricity, after all. After we pick up the beam, we could
recharge the batteries before switching the magnets on."
Porter chewed her lip. "But then you wouldn't have
four hours' deceleration time. We'd overshoot."
David grabbed his grease pencil and scribbled
furiously. "Not if we decelerated harder than normal. The platforms are
tested at something like a hundred and twenty percent of normal
operating levels."
"And if it isn't enough?"
"I didn't say it would be easy. But we won't have to
strip off as much velocity as normal. We're not looking to rendezvous
with the magbeam platform: without Beaume there's no one qualified to
pilot their lander."
"So how the hell do we get to the surface--sprout
wings and fly?"
"Back in the Stone Age, before magbeam, the McAuliffe
was the first ship ever to make a successful landing and relaunch from
Mars. The magbeam harness is just strapped on; it's got explosive bolts
so it can be jettisoned for maintenance. If we cut it loose after we
decelerate, she'll be reentry-capable again. Reentry orbit is faster
than the beam platform's orbital velocity, so the deceleration should
be a bit easier--"
"As easy as free return?"
"No, but if we can tell the Mars station to switch
to a high-power beam after we've recharged our batteries, we can push
ourselves into a reentry orbit. Then we use Mars' atmosphere to
aerobrake and glide in."
"You're insane, Longrie. For God's sake, listen to
yourself. You've got a granddaughter now; don't you want to see her?
Because if you try this crazy plan, you never will."
"You'd rather run away?"
"Are you calling me a coward?"
"What would your superiors think if you took the
safe route and let the colonists die? I'd have no choice but to report
you vetoed an alternative."
Her brows drew down. "So now you're threatening me?"
"I'm just asking you to think about the effect this
could have on your career. Think of all the headlines if we save all
those people. Isn't that worth taking a chance for?"
"In other words, 'sign onto my lunatic scheme, or
I'll ruin your career?' Nice try, but I think my bosses are a bit more
objective than that. Why are you so dead set on trying to be a hero?"
"Do you know anything about boxing?"
She shook her head. "What are you getting at?"
"When a boxer's outclassed, he's got two choices. He
can either ride out the punishment, accepting the defeat but not
getting hurt, or he can forget about defending, go forward, and try for
the knockout, even though he could get badly hurt trying. We call that
taking the puncher's chance. When I was twenty-two, I won the Air Force
Heavyweight Championship that way, against an opponent ten times as
good. Got my nose broken, but I won."
"So?"
"This mission is right on the ropes, and way behind
on points. We could take the shots on our guard, but however well we
duck and weave, we still lose. If we take the puncher's chance, we can
win clean: save ourselves, the colonists, everything. But we've got to
risk walking into the big punch for it. We can't let those colonists
die without taking a few swings for them first. What do you say?"
Porter chewed her lip, and David thought he saw a
moment of doubt cross her face. Then her mouth curled. "Goddamn space
cowboy!" She pushed off awkwardly for the engineering compartment door
and banged hard against it on her way out.
* * * *
David tried to pin the circuit board to the work
surface with his wrist. It was no good. The board slipped, and David
cursed as he soldered two channels together. The globule of burning
plastic had left the back of his hand so blistered and throbbing he
could hardly use it. He tossed the board aside into a growing cloud of
botched components hovering next to a sheaf of scribbled notes, then
looked up at the mission clock on the galley wall. With heartless
precision, it announced beam pickup in thirteen hours, forty-one
minutes, and eleven seconds.
Porter had vanished into the cabin they were using
as a makeshift infirmary, refusing to speak. She pulled herself through
the galley occasionally to retrieve more medical supplies for
Beaume--her color fading from furious red toward pallid white with each
circuit--but each time she ignored him. Trying to wait me out. She
knows my solution will take longer than hers. But for all the lives
hanging on it, David would have laughed at their petulance. I may
be going to die out here, but they'll not say I ran away.
The galley door opened, and Porter floundered
silently in, awkwardly upright as always. She said nothing, avoided his
gaze, and dragged herself toward the medical kit. David, focusing more
on her than his work, scraped his hand against the edge of the table.
Porter turned and frowned at him while he clutched
his wrist and cursed. She pulled herself closer and scrutinized his
hand.
"Bloody fool. Why didn't you say something?" She
rummaged in the first-aid box for burn ointment and bandages. By the
time she finished wrapping the hand, the ointment was starting to
relieve some of the throbbing pain.
"Thanks." He flexed the hand, frowning at how the
bandage limited its usefulness.
She scowled and turned to leave.
"That's the first time you've spoken in more than a
hundred and fifty thousand kilometers," David said. "A bit less than
an
hour ago, we came within two million kilometers of beam pickup. I'm
trying to modify the emergency transponder to send out voice messages:
the shipboard communication system's fried. If we can't send messages
to the Mars station, we won't even be able to navigate a free return
trajectory. At least let's do something."
Her scowl softened a fraction. "What's wrong?"
David held up his hand. "Damned burn. I feel like
I'm trying to sign my name with my boxing gloves on. Is Beaume stable?"
She nodded reluctantly. "The medical monitor will
alert us if his condition changes. What can I do?"
David gestured to the cloud of discarded circuit
boards with its magic carpet of sketches and mathematical speculation.
"Grab one of those and hold it steady for me. This should be a
ten-minute job, but soldering's a cast-iron bitch in zero gee. Doesn't
flow properly." He worked as he spoke, hoping she'd ask the vital
question.
She did. "What's the drawing?"
He shrugged. "Idea of mine. Not sure about some of
the science, to be honest; I'm more of a nuts and bolts man."
Porter raised her chin, but held out the circuit
board and said nothing.
"Just turn it over for a second. Thanks. Okay, you
can let go now." David gathered up half a dozen circuit boards and
began slotting them into the transponder. Porter eyed the bundle of
filmies. Come on. Let's see the ambitious, nosy bitch who made my
life hell back in orbit.
While David fitted pins and wires to the
transponder, Porter brushed one of the spoiled circuit boards to one
side, then reached out and pulled the bundle toward her. David
concentrated on the intricate wiring. Plastic rustled as Porter turned
to the second page, and she hummed faintly.
A few minutes later--six minutes and thirty-one
seconds according to the mission clock, or about fifteen thousand
kilometers--David risked an open glance at Porter. She still floated
next to him, clutching the tabletop with one hand. Her eyes riveted on
the sheets, she nearly bumped her shoulders into his chest. David
coughed.
She looked up in surprise, the last of the pages in
her hand. Startled by their proximity, she drew back. "This won't work,
you know. The incoming ion velocity's too high."
"I was thinking of using a collider to slow them
down," David said. "Something like a tapering metal funnel, to slow
them by collision until they're ready to deionize."
Porter shook her head. "It'd need to be huge. What
you want is something like a giant multichannel plate."
"A what?"
"Electron multiplier. Basically an array of slanted
tubes bundled together and coated inside with a scintillating compound.
Electrons collide with the inside wall and set off a charge cascade. We
could use the same thing--without the compound, of course--to slow the
incoming ions before they separate."
David nodded. "I see. The electrons and ions rattle
around like peanuts in a jar, then come out the far end slow enough to
be used. By using narrower tubes, you make the collisions take place in
a smaller space, right?"
She gave a sudden smile. "Exactly. They'd need to be
the right length, though, or the beam would deionize before you got any
current out of it."
"How long?"
"Depends on the angle of slant. I could work out a
formula."
David grinned. "Brilliant. I can get all the tubing
we need out of the plumbing system. So, once we've got the magbeam
slowed down to a manageable level, what then?"
"Well, once you've slowed the beam, you can use an
electric field to separate it into electrons and ions, like you
suggest, and you should get a current between your two collectors. What
were you going to make them out of?"
"I thought something like the mesh screens out of
the ventilation system. The separator I could make out of some metal
blinds from a fan outlet--"
"With the louvers alternately charged positive and
negative," Porter broke in. "I see. You'll need several layers of mesh
for the collectors if you want to keep the efficiency up."
David nodded. "I know. My main concern is heat
dissipation. A full-power magbeam would fry anything we could build. If
the incoming power's too high, it won't self-cool quickly enough. We
need to get the Mars station to run at low power while we're
recharging, then turn the power back up past a hundred percent when
we're ready to decelerate."
"Well, contacting Mars is no problem if your
transponder works."
David chewed his lip. "We'll only be able to send,
not receive. Our long-distance receiver is slag, and the ones in the
spacesuits aren't compatible. We won't know whether Mars received our
message."
"How long do you think the converter would need to
recharge the batteries enough to decelerate?"
"I was hoping you could help me with the numbers. I
did a couple of estimates, but you're the math wiz."
Porter shuffled through the sheets, flailed
helplessly in midair for a moment until David dragged her to a seat,
then set to scratching figures. Every now and then she would snap her
fingers and demand some esoteric figure of merit for the ship or
magbeam: mass, battery capacity, charge ratios, power consumptions, ion
velocities. Without resorting to computer or calculator she jotted for
ten minutes, then triumphantly double-underlined a number.
"Forty-seven minutes, thirty-one seconds!" she
announced. "That's a minimum, of course."
David closed his eyes and silently blessed the
bloody-mindedness of physicists in the face of an intriguing problem.
"Okay. If we call it an hour for safety's sake, we'll still have three
hours' deceleration at a bit under a hundred and thirty three percent
power. We've got thirteen hours to build this thing and get it into
place. I'll need to go EVA to secure it. That's a two-hour job in
itself, so let's get to work."
* * * *
David took a deep breath and started the recorder
attached to his improvised transmitter.
"Mars station, this is the McAuliffe. At
present this is the only communications channel available to us. We do
not--repeat, do not--possess the ability to receive communications on
any
frequency. We have suffered a massive power failure and lack sufficient
battery reserves to undergo a standard deceleration. Two crew are down.
Life support at minimal levels. State of navigation system unknown. We
intend to use a space-mounted electrical converter to recharge our
batteries from the magbeam prior to executing an emergency deceleration
to Mars entry orbit--repeat, Mars entry orbit--for landing and direct
rendezvous with the colony for immediate cargo delivery.
"Execute standard beam pickup, but operate magbeam
at one-zero percent power output for six-zero minutes after
acquisition. Then increase magbeam power output to one hundred and
twenty-nine--that's one-two-nine--percent standard and maintain target
lock for one hundred and eighty minutes. We'll do the rest. Wish us
luck, Mars station."
He set the recording to repeat and dragged himself
from the cockpit.
The build had taken far longer than David
anticipated, but finally the converter was complete. It didn't look
like much for ten hours' work. About the size of an armchair, the bulk
of it was comprised of the big metal blinds from two ventilation ducts.
Each of the pivoting metal leaves was attached to the terminals of a
tiny power supply cannibalized from a spacesuit. To either side, two
metal cylinders jutted. Inside them, behind David's hasty welding, lay
the two ion collectors, built of dozens of layers of fine metal mesh.
Great coils of insulated power cable protruded from each collector, to
carry the electricity they hoped it would generate. He'd spent three
hours making the ion collider, welding four hundred lengths of metal
tubing to the front of the assembly in an array like a narrow slice cut
from a bundle of drinking straws. Heat sinks and cooling fins bristled
here and there, welded on wherever space permitted.
David stood back, trembling from pain and fatigue.
He couldn't count the number of times he'd jarred his burned hand in
the past hours, turning the persistent burning into lances of fire. The
ointment did little to stop the pain, and edema puckered the inflamed
skin, swelling his hand to half again its normal size. Porter hung next
to him, dirty and exhausted but with a curious glow about her, like a
child with a new finger-painting to show her parents. Between them they
pushed their creation towards the airlock.
David pulled a stretchy, one-piece spacesuit
undergarment from the rack, then stripped down. He glanced up to see
Porter averting her eyes, red creeping up to her face. He pulled on the
skintight pants and tried to insert his burned and bandaged hand into
the sleeve. After barely an inch, he stopped, weeping in agony as the
tight material tore at his burnt hand, setting it bleeding.
"Longrie? Are you all right?"
He gasped, trying to recover his breath. "Hold the
sleeve straight for me. I'll try again."
She did, but the tight suit still crushed the
bandage against the burn. He stopped her, breathing hard. "It's no
good. Even if I can get it on, I won't be able to use the thruster
controls or tools properly. You'll have to do the EVA instead."
All color drained from Porter's face.
* * * *
Porter clutched the edge of the galley table, her
knuckles white. The mission clock ticked away behind her, unnoticed.
After four weeks in space, he should have guessed. All the signs were
there: she never admired the view from a porthole, always aligned
herself with the gravitational axis of the furniture in the ship,
always moved between handholds without drifting free.
David sucked his teeth. "Why the hell did you insist
on coming?"
"What was I supposed to do? Tell my boss, 'Sorry, I
can't go on the inspection tour because I'm afraid of falling. Your
Assistant Director of Space and Aeronautics is terrified of space?' I'd
have been the laughing stock of Washington. Besides, my psychologist
told me I could be desensitized if I exposed myself to space. Damn
crackpot. Let him take a walk off the edge of the Grand Canyon, see how
he likes it."
"You fell from the edge of the Grand Canyon?"
She nodded, empty-eyed. "I was nine. My father took
us on vacation there. My brothers wanted to use the binoculars and
stargaze. We sneaked out of the tourist area after dark and walked
along the edge for a while. We were looking up, pointing out the
constellations. I stepped over the rim.
"I hit a ledge about twenty-five feet down, broke my
arm, and fractured two vertebrae. I lost the use of my legs and only
managed to stay on by clutching some weed growing out of the rock face.
The rescue squad took two hours to reach me. All I could see were the
stars above me and the darkness below, waiting to swallow me whole."
She shivered. "Now you see why I can't go out in a spacesuit?"
David spoke quietly. "Even if we turn off life
support this minute, the solar panels won't be able to gather enough
power for a free return trajectory. If we don't get the converter into
place, we die. It's that simple."
Porter turned haunted eyes on him. "I'm sorry."
Three hours and twenty-one minutes until beam
pickup, the mission clock warned. David cast about helplessly. Take
the puncher's chance.
"Your therapist thought you could get over this by
being exposed to what you fear most, did he? Let's try it. We'll start
slow, maybe just looking out a porthole. I'll be there to talk you
through every moment of it, from start to finish."
Porter gaped at him. "You're crazy!"
He barked a short laugh. "Do you have a better idea?"
* * * *
David locked Porter's helmet into place. She stared
out through the plastic shield, her dark eyes wide with frightened
anticipation. He touched a control and was momentarily blinded when the
four spotlights mounted around the helmet blazed to life. He gave her a
thumbs-up and squeezed out through the airlock's inner door, then swung
it home and spun the locking handle. Over the past half hour he'd
coaxed her into the clumsy carbon-fiber suit, pushed her to gaze out a
porthole while floating free, and now had her ready to open the outer
airlock--he hoped. She'd cursed him a blue streak throughout.
He pulled the communications cap from another
spacesuit over his head. "Porter, give me a radio check."
"I can hear you."
"Great. I'm going to pump the air out. You don't
need to do anything." He pressed the Atmosphere Purge control and
heard
the whirr of the extraction pumps. She didn't know he was running
internal life support at a dangerously low level just to hoard enough
power to run them. He hoped a handheld atmospheric sensor would warn
him if the air became too stale to breathe.
"Okay, Porter, we're ready to go EVA now. Do you
remember what I told you?" He wished he could see through her
visor-mounted camera, but with the ship's systems down, crackly
suit-to-suit radios provided their only link. All he could do was wait
by the cargo bay airlock and talk her through the operation.
Her voice wavered. "Yes. I'm pulling the external
release handle now."
The residual atmosphere in the airlock whistled away
out of the hatch. Porter's breathing accelerated as she looked out into
the vacuum of space.
"You're doing great," David assured her. "Clip the
converter to your belt." He looked through the airlock porthole and
saw
her latch the bulky instrument onto her spacesuit's retaining harness,
next to the connection for her safety line. "Okay. Are you ready to go
outside?"
Porter drew what sounded like a steadying breath.
"Why the hell did I let you talk me into this?"
"Because I'm your Prince Charming. Use the grab
handles along the walls to pull yourself towards the hatch. Take it
slowly and don't forget you need to stop the converter as well as
yourself when you get there."
"All right, I'm at the hatch. I can see outside."
After a pause, she went on, quavering. "My God, it's full of stars."
David grinned. "Sure it is, Commander Bowman. To the
right of the hatch is your first handhold. Grab it with your right
hand, then bring your left hand across your body and reach for the next
handhold beyond."
He glanced down at his watch. In just under two
hours and forty-five minutes, the magbeam would reach out to them. If
the converter wasn't there to meet it, he and Porter would die more
alone than two humans had ever been. He looked up. Porter hadn't moved.
The converter drifted to the end of its short tether, tugged at her
frozen figure, and began its slow return trip to her side.
"Porter, reach for the handhold."
Her raspy breathing filled his earpiece.
"Take the handhold in your right hand and swing
across to the next one with your left. Victoria! Do you hear me?"
An alarm buzzed, barely audible over her panicky
breathing. If it were a warning from her suit, he would have heard it
more clearly. Abruptly, it stopped. Frowning, he glanced around the
cargo bay.
A squeal came through the earpiece. "Ow! Damn
contraption! Who the hell built this heap of junk?"
David peered into the now empty airlock. "What
happened?"
"Your little fixit toy nearly sliced my suit open
with its damn pointy corners. How the hell am I supposed to drag this
thing all the way out to the magbeam ring?" A long string of profanity
followed.
"Try shortening the tether." He could hear her
ragged breathing and continuing mutters. "How far have you gotten?"
"Not far enough. This is impossible. I think I'm
going to be sick."
Not with the meds I pumped into you, you're not.
"Just take slow, deep breaths. Let yourself hang in space for a minute.
Focus on relaxing. You'll make faster progress if you're relaxed."
The faint buzz of the alarm reached him again. He
pulled off the communications cap, using both ears to pinpoint the
sound. To the left, he decided, somewhere up near the engineering
section. He drifted to the hatch. As he reached it, the buzzing
stopped. Placing the cap back on his head, he heard Porter setting off
a new string of curses.
"Calm down, Victoria, and tell me what's wrong."
"The damn tether is caught on something! I'm still
five meters from the magnet harness, and I can't go any farther."
David returned to the airlock, and inspected the
windlass through the porthole. Plenty of line remained on the spool,
but the line trailing out the door stood taut. "Victoria, can you see
the full length of your line?"
"Yes, of course I can see it. There's nothing else
out here. It must be snagged inside the airlock."
David groaned. Just what they needed--a jammed
windlass. Fifteen minutes for her to return to the airlock, ten minutes
to repressurize, then twenty-five more to pump the lock out again and
return to the magbeam harness. Fifty minutes wasted, plus however long
it took him to fix the windlass. Too long. He took a deep breath.
"Victoria, your tether's stuck. You'll have to cast
yourself loose."
The shriek in the earpiece nearly deafened him.
"What? Do you think I'm a lunatic? I'm not about to cast off my safety
line!"
"We're out of time and out of options. Either you
unclip the tether, or we die a hundred million kilometers beyond the
asteroid belt." The alarm buzzed indistinctly, barely audible over
Porter's protestations. David pushed off for the engineering section.
Maybe the life support systems were tripping an atmospheric sensor. His
handheld sensor hovered between green and yellow.
"Look, Victoria, the suit has thrusters built in. If
you lose your grip on the handholds, you can use them to push you back
to the ship, just like I explained to you. You're safer than walking
down the street in D.C. Get yourself back to the handholds, unclip your
tether, and pull yourself on to the magnet."
More curses, then, "All right, I'll do it."
David grinned. "Atagirl. You'll be fine, I promise."
The radio crackled in his ear. "Longrie, what's that
noise?"
The alarm stopped, and David looked around intently,
trying to imagine what it could have been. He shook his head. "Nothing
important. Just my radio. Banged it and got some feedback going."
"Well, don't do it again. I nearly jumped out of my
skin." Porter's voice eased, and a few minutes of silence passed. "I'm
at the magnet now. How much time do we have?"
David looked at his watch. "You're doing fine. Just
make sure you get the converter securely attached as quickly as you
can."
He continued trekking through the engineering
spaces, checking subsystems and sensors. Nothing registered an alarm.
Porter's scream stiffened every muscle in his body. "Victoria, are you
all right? What happened? Victoria?"
"Damn! The converter is drifting away! I just let it
go for a second to get a tool out. I can't reach it!"
He stifled a curse. "How far away is it?"
"Two meters. I can't reach it from the handholds.
It's getting farther away all the time."
David took a breath. "Victoria, let go of the
handhold and use your suit thrusters to reach the converter before it
goes any farther."
"I can't."
He heard her sob, pictured tears welling in her
eyes. That she'd gotten this far was nearly miraculous, but if she let
the converter get away, it would all be for nothing. "You can,
Victoria. You can do this. It'll be just like when you were on the
tether. Use the thrusters to go to the converter, clip it onto your
belt again, then head back to the ship."
Sheer terror swelled her voice. "No, I can't. What
if the suit thrusters run out of gas? I'll be stuck out here, falling
forever."
David thought about how he'd handled young boxers
afraid to fight on after a knockdown. His watch showed less than two
hours to go, and the job of bolting the converter in place wasn't even
begun. They were in the final round and needed to deliver the knockout
blow, but the clock was ticking down towards the bell--a bell that
would
signal their deaths, as well as those of Beaume and God knew how many
colonists.
"You're not falling, Victoria. You're
swimming--swimming between the stars. There's no place to fall to, no
planets to suck you down to their surface. Think about swimming,
Victoria. You're not afraid of falling when you swim, are you?"
She sniffed, and then answered in a small voice.
"No, I don't fall when I'm in the water."
"And you aren't falling now; you're floating. Use
the thrusters to help you swim to the converter. Think of it as a life
buoy. Swim to the life buoy and bring it back to the ship. Do it now,
Victoria, before the life buoy is too far away."
She sniffed again and hiccupped. He thought he
detected the sound of teeth grinding. After several minutes of heavy
breathing, she reported she'd retrieved the converter. David gave a
silent prayer of thanks. "Well done, Victoria. Now go back to the
magnets and secure it. We don't have much time."
"We've done it, David. We've done it! The
converter's in place!"
Porter beamed as David helped her out of the
airlock. Fatigue lined her face, and her hands shook as she removed the
outer shell of the spacesuit, but her eyes were wide and her voice
slurred as if she was high on drugs. David admitted to himself that the
clinging undergarment looked a lot better on her than it did on him, as
did the crazy grin they shared. No sooner was she free of the spacesuit
than she threw her arms around him, the strength of her embrace
pleasantly surprising, her lips close to his. To look at her, she could
have been through a war, but new confidence gleamed in her eyes. He
hugged her tightly, and she squeezed his shoulder, feeling the muscle,
looking at him with lips slightly parted.
"You did great, Porter. I'm proud of you."
She kissed his cheek. "Vicky," she whispered. "My
friends call me Vicky."
"Vicky." He tried the name for size, and found it
fitted her. "Well, Vicky, I think you've done enough to deserve a
little prize."
She looked up at him from under long eyelashes. "And
just what did you have in mind?" Her fingers touched his earlobe,
stroking gently.
David felt his face redden, and fumbled in his
pocket. He pulled out the lump of chocolate handed out by Ellen at
their abortive celebration, and proffered it to Porter with an
apologetic smile. "I tried to get something better, but the
confectioners don't deliver this far."
The fragment was gone from his hand before he saw
her move, and suddenly he was pressed back against the wall with her
legs braced against him and her fist twisted in the front of his shirt.
"You've been hiding this from me all this time?" she demanded, her
face
savage. "All this time?"
David recoiled from her fury, then jerked in
surprise as she burst out laughing.
"Fooled you!" She broke the bar into two pieces and
held a fragment up to his mouth with delicate fingers. With a pang of
guilt about how it would have looked to Gin, he let her feed him the
piece of cheap chocolate. Ecstasy overtook her face as she consumed the
other, and she pressed herself against him harder, then licked her
fingers lasciviously clean, one by one, right in front of his face.
She gave a rapturous smile. "Not bad, but shouldn't
you have ordered Mars bars?"
He kissed her. There didn't seem to be any other
response. He meant it to be momentary, but her arms locked around his
neck and held him until they were both out of breath. They only parted
when his watch let out a beep. She looked at him in gentle query.
"Five minutes until beam pickup," he explained,
regretfully. "It's game time. You remembered to switch on the power
supply to the separators, didn't you?"
She flicked his ear. "I'm not incompetent, David."
He smiled. "No, Vicky, you're not." He pushed off
for the engineering section, trying hard to forget the taste of
chocolate on her lips.
Porter trailed along behind him, and bounced to a
halt as he stopped at a voltmeter attached to one of the battery
panels. "When will we know if this converter of yours worked?"
"If we don't explode in the first seconds, we'll
know when this little gizmo bleeps at us."
"Explode! You never said anything about an
explosion!" She grabbed his shoulder and spun him around.
There was no point in deceiving her any longer. "If
Mars didn't get our message, and picks us up with a full power beam,
the batteries'll get a high voltage spike before the converter melts.
It could trigger an explosion. I don't know about you, but I'd rather
go quickly than starve to death in the outer reaches. Nothing I could
do about it, so I didn't think you needed to know."
She swelled up in anger, then just as abruptly
deflated. "Thanks, but I'd rather have known."
David shrugged, and took her proffered hand. "One
minute." They clung to each other, staring at the voltmeter, lying
blank and silent as the time ticked down.
"Thirty seconds," David said. "Fifteen. Ten. Five.
Time."
Silence. No explosion, no sound from the voltmeter.
"Time plus five. Time plus ten. Plus twenty." He
looked down at the frightened woman clutching him. "I'm sorry, Vicky.
I'm truly--" The ventilation fans sputtered, then sped up, pushing
cool
cabin air over them both. David opened his mouth just as the voltmeter
sounded. Its electronic bleep could have been a siren's song for the
effect it had on them. Porter whooped like a cheerleader, and David
threw back his head, roaring in triumph.
"That one's for you, Christa!" he shouted, then
turned to kiss Porter again, who grinned like a fool. "It's working,
Vicky," he said. "We just scored our first knockdown. Let's make sure
the bastard doesn't stand back up again."
* * * *
"Yes! Now we're motoring!"
Porter stumbled into the cockpit, no longer
submerged in Stygian gloom, but filled with bright lights and video
displays. Above the viewscreen, the mission clock announced the beam
pickup was fifty-three minutes old, while another ticked down towards
zero, marking the time when they would begin decelerating. "What's up?"
David gestured to a tiny video screen. Columns of
numbers propped up the title InsertionCourse1. "Navigation came back
online. We won't have to manually steer the insertion course; we can
let the microchips do the thinking."
"What about the other systems?"
"I've just asked the computer to run a full
diagnostic; the results'll be back any second. Damn, but this beats
digging around with a voltage probe." The biggest video screen lit up,
rows of numbers cascading down it. David touched a control and the
avalanche froze.
"Let's see now," he said. "Attitude thrusters
operational. Deceleration magnets operational. Liquid recycling and
cargo heaters down. Food refrigeration down, cabin temperature sensors
busted. None of those matter. Propellant feed, power couplings, heat
shield sensors, landing parachutes: all operational. The radio's still
down, but we're broadcasting position telemetry again."
Porter grinned. "We have what we need, then? We're
good to go. Aren't we?"
David scrolled through the diagnostic screens.
"We're--" He stopped, his mouth hanging open. "Oh, shit."
"What? What isn't working?"
"It's the inductor coils for the magbeam harness."
"The whats?"
"Little gizmos that fire the explosive bolts to
break the contacts between the magbeam harness and the hull. They must
have burnt out when the batteries discharged. We'll have to replace
them."
"Why not just leave the harness in place?"
David shook his head. "Can't. It'd make us
aerodynamically unstable. We'd burn up in the atmosphere. The coils've
gotta be replaced."
"How long will that take?"
He frowned. "I don't know. I've never done it
before."
"What? I thought you knew this ship!"
"This ship has over a million working parts. Those
coils are about the least important of them."
"Not right now, they're not. Right now I'd say
they're pretty damn vital. What are you going to do?"
"I'll have to get a look at one of the original
coils, and help you make some new ones to match them."
"You want me to make them?"
"No choice. I can't do delicate work with my hand.
But we're only talking about half a dozen metal coils, about the size
of your finger. We've got three hours to replace them."
"What if I had a better idea?"
"Like what?"
"Screw landing on Mars. Set a course to dock with
the platform instead."
David's teeth clenched. "We can't get to the surface
from the platform. I can't fly their lander, and Beaume's in no state
to do it for us. The sick people are on Mars. The medicine to save them
is on this ship. We're going to Mars."
"You're going to risk crashing into the surface when
we could dock safely with the station?" Panic tinged Porter's voice,
and her eyes implored him. "At least dock for a few days to fix things.
Then, if you're still bent on this kamikaze mission to the surface,
you'd have a fighting chance."
"Their medical supplies have already run out. I'm
not letting anyone else die waiting for us." He reached for her.
"Vicky--"
She wrenched away from him. "Don't you dare call me
that. You're going to get us both killed. We've got three hours, but
what if we started on an insertion course and it turned out we couldn't
fix the coils? We wouldn't be able to change course to dock with the
platform, would we?"
She read the answer from his face.
"So, we'd be plunging down toward Mars, knowing we
were going to burn up and not a damn thing we could do about it. Right?"
"Six little coils, Porter. Will you let them say we
were beaten by six little lengths of wire? That we gave up after coming
this far?" He nodded at the mission clock. "Three minutes until
deceleration starts. Time to make a choice. Are you going to go for the
knockout?"
She paused, frowning at the navigation computer. He
could see the play of emotions across her face.
"I'll make your damn coils," she snapped, and
stormed out of the cockpit.
Stifling a smile, David punched the Execute key to
start the insertion program and trailed her back through the ship.
He felt weight return as the deceleration began, and
for the first time in a month, "up" and "down" meant something again.
At first he felt crushed, even though it was barely a quarter of what
he carried every day of his life. After so much time watching Porter
fumble around in weightlessness, it was a surprise to recall how
gracefully she moved with gravity on her side.
He levered the access panel open. The metal tunnel
beyond was barely wide enough for his shoulders, and with only one
hand, he needed Porter's help to pull himself into it. He pushed a
flashlight between his teeth, and crawled.
Fifteen minutes later, he dropped a melted and
blackened wire coil onto the galley table. "We need to make six copies
of this. It's just a copper coil with connections soldered on, but the
dimensions need to be just right. The problem will be reinstalling
them; we'll have to fit three each to save time. They're tricky to get
at, along tunnels around the ship's perimeter."
"How do I find them?"
"I marked up the first tunnel with tape arrows while
I was fetching this; the others are all the same. But let's get started
making the coils; I'll explain as we work."
Porter proved adept at twisting the copper wire into
the correct spiral shape, but the connections were fiddly and
intricate, and her soldering needed constant supervision. After an
hour, they were only onto the third coil.
"Hold the iron to the wire for a few seconds
first,"
David said. "The solder'll flow better when you--" He stopped as the
buzz of an alarm reached his ears. "Damn thing," he said. "It went off
while you were on EVA. It kept stopping whenever I tried to find it.
See--it's stopped already. Can't be anything important."
Porter swore as the alarm went off again, making her
slip. This time it didn't stop, but kept sounding insistently. With a
horrifying jolt, David realized at last where it was coming from.
The alarm blared as Beaume's cabin door slid open,
and a red light pulsed on top of the medical monitoring unit. The EKG
trace should have shown its distinctive pattern of dips and spikes
separated by long flat stretches. Instead, a continuous ripple played
across the monitor. Other indicators told a story of failing
respiration and blood pressure. Beaume must have been teetering on the
edge of cardiac arrest for hours, tripping the alarm for a few seconds
at a time. He lay on his pallet like a corpse, muscled chest sunken and
unmoving, eyes staring blankly at the ceiling.
David seized the med kit and unpacked the
defibrillator, then thrust an ampoule of epinephrine at Porter.
"Add that to his IV line and open the pump wide."
While she injected the drug into the line, he pulled
the defibrillator paddles from the charge unit and ripped open a
package of conductive gel with his teeth. Porter stepped in and
squeezed the gel onto one of the paddles. The defibrillator beeped,
signaling its readiness. David spread the gel on both surfaces, then
forced them against Beaume's chest and punched the buttons in the
handles. Beaume jerked violently, his massive shoulders gouging at the
pallet, but only flat red lines trailed across the monitor. Porter
strapped a respirator mask over Beaume's face and squeezed the bag,
forcing air into the pilot's lungs.
When the defibrillator beeped its ready signal
again, David traded places with Porter and sent another shock through
Beaume's body. This time his heart sputtered back to life, showing
regular beats interspersed with erratic ones. The blood pressure
reading climbed slowly and shallow breathing registered on the monitor.
David sagged, feeling suddenly old and tired.
* * * *
Beaume went into arrest twice more during the
fabrication of the coils, and each time he was harder to resuscitate,
wasting precious minutes. David brushed sweat from his brow and glanced
at his watch every few seconds.
Porter put down the soldering iron. "That's the last
coil. How long have we got to install them?"
"Forty minutes. We'll have to hurry."
The medical monitor sounded again. Racing to the
cabin, David arrived to see the heartbeat indicator jump, squiggle, and
flatten. Porter loaded another ampoule of epinephrine in the IV line
while he flipped on the defibrillator. As soon as it charged, he
applied the paddles to Beaume. No luck. Blood pressure and respiration
fell off the chart. Porter cursed as she struggled with the respirator.
David added his own litany of malediction under his breath. On the
cabin wall, the clock ticked ever closer to atmospheric contact.
David grabbed Porter's arm. "We've got to stop."
She shook her head. "We can still save him."
"There's no time."
"I'll stay with him."
"No good. I can't install all six coils in forty
minutes." The defibrillator's beep interrupted them. Might as well
give the poor bastard one last chance. David set the paddles in
place and squeezed the buttons down.
"Time's up." He dropped the paddles without waiting
to see the results, and hurled himself out of the cabin, towards the
first access panel, with Porter on his heels. He handed her three coils
and helped her into the tunnel. As she pulled her legs in and grabbed a
voltmeter, the monotonous buzz of the alarm stopped, replaced by the
irregular beep of a heartbeat.
* * * *
Mars loomed large, a great, rusty disk filling the
viewscreen from edge to edge. David muttered a silent prayer and pulled
the magbeam harness release handle. The McAuliffe shook with a
series of sharp cracks as the explosive bolts fired. Six red lights
flickered, went blank, then turned to green. Weight vanished as the
ship's drive floated free, and the view tilted as the McAuliffe
oriented herself to meet the Martian atmosphere.
David turned to Porter, strapped into the cockpit
next to him. "It worked. The harness is loose. The referee just raised
our glove."
The viewscreen washed white, and a rumble of thunder
drowned out Porter's reply as the aerobraking began. David closed his
eyes while the ship shook and bucked around him, and the heat and the
roaring propelled him back through the years, to a time when he'd stood
in front of a crowd, tired and bloody but unbeaten, in a boxing ring
under the desert sun.
* * * *
A combination of fatigue and Martian gravity
anchored David and Porter in their seats while they watched a tank-like
vehicle roll across the rocky surface to meet them. The wind whistled
softly over the McAuliffe, like a new father soothing a
restless infant. A cloud of red dust roiled up from the vehicle's
treads and spun away to the south, whirling off toward the star-crowned
horizon of an alien world.
David turned his gaze to Porter. "Welcome to Mars,
Vicky."
* * * *
David fastened his seatbelt and gazed out at the
disk of blue and white visible through the shuttle window. In a few
short hours, he and Porter would be landing at Dulles spaceport to face
more cheering crowds. In the evening, they were due at a presidential
dinner. It seemed like the whole world had listened to his emergency
broadcast, prayed for the fate of the colonists, watched through the
Martian cameras while they landed.
But however much the public and media trumpeted his
supposed heroism, six months after the fact, saving the Martian
colonists seemed a hollow victory. David couldn't shake the feeling
that Ellen should have been there with him. On arriving at HEO the day
before, he'd found Gin waiting--waiting to deliver his decommissioning
papers. He'd passed the mandatory retirement age for active space duty
during the flight home from Mars, and was sentenced to a life's
imprisonment on the surface of the Earth, with no right of appeal. He'd
boarded the shuttle headed for LEO after only a few minutes' good-bye.
She'd leave for Mars soon, to take up her new post as Colony
Coordinator. She'd be fine, he was sure. They'd probably exchange
messages at first, then she'd become too submerged in the work to
remember him, casting aside her old life in the Space Transit System
for a new one in the colony.
Beaume had survived. STS was set to settle quietly
to prevent any claim of malfeasance, even though the inquest suggested
Beaume's own careless attempt at a battery check had caused the
accident. He'd soon be sitting pretty in some tropical paradise on
Earth, surrounded by beautiful women who only wanted his money and not
the cripple in the wheelchair. David didn't envy him.
"You're drinking in that view like it's a desert
oasis."
David turned his attention to Porter, still fumbling
with the straps of her harness. She'd never mastered weightlessness
despite all the long hours traveling to Mars and back. He reached over
to help her.
"Thanks." She flashed him a smile and glanced out
of
the porthole. "These presidential receptions are only one-night stands.
You'll be back up here before you know it."
The mournful look on his face must have revealed the
truth.
"You're not coming back, are you?" she said. "Oh,
David, I'm sorry. I know how much you love it out here. What will you
do?"
"I don't know. I'd like to make sure that Christa
McAuliffe, Ellen Francis, and the two colonists who died on Mars aren't
forgotten when some new president decides to pull the plug on the space
program. Perhaps I'll do the rounds of the talk shows, let Hollywood
make their vid of my life story, and advocate like hell for more space
investment while people still remember who I am."
"Hm. Fame's a fleeting thing, and fans can prove
fickle in the long run."
David looked again out the window. "The '26
elections are coming up. I could file for the Senate seat left vacant
after Senator Ferrera's heart attack. A senator could be a powerful
friend to the space program. I've never really seen myself as the
Washington type, but maybe I should strike while the iron's hot."
Porter lifted an eyebrow. "And your kids at the gym?
Your grandchild? Will you still find time for them?"
"Wyoming's a short hop from Washington by scramjet.
Besides, how much more good could I do from Congress? Keeping space
open as a possibility for those kids is just as important as what I do
at the gym. What will you do when you get back?"
Porter gave him a crafty look. "I've been offered a
promotion from Assistant Director of my division to Associate Director
of Technology."
"Sounds impressive."
"One step below the top; without even a spell as
Deputy Associate Director first. And the director's already made it
clear he won't stay for a second term when the president carries the
'28 elections. I'll be nicely positioned to move into the open slot."
"So the headlines helped a little, did they?"
She blushed.
"The president is bound to ask your opinion of the
space program at the dinner tonight," David said. "What will you tell
her?"
"Well, I didn't find anything significantly wrong
with STS, however much I wanted to. There's no indication of
malfeasance, fraud, or inefficiency. The only problems are down to
underfunding. It'll be up to her to decide what to do with my report.
What will you advise her to do?"
David narrowed his eyes. She was getting at
something. "I'll tell her to back the Mars colony one hundred percent."
Porter nodded. "And what will you offer her in
return? It would be political suicide for her to resist expanding the
Mars colony transport system right now, but with all the attention
you'll be focusing on disaster contingencies, and her '24 campaign
promises about building arcologies, she'll need something to
demonstrate her commitment to people stuck here on Earth. She also has
to balance the budget. You'll need to offer her something of equal
value."
He shook his head in confusion. "Give me an example."
"Tell her to pull out of the US/EU Jovian expedition
and use its budget to build arcologies on Earth."
"The Jovian expedition is the next step toward
colonies at places beyond Mars. I can't recommend it be cancelled!"
Porter snorted. "Amateurs. Always thinking they can
have it all. If you want to survive more than five minutes in
Washington, learn that life is about compromise."
David opened his mouth, closed it, then nodded
ruefully. "All right, I'll do it. I'll recommend postponing the new
Jovian expedition in favor of expanding the Mars colony."
Did he detect disappointment? Porter's face settled
into the old, frosty look he hadn't seen since their landing on Mars.
David gazed out the window for a few moments. "We can launch the Jovian
expedition much more economically from an independent Martian colony,
anyway."
Beside him, Porter shook with peals of laughter.
* * * *
Jodie looked out the shuttle window at the receding
Earth, thankful that her husband and son were waiting safely on Mars to
begin their trip to the new colony on Ganymede. Below, a cancerous
black cloud obscured half of Montana and most of Wyoming, blanketed
South Dakota and Nebraska, then crossed the Mississippi, creeping
relentlessly eastward. The eruption of the Yellowstone supervolcano was
only eleven hours old, but already death tolls were rising. The
vulcanologists didn't know when it would stop, or how much of the world
would be left.
She glanced down at the pamphlet in her hand, read
her grandfather's name on the cover: David William Longrie. She'd
attended his funeral service with her mother only the day before. So
many years spent as a champion of the space colonization effort,
warning against an event exactly like the one occurring now. At least
he hadn't perished in it the way his own father had died in the '21
eruption. How ironic the eruption should start on the day of his
memorial service.
Jodie's gaze returned to the window. She hoped her
mother would be safe in the arcology under Mexico. The evacuation of
the selected few was underway, starting the week before when the first
rumblings sounded deep beneath the earth. That nice doctor who'd given
her mother the arcology lottery ticket five years ago had attended the
service as well. Jodie couldn't remember her name. Although elderly,
she'd been ramrod straight, a quiet pillar of strength among the
mourners, paying her respects to a great man.
Copyright © 2006 James Grayson and Kathy
Ferguson
[Back to Table of
Contents]
Science Fact: Solar System Commuter
Trains: Magbeam Plasma Propulsion by James Grayson & Kathy
Ferguson
In the age of the Internet, when communication moves
faster, when cramjet technology makes it possible to be anywhere on the
planet in a matter of hours, we still don't have the ability to
investigate our nearest planetary neighbors in anything less than
years, and then only when the planets are in optimum alignment. With
the success of SpaceShipOne, the first reusable manned spacecraft to
reach orbital altitudes twice in a two-week period, we stand on the
cusp of a new age, where getting people and supplies into orbit may
become as commonplace as flying from New York to California.
Once we reach orbit, how do we travel around our own
neighborhood and beyond in a safe, fast, and cost-effective manner?
Because of the risk and immense up-front cost of even a single manned
space mission, off-world colonies and interstellar travel have long
been regarded as pipe-dreams by the astronautical establishment. But,
at the annual meeting of the NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts
(NIAC) in March 2005, Professor Robert Winglee, of the Earth and Space
Sciences Department at the University of Washington, proposed a new
kind of ion propulsion system that may make fast solar system travel
and interstellar exploration a reality, a system that could allow
astronauts to make a round trip to Mars in less than a hundred days
[1]. He calls it MagBeam.
Ion Propulsion Systems
When a gas--usually argon or xenon--is sufficiently
energized, electrons are stripped away from their nuclei, and the gas
becomes charged (or ionized). Because of its charge, this cloud
of ionized particles (or plasma) can be accelerated to very
high speeds (tens of kilometers per second) by exerting a force on them
with an electric or magnetic field. If these fast-moving ions are
directed out of a spacecraft, they impart a force to the spacecraft
according to Newton's Third Law. This approach does not produce very
high levels of thrust, but it does have much lower fuel consumption
than traditional chemical rockets, allowing ion drive spacecraft to
continue accelerating for much longer periods of time. Thanks to the
very high speed at which the ions are ejected, ion thrust is ultimately
capable of propelling a spacecraft much faster than chemical propellant
drives.
Using a stream of ions to propel a spacecraft is not
a new concept. It was used in the Russian Zond-2/1 satellite in 1964,
and the USAF/TRW Vela/2 craft in 1965[2]. Satellites presently in orbit
around Earth use ion propulsion to keep themselves in position and
prevent their orbits from decaying over time. On a larger scale, the
Deep Space-1 (DS-1) vessel, launched in 1998, used an ion drive for its
flyby of the asteroid Braille and Comet Borrelly, while the Dawn
mission will carry three separate ion drives for its flyby of Vesta and
Ceres when it sets off in May 2006 for the asteroid belt beyond Mars
[3,4].
Helicon Plasma Propulsion vs.
Electrode Ion Drives
All of the systems on these spacecraft use what are
known as electrode ion drives. The typical design is called a gridded
ion drive [2]. These use an electron source to energize the fuel gas,
splitting it into negatively charged electrons and positively charged
ions. A metal grid, held at high voltage, attracts the positively
charged ions, which pass through the grid and out of a nozzle at high
speed, creating thrust for the craft. Meanwhile, the electrons are
gathered and reintroduced into the exhaust to neutralize it and prevent
charge building up on the spacecraft. The voltage of the grids can be
adjusted to vary the thrust, varying the velocity imparted to the ions.
The problem with this approach is that to get the
high levels of thrust needed to move larger payloads, the power
requirements and grid sizes become so large that they're no longer
practical [5]. And, as the level of thrust is increased, the grid
electrodes begin to erode, limiting the useful lifetime of the system.
By contrast, the MagBeam system proposed by
Professor Winglee uses a helicon plasma source to create thrust, rather
than a gridded ion drive. A helicon consists of a quartz tube with a
radio antenna wrapped around it [6], into which gas is injected (again,
usually argon or xenon, although almost any gas can be used). Radio
frequency (rf) electric currents are passed through the antenna, and
the rapid variation of the electric field ionizes the gas. The ionized
gas is then accelerated by electric or magnetic fields to produce
thrust.
The helicon technology has several advantages over
gridded ion drives. First, it produces more efficient ionization than a
gridded system, resulting in a much denser plasma, which can produce
much more thrust. Second, while a gridded electrode system has to grow
in size in order to produce more thrust, a helicon system can simply
use more power to produce more ionization. For example, a gridded
ionization system with a 40-kW power source would need to be 5 to 10
times larger than a helicon system using the same power source [7].
This compactness is of great benefit in space missions, where every
kilogram of mass has to be paid for in extra fuel consumption. Finally,
because the ionized gas never comes into contact with the antenna
producing it--the system has no electrodes--the helicon system does not
experience the erosion that limits the lifetime of electrode ion
drives, and has an essentially infinite lifetime.
Helicons, with their potential for increased thrust
and decreased wear, have obvious advantages over electrode ion drive
systems. However, another property of the helicon technology is even
more important for the MagBeam system. Most ion drives produce quite
broad plumes of exhaust, but if the exhaust doesn't hit the spacecraft
superstructure, no one really cares about the dispersion. In MagBeam,
however, the helicons produce a much tighter beam of ions, because the
magnetic field that accelerates them is "frozen" into the plasma and
carried along with it, creating an elongated magnetic field continuing
out into space. (See Figure 1.) When a focusing magnet is used, the
result is a tight beam with very little divergence, much like a laser.
Even in a conventional system, this is a significant advantage; it can
yield an improvement in efficiency of about 50% over normal ion drives
[1].
* * * *
* * * *
Figure 1 (image used courtesy of
Robert M. Winglee):
Magnetic field distortion with MagBeam propagation.
* * * *
In MagBeam, though, the dense, focused beam is
crucial to how the system works. That's because, in MagBeam, the
helicon doesn't push itself through space, but sends its ion beam
through space to push other spacecraft. So, how does this translate
into more efficient space travel?
How the MagBeam System Works
In the January/February 2004 issue of Analog,
Gary Lai reported on efforts by Professor Winglee's team to produce a
craft (dubbed the "M2P2" for Mini-Magnetospheric Plasma Propulsion)
that used a giant magnetic ion bubble to extract thrust from the solar
wind--the stream of fast-moving ionized particles that flows outward
from the Sun [8]. This concept, while interesting, proved impossible to
demonstrate adequately on the ground because of the scale of the
testing facilities required [7]. Technologies that cannot first be
proved on the ground cannot be included in space test missions.
However, the limited, on-ground testing stage of that project sparked
an idea for a new and different propulsion system, with potentially
revolutionary capabilities: MagBeam.
* * * *
* * * *
Figure 2 (image used courtesy of
Robert M. Winglee):
Schematic layout of MagBeam system.
* * * *
While the University of Washington group was testing
the M2P2 prototype in the laboratory, they conceived the idea of using
a plasma thruster to imitate the solar wind. The solar wind is itself a
plasma, although very much less dense than that produced by any kind of
ion drive, so using a plasma source to simulate it was a natural
decision. This experiment inspired the idea of using a plasma source to
beam energy across space to an unpowered spacecraft and became the
basis of the MagBeam system. It works like this:
Professor Winglee proposes the use of orbiting
platforms carrying high-power helicons, each able to focus a very dense
ion beam with a power of about 300 megawatts onto a transport
spacecraft from a distance. These transport craft carry a small store
of a gaseous propellant, such as argon or xenon, and a set of
electromagnets, in addition to a small power source and a payload. The
propellant is ejected into space, where it is heated and ionized by the
incoming plasma beam. This ionized gas is then repelled by the
electromagnets, imparting thrust to the craft in reaction. (See Figure
2 for a schematic of the system.) A good analogy is driving a floating
bottle along by splashing stones in the water just behind it. The
platform carrying the helicon remains in orbit, pushing the spacecraft
away at high speed, while a similar platform at the destination uses
its plasma beam to slow the vessel down again when it arrives.
Unlike the earlier M2P2 project, where the force of
the solar wind against the ion bubble was always directed away from the
Sun, a MagBeam system can impart thrust in any direction simply by
having the target craft eject the propellant gas in a different
direction (or, in the analogy used before, splashing the stones on the
other side of the bottle). A large bubble or sail area to intercept the
plasma beam is not required. The payload spacecraft doesn't have to
carry a massive power source or large store of propellant, because all
of this equipment is on the orbiting platform instead. The energy for
propulsion is beamed to the vessel through space, rather than being
carried with it, making it far lighter than any existing craft can be.
Because of this, MagBeam imparts rapid acceleration
to the departing spacecraft, on the order of 1 ms-2 [7]. This may not
sound very large--the equivalent of a car taking about twenty-five
seconds to reach sixty mph--but it's far higher than other ion drive
systems. By comparison, the solar-powered ion drive on DS-1 provided
acceleration about ten thousand times smaller. Proposed nuclear-powered
craft, such as VASIMR [9], do about ten times better than solar powered
systems, but still accelerate a thousand times slower than MagBeam.
A logical question might be "How does the beam
remain targeted on the vessel?" With such high accelerations, the
distance of the vessel from the platform gets very large very
quickly--reaching as much as 150,000 km for the longest anticipated
accelerations. This isn't expected to be a problem. The plasma beam is
like a stroke of lightning. Lightning is a very coherent beam of plasma
that seeks a region of high conductivity to transfer excess energy from
a cloud to the ground: that's why smart people don't fly kites in
thunderstorms. Our magnetized beam behaves in the same way.
The payload out in space acts as a lightning rod,
and the plasma beam is essentially the same as an electric current,
with the magnetic field it drags along acting similarly to a wire.
Space itself is pretty much empty, and therefore of low conductivity.
When the beam is turned on, it makes an electrical contact with the
payload near the station, and then it's just like paying out a
transmission line as the vessel moves away. The beam stretches out
between the two regions of high conductivity (the platform and the
payload) until it's turned off at the platform. Electricity always
seeks the path of least resistance, and so the plasma flows along the
conductive path traced out by the retreating vessel, confined by its
inherent magnetic field.
Once the spacecraft has been accelerated, the beam
is turned off, and the craft coasts toward its destination at very high
speed--as much as 20kms-1 for a 50-day trip to Mars. This is faster
than
any human vehicle has ever traveled, including the Voyager probe with
its multiple gravity assists over several years. On arrival, of course,
the MagBeam vessel has to brake, or it would shoot past its destination
and never be seen again. The MagBeam system uses another platform on
the opposite end of the journey to provide the thrust to brake.
Braking is more difficult than acceleration, because
there's no conductive path between the platform and the payload for the
plasma beam to follow. So, the platform at the destination would have
to be activated when the spacecraft was already quite close to it, then
be run at higher power than during acceleration to get in the same
amount of energy in a shorter time. However, once the connection is
made, the vessel uses the same thrust system it used for acceleration
to brake by simply deflecting the ionized gas ahead of itself instead
of behind.
Advantages and Risks of
the MagBeam System
One useful way to think of the MagBeam system is to
compare it to an electric train. Huge generators and transformers are
needed to produce the electricity to power such a train, but none of
this equipment is carried on the train itself. If it were, the train
would be so heavy that it would hardly be able to move. Instead, the
electricity is transmitted to it through the electric rail--just as
it's
transmitted through space in MagBeam--and can not only power the train
to much higher speeds, but allow it to carry more cargo in place of the
generators.
* * * *
* * * *
Figure 3: Schematic of MagBeam
propulsion for a fifty-day mission to Mars.
* * * *
In a conventional system, where the propulsion
system and propellant are all carried on the payload they are
propelling, the acceleration potential for the payload is reduced
because of the mass of the propulsion system (as much as 80% by mass of
the Deep Space-1 vessel consisted of propellant, propulsion system, and
power supply [10]). The MagBeam system transport spacecraft will be
much lighter than the platform that carries its propulsion system [7],
and so can be accelerated much more rapidly and to much greater speeds
than any spacecraft that carries its own propulsion system on board.
The amount of time the platform needs to beam energy
to the craft is quite short--as little as five minutes to transfer a
ten-ton payload from suborbital altitudes to a low earth orbit, or
thirty minutes to propel it to geostationary or escape velocity,
according to Professor Winglee's calculations [1]. For maximum
flexibility, the system uses two platforms: one in a low Earth orbit
(LEO), and one in a much higher orbit. Payloads are raised to
sub-orbital altitudes using standard launch methods (such as those used
for SpaceShipOne), and then the LEO platform takes over. The LEO
platform propels the payload into low Earth or geostationary orbit, or
even to escape velocity for a trip to the Moon. For longer missions
requiring higher speeds, such as a trip to Mars, the higher orbital
platform is used to provide additional acceleration. (See Figure 3.)
Longer interaction times are necessary to achieve the higher speeds for
interplanetary travel. To achieve these, a higher orbiting platform is
required, so that the Earth doesn't get in the way during the
interaction.
In addition to the fast accelerations and high final
speeds MagBeam offers, the savings in terms of fuel are also
significant. Professor Winglee predicts that for MagBeam to send a
ten-ton payload to Mars in just fifty days, only a four-hour
interaction time and a total of seven tons of propellant are required.
Carrying out the same mission using today's conventional rockets would
require an enormous 18,000 tons of fuel. The potential of MagBeam is
obvious.
Currently, space missions operate using a "one power
plant, one rocket, one mission" paradigm, where all the expensive
propulsion hardware on a deep space vessel is lost after one mission.
Not only does it cost money to keep building new power plants for
successive missions, but it costs on the order of $10,000 per kilogram
just to get them into orbit. The MagBeam system, by using an orbiting
propulsion platform with an effectively infinite lifetime, and
propelling a succession of small, reusable, unpowered or low-powered
craft, would reduce hardware costs radically in the long term.
The MagBeam system would require a large initial
investment to build the platforms and associated infrastructure (an
estimated $10 billion at present to launch a platform capable of
sending that ten-ton payload to Mars in 50 days [7]), but repeated
missions would bring vast long-term savings over more conventional
propulsion systems. This is partly due to the far smaller propellant
requirement and partly due to the reusable nature of the orbiting
platforms.
Having platforms at both ends of proposed journeys
is a key element of the MagBeam system. Unfortunately, while the system
would provide drastically reduced trip times once in place, currently
no way exists to get the destination platforms into place quickly. To
propel a spacecraft, the MagBeam platform will need to be between 20
and 100 times more massive than the craft it pushes [7]. Positioning
this much mass around Mars will still require longer trip times, using
conventional propulsion methods. If we continue the analogy with a rail
system, this is equivalent to the time and cost of laying the tracks
and building the stations.
However, adding MagBeam capability to facilities
already in orbit could be relatively simple. For instance, if an
orbital station already existed around Mars in support of manned
exploration, a MagBeam platform could be attached and powered, making
fast trip times possible. The equipment to produce the plasma beam is
relatively light--the great bulk of the mass comes from the batteries
or
other power supplies needed to operate it. For example, to carry out
the four-hour acceleration required for the 50-day trip to Mars, the
platform would require about 3,000 tons of batteries to power its
300-megawatt thruster. This seems like a lot, and indeed getting an
equivalent mass to Mars by conventional means to carry out
decelerations would be expensive. But once in place, these battery
systems could be recharged indefinitely via solar power, so the cost
would be a one-off capital investment. Better still, even conservative
estimates suggest that improving battery efficiencies in the next
decade could bring the weight requirement down by as much as a third
[1].
If MagBeam has a downside, it comes from the high
speeds that the spacecraft obtain.
"You're traveling at high speed," Winglee told us,
"so anything at high speed is going to be more dangerous per se
than lower speed. On the other hand, if you go out at low speed, you
end up with a whole lot of biological dangers. So we're swapping
biological hazards for physical hazards. If you make a mistake at 20
kms-1 vs. your standard 7 kms-1, it's going to make a bigger change.
Would it still be safe? We try to keep it as safe as possible insofar
as you guide the system and make course corrections, but once you're up
to speed, you're up to speed, and you have to wait to the other side to
make course corrections because the speeds are so high."
Implications for the Future
The validity of the MagBeam idea has been proved in
the laboratory, and plans are afoot to expand the testing to larger
scales. At the NIAC conference in March 2005, Professor Winglee
expressed his hope for a space-borne test as soon as 2009. Even though
a MagBeam commuter system doesn't yet exist, we can still speculate on
what it might mean to the manned and unmanned exploration of the solar
system, and to robotic flights to nearby stars.
We've seen a pattern throughout history of the
expansion of civilizations as transportation to new lands becomes
cheaper and easier. Humans first migrated to North America because the
land bridge between Alaska and Siberia made it possible. When the land
bridge was no longer available, Europeans took to the seas and sailed
to the new world, where expansion took place first on foot, then by
covered wagon, and eventually by rail. During the Great Depression,
automobiles made possible the huge migrations of Midwesterners to
California, where people searched for new opportunities. Today, many
people on the eastern seaboard use commuter trains to get from their
homes to their jobs, covering distances daily that would have awed the
early colonists. This would be impossible without inexpensive,
dependable transportation.
MagBeam should not be seen exclusively as a method
for reducing trip times to distant locations in our solar system. A
platform in a low Earth orbit could be used to modify the orbits of
satellites or space stations, and also to boost payloads headed for the
Moon--all far more cheaply than currently possible. For example, a
platform on the Moon could be used for returning rock sample containers
to Earth far more economically than dragging chemical propellant and
rockets to the Moon for the purpose. A platform in Earth orbit would
decelerate the Moon samples, and insert them for re-entry. When
combined with inexpensive orbital launch techniques, the possibilities
for an expanded presence on and commercial development of the Moon
become financially much more attractive, both for businesses and for
tourists.
Although the need for deceleration platforms means
that the MagBeam system would not allow us to reach distant
destinations any sooner than existing methods, it would allow for much
cheaper, more rapid repeat journeys. Instead of being hugely expensive
single endeavors as they are now, trips to Mars or the outer planets
could easily become much more commonplace. For example, the unmanned
Mars Exploration Rover Mission took six and a half months to arrive on
Mars [11], while a MagBeam system, once implemented, could have a crew
there and back in just 96 days, including eleven days on the surface.
(See Figure 4.)
Successful colonization of distant places like Mars
hinges on an easy system of re-supply until such time as the colony can
become self-sufficient. With our present technology, we can only launch
missions to Mars about once every two years, when the planets are in
the proper alignment. However, with the kind of acceleration MagBeam
could impart, we would no longer have to wait for those brief windows
of opportunity to send people and supplies. Although trips at times
when the Earth and Mars are not aligned would take longer than the
50-day trip described by Professor Winglee, they could still be made in
relatively short amounts of time and at very low cost compared to those
fueled by other means.
Far distant locations such as Jupiter or Neptune are
currently not considered plausible destinations for manned missions
because of the extensive travel time involved, and scientific missions
taking more than ten years to produce data are rarely considered
useful. However, if MagBeam can reduce the travel time to Jupiter from
ten years to a year and half, travel to these places by humans becomes
more enticing. And before humans go, an Earth-orbital MagBeam platform
gives us the chance to launch larger and more frequent robotic science
missions at vastly reduced cost, so we'll be better prepared when we do
set forth.
* * * *
* * * *
Figure 4 (image used courtesy of
Robert M. Winglee):
Orbital schematic of 96 day Mars return trip.
* * * *
Another exciting application for MagBeam could be
accelerating interstellar probes. MagBeam has the capability to
accelerate robotic probes to much greater speeds than those attained by
any craft to date. Additional speed could be obtained by using
successive platforms at distant locations such as Mars and Jupiter to
boost the probes' speed as they head out of the solar system, greatly
reducing trip times to the nearest stars. Any such trip would probably
still take centuries, but the prospect is an exciting one nonetheless.
Like the commuter train, MagBeam offers humans the
chance to expand the neighborhood and explore new places, yet still
remain in close touch with our roots on Earth. Professor Winglee sums
it up succinctly.
"Yep, you could do that. You could really have some
fun."
References
1. R.M. Winglee, "Magnetised Beamed Plasma
Propulsion (MagBeam)," paper presented at the Fellows Meeting of the
NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts, March 2005
2. M. Martinez-Sanchez & J.E. Pollard,
"Spacecraft Electric Propulsion--An Overview," Journal of Propulsion
and
Power, 14, 5, 688-699 (1998)
3. J. Brophy et al, "The Status of Ion Propulsion
Development and Implementation at JPL in 2003," AIAA Joint Propulsion
Conference, 39th AIAA/ ASME/SAE/ASEE joint propulsion conference,
page(s) 4711 AIAA, 2003
4. M. Noca, "Next Generation Ion Engines: Mission
Performances," presented at NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
International Electric Propulsion Conference 2003, March 17-21, 2003
5. R.H. Frisbee, "Advanced Propulsion for the XXIst
Century," AAIS/ICA international air and space symposium 2003, vol.
19,
ISSU 2625-2778
6. O. Batischev & K. Molvig, "Kinetic Models for
the VASIMR Thruster Helicon Plasma Source," presented at 43rd Annual
Meeting of American Physical Society Division of Plasma Physics, Oct 29
2001
7. Interview with Professor Robert M. Winglee, Dept.
of Geophysics, University of Washington. Interview carried out by Kathy
Ferguson on March 7, 2005
8. R.M. Winglee et al, "Laboratory Testing of the
Mini-Magnetospheric Plasma Propulsion (M2P2) Prototype," Proceedings
of
Space Technology and Applications International Forum (STAIF-2001)
9. I. Katz et al, "Technologies to Improve Ion
Propulsion System Performance, Life and Efficiency for NEP," presented
at NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory Workshop on Technology and System
Options Towards Megawatt Level Electric Propulsion, June 9-10, 2003
10. J.R. Brophy et al, "Ion Propulsion System
(NSTAR) DS1 Technology Validation Report," Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Available at nmp-techval-reports.jpl.nasa.gov/DS1/IPSIntegrated
Report.pdf
11. Mars Rover Exploration Mission: Press Release 6
August 2003 etc. at
marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/newsroom/pressreleases/pressreleases-2003.htm
About the Authors:
James Grayson is 25 and holds a Masters degree in
Physics from the University of Bath, England, where he was awarded the
annual Physics World prize for achievement as a student in 2002. He has
also worked as a research scientist for the Engineering and Physical
Sciences Research Council of the UK. He has written for online
compilations, University newspapers, and the hell of it for several
years, but this is his first professional fiction publication. He has
no cats and lives in the rain somewhere in the south of England.
Kathy Ferguson has undergraduate degrees in Animal
Sciences, Psychology. and Secondary Education. She also holds a Masters
in Clinical Psychology. For the past ten years, she has worked as a
technical writer in the computer industry, transforming geek-speak into
English suitable for machine translation to other languages. Prior to
her writing career, she held jobs as varied as hotel maid, vetrinary
technicial, and vocational rehabilitation councelor. Previous
publications include articles, essays, and show reports in several dog
magazines, chapters in computer manuals, and technical articles on the
TechNet website. In the rare moments when she isn't at a computer, she
trains her Doberman Pinscher in obediance, agility, and tracking for
competitions around the Pacific Northwest. At the moment, she calls
Cheney, Washington home.
Copyright © 2006 James Grayson &
Kathy Fergusonn
[Back to Table of
Contents]
Original Sin by Richard A. Lovett
Any tool can be put to alternative
uses, some of which are ... tempting.
Eight thousand meters isn't really all that far to
run. But it can be a hell of a long way to race. Especially on a tough
cross-country course like this one, where mud and hills turn the legs
turn to jelly until, by the final circuit, you're running solely on
willpower.
I knew. It was my second time through, feeling that
I was on the ragged edge of collapse but continuing, nonetheless. I'd
run the race of my life the first time. Now, I was doing it again, for
Dylan.
I was doing it because nobody had faulted him when
at fifteen, he'd coasted to first place in the Wyoming high school
championship, then won again and again and again. Instead, they'd
rewarded him: running was now paying his way through college.
Last year had been more of the same under the coach
who'd preceded me. But no longer. Not if I had anything to say. Today,
Dylan couldn't slow down. He would have tried by now and found it
didn't work. Hell, at the start of that final lap, I'd tried.
But I'd just kept on running, like an out-of-control Energizer bunny:
going and going and going.
How much longer? Four minutes? That would be about
700 steps. Seventy would be a tenth of the way. I could imagine keeping
up the pace for that much longer--barely. Once, Dylan had admitted to
thinking that way in practice, when I pushed him harder than any coach
ever had before. Now I could hear him, softly counting. "Cut that
out,"
I said, and he gasped at the unexpected sound in his ear.
I felt as though I should be wheezing from the
effort, but my voice was nearly normal. "You're trying to disengage,"
I
said, "but you have to stay in the moment. Welcome the pain. Tell
yourself you're going to punish the parts of your body that hurt by
make them hurt more. That's what real racing is about."
Ahead, the course slanted into a ravine. It was a
good chance for a breather, but we sped downhill, barely on the edge of
control, legs and lungs working as hard as ever. At the bottom, a
slight stutter-step set us up to leap a narrow creek with dry feet,
then we were dashing up the other side.
"The finish is at the top," I said. "Now is when
great racers run like there's no tomorrow. None of that half-assed,
cruise-in-for-the-cameras crap you've been getting away with all your
life. This time it's going to be the real thing."
Not that he had any choice. We were in what, in our
present condition, passed for a full sprint, dashing uphill. It felt
like running through molasses, but the runner we'd been shadowing for
the last 800 meters--the one with the fringe of salt-and-pepper hair
surrounding a Friar Tuck bald spot--didn't have what it took and we
shot
by him like he was standing still.
Now we were at the top, and there was the finish
line and the clock. Dylan gasped again, and it took me a moment to
figure out why. Then I realized that the time was, for him, far too
slow. Minutes too slow. It was a good finishing time for me--a
spectacular one, in fact--but there was no way Dylan could work so hard
and not be a lot faster.
For the moment, though, it was enough to be across
and no longer running, gasping for air that still would not come fast
enough, walking--pacing because if we didn't keep moving, we'd keel
over
in a dead faint. Except, of course, that I was the only one who'd
actually run a race like this anytime in his life. The only one who'd
truly been at risk of fainting, because Dylan always finished looking
as though he could do it over again--always held something back because
he didn't want to look like this at the finish.
He was saying something, but I couldn't catch it.
Most likely, he was still confused about the time, because the illusion
was so gripping that the first time you tried it, it was hard to
remember what was really happening.
I cut the feed and finally there was enough air. In
fact, there was a lot of it, and we were no longer pacing. We were
sitting in my office and I was unjacking the virtual reality players
that had been so unbelievably good that halfway through, I too had had
trouble not believing I was out there in the grass and mud and that it
wasn't my lungs, or at least not my lungs in the here-and-now, that
were about to explode. As it was, my pulse had quickened and I was
bathed in a thin sheen of real sweat. I could even swear that I felt
residual fatigue in my legs, though that had to be simply an afterimage
of the VR, which had been more real than any game program Dylan would
ever have encountered: so real it had never crossed his mind that he
could make the whole thing end simply by ripping off the headset and
telling me what he thought of my little "experiment" in racing
strategy.
But now he was thoroughly back in the present. "You
tricked me!" he protested, as though coaches hadn't been tricking
athletes since the dawn of sport.
I grinned. "No permanent harm. I wanted you to
understand how much you'd been slacking. Just because you're fast
doesn't mean you're anywhere close to your potential."
"But who cares, if the time sucks? I could jog
faster than that. Who the hell was I, anyway?"
I could feel the grin stretching. "Me. Last weekend,
in the national masters championships, with an honest-to-goodness gold
medal on the line." The medal had only been in the 55-59 age group,
but
that was beside the point. It's been a while since I could keep up with
the forty-year-olds.
I didn't add that the decision to record the
experience might have made the difference between gold and silver. I'd
never beaten Friar Tuck before, but I'd known I couldn't show Dylan the
recording unless I went after him with everything I had. "Learn to race
like that and you can take it to the next level. Maybe even beat the
Kenyans in the Olympics. Continue backing off from the pain, and you'll
never truly amount to anything." I let that sink in. "As for the
gadget, it's a VR trainer. A friend made it for me, and I used it to
record my race."
Dylan didn't ask where the device came from, and I
didn't tell him. There is an old thought experiment, called "six
degrees of separation," which postulates that nobody on the planet is
more than a half-dozen "friends of friends" removed from anyone else.
I
have no idea whether it's correct, but if it is, it must rely strongly
on what I think of as nexus people: those whose connections run in
multiple, unexpected directions.
I'm one of them. I've always been into
athletics--running paid my own way through college--but the connections
that got me the VR gadget involved basketball and computer games. Last
summer, I'd been complaining to my old college roommate, Derrick, that
the basketball team could have won the NCAA tournament if only it could
shoot free throws. I'm not sure exactly what I said--multiple beers had
been poured and I was merely telling him about my new job and the
school's overall athletic prowess. But six months later, the headsets
arrived. They came with a recording of some NBA star doing his thing at
the free-throw line, and by the time I'd played it a few times, I felt
as though I could hit nothing but net every time.
Derrick didn't know the basketball coach and asked
me not to show him the headsets. But I'd also told Derrick about Dylan
and his Olympic potential. Officially, I was beta-testing the interface
for a hush-hush video game. Unofficially, I was living a coach's dream.
Coaches have always wished they could read their
athletes' minds. Now I could do the next best thing, because one of the
headsets doubled as a recorder.
"Do you want a shot at the Olympics?" I asked.
Dylan nodded. What athlete didn't?
"Then I want you to wear this thing during workouts
and races." I handed him the recorder, a nicely miniaturized
contraption about the size of a music player. I showed him how it
worked and handed him one of the recording chips. "Bring this back next
week." Distance runners by necessity do a lot of their training out of
sight of the coach, but with the headset, I could monitor every step he
took. It really was a coach's dream.
* * * *
That week, Dylan showed a new fire in his training.
He'd always been the fastest on the team, but never the emotional
leader. Now I wondered whether he might mature into next year's
captain. It was hard to tell because Dylan had a lot to learn, not just
about running but about emotional maturity, and the chip didn't really
allow me to read his mind. It merely captured sensory inputs.
The collegiate cross-country season had ended
several weeks before my masters race, so we were now gearing up for
track, where Dylan's event was the 10,000 meters. As the weeks
progressed, he continued using the chip, but now he seemed to have two
modes. One was the slacker, who always kept enough in reserve to look
good to whoever might be watching. The other was new: an overachiever
who did his workouts slightly faster than called for. I could shift him
from one mode to the other by catching him at it, but it was like
flipping a switch: "A" or "B," with no midpoint. That puzzled me
until
I realized that both behaviors represented the same thing. He was still
showboating; he'd just found a new way to do it.
For Dylan's remaining collegiate career, the new
mode wasn't necessarily a bad thing. But in the long run, that
overachiever stuff is worse than slacking because it burns you out and
increases the risk of injuries.
My job doesn't require me to worry about the long
run. I'm paid to bring glory to the university by winning collegiate
meets, not to train iffy Olympians. College coaches are notorious for
wringing as much as possible out of their athletes during their years
of eligibility, with no thought of what happens later, but I've never
been one who could advance his own career over the bodies of the kids
he's supposed to mentor. Call me altruistic; call me a fool. I'm either
good enough to do both the paid job and the real one, or I'll find a
new career. One advantage of being a nexus person is that I know how to
do so, if necessary.
From the chips, it was obvious that Dylan's
showboating was at its worst when the women's team was training at the
same time. In retrospect, I should have addressed the underlying
immaturity directly, but instead I chose to focus on his running. My
theory was that if I could help him mature there, he would in due
course do so in the rest of his life, as well. It's an approach that's
worked for plenty of other athletes, but if there was ever a decision I
wish I could reverse, this was it.
I began by changing his schedule to avoid the women.
Then I told him that the best way to show off was by impressing me, via
the chip. "What I want to see is discipline," I said. "The closer you
can get to doing exactly what I tell you, the more impressed
I'll be."
Every Friday, Dylan handed me that week's chip, and
I spent my weekends playing back every minute of it. Since he ran
eighty miles a week, that was a sizeable time commitment, but luckily
my wife is the understanding type. Our daughter had gone off to college
two years ago (on a track scholarship, what else?) and I was the one
who most strongly felt the empty-nest syndrome. If I wanted to adopt
Dylan as a special problem child, my wife was willing to humor me.
Someday, I owe the woman a trip around the world, but probably not
before I retire. Until then, there will always be some Dylan who I
can't abandon for that long.
For a month, he ran strong. Then in the fifth week,
I felt a pain in his right knee. He'd said nothing about it, but when
it comes to injuries, athletes fall into two camps: hypochondriacs who
fret that each twinge is the one that will ruin their careers, and
macho-types who'll tell you they're fine, even when they obviously
aren't. Dylan had never been a hypochondriac, and with me tantalizing
him with dreams of glory, it was no surprise he'd gone macho.
One of the hardest parts of coaching is figuring out
whether such injuries are worth worrying about, and there have been
myriad occasions on which I'd wished I knew exactly what an ache or
pain felt like. Now, I could. I played the chip over and over again,
concentrating on how it felt at each part of his stride. Eventually I
decided it was trivial, and the next week proved me right when the pain
vanished as mysteriously as it had appeared.
But the experience set me thinking. A few days later
I called up Derrick and told him the story.
"Can you imagine what it would be like if every
doctor had one of these?" I asked. "No more, 'Does it hurt when I do
this?' You'd just wear the headset, then give the chip to the doctor."
Derrick is the opposite of a nexus person, deeply
wrapped up in his own narrow field. But that doesn't mean he has no
imagination. "EMTs would love it, too," he said.
"Parents could use it with young children."
"Cops could screen drunk drivers."
That set off a brainstorming session that I cut
short a few minutes later with a question that had been nagging at me
ever since I'd played the recording of Dylan's knee.
"Would you really want to spend a whole day
experiencing other people's pains?" I asked. It was one thing to play
the chip of Dylan's knee pain again and again. It had never been more
than a twinge. "That could get rather unpleasant."
"Yeah," Derrick said. "It needs a gain control."
There was a brief silence, and I pictured him staring out the window,
thinking through a nifty technological problem, like he'd often done
back in our dorm room. "Intensity of playback was a problem in the
first prototypes," he said a few seconds later. "The first was so
powerful you could barely wrench yourself out of it before the end,
even when it was something mundane, like looking out the window. Then I
overcorrected, and got nothing more than a weird shadow image." He
paused again. "It would be easy enough to make it variable. Good idea."
* * * *
Two weeks later, Dylan ran his first race wearing
the headset. He ran hard, though still not all-out. I told him so, and
the following week he was better. Two weeks after that, he was better
yet, and then we were on a roll until the NCAA finals loomed. The team
had no chance--I'd recruited some good underclassmen but they needed
another season or two to develop--but Dylan made the finals on
individual merit.
This time, I told him not to wear the headset. It
didn't weigh much, but in a 10,000-meter race each unnecessary ounce
costs you half a second, and the headset weighed six ounces. Dylan
would either do well or he wouldn't. Either way, the season would be
over.
* * * *
He was eighth, a major improvement from the year
before. He'd have done better yet if he'd not ignored my advice and
grabbed the lead in the first lap, where he stayed until he ran out of
gas with a mile to go. It was another show-off move, but at least he
was running hard, and we had all of next year to work on strategy.
Overall, I was pleased. If he continued to improve, he had a shot at
winning by his senior year.
It was now summer, and Dylan went back to Wyoming
with the recorder and a stack of chips. For the next few weeks, his
regimen was simple: keep running, but take a few weeks off from hard
workouts. Perhaps that's why I wasn't overly dismayed when, on the
first Friday, he left a voice mail message saying he had no chip to
send me.
"Sorry, Coach," he said. "I seem to have misplaced
them."
The chips looked a lot like the latest music and
video cartridges, so I figured they were lost in a stack of
look-alikes. I was out of blanks, but I didn't really need the ones
we'd recorded during the winter and spring, so I erased a few, labeled
them carefully as VR chips, and sent him enough to see him through the
summer, along with a stern admonishment not to lose any more.
Meanwhile, Derrick sent me a new pair of headsets,
with variable gain control. "I realize you're doing fine with what you
have," he said, "but it was your idea, so I thought you might like to
try it out."
"Do you want the old ones back?"
"Nah. Keep 'em."
As long as he was in a generous mood, I told him
about the lost chips.
"No problem. I've got a whole boxful. It's the type
of thing that once you make the first one, it's not a lot more
expensive to make a thousand. How many do you want?"
I pulled a number out of the air and he promised to
get them into the next day's mail.
* * * *
As luck would have it, I'd not reused the chip that
had recorded Dylan's sore knee. The gain control on the new headsets
was a simple dial, with an arrow indicating what I presumed to be the
high-gain end. The thing about prototypes is that nobody invests time
in fancy labeling; all that matters is that the designer knows what the
controls do.
Since there was some chance that the arrow indicated
the low-gain direction rather than the high-gain one, I set the dial in
the middle of its range and skimmed for the right segment of the chip.
When I found it, the playback felt about like what I remembered.
I turned the dial down and the pain decreased. I
turned it up and yelped. Dylan's twinge had become an excruciating
stab, his stride was a pounding rhythm that hit like a sledgehammer,
and his breathing felt like the chugging of an old-fashioned steam
engine. The entire experience was also more intense--far more real than
reality itself, but with a wrongness you didn't realize until
afterward. If I'd not been playing back chips for months, I'd have sat
there entranced until the playback ended.
Nobody needed a gain control with that wide a range,
but Derrick had never been one to do anything by half-measures.
* * * *
By August, Dylan was back on campus with the rest of
the team, which needed to start practice well before the start of
classes.
He showed up with a sporty new car--a nice little
gas/electric hybrid. At the time, I didn't think much of it because
track and cross-country aren't the type of sports in which rich
boosters buy such things for the stars. Runners are much more likely to
get into trouble over trivia, such as cash or merchandise prizes in
summer road races--anything of sufficient value to turn them into
professionals.
The main reason the car caught my attention was that
it got me thinking about poverty. With gas prices heading toward ten
dollars a gallon, the old gas-guzzlers have become dirt-cheap. That
makes them the most common cars for students, even though most can
barely afford to drive them. It's one of those ironic little poverty
traps in which you can save a lot of money by buying a more efficient
car, but only if you have the money to begin with. I wasn't sure how
well-to-do Dylan's parents were, but his running was saving them a lot
on tuition, so I figured they'd used it to give him a gift.
* * * *
Then, as it is sometimes prone to do, life became
infinitely more complex.
It began with a phone call from Derrick.
"I've been trying to reach you for hours," he
began,
breathlessly enough that he obviously believed every second mattered.
"You know those VR headsets I gave you?"
"Sure. They've worked wonders for my runner. This
year I'm hoping he'll--"
"Tell me some other time. I'm calling from a pay
phone and I don't think anyone can trace me, but I don't want to talk
any longer than I have to. I just want you to destroy them."
"What?"
"You heard me. I shredded all my files today and
threw all of my own prototypes into the incinerator. You've got the
only ones left."
"But it's a miracle. Dylan's--"
"I don't care! I've been stupid. Really, really
stupid. I got a visit this afternoon from a pair of government types.
They tried to search my office but didn't have a warrant and my boss
managed to chase them away, but not before my secretary heard them
tossing around a phrase that sounded like 'humane torture.' I'd never
even thought of it, but that thing's too real. With the right
recording, you really could use it for torture. If they want a gadget
like that, they've got to invent it themselves. Don't let them get
yours." Then there was a click and I was listening to an empty line.
It was Friday evening, and my wife and I had just
come back from dinner and a movie. Dylan had one headset, but the
others were in my office. Could this wait until Monday?
The trouble with miracle gadgets is that there's
always someone who can figure out how to turn them to anti-miracles. My
brother is a Baptist minister and he's always talking about Adam and
Eve, original sin, and human depravity. I suspect that this tendency to
create anti-miracles is exactly what he means, but when we try to
discuss such things, we don't speak the same language, so I'm never
sure.
One thing I was sure of was that the baddies
wouldn't wait. I sighed and decided I probably shouldn't, either.
* * * *
The headset and chips were right where I'd left
them. I probably could have waited until Monday, though Derrick and I
had talked enough on the phone that anyone who was serious about
tracking down people who might know about his invention would find me
soon enough.
But now I found myself hesitating. Destroying the
headsets wouldn't solve the problem forever; if the government knew
such devices were possible, some secret lab would reinvent them sooner
or later.
Still, it would slow them down. Another of my old
friends is in the wilderness-preservation field. She tells me that the
only way she stays sane is by thinking of everything in terms of buying
time. In her field, victories are only temporary because each time you
save a tract of land from one threat, there's always another. But
losses are forever. So you work to string together enough temporary
victories that new attacks at least face an increasingly uphill battle.
She and my brother wouldn't see eye-to-eye on a lot of things, but I
suspect she would appreciate his concept of original sin.
Destroying the prototypes might not keep them from
being reinvented, but in the interim, it would save an unknown number
of people a lot of pain. Most would deserve it, but one drawback with
torture is that you're never sure who's who until afterward. My friends
were right. Even if the victory was only temporary, I didn't want to be
the one who caused the "forever" loss.
* * * *
The headsets might be prototypes, but they were
solidly made and I wasn't sure how best to destroy them. I could break
the moldings easily enough, but what mattered were the electronics
inside, and even if I broke those, I didn't know whether a good
electronics whiz could figure them out from the pieces.
Derrick had burned his, but that wasn't something I
could do in my office. I stuffed them in a bag, wondering whether I
could take them home and burn them in my fireplace without creating
dangerous fumes. Probably a bad idea. Maybe I should just run over them
a few times with my car and scatter the pieces out the window on the
freeway.
I was halfway to the parking lot when my cell phone
rang. I presumed it was Derrick, checking up on me, but it was a local
number--and not my wife, either.
"Hello," I said, still trying to figure out who
might be calling. Maybe Derrick's government types were already on my
tail.
What I heard, though, was a torrent of static, kind
of like the sound you get when someone forgets to lock their cell phone
keyboard and it dials you at random, giving you a chance to listen to
the inside of their pocket. There was a wailing sound in the background
and a torrent of syllables from which I could catch only fragments:
"...Coach ... Highway 36 ... cops."
"Dylan?" The transmission was so choppy I wasn't
sure, but it had to be him. "Slow down. You're breaking up. Are you
okay?"
If he heard me, it didn't help. "...blood ... need
help..."
Someday, someone's going to design a cell phone
network that works when you really need it. Highway 36 put him
west of town, on a two-lane that had once been a favorite drag-racing
site--a bit of trivia I'd picked up from colleagues who'd been around
since before rising fuel prices put the kibosh on that dangerous
pastime. I thought of Dylan and his new car and shuddered.
I hung up, counted slowly to ten, and hit the
callback button. Sometimes that's all it takes to get a good
connection. Instead I got Dylan's voicemail, clear as a bell. I left
him a quick message that he might or might not think to pick up,
sprinted for my car, and broke a lot of traffic laws heading west.
* * * *
Luckily there weren't any cops around to see me.
That's because they were all out on Highway 36, about where I figured
they'd be. There were also several ambulances, but their crews didn't
appear to be doing much, which is either very good or very bad,
depending.
Given the state of Dylan's car, the answer had to be
the latter. It was upside down in the ditch, crumpled practically
beyond recognition, with glass and plastic strewn along two hundred
meters of roadside. A paunchy policeman tried to wave me on when I
pulled to the side, but relented when I told him one of the victims had
called me.
"He's over there," the policeman said, gesturing
toward a space-blanket-wrapped figure talking to a notepad-wielding
officer. "He's one lucky boy. Apparently he was in the backseat when
the car went off the road. See if you can talk him into letting them
take him to the hospital. We can get his statement later."
Dylan spotted me before I got halfway to him.
"Coach!" he called, breaking away from the officer and half-running to
me. He seemed eager and needy, not at all the Dylan I'd always known.
"What happened?" I asked, fighting down panic. "Are
you hurt?"
"Oh, Coach, it was so awful." He embraced me--also
wildly out-of-character--then with his back to everyone else, his mood
shifted. "You're going to kill me when you see this." He slipped a
hand
into his pocket, then pressed a VR chip into my hand. "But better you
than them. I tried to erase it but I didn't know how. I threw the
headset somewhere off over there." He inclined his head slightly
toward
the roadside. "They'll probably find it, but without the chip they
won't know what it is."
I looked at the chip, wondering how it related to
the accident. "What happened?" I repeated.
"Andrew and Thomas are dead," he said, and
fleetingly, I felt a guilty relief that I'd never heard those names
before and that Dylan hadn't managed to kill off two of his teammates.
"How about you? Are you hurt?"
"I can still run," he said, and for a moment I
wondered if he'd seen my relief and was too young to realize that none
of us are exempt from such things. All we can do is recognize them when
they occur and try to fight them off. More of my brother's original-sin
doctrine, I suspected. Then I saw tears in his eyes and realized he was
merely trying to cover them with macho.
"Go to the hospital," I said. "I'll take care of
things here."
* * * *
It was 3 A.M. by the time I finally got home. There
wasn't that much to do at the accident site, but I waited for the tow
truck and watched as the police cars gradually dispersed. When I had no
excuse to stay, I went to the nearest convenience store, bought a
coffee, and sat in the parking lot staring at Dylan's chip, nerving
myself to view it. I couldn't decide whether I was glad or disappointed
that I'd not had time to destroy the headsets.
At last, I put on one of the new ones, with the gain
turned down far enough that whatever was on the chip wouldn't be too
overpowering. The index showed seven tracks, so maybe it was merely one
of Dylan's running logs and he'd simply been trying to help keep the
whole project secret.
The first recording, in fact, was merely a training
run, and I nearly disconnected in relief. But something told me to keep
going. I skimmed the rest of the first track, sampling every few
minutes, then jumped to the middle of the next one.
Even at low gain, the transition was jarring. This
track had nothing do with running and everything to do with vigorous,
enthusiastic sex. I immediately hit the cutoff, but still felt mentally
polluted. At least I hadn't been Dylan. There are some things I most
emphatically did not want to know about him.
I popped the chip out of the player and considered
my options. Two cups of coffee later, I decided I really did need to
know the rest--but preferably at an even lower intensity. I put the
chip
back in the headset and resumed scanning at the lowest level that would
allow me to understand what was going on.
In track 3, I was a woman. Were these souvenirs, or
porn? Most likely the latter. In track 4, I was male again, but this
time I was gay. And so it went through two more permutations. I was
beginning to get a hunch about where the sports car had come from. With
only one headset, Dylan couldn't mass-market this stuff, but there
would be people who'd pay a tidy sum for one viewing of any of these.
Then came the final track.
I was sitting in the driver's seat of Dylan's car.
Beside me was a young man I didn't know, and in the rearview mirror was
Dylan. The car was stationary, but then Dylan said, "Let's get this
show on the road," and there was the nervous banter of college
students
egging themselves into action. The driver revved the engine and paused
as it vibrated with power. We put it in gear, the tires squealed, and
we were off. Just because it was a hybrid didn't mean it didn't have
power, and whoever I was handled the curves like a pro--which was
probably why Dylan had picked him to drive, rather than himself.
Still, I couldn't figure out why he had switched
from porn to this. Then I recalled the one-time popularity of drag
racing. This wasn't a race, but there'd definitely be people who'd pay
to experience it. I thought of the missing chips and wondered how big a
VR library Dylan had amassed, and how many people might have tried out
the headset. So much for Derrick's big secret. Word of his VR miracle
was probably on dozens of Internet chat rooms.
The car was going faster and faster. It wound
through the mountains, then out onto the flats favored by the former
drag racers. I/we/the-driver floored the gas and the car leapt forward,
the speedometer hitting 80, 90, 100, 110, 120...
Somewhere around 130 the front right tire blew. Or
did it? Somehow it didn't feel right, but things were happening too
fast to be sure. For one precarious moment, the car ran in a reasonably
straight line, then it yawed onto the shoulder and suddenly I was
flipping, sideways and end-over-end, like a running shoe in a clothes
drier. An airbag inflated in my face, then burst as something, maybe a
piece of the roof, was thrust through it from above. Then something
else struck me, and I looked down and it was sticking out of my chest
and even at low gain my world exploded in pain...
...and it was all happening so fast that it was only
now that I finally found the off switch.
I sat back, shaken and terrified. What would be the
result if I played it to the end? I knew what had happened to the
driver. Had Dylan managed to reach him and turn off the recorder before
he died? If he hadn't (and given the extent of the injuries, I doubted
it), I was holding the ultimate in porn-myth: a snuff film. Not just a
snuff film, but a VR experience in which you were the one who
died.
Cautiously, I played back the first part in slow
motion, concentrating on the blown tire, running through those moments
again and again at increasing intensity, just as I had with Dylan's
sore knee. My first impression had been correct. The tire hadn't blown.
The wheel had fallen off. From the corner of my/our eye, the driver and
I could see it bounding off into the ditch, although I doubt he'd had
time to understand what he was seeing before we'd begun that endless
series of flips.
What were the chances of a wheel coming off a new
car by accident? I'd never driven at this speed and had no data on the
risks, but it seemed unlikely.
I wondered again why Dylan had shifted from porn to
this. With only the one headset, he needed recordings that could
command a high price per viewing. Porn obviously fit the bill. But
driving? Yeah, gas was expensive, but if you wanted to waste a gallon
or two, any of those student gas-guzzlers could go as fast as you
wanted. And no matter how good the VR was, the real thing had to be a
bigger thrill. That meant there was a limit to how much he could charge
for the recording he'd intended to make, and given the fact that he
couldn't mass-produce, it didn't seem worth the effort.
Unless someone had hired him to do it. Someone who
was hoping for a wreck, maybe even a snuff film. Someone who was
willing to risk losing the headset in a crash because he thought he had
a way to get more.
* * * *
I drove back to the crash site, again courting
tickets. If I was right, the people who'd set Dylan up had planned on
retrieving both the headset and the chip. I wondered why they hadn't
beaten the police to the crash site. Maybe they'd expected the wheel to
come off in the curves and were waiting in the wrong place. Maybe
they'd not counted on Dylan surviving and phoning for help. Hopefully
they'd not seen him throw the headset into bushes, or they'd already
have it.
The one thing I was sure of was that I wasn't
dealing with feds. The more I thought about it, the fishier Derrick's
visitors sounded. "Government types," he'd said, not "FBI" or "CIA"
or
anything else shadowy but specific. That meant he'd not gotten a good
look at their IDs. Nor could I imagine real feds being so unprepared
for the resistance they got from Derrick's boss. Or careless enough to
be overheard talking. For that matter, I couldn't imagine them using a
phrase like "humane torture." They'd say "humane interrogation" or
something even more indirect, like "personal data retrieval." Most
likely, Derrick's visitors had been trying to bolster their image as
government agents, in an attempt to secure his headsets before the car
accident.
There was also the question of what Derrick could
have done to bring himself to the attention of the government, while it
was obvious how Dylan's clients could have found him. The headsets bore
the logo of Derrick's company, which was small enough that anyone
inquiring about VR would be referred to Derrick pretty quickly.
If they knew of Derrick and Dylan, they knew of me.
I wondered if I dared destroy the headsets I already had. Would they
believe it, if I did?
* * * *
The crash site was deserted. Until the cops took a
good look at the fallen-off wheel, this was merely an accident. Still,
multiple-fatality accidents are rare enough that the investigators
would be back, first thing in the morning, so I had limited time to
find the headset.
Wondering if I was being needlessly paranoid, I
parked a mile down the road and pulled on a worn-out pair of running
shoes. I couldn't avoid leaving footprints, but at least they wouldn't
match the ones I'd left before. And I could throw away the shoes before
going home.
Then I jogged back and began scouring the bushes for
the headset. It took an hour, but eventually I found it, happy for the
deserted highway, which only occasionally required me to hide from
oncoming headlights.
If anyone was watching, I certainly didn't see them.
* * * *
The phone pulled me awake sometime before 5 A.M.
"Urrmph," said my wife, or words to that effect, followed by something
vaguely like, "Saturday morning."
I let the voice mail pick it up, but thirty seconds
later it was ringing again. Someone wanted me badly, and I wasn't going
to get any more sleep until I found out who.
Grudgingly, I picked up the receiver. "Yeah?"
Damned
if I'd be polite at this hour.
"Hello, Coach," said a voice I'd never heard
before.
The tone was way too chipper for the crack of dawn, but something about
it carried an undercurrent of menace. "You have something we want."
It was a line right from a bad movie, and I
half-expected the next one to be "and we have something you want." But
extortion is easier than kidnapping.
"What are you talking about?" I asked, trying to
buy
time, fearing that I might need to think fast and be unable to do so.
Which was probably why they'd phoned at 5 A.M.
"Your boy calls it a VR headset," the voice said.
"He says there are two of them and that by now you should have both.
Plus a chip." He paused, then continued conversationally, "You know,
you runner types really are wimps. A little persuasion and you cave
right away. Don't worry; we merely paid him a visit. But if you want
him to stay safe, bring everything to Fremont Park in one hour. Park in
the main lot, and we'll find you."
"I can't get there that fast," I said, now
wide-awake. "I've got the headset but it's not here." Not true, but it
sounded reasonable and bought me time.
"Get it quick," the voice said. "We'll give you
ninety minutes. Don't be late. It's amazing how easy it is for runners
to have little, uh, accidents." He chuckled and my waking-up brain
thought: It's not me who's in the bad movie. It's these guys.
Maybe that meant that while they were dangerous, they weren't all that
sophisticated.
* * * *
When this was over, I'd be furious at Dylan, but at
the moment, that was a luxury I couldn't afford. I toyed with calling
the cops, but I couldn't imagine explaining things quickly enough to
convince them to stake out the park before Dylan's thugs got nervous
and disappeared.
I dressed quickly, thinking I had two advantages.
One was that they saw runners as wimps, which meant they might
underestimate me. The other was that they didn't know that I actually
had four headsets because I'd never shown the other two to Dylan.
I had another advantage, too, which was that my wife
had been a 1500-meter runner, and those folks are the toughest of the
lot. She'd heard my end of the phone call and knew something was badly
wrong, but when I told her I needed to think, she didn't waste time
with questions. Nor were there any histrionics when I filled her in on
last night's adventures and the plan that was beginning to take shape.
There was a pretty good chance I wouldn't survive
it. But if I just gave the caller what he wanted, I doubted that he'd
let me live. And if I refused, he'd either start kneecapping my runners
or realize that the way to really get to me was through my
daughter.
I had about an hour until I needed to be on the
road. As quickly as possible, I jacked two of the headsets together and
set about copying selected portions of Dylan's chip. With only one
headset, Dylan hadn't been able to duplicate chips, and as long as the
bad guys didn't know how many headsets I had, they wouldn't be
expecting me to do it, either.
Once I had a master copy, I could make two at a
time, one on each recorder. I set my wife to making as many as
possible, recording them on top of old running chips that had
accumulated in my study and never made their way back to the office.
Meanwhile, I dashed to the corner market for a tube of Superglue.
En route, I called Dylan.
He answered on the second ring.
"I'm sorry, Coach," he began before I could speak.
"All I meant to do was to show the headset to a couple of friends. Then
we got thinking about all the cool things you could do with it. Morgan
took it skydiving, and Chris used it with his girlfriend, then someone
suggested it was a nice way to make a bit of money. I didn't think--"
"--that you were being really stupid." I said,
wishing yet again that someone had been tougher on him, all the way
back in high school. "But for now, I only want to know one thing. How
many guys?"
"Two. Why?"
I ignored the question. "Describe them."
"One was tall and fat, but looked strong. The other
was shorter, with a beer belly. But he was also pretty big. He was
getting old--maybe your age--and was nearly bald. Why?"
Again I ignored the question. "You're sure?"
"They never mentioned anyone else. I think they were
from Cheyenne. One of my friends found some folks there who'd pay $200
apiece just to view the chip, then a few days later these guys showed
up and started offering $500 for special recordings."
Next, I woke up Derrick, who gave a very similar
description of his "government types"--minus the bit about being
"old."
Derrick lives 300 miles away, which is close enough that the thugs
could visit him in the afternoon and still get back here in time for
Dylan's ill-fated drive, but far enough that they'd have probably sent
an associate if they had one. And if they really were from Cheyenne,
they were probably small-timers, because anywhere but in Wyoming,
Cheyenne would be viewed as a small town.
I hoped I was right. If there were more than two, I
was dead for sure.
* * * *
By the time I finished with the glue, time was
running out. While I'd been busy, my wife had managed to make an
impressive stack of duplicate chips. Now, I handed her the original and
one of the players.
"Take these, and go somewhere," I said. "Breakfast,
a drive, anywhere. Make sure you have your cell phone. If you've not
heard from me in"--I glanced at my watch--"two hours, take it all to
the
police. Then call Lauren"--our daughter--"and find a way to
disappear."
That way the real feds probably would get the headset, but
there wasn't much I could do about that. If I hadn't called by that
time, Dylan's clients would be well on their way to flooding the
underground market with the things, and humane interrogation would be
the least of everyone's worries.
* * * *
At the best of times, Fremont Park isn't the type of
place you go to unless you really want to get mugged. At 6:30 A.M., it
was as deserted as I feared it would be. I suspected that my life
expectancy could be measured in minutes.
My callers must have been watching, because a moment
later a blue sedan arrived and two beefy guys climbed out.
Football-player types, gone to seed. Exactly as described, but also
just the type to underestimate folks like me. They were supremely
confident, having done nothing to disguise their car or themselves. In
their eyes, I was already dead.
"Here's what you want," I said, taking the
initiative as though I were naïve enough to see this as an
ordinary
transaction. "But I don't know which is the chip you're after. Dylan
gave me one last night but I just tossed it in a drawer with the old
ones."
The bigger man stared at the handful of chips I was
offering. There were eighteen of them, and I suspected these guys
weren't long on patience.
"You have no idea which it is?"
I shook my head.
"Crap." He looked at his buddy. "At least there's
two headsets." He opened the trunk of his car and for a bad moment I
thought he was going to lock me in it. Instead, he pulled out a thick
roll of gray tape.
"Duct tape," he said, grinning wickedly. "Never
leave home without it. Hands behind your back."
I nearly abandoned the plan and bolted. But the park
was crisscrossed with roads and there was nowhere to go where they
couldn't chase me in the car. Not to mention that even if I got away,
they could still get at me through Dylan and his teammates. At least
Lauren was safe.
He wrapped my wrists--tightly enough, despite the
football-player mentality that underestimates us skinny types--then
opened the back door of his car and shoved me in. He slammed the door,
pushed a button on his key chain, and something went snick.
I didn't really want to get out yet, but I knew I
was expected to react, so I squirmed around until I could reach the
door handle with my fingers. I pulled on it, and nothing happened. I've
always hated those child-safety interlocks. Now they had me trapped as
effectively as the duct tape.
My captors laughed and I tried to act like a man
beginning to realize he's made a big mistake. That produced another
laugh, and by this time, the acting was easy because everything
depended on timing and there were a lot of little variables that could
get me killed. But at least they now had me sufficiently incapacitated
that they would be confident about not having to keep an eye on me.
They spent a few moments studying the chips,
presumably hoping to find one labeled with something more useful than a
scratched-out date from its original use. Then, the bigger guy started
examining one of the headsets, turning it over and over in his hands.
He looked puzzled, and for a moment, I truly panicked, wondering how
many times he'd seen Dylan's and if he knew something was wrong. The
differences were subtle, and I was counting on him not spotting them.
As it turned out, he'd apparently not used Dylan's
often at all. He turned to the bald guy and asked a question I couldn't
hear, after which his companion theatrically pushed a chip into its
slot and pointed to the start/stop button.
The big guy sat on a bench only a few yards from my
window, put on the headset, and pushed the button. His face went slack,
his eyes acquired a thousand-yard stare, and I knew he was in another
world.
His companion shrugged, gave me a final glance to
make sure I was behaving myself, and donned the other headset. A moment
later, he too was in another world--the same one as his companion,
actually, because all the chips were identical. Right now, he was
Dylan, running. Normally, he'd be taking off the headset, disgusted, or
clicking straight to the next track. But these were the variable-gain
headsets, and I'd turned the gain controls all the way up before using
the Superglue to make sure they didn't get jostled out of position. At
that level, even I would have found it difficult to break the
enhanced-reality's spell.
There was only about six minutes' material on each
chip, but that's a long time when you're waiting for someone to die.
The running was simply an introduction--something benign, because they
were looking for the death scene and just might be sufficiently on
guard to wrench themselves out of it, even on high gain, if it was the
first thing they encountered. That was followed by several minutes of
sex, just to make sure that if one was slow to put on his headset,
nothing unpleasant would be happening to his friend. Then came the
accident.
I have no idea what virtual death is like at high
gain. Making the master recording, I'd been forced to play it at low
gain, just to make sure I got the entire thing, and it had been bad
enough that I'd felt my own heart lurch when the driver's gave its last
beat. At higher gain, the pain and terror would be overwhelming, and
everything else, I hoped, magnified beyond the body's ability to endure.
The bigger guy was the first to encounter the
accident. During the running sequence, his thousand-yard stare had
never faded, but as the chip pulled him more deeply into its reality,
his legs and arms began to twitch, his breathing increased, and sweat
appeared on his forehead. When he reached the sex scenes, the sweat and
heavy breathing increased and a thin stream of drool ran down the
corner of his mouth. Pretty disgusting, especially for a non-voyeur
like myself.
Then he hit the accident sequence. His whole body
tensed, as though trying to brace against the car's rolls and flips.
His eyes were wide. The drool turned to froth, his body began thrashing
with convulsions that had not been in the recording, and the froth
became flecked with red bubbles.
I waited until both men were done thrashing before
trying to figure out how to get out of my prison. Then I tried to
wriggle over the front seat, but the headrests were too high.
Remembering how often vandals break car door windows, however, I braced
myself as best I could, got my back and glutes into it, and kick-shoved
for all I was worth. It was tougher than I expected, but the window
wasn't all that tightly rolled up, and at the cost of bruised heels, my
third attempt produced a gratifying shatter of glass.
With my hands behind my back, getting out the window
without landing on my head would still have been a difficult trick, but
luckily, I didn't need to try. Now that the glass was gone, I could
roll onto my back, stick my head and shoulders out the window, and use
the extra maneuvering room to contort myself enough to get my hands
below my ankles and then, blessedly, out from behind me. Now it was
easy to slither out the window, and moments later I was in the street,
ripping the duct tape off with my teeth.
The two extortionists lay where their final spasms
had thrown them. They looked dead, but it was hard not to believe they
were simply awaiting the opportunity to spring to their feet and pummel
me.
With some trepidation, I checked both for pulse. I
even pinched the bald guy's nostrils and counted to a hundred, waiting
to see if he'd breathe through his mouth. He didn't, and if that's not
dead, I don't know what is.
I should have felt at least a touch of
remorse. If they'd been alive, I could have bound them with duct tape
and called the police. But what I felt was relief. Explaining to the
police wasn't something I wanted to do.
Chips were scattered across the parking lot, which
was still miraculously deserted. Feeling that I was stretching my luck,
I collected them and the headsets, climbed into my car, and drove away.
That's when the enormity of what I'd done finally
began to soak in. Derrick had been afraid his wondrous invention would
be used for torture. Dylan had discovered porn and cheap thrills. But
I'd done them one better: I'd turned it into a weapon. Not just a
weapon, but an assassin's tool, with which I'd carefully laid a trap
and executed two men.
Once I was safely out of the park, I pulled my cell
phone from the glove box, where I'd stashed it for safekeeping, and
phoned my wife. Then I crushed the headsets with the car and threw the
pieces down sewers in three parts of town.
I'd always seen myself as a nice guy--a pacifist at
heart. Now, I knew otherwise. True, I'd seen no alternative, but I'd
been just as cold-blooded and ruthless as Dylan's extortionists. When
it comes to that anti-miracle stuff, it really is true. None of us is
immune.
I had to buy a hammer to crush the chips. Smashing
them should have felt satisfying, but it didn't. The chips were just a
symbol. What I really wanted to smash was something internal, human,
and more universal than I'd ever wanted to believe.
Copyright © 2006 Richard A. Lovett
[Back to Table of
Contents]
Preemption by Charlie Rosenkranz
Intelligent beings need to plan
ahead--but it can be hard to recognize all the relevant variables.
One brilliant April morning, the red-eye flight of a
Boeing 757 was on its final approach to Houston International from Las
Vegas when a portion of its underbelly disintegrated. The resultant
shock wave and missing hull section caused it to make prepunctual
contact with the Earth's unforgiving surface, just short of the runway.
Three miles south-southwest, a local who was barely
finished coughing into his cell phone at his boss, feigning the flu,
was driving two buddies and his dog, Spartacus, to a Monster Truck Pull
Rally when his SUV was vaporized. In the front, only the radiator and
items forward of it remained. In the rear, only a foot and a half
section of glossy red metal and sparkling chrome survived, along with
one third of the gas tank. The remaining gasoline erupted as it was
blown backwards, setting fire to a barbershop and incinerating a
smiling cardboard cutout of the mayor--an indisputably self-described
man of the people, who was locked in a vicious bid for re-election.
Just to the north, a traveling circus--currently not
in the act of traveling--lost one of its larger trailers as an
eight-foot spherical section of its center magically disappeared. The
two ends of the trailer were blown in opposite directions, destroying a
couple of valuable midway tents, but in this instance no fires
materialized.
In the center of town, a pet psychic was in the
process of describing the profound sense of loss and self-loathing
associated with a case of overly compulsive scratching (and preparing
to collect her fee) when she and her divination vacated the Earthly
plane. The eight-foot spherical zone of sublimation--where solids
transformed instantly into gas--also made a casualty of the neighbor's
chandelier in the apartment below. Though nearby windows were blown
out, the majority of the heat and force of the disintegration
inexplicably vanished along with the seer.
Panic erupted as hundreds of similar incidents
occurred throughout the greater Houston area in rapid succession. But
the panic was not limited to Houston, or to the great state of Texas,
for that matter. This was also happening in every other state--and in
every nation on Earth.
* * * *
The men on either arm were half carrying Andrew
Harrison as they flew through the tunnels. Eventually they made it to
the end. Over the sound of the internal pile driver hammering blood
past his ears, he heard the steel door thud into place, felt the
vibration underfoot.
"You nearly pulled my arm out of its socket," he
said with a scowl to the one on his left.
"I'm sorry, Mr. President. I'll be more careful next
time."
"Next time? Write yourself a directive: there will
never be a next time." He looked around. The bunker was spacious but
nonetheless felt cramped, as if he had just been banished to a hovel in
someone's back yard next to their garage. Never had accommodations
costing so many taxpayers so much felt so subhuman, so second-class. He
marched over to another Secret Service man, this one seated at the
conference table in front of a computer, pecking at the keyboard with
his right hand while talking into his left sleeve.
"What the hell's going on?"
"We don't know, Mr. President. Some type of high
tech assault. Explosions or disintegrations or ... we don't know what
they are, but they're happening all across the country."
"What are you talking about, 'all across the
country?'"
"Everywhere, sir. Thousands of them. So many we
can't even count. Reports coming in from every city in the U.S."
"My God." His knees, like a pair of garden hoses
with their water source cut off, were useless. He slumped into a chair.
In the last few minutes of chaos he had only been told of unexplained
explosions in D.C., including one on the sidewalk in front of the White
House.
"Who's doing it?"
"We don't have a clue, sir."
"Get Swick down here immediately. And locate the
directors of the CIA and FBI." He switched seats and grabbed a phone.
"This is Harrison. Get me McNab. Now."
The Secretary of Defense came on the line. "Andy,
are you okay?"
"What's going on?" he demanded, ignoring
pleasantries. "Who's attacking us?"
The first reply he received was silence.
The second reply he received was, "We have
absolutely no idea."
"What? Is that the best you can do?"
"Andy, look. We've got several thousand people on
this. And people from every other agency that might be of any help. So
far ... zip. People and buildings everywhere are being destroyed, and
there's not the slightest sign as to how or why."
"Unacceptable. I want answers. Who has the
capability to do something like this?"
Again, silence.
"No one. This is far in advance of anything we ever
thought possible."
Harrison's hands felt cold even as his neck grew
hotter. He felt the impulse growing to insult his long-term friend--to
start yelling to relieve the pain choking his thoughts. But he didn't
get the chance.
"Wait a minute, Andy. We're getting some data. Hold
on."
When Secretary of Defense McNab came back on the
line, his voice was shaky. "Mr. President," he began. Formal. That
wasn't good. "NASA and Air Defense both confirm the appearance of a
number of unidentified objects encircling the Earth."
Realizing the incomprehensible must now somehow be
comprehended, Harrison slumped forward, a frozen image of pure
helplessness. The facts trickled in: Estimated altitude of enemy
vessels, 800 miles; seventeen located so far; out of range for
retaliatory action; destruction occurring with spherical areas being
vaporized; diameters of kill zones estimated from eight to fifty feet;
similar reports from other nations; methodology unknown; attacks
already suspected to be in the hundreds of thousands, possibly
millions; no pattern or reasoning evident; cites, towns, and
communities everywhere in chaos.
The phone seemed to increase in mass, becoming a
burden to hold. His strength had been sucked away along with his
ability to think. His impulse never to give in, never to back down from
a fight, was annihilated. Through a numb stupor, he envisioned the end
of his own life, the end of his family, and that of humanity. His
Defense Secretary, dismayed and helpless, asked if he had any
suggestions--again not what he wanted to hear.
He said nothing. All he could do was wonder how to
say, "We surrender," in whatever alien tongue the attackers spoke, if
indeed they spoke any language at all.
* * * *
The FBI Director had been injured; she had been hit
with flying glass from an attack. The CIA Director, having called in
sick, thereby extending his vacation at his second home in Easton,
Maryland, across the Chesapeake, had not been heard from since the
attacks began. Two CIA analysts, Kimmells and Blix, were poring over
reports on their laptops, directing occasional nervous glances toward
the president. He eyed them suspiciously. They should be trustworthy:
they were career analysts, but he was paranoid at the moment. The
people around him weren't giving him answers, and giving him answers
was the primary job of the people around him. They should all know this
by now.
Additionally, emergency talks with other world
leaders had been as helpful as a chat with an IRS telephone information
center. The Russians, the Chinese, and various NATO leaders could do
little but confirm they were enduring the same fate. They all agreed to
stand firm against the aggression, not give an inch. Useless posturing.
He looked to his right. "I've got to get on the air
and say something. Something to calm and reassure them. They expect
leadership, deserve it, demand it. If we survive this, if we don't all
get fried, they'll just turn around and roast me at the polls next
November."
His ashen speechwriter nodded and gazed at an empty
note pad. Three TV screens high on the wall gave flickering
images--endless reports of major amounts of minor destruction on all
continents. On one station, the citizenry was being interviewed. One
woman said, "It's like, way totally unfair. We didn't do anything to
anybody and they're totally bombing us. Are we supposed to like ...
hide or something? I'd be way pissed off if I weren't so totally
freaked. What do I do now?"
Others being interviewed were equally confused and
unenlightened.
"It just doesn't make any sense, sir," came a voice
from across the table. Bernard Swick, National Security Advisor, was
visibly shaken. His chin quivered; his jowls wagged. "Their technology
is so far advanced we can't even remotely determine how it works and
don't have the slightest clue as to what it is. There's no detectable
beam or energy transmission. They could easily have wiped us out by
now. But the attacks are completely random. Not on our key
infrastructure, defense, or high technology. Mostly civilian. Totally
chaotic. There's no logic to it at all."
"Unless they want to create terror before
eliminating us. Unless they have some other motivation. Unless. Unless.
You and the Secretary of Defense need to determine what they're doing
and how they're doing it. Immediately. Find any weakness to exploit.
Whatever their plan is, I expect you to stop it. Understood?"
"Yes sir." Swick got up to leave, at which point
the
Secret Service refused to open the blast door until the president
turned around and barked at them to let him out.
Harrison grasped at a frenzied dust devil of random
thoughts, trying to hold each of them still where he could look at
them. At least his wife, Brittany, and the two kids were safe. At least
for now. They were in another bunker--an Uncle Sam cave with all the
amenities. But what did the supposed illogic behind these attacks mean?
What did any of it mean?
He went over and sat across from the CIA analysts.
"What patterns are there to the attacks? There's got to be something."
Kimmells pursed his lips, thinking about this, as if
there were time for idle pondering. "Well, Mr. President, I can't say
there's a pattern to whom they're attacking, but we have been able to
deduce a couple things."
"Which may be mostly irrelevant," said Blix.
"Yes, but not entirely irrelevant," said Kimmells.
"That's true," said Blix.
Kimmells looked to his left. "Stop interrupting.
You're distracting me."
Blix clamped his mouth shut and stared defiantly at
the wall.
"You see, Mr. President, most of the attacks have
been on the surface. Houses, cars, parks, apartment buildings. The zone
of annihilation is always spherical. And normally eight feet or so in
diameter."
"But not always," said Blix.
Kimmells shot him a look. Blix returned to his
computer.
"Some of these spherical zones are larger. A few.
But below ground they're all larger. All reports of attacks on
basements, root cellars, and the like have had kill zones of twenty
feet or more. And depth seems to be significant. For example,
there was an attack on an office building over on K Street, one level
below ground, twenty feet in diameter. A few minutes later, on the
other side of that same building, an attack two levels down, twenty-eight
feet in diameter. Sad, actually: it was a policeman and his dog, highly
decorated, and he was investigating--"
"The policeman, not the dog," Blix interrupted.
"What?" Kimmells spun around.
"The policeman was the decorated party. Just
clarifying. The way you structured that sentence, it sounded like--"
"Of course, the policeman! Blix, you're not
helping!" Kimmells turned back to Harrison. "My point, Mr. President,
should I be permitted to finish it: the farther below ground
the room is, the bigger the sphere." He took a deep breath. "It could
mean they're testing their weaponry in some fashion."
"But we think that unlikely," said Blix.
"That's right. Unlikely. They could have tested it
anywhere. Not here and now when they're in the process of attacking us.
Now it could mean their weaponry requires more power to be activated
when surrounded in five out of six directions by soil and rock--"
"But we think that unlikely also," said Blix.
Kimmells sighed. "Yes. Unlikely also."
Harrison leaned forward, his temper long since
missing in action, his patience on a short leash. "Get to the point.
What's the most likely conclusion?"
"Well, it could well mean their detection and/or
targeting technology utilizes data gathered multi-directionally--in
three dimensions--and therefore is less effective below ground."
"I don't understand. Why would that result in larger
explosions?"
Kimmells held up his index fingers and stared at the
space between them as if the answer resided in, and could be divined
from, that exact location. "Well, if they're having difficulty
obtaining a bio-sign reading, or getting an exact lock on the
individual's location, they could simply boost their power output and
destroy a larger area ... theoretically."
Difficulty obtaining a bio-sign reading. Growing
slightly hopeful, Harrison said, almost whispered, "Any reports of
attacks this deep?"
"Oh, no sir. Not even close."
Harrison felt his shoulders relax and experienced a
rush of hope. Only then did he become aware of the ignoble fact that
most of his tension had been tied into concern for his own survival,
not that of his fellow Americans. Partially cognizant that this might
be something he would have felt guilty about in years past, he
nonetheless managed not to let it derail his feeling of relief.
Blix chuckled. "But statistically speaking, Mr.
President, that doesn't mean very much. After all, very few people work
at this depth. So, if attacks are random, based on probability it might
take quite a while--"
"Yes. I get your point." So much for relief. He
looked at Kimmells. "Is there any pattern to the attacks? Anything at
all?"
"Well, Mr. President, there's so much chaos, it's
hard to tell. And there's so much raw data, it's a gargantuan task for
headquarters to sort it all. We're being sent any relevant information
as fast as they compile it. The targets have been homes, offices,
veterinary clinics, beauty salons, police stations, airplanes,
municipal parks, duck blinds, urban, rural ... you name it."
Harrison looked down, but held up his right index
finger to indicate he had heard enough for the moment. An image of a
duck blind flitted nervously through his mind, frantically searching
for a place to settle down and make sense, on a quest for meaning where
it could fit properly into a greater whole. It failed.
"Okay. What about the size of the ... kill zone. You
said some were larger."
Kimmells smiled, a slightly goofy and sheepish grin.
"Well, the largest one reported so far was, uncharacteristically, above
ground and was on what Blix and I are calling the 'busload of blind
bigots.'"
"You're joking." Harrison stared at the pair of
analysts, wondering who hired them. He also wondered how he had gotten
stuck with these two, of all people, in the middle of this crisis. "A
busload of blind bigots," he said incredulously.
"Yes sir," said Kimmells. "It seems there was a
charter bus full of blind members of the KKK on their way to an annual
party in Biloxi, Mississippi. They go there each year for Easter, to
gamble away the holiday. The attack took out the driver, the
passengers, the entire bus, and a healthy chunk of Interstate 10. We
estimate a diameter of 60 feet. And a whole mess of other cars behind
them drove right into the crater."
Harrison rubbed his eyes. Despite himself, he
wondered how blind people gambled. Then he wondered--if they were both
KKK and blind--how they would know they hadn't put their hoods on
backwards. Shaking his head, he wondered if present company was
possibly getting to him.
He confronted Blix accusatively. "What's taking so
long with my order to attempt communication with the aliens?"
"Well, sir, they're working on it, but we're a bit
short-handed. Some people went home to their families as soon as the
chaos began. And some of our guys overslept. A big Caribbean
theme-party last night. I wasn't invited, but ... Wait." Looking at
his
computer screen, he grinned. "What do you know? They've just informed
me they're ready! Just when you need something, if you try, sometimes,
well, you get what you need. I was just telling Kimmells here--"
"Shut up and prepare to send my message." Harrison
forced himself to concentrate on the issue at hand. He thought of all
the exhortations of foreign leaders--to stand firm, to talk tough with
the aliens, threaten massive retaliation. A big bluff. He thought of
all the people dying with every minute that passed and all the
additional people that would die while he pretended he could fight
them--a nameless them, likely as advanced over us as we are over our
cave dwelling ancestors. He wondered what kind of a leader he would be
if he didn't at least try to stand up to them. He thought of the
cheering crowds at his campaign stops, the friendly, innocent faces.
"Tell them we surrender. Tell them we will cooperate
with them in any way they require if they will stop the attacks."
The message was relayed along a circuitous path to
conceal the whereabouts of the president, then sent skyward on multiple
frequencies. They waited.
Harrison repeatedly walked the length of the
conference table, trying to shrug off a suffocating aura of guilt at
his impotence and concentrate on a solution. He stopped pacing and
turned to face Kimmells.
"Where aren't they attacking?"
"Sir?'
"Where aren't they attacking? You told me what types
of places they are attacking. What types of places aren't they
attacking?"
"Well, sir ... I--"
"Movie theaters," said Blix. "Not one report of an
attack on any theaters."
"Well, come to think of it, Mr. President," said
Kimmells, "we don't know of any attacks on grocery stores yet."
"Or hospitals," said Blix. "Except for one. We did
get one report just in the last few minutes of an attack on a hospital
basement. Three levels down. Forty foot diameter. Took out everyone
hiding there. And a chunk of the morgue. But that's the only one so
far."
"Are people dying in every attack?"
"Not at all," said Kimmells. "Many houses have been
hit when the owners were out."
"Possibly at the theater," said Blix.
Kimmells glared at his associate, looked back at the
president, took a deep breath, and said, "Anyway ... no. One report
from a man says an attack took out several of his prize sheep. And his
best sheepdog. And we have reports from park rangers in the Angeles
National Forest, north of LA, of blasts out in the woods, in completely
unpopulated areas. And from forest rangers elsewhere as well. And then,
well, there was what could only be described as an odd one--"
"We're receiving an answer!" Blix shouted. "They've
sent back a message. It's coming through now."
Harrison quickly slid over the conference table and
landed on the floor next to Blix. On the screen was their reply: WE DO
NOT REQUEST YOUR SURRENDER. WE DO NOT REQUIRE YOUR COOPERATION.
Harrison stared at the screen with a stiffness that
mirrored his catatonic wits. That was their reply?
After a moment, he said, "Send this message. 'Then
why, in the name of humanity, are you attacking us?'" He collapsed
into
the chair.
"This next response should be quicker," said Blix.
Weary and frustrated, Harrison raised his head and stared at him.
"Well, sir, they had to learn how to respond. Maybe even learn our
language. And look, they answered intelligibly and with proper grammar."
He then returned to his computer, his enthusiastic
countenance withered by the president's glare.
Blix was right. Soon the answer came: WE ARE NOT
ATTACKING YOU.
Seething with anger, Harrison said, "What the hell
are they trying to pull? Okay. Send this: 'You have attacked us around
our entire world. Stop immediately. We will not sit idly by as you
exterminate us.'" He gazed at the ceiling. "As if we could stop
them,"
he muttered.
He went to the other end of the conference table and
argued with his speechwriter, whose note pad was suspiciously devoid of
anything resembling a speech. Kimmells and Blix took the opportunity to
bicker with each other, after which they returned to their research,
but not before Blix accused Kimmells of possessing neither the insight
nor the courage that Mulder would show in a similar situation.
Soon Harrison was called back over. The response had
arrived: WE ARE NOT ATTACKING YOU. WE ARE NOT EXTERMINATING YOUR
SPECIES.
Blix raised an eyebrow at Kimmells, who bristled at
Blix like the more irritable half of a long-married couple. "So?"
Blix then raised both eyebrows. Kimmells's eyes
flared. "I don't want to hear it!"
Harrison--whose whirlwind of thoughts had lost its
speed but had disrespectfully dumped the clutter of ideas on him in a
heap--ignored their bickering. "This is insane! What are they doing?
How
do we stop it? Okay. Send this: 'If you are not attacking us, what the
hell are you doing?' Yes, that's exactly how I want you to say it. 'If
you are not attacking us, what the hell are you doing and why?' Send it
now."
He looked at Kimmells in despair. "Does it appear
they're trying to deceive us with these answers? Or could it be ... we
think so differently that they don't understand us ... or we don't
understand them?"
"Any of those possibilities could exist," said
Kimmells.
Blix looked away, clearing his throat.
Kimmells continued. "They seem to be responding only
to the direct communications you give them. So we get terse answers.
But this time you asked what they were doing and why. Perhaps that will
elicit a more detailed response. But it's also possible they
misunderstand our communication somehow."
"Or not," said Blix.
Kimmells sighed abruptly, nervously. "Mr. President,
there is one theory developing, and Blix thinks it probable. You see,
based on some of the attacks and now this reply by the aliens that they
are not exterminating our species ... well, sir ... there's the
... the possibility that they're actually attacking our ... well, sir,
there's the possibility they're actually attacking our pets....
Sir."
Harrison coughed uncontrollably for a few seconds,
silently vowing that if his CIA Director proved to be still alive, he
would strangle him at the first opportunity.
"You're joking. Or you're insane."
Blix eagerly turned to face him. "To be more
specific, Mr. President, I believe they're attacking our dogs." He
looked at Harrison with a wide-eyed innocence that made him appear even
more ridiculous. "It was hard to filter this out at first with all the
confusion, but it's possible that dogs have been the target of all
attacks. Human deaths are likely just collateral damage. Or sheep
deaths, for that matter," he said with a chuckle.
Stunned now more than angry, Harrison tried to
process the information. Okay, so there was a dog that a man lost along
with his sheep. There was that policeman and his dog. Parks are often
filled with people walking their dogs. Families trying to hide would go
into their basements or public shelters with their ... Veterinary
offices filled with ... Okay. Okay. But this did not in any way
constitute proof. As he was about to say so, the image of the duck
blind flapped its way back into his consciousness, exhausted from its
migration and still searching for a place to rest. This time it was
complete with two hunters and an English Setter. No. How in the name of
cross-eyed, crack-smoking Uncle Sam was he supposed to believe
something like this?
"What about the airplanes?" he blurted out.
"The airplanes were all destroyed from blasts to the
cargo area," said Blix. "Where the dogs are carried. Also, we've
recently had two reports of people cut in half by the spherical blast
zones while walking their dogs: either poor targeting or the humans
weren't the target to begin with. And lots of houses attacked when the
owners were out. It was your question about where they weren't
attacking that got me going. Movie theaters. When's the last time you
saw a dog in a movie theater?'
Far from ready to embrace either the premise or its
messenger, Harrison ignored the question. "What about the blasts in the
woods?" He found himself compulsively making a fist on the surface of
the table.
"Coyotes, I suppose. Or wolves. All the same
species, you know."
"They are not," said Kimmells.
"Are too," said Blix, through gritted teeth.
"Well, what about those ... that KKK bus?"
"Blind, sir. Guide dogs. A whole pack of Klan guide
dogs, I presume."
As much as Harrison wanted to believe a scenario
that didn't end with the destruction of humanity, he still was not
about to take this person's idea seriously. And he tightened his fist a
little more. "Have you always been prone to wild and crazy delusions?"
"No, Mr. President. Not at all.... Well, actually
... Oh, look! They've responded!"
As motionless as granite, three Grand Tetons in a
bunker, they stared at the screen as the message came in. It said: AT
THE REQUEST OF A SPECIES THAT WE HAVE ENTERED INTO A MUTUALLY
BENEFICIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH, WE ARE ELIMINATING A THREAT TO THE FUTURE
BALANCE OF POWER IN THIS PART OF THE GALAXY. YOUR SPECIES, NOT
REPRESENTING A THREAT, IS NOT BEING EXTERMINATED. PREDICTIONS INDICATE
THAT YOUR SPECIES WILL NOT EXPAND BEYOND THIS STAR SYSTEM, DUE TO ITS
SELF-DESTRUCTIVE NATURE. FURTHERMORE, WE ARE BOUND BY INTERSTELLAR
CODES THAT FORBID THE TOTAL ELIMINATION OF ANY SPECIES THAT HAS ALREADY
ACHIEVED FULL SENTIENCE.
OUR CONTRACTED TASK IS THE COMPLETE ELIMINATION OF
YOUR CANINE SPECIES. PREDICTIONS INDICATE THAT, IF UNCHECKED, THEY WILL
ACHIEVE FULL SENTIENCE AND INTELLIGENCE IN 178,000 OF YOUR
YEARS--SOONER
IF ASSISTED BY HUMANS. PREDICTIONS ALSO INDICATE THEY WOULD THEN
RAPIDLY SPREAD THROUGHOUT THE GALAXY AND DESTROY THE PLANS OF THOSE WE
REPRESENT.
Harrison felt an unannounced and unwelcome creaking
in the fuzzier recesses of his harried mind and stared at Blix
suspiciously. No. No, not even this loon would jeopardize his job by
writing a fake response as some type of perverse joke. It had to be the
real thing.
He shook his head. "Contracted assassins.
Mercenaries. Sent across interstellar space in a preemptive attack to
kill our dogs? Preposterous. I can't address the nation with a story
like this and then find out it's wrong. It will be tough enough to do
even if I'm certain it's true. How can we be sure they aren't still
interested in wiping us out?"
Blix was frowning, staring at his computer screen,
and didn't seem to hear the question, but Kimmells answered readily.
"Well, sir, one thing that's puzzled us from the start is the lack of
damage. It's--"
"Lack of damage?"
"Yes, sir. What I mean is the low amount of damage
with each individual incineration, not the total number of attacks. You
see, obliterating that much solid matter instantly should cause
tremendous heat and an enormous shock wave. But most of the heat and
force is being dissipated, somehow. It's as if they're actually trying
to protect us. Sir."
"And the planet," said Blix, while still puzzling
over the alien message. "Otherwise, 200 million of such energy releases
would almost certainly devastate the Earth."
"200 million?" Harrison asked with a shudder.
"Yes. The number of dogs on Earth. But that's a very
rough guess. It's likely more. I could--"
Harrison jumped from his chair. The latest bizarre
parade of facts steamrolling its way through his mind had just
coalesced into bleak understanding. He ran to his speechwriter. "No
time to prepare a speech. Just give me notes. I need to be on the air
in two minutes. I need to warn everyone to stay away from their dogs!"
Staring at his president with an expression
customarily reserved for a lunatic sporting a weapon, his mouth stayed
open, unmoving. There was a tremor in the eyes as he tried to keep them
focused on his boss. But after Harrison sat down and explained the
situation he relaxed (somewhat) and they quickly started working out
what to say.
"I understand some dog owners can be a bit
fanatic,"
Harrison said. "Do you think they'll all listen to me? Or will some
refuse, hugging their dogs into oblivion in some sort of defiant act of
devotion and self-sacrifice?"
"I really wouldn't know, Mr. President. I'm a cat
person."
"Yeah. Me too," Harrison said, contemplating
whether
it had been a mistake not to get a dog within the last couple years.
Suddenly a new worry descended upon him.
He scurried back to Kimmells and Blix. "We need to
at least attempt to change their minds. We can't just let them destroy
our dogs while we sit and do nothing." No longer worried about the
destruction of humanity (or his own survival), he was now fighting back
irrepressible and prophetic images of enraged dog ex-owners marching on
the White House for the next eighteen months.
Blix jumped up. "I'm so glad you said that, Mr.
President! There's no way dogs can achieve sapience in a mere 178,000
years. They're just, well--no disrespect intended--they're just not
that
smart."
They sent a formal protest: there had to be an
error--dogs could not possibly develop such highly evolved intelligence
so fast.
This gave Harrison the opportunity, in his speech to
the nation, to pronounce that he was personally attempting everything
humanly possible to stop the alien assault diplomatically, as we had no
chance of stopping them militarily.
But the bulk of his speech was simply an appeal to
get everyone to put immediate distance between themselves and their
dogs. Due to the urgency of the situation, he had not even spoken with
other world leaders yet. Lives had to be saved, and his first
responsibility was to the citizens of the United States.
That was a good touch, he thought. Of
course, his subordinates were communicating with every government in
the world, but that was a small detail better left out at a time when
he would need all the political capital he could get.
He poured empathy into his speech. He knew their
pain, but this was the only way. He felt the intense sorrow and depth
of their sacrifice, but every dog owner must act immediately to protect
their lives and the lives of their children. Like a mighty redwood that
has had the core of its trunk hollowed out by cruel forces of nature,
yet still lives, we must do our duty; we as a nation must soldier on.
No sooner had he finished his speech than a message
came back from the aliens: WE HAVE MADE NO ERROR IN PREDICTION. THE
TIME INTERVAL STATED IS ACCURATE.
After deliberating, they sent a new message--one
designed to give a response of more than thirteen words: "Our data on
evolutionary development, canine brain capacity, and intelligence
levels suggest it would take more than ten times as long as you state
for dogs to evolve as you claim. How do you account for such rapid
development?"
Soon the answer came: YOUR PRIMITIVE EVOLUTIONARY
THEORIES AND ASSUMPTIONS ARE INACCURATE. THE MANIFEST CAPACITY OF A
SPECIES TO LEARN IS NOT AS IMPORTANT A FACTOR IN LONG-TERM DEVELOPMENT
AS A WILLINGNESS TO LEARN.NO OTHER SPECIES ON YOUR PLANET EXHIBITS AS
MUCH EAGERNESS TO LEARN AS YOUR CANINE SPECIES DOES. THIS SHOULD BE
EVIDENT TO YOU BASED ON THEIR ENTHUSIASM FOR DOING TRICKS, STUNTS, OR
OTHER TASKS, NO MATTER HOW CONDESCENDING OR ANNOYING. IT IS THIS
CAPACITY, ALONG WITH ALARMINGLY PROLIFIC BREEDING, THAT WOULD HAVE
SWIFTLY PROPELLED THEM TO FULL SENTIENCE AND DOMINATION OF THIS ARM OF
THE GALAXY.
That would have swiftly propelled them.... Harrison
contemplated the bleak finality of those words. He wrestled with what
to do, even as he puzzled over how they knew so much about us. TV, no
doubt. TV signals blabbing about us every day, heading
omni-directionally into space. The same TV he repeatedly told his wife
and nanny to keep the kids from watching. His kids, who were so
proficient at avoiding their schoolwork. His offspring, his progeny,
who apparently represented no threat to the cosmos.
Over the next several days, he tried in vain to
persuade them to cease. They refused. He tried to get a delay, time to
negotiate or come up with other options. They again refused; time was
of the essence in their contract with the species they represented. In
short order, all dogs were eliminated from the surface of the Earth,
along with wolves, jackals, and coyotes. Then, as promptly as the
aliens came, they left.
* * * *
The devastation and terror created by the attack
caused a worldwide economic slump. It was sharp and severe, though not
as great as some in decades past. But this one felt deeper. The
emotional loss, many would even say the spiritual loss, was
unmitigated. The planet had been violated.
There was vitriolic anger toward the nameless
aliens, who came to be known as the Butchers. Those who mourned the
loss of their companions could not strike back at them and were even
cheated out of the opportunity to have a physical image to curse, a
face to hate.
Numerous incidents of unprovoked attacks on cat
owners and an increase in wars around the globe seemed to prove the
Butchers' claims about our species. Mankind did indeed know how to be
self-destructive.
In the U.S., which had been particularly hard hit,
the human population gave its best shot at returning to normal. They
sought out ways to carry on.
After statues, monuments, and other shrines had been
lovingly erected in memory of their pets, people turned to other
sources of companionship. They adopted turtles, hamsters, parrots, and
pigs. Many prior dog owners got cats--and were forced to make the
necessary adjustments. Others took in raccoons, ferrets, otters, and
even skunks ... after prudent alterations had been made. They even did
it despite laws to the contrary. And laws were changed. Rapidly. The
times cried out for change (as much as any increment of time could
possibly be expected to cry out for anything), and even old politicians
can learn new tricks when forced to do so.
By the time the Earth pirouetted its way around the
Sun again to the spot in its orbit we call Easter, the intense demand
for rabbits was overwhelming. But, as fortune would have it, the
rabbits complied enthusiastically. Rabbits always do.
Many former dog owners, with ceaseless devotion,
endeavored to teach their new cats any number of tricks. The cats
proved to be wholly uncooperative, some even disdainful.
Others had better luck. Crows were said to be able
to learn a few words, and some would even play fetch with marbles or
small rubber balls. One man from Minnesota trained his parrot to sing
the Star-Spangled Banner. In defense of his bird and its rendition, he
said, "Well, he ain't perfect, but he sure is better than some people
I've heard sing it."
No one could argue with that.
Otters, it was found, would hang their heads out of
moving car windows just like dogs, and--as a bonus--they could learn a
wide array of tricks. Being the providential creatures that they were,
they became popular overnight.
Pigs could be taught to wake their owners (albeit
with a limited degree of finesse) at just the right time of the
morning, and altered skunks were discovered to be amazingly
affectionate. They also had the side benefit of scaring off burglars
and pesky door-to-door salesmen.
But parrots would not fetch the morning paper, and
pigs were sadly lost when it came to the finer points of how to
retrieve a stick. Cats could not be trained to bark in an attempt to
frighten the mailman, and skunks would not bring slippers to their
owners. Despite mankind's best efforts, life was not the same.
Very few people blamed President Harrison for the
disaster, and he received high marks for many eloquent, consoling
speeches. But when November rolled around, they voted him out of office
in one of the most crushing landslides in modern American history.
He was trounced by the junior senator from Missouri,
a father of four, who had been the proud owner of a Malamute and two
Dachshunds.
* * * *
On the morning of January 16th, President Harrison
descended in the elevator along with four Secret Service agents, whose
protests he had overridden by coming here. But for now, he was still
president, and they still worked for him.
"It's safe, guys. Relax." Carefree lately, having
fully accepted his defeat, he smiled at them as they got off on the
bottom floor. But they weren't much for smiling back.
It wasn't in their nature.
Major Parker, head of the local operation, greeted
him. "Glad you could make it, Mr. President."
"Oh, I couldn't pass up this opportunity, Dane. It
was now or never for me."
They passed through four blast doors, each one
closed in their wake. Harrison contemplated the two thousand feet of
rock above them. He also contemplated the brave members of the
intelligence and military communities who had been lost in this
campaign.
"What's the latest count?"
"1,287, sir."
"1,287? That's up quite a bit, isn't it?"
"It sure is. In fact, six more just this morning,"
he said proudly.
As they walked into the main hall, Harrison was
surprised to find himself overcome with emotion. Nearly seven hundred
dogs were neatly assembled in rows and columns in front of him.
"This room's more packed than some of my campaign
rallies," he said, feigning a puzzled scratch of the head. "And a more
enthusiastic crowd, too."
And they were. Tails were wagging that belonged to
Irish Setters, Dalmatians, German Shepherds, and Pomeranians. From
Golden Retrievers to English Sheepdogs, Labradors to Papillons, there
were thirty-seven breeds represented, as well as a broad assortment of
mutts.
He had been briefed prior to coming, just as he
would have been for a press conference. Stay away from the Husky in the
front row--you give him a little attention and he'll demand more. And
the Cocker Spaniel next to him bites. Yes, exactly like the press.
"These are all local dogs, Mr. President."
"Yes, I know." Only thick lead containers with no
air holes had proven safe to transport the dogs in. Other attempts had
resulted in dogs and the government officials moving them being
destroyed. Limited air supply had necessitated carrying sedated dogs
from nearby locations only.
"And a proud lot they are," Harrison said.
"Sir, I understand we may be working out a
cross-breeding program with the Russians. Any word?"
"Oh, that's for the next administration to decide.
I'm out of that picture. But the Russians do have a sizeable
population. And the Brits, too. The Brits have more than we have in
Colorado."
"Really? I didn't have details. They keep me in the
dark down here."
Harrison laughed. "They probably do. They do that
sort of thing. Well, I'll tell you something you don't know, then. When
the Egyptians were informed of the alien inability to see through solid
rock, they successfully barricaded about fifty of them in a tunnel
underneath one of the pyramids.
"That's fabulous, sir."
"I tell you, Major. Those Butchers may be right
about us. We may not make it. We may end up destroying ourselves ...
perhaps with the same finality with which they destroyed my career. But
I'll be damned if we're going to let them cheat Earth out of its
rightful place in the galaxy."
A Pembroke Welsh Corgi barked in agreement.
"I have something to show you, sir. Over here." He
led the president to the far side of the room, where forty-two dogs
were separated into seven rows of six each. One of the trainers held up
three fingers. They all stood on their hind legs and raised their right
front paws, giving the president a salute.
"Ho! That's wonderful!"
"Well, Mr. President, you are still the
Commander In Chief, after all."
"Ah, not for long. Not for long."
"Well, I can guarantee you, sir, every one of them
would have voted for you if they could."
"Hah. I could have used their support. But I'm
afraid that would have required a Constitutional Amendment."
He knelt in front of a Golden Retriever. "What's
your name, soldier? Would you like to be given the right to vote?"
"His name is Buddy, Mr. President," his trainer
said.
Buddy indicated his voting preference with his tail.
He looked into Buddy's eyes. And at that moment
President Harrison understood, far too late, what a fool he had been
for never having owned a dog.
The Corporal grabbed the disk and turned around.
"Get the Frisbee, Buddy!" he yelled. He tossed it toward the Golden
Retriever.
Buddy came to full alertness as the plastic disk
sailed his way. It was headed over him, a fairly long throw. His tail
wagged randomly, but his eyes followed the disk's movements exactly.
"Catch it, Buddy!"
Buddy was watching the exact angle and speed of the
disk. With an eager burst of enthusiasm he ran after it, not taking his
eyes off it even to blink. It was rising up on the right hand edge ever
so slightly ... it would soon change course, curve back, dip to the
left. He kept running. He knew full well he would soon have to turn and
run back the other way; he wasn't fooled a bit. But he enjoyed chasing
it in both directions, then catching it at the earliest possible
moment. That was the best way to play the game, the way that made it
the most fun.
He reversed course, whipping his head up to stay on
track with the disk. It was losing speed and altitude now, and he could
project exactly when and where he would be able to jump and grab it.
Another second went by, and he confirmed the projection. Two and
three-quarter seconds after that, he jumped. This moment represented
the culmination of the game, the point of success or failure.
He had timed it perfectly. His teeth bit down, and
it was now his. The plastic of the disk tasted like triumph.
"Great catch, Buddy!"
He trotted proudly toward his owner. He liked this
new owner who gave him these games to learn. At first, this person had
smelled like a stranger. Soon thereafter he smelled like an
acquaintance, maybe even a neighbor. But now he smelled like an owner,
and Buddy loved that. It filled him with a sense of belonging and
security.
He surrendered his prize and then started to trot
back to his position, to practice the game once more. He even was
beginning to like this new home--these big, square caves with doors and
smooth walls and ceilings. But he missed going to the park: the old
place with the soft grass that smelled like nature, the fresh breezes
that smelled like exhilaration, and the brilliant sky overhead that
shone like freedom.
The man prepared to throw the disk again, and, in
less than the brief flicker of a dog's heartbeat, faster than the wag
of a joyous tail, Buddy forgot all about the park. Because the game was
ready to begin anew. He loved all these amazing games: this flying
disk, the balls, the stick, and many more. He even liked the new ones
where he held up a paw or spoke when his owner showed him a particular
object or held up the same object two times in a row. Those games were
harder, but he vowed to keep learning them.
The man threw the disk again, and he studied it to
see precisely how it would behave this time. He would keep analyzing
this game until he mastered it. Just like the other games, he would
learn them all. The disk soared overhead, and once again exhilaration
ruled the universe. He bounded after it. It was leaning differently
this time ... this disk was delightfully, deviously tricky. But no
matter what, he would keep working at it until he was flawless. At
every opportunity, with every breath, he would keep striving, he would
keep learning. His reasoning for this was as resolute as it was
straightforward.
It's what life is all about.
Copyright © 2006 Charlie Rosencranzn
[Back to Table of
Contents]
The Alternate View: My Mysterious Father
by Jeffery D. Kooistra
It is not unusual for Analog to feature a
seasonally-flavored story or article appropriate to the date on the
cover (even though said issue might hit the stands a month or two
before that cover date). Hence, the July/August issue might feature
something suitable for Independence Day. The October issue almost
always has a story appropriate for Halloween. I myself once wrote a
story for Christmas ("Easter Egg Hunt: A Christmas Story") that
appeared in the December issue of 1997. But I can't remember Analog
specifically including a piece for Father's Day in the June issue,
though no doubt some such pieces have appeared through the years even
if only by coincidence.
I'm going to write one this time because, though my
dad died in 1989, these past few months I've been walking down a path
he once walked, literally following him step by step. There is a
nostalgia factor involved too, what with writing this between
Thanksgiving and Christmas. And something about Dad has long mystified
me, but I think I've finally figured it out.
I'll get to the mystery, but first let me tell you
about my dad.
Franklin Kooistra (he had no middle name), born in
1924, came to the U.S. at the age of four, just in time for the onset
of the Great Depression. His parents and his four brothers and five
sisters (he was the youngest) settled in Grand Rapids, Michigan, which
was already home to more Hollanders than almost anywhere else in the
United States.
Like many boys of that era, he grew up poor but
didn't know it. He went to school through the 8th grade and then, this
being the depths of the Depression, to work, helping the family make
money any way he could.
Despite his lack of much formal education, Frank
liked to read, and he was becoming quite the jack-of-all-trades by the
time Pearl Harbor rolled around. The then 17-year-old lad cried when
his brothers got to enlist but his father wouldn't sign for him so he
could go, too. Nevertheless, once he turned 18 the following May, he
signed up with the Navy and became a gunner's mate, manning the weapons
on assorted merchant ships and seeing the entire planet.
After the war Dad met my mom, Trudy. He fell in love
with her instantly, and on that very first date he told her he was
going to marry her, which he did.
Their first few years together Frank and Trudy lived
in the second floor apartment of his sister's house. This was while he
was building, by himself, the house in which I would grow up. I don't
know when it was Dad learned to be an architect, because he also
designed the house. He also laid the blocks for the foundation alone,
and did the plumbing, and the electrical work, and the septic system,
and all the concrete for the driveway. Apparently, an 8th grade
education went a long way in those days. The only things he had
professionally done were the plastering and digging out the basement.
But he'd been doing the latter by himself with a shovel when someone
came along and offered to bulldoze it out for him.
My account of Dad's abilities is reminiscent of
Heinlein's descriptions of E. E. "Doc" Smith, who was the archetype of
the "man who could do everything." You might think Dad's talents were
inflated when I was told about things he did prior to my being born.
But I saw him do these things, too. He finished the upstairs of
our house when I was very young, but I still remember moving into my
bedroom. Now that I can appreciate it, I marvel at the precision with
which he cut and varnished every piece of trim. In junior high I helped
mix the concrete when it came time to redo the driveway. I saw just how
expert and accomplished Dad was in real time as over the course of a
few summers he pieced it all together one four-by-eight-foot slab at a
time. The job was quite the elaborate masterpiece sculpture when he
finished, so he must have drawn a few sketches. But most of it was
built straight from his head to his hands.
Another summer I helped Dad connect our house up to
the city septic system. I used a hand pump to pump the water out of the
long, deep, skinny trench he was digging, by hand, from the road to our
house. He made portable plywood walls to keep the sides from caving in.
His friends never forgot that episode. When later in life he became a
maintenance man, his coworkers marveled at his knowledge, range of
abilities, and general omni-competence.
Until I grew up, I didn't realize how unique my dad
was. Since he really could fix anything, I didn't know most dads
couldn't.
Peace did not always reign between Dad and me. We
used to argue a lot, though not about the length of my hair or anything
like that. We'd argue like the dickens over whether or not it would
ever be possible to go faster than light. He insisted that Einstein
showed it couldn't be done. Out of love for Star Trek, I argued
that there must be a way.
And here is where the mystery shows up. How could my
dad, with his 8th grade education, understand Einstein? Hear
about or read about Einstein, sure. But Dad understood him.
* * * *
Right after he married, Dad got a job as a truck
driver, taking a semi all over Michigan, delivering groceries to
A&P stores. Wanting more out of life, he decided to take a radio
and TV repair correspondence course. This was in the early '50s. The
manuals he used are very much a product of their time. The early
booklets in particular talk repeatedly about how exciting the field of
electronics is, how it is expanding, and how great the opportunities
are for the man who masters it.
Dad was undaunted by his lack of a high school
education. He taught himself whatever additional mathematics he needed
to master the course work, since by the time I came along, he did
indeed repair TVs as a side business. I fondly recall a time when our
basement was full of old televisions in gorgeous cabinets, and even a
couple of old console radios, taller than I was.
I remember asking him how it was he knew how to
repair TV sets. Though I was still in elementary school, he gave me his
old manuals and encouraged me to read them. I didn't read all of them
then--there's something like a hundred of them. Yet it was then that I
began to learn the wonders of electronics, albeit just in time for
vacuum tubes to go out of fashion. However, the education I got from
reading those books, checking out tubes on the tube checker, and
building a one-tube radio receiver, was nothing short of fantastic.
Recently, I've had reason to go back and study those
TV repair manuals again, and this is my father's path I've been
following that I alluded to earlier. I'm not walking it because I
intend to fix antique radios for a living, but because so much of the
circuitry in use today was pioneered during the post-war explosion in
electronics that put a TV in almost every home by 1960, and these
manuals are so clearly written. The bulk of the electronics we find on
store shelves today are not at all new in terms of the core ideas. We
do things faster today, and far more cheaply, and with far greater
reliability, and with far less power and tremendously greater
efficiency. But the, a-hem, analogs of that commercial
circuitry we enjoy today were right there in the TV circuits of
yesterday.
To this day I feel the way to teach electrical
engineering is to go back to the beginning and understand the basic
physics of the early devices. The laws of nature reside very close to
the surface in a vacuum tube. In the course of his studies, my father
learned why heating the cathode helped to make the electrons come off,
and how those negative electrons are accelerated toward a positive
anode. Between the cathode and anode are several grids--depending on
the
tube and what it's supposed to do, there might be none, one, two, even
five or more. He had to learn what those grids did, and why, and that
involved physics.
As a necessary aside, back in the early '90s I ran
into a young electrical engineering student (a pretty girl as a matter
of fact--times have changed) who had heard of vacuum tubes, but
confessed she couldn't recall ever having seen one (CRTs don't count).
So for some of you younger readers, think of the inside of a vacuum
tube as a collection of concentric metal cylinders, screens, and
spirals of wire. The innermost hollow cylinder is the cathode, inside
of which is a filament similar to what you'd find in a light bulb.
Exterior to this is a cylindrical screen or spiral of wire--this is the
control grid. Outside of that might be several more screens or wire
spirals. Outermost is another cylinder, the anode, and all of these are
inside an evacuated glass envelope, with pins coming out of the bottom,
which is one of the few characteristics tubes have in common with
integrated circuits.
Returning to the physics, consider the grid closest
to the anode in a multi-grid tube. That one was called the suppressor
grid and its purpose was to keep that fraction of high-speed electrons
that impacted the anode and bounced off from escaping back toward the
interior of the tube. So as a budding wizard of tube technology, Dad
learned the physics of particle beams, and he learned it dozens of
lessons before even getting to the picture tube (which is all
particle beam physics).
And Dad couldn't have begun to do communications
electronics without learning the physics of resonance, wave reflection
and interference, transmission line theory, parasitic capacitance, and
a host of other things. In short, factoring out the vector calculus and
quantum mechanics, Dad's TV repair course amounted to about eighty
percent of a college physics degree today.
* * * *
How could my dad with his 8th grade education
understand so much physics? That was the mystery. Elementary schools
may have been good in his day, but you didn't get to Einstein there, or
even in high school, not even then. It was one thing for Dad to know
how to do so many of the industrial arts. During the Depression, boys
could wander around unaccompanied and watch craftsmen at work.
Unencumbered by fear of lawsuit, these craftsmen would show an
interested lad their trade. But it is unlikely he would have run into a
physics teacher scrawling equation-graffiti on the wall of a building.
But now I can picture my dad, sitting in the dark in
his basement TV shop, the room illuminated solely by the glow from the
tubes of a radio freed from the confines of its cabinet--like the lamps
lighting Newton's study. I imagine him, in the quiet, thinking deeply
about what was really going on inside those tubes, sorting out the
science for himself.
Dad knew so much about physics because he was doing
it every day.
Copyright © 2006 Jeffery D. Kooistra
[Back to Table of
Contents]
The Door That Does Not Close by Carl
Frederick
Assumptions are easy to make, and hard
to refine....
* * * *
* * * *
Illustrated by Tom Kidd
* * * *
As he walked closer, the ancient stone structure
looked more like a bunker than a Roman temple. Thorvald felt a twinge
of collective guilt. If the guidebook was to be believed, that squat
monstrosity had been designed by a scientist like himself.
"Sure is ugly," said Roger, walking alongside.
Roger appeared to be about twelve years old. He had
blue eyes, blond hair, and wore a polo shirt, shorts, and sneakers. He
looked more like a stereotype than a kid. Thorvald had to remind
himself yet again that the boy was not of this Earth--or indeed not of
any Earth.
"Ugly it may be." Thorvald paused to swat at a
mosquito. "But speaking as a physicist rather than an amateur
archeologist, this building is impressive. It's survived intact for
almost two millennia." He shook his head. "But I've never seen a Roman
building like this. It seems ugly on purpose."
"It doesn't look big enough for many hiding
places."
Roger swatted at a mosquito as well--even though the insect didn't seem
interested in him. "You really think the codex is inside?"
"Yes." Thorvald sighed. "I'm afraid so," he added
without intending to. Roger, although he could bleed and feel, was
actually an android. But the creature that controlled him through
telepresence was indeed a child. And although that child was an alien,
far off on a spacecraft hovering above Earth, Thorvald had grown fond
of him--or it. And once the codex had been recovered, Roger's mission
on
Earth would end.
* * * *
"You know," said Thorvald, "I've been your tutor
for
about six months now. I'm going to miss you."
"I'll miss you too, sir." Roger shuffled a foot. "I
wish I didn't have to go."
Thorvald tousled the boy's hair. He'd done that
simple act so often, he no longer felt self-conscious about it.
Roger leaned in like a cat wanting to be scratched.
Embarrassed by the show of affection, Thorvald
reverted to his role as a teacher.
"Do you know where we are?" he said.
"Of course." Roger padded a few steps ahead.
"Constanta, Romania."
"Ah. But the ancient Romans called it Tomis. This
was an important town in the Roman province of Dacia."
"Doesn't look very important, now."
Thorvald gazed around at the desolate countryside
and nodded. "Dacia Felix, they called it. Happy Dacia. And the region
stayed happy until the Visigoths and Carps overran it."
With Roger at his side, Thorvald trudged up to the
front of the temple. He carried a flashlight and gestured with it. "The
Romans simply abandoned the place. Hard to know why. Some say the
evacuation of Dacia marked the start of the disintegration of the Roman
Empire."
INTRAREA OPRITA, read the sign hammered
into the heavy wooden door.
"'No admittance,'" said Roger, "but of course we're
not expected to know Romanian. So let's go in."
"You certainly seemed to know Romanian back when we
were renting the car."
Roger shrugged. "Kids learn languages easily."
"Very funny."
Roger giggled. "Okay. I've got translation software."
Thorvald wrinkled his nose--a sign that he was
puzzled. "Are you saying your people have done translation software for
every language on Earth?"
"No. But yours have." Roger laughed again. "It's
neat having Internet access."
Roger bounded up the stone steps. Thorvald followed
the boy inside.
The temple, though reasonably intact, still had
sufficient gaps in the stonework that they could see their way by the
sunlight pouring through the holes. Thorvald tucked the flashlight
under his belt.
The central chamber, dank and smelling of animal
habitation, had the usual assortment of divine statuary scattered
around the periphery. The domed ceiling, like an ancient planetarium,
depicted the sky at late twilight. Timeworn blues as well as faded reds
and ochres served as background to dots of white representing the
visible planets and the brighter stars. A massive stone pillar stood in
the center of the room. Jutting from the middle of each wall, mythical
animals, each clearly representing a point of the compass, stood on
smaller versions of the central pillar.
"Boy, it stinks in here," said Roger.
"Strange," said Thorvald, running his hands along
the rough stonework. "The proportions are all wrong. The pillar is too
massive." He walked around the fluted column. "Must be over five feet
thick. And this chapel is so small, there doesn't seem to be a need for
a pillar to hold up the building."
"Maybe the building is holding up the pillar."
Thorvald chuckled. "Interesting notion." He circled
the pillar again, looking for cracks that might indicate a doorway. "No
secret entrance, I'm afraid." He stepped back and looked up at the
juncture of the pillar with the top of the temple and then down at the
stone floor.
"Now this is odd." Thorvald sank to his knees.
"This
pillar has no stylobate, no real base; it seems to just extend down
into the ground." Crawling around the column, he followed a crack in
the floor that completely encircled it. He pulled a ballpoint pen from
his shirt pocket and, using it as a chisel, tried to worry some of the
grime out of the crack. But instead of coming out, the dirt fell deeper
into the narrow fissure.
"You know, Roger, you might be right." Thorvald
looked up at the boy. "I think the building is holding up the
pillar." He got to his feet and brushed the dust from the knees of his
pants.
"This is really neat," said Roger.
Thorvald smiled. "Yes, it really is." He pointed to
the top of the column. "The pillar exudes a sense of permanence. But
look how those lintels are pinioned. If you could rotate them, I think
the pillar would slide into the ground."
"Wow!" Roger patted the massive stonework, then
gazed up at the marble ornaments that jutted against the upper lip of
the column. "If I stood on your shoulders, I could reach those."
"And, if you could?"
"I might be able to turn them."
"Fat chance."
"Well," said Roger. "I could try."
Thorvald nodded. "Fine." He made a stirrup from his
hands and Roger used it to climb onto Thorvald's shoulders. Roger
seized one of the lintels and, grunting from the effort, he twisted it.
Creaking and scraping against its support, the lintel turned.
"Unbelievable," said Thorvald.
"I'm stronger than I look."
Thorvald stepped a third around the pillar's
circumference, and Roger released the second lintel. At the final
latch, Roger had trouble.
"What's wrong?" Thorvald gasped out the words. He
bore not only Roger's weight, which was slight, but also the
surprisingly intense force of the boy pushing against the ancient
marble.
"It's the last one."
"Can you do it?"
Roger grunted as he threw his weight into the task.
After half a minute or so, he stopped.
"No. I can't."
Thorvald helped the boy to the ground. "It was a
good try." He wriggled his shoulders. "I think I'm getting too old for
this kind of work."
"I could do it if I had a hammer."
"Well, we don't have one." Thorvald paused. "But
there's a tire iron in the car."
"Hey, great!" Roger ran toward the door. "Come on.
Let's get it."
Thorvald chuckled at the boy's enthusiasm. "I don't
know. If I'm wrong about this, we'll have damaged an important
archeological site for nothing."
Roger watched him with an expectant look--like a dog
waiting for a stick to be thrown.
"Okay, okay," said Thorvald. "We'll get the tire
iron."
"You know," said Thorvald, as they walked the half
mile or so back to the car, "it's going to be a little lonely for me
when you go home. I've always been a scientist and never bothered with
family." He sighed. "I really should have married and had a family.
You
make me realize how important that is."
"Why don't you come with us?"
Thorvald chuckled, then patted Roger on the
shoulder. "I wish it were that easy."
They walked in silence for a while, and then Roger
said, "There's a colony of Earth people on my planet."
"What?" Thorvald froze in surprise for a moment,
then lengthened his stride to catch up to the boy. "People from Earth?
Really?"
Roger kicked at a flat stone and sent it spinning
along their path. "I was taught that when my kind first visited Earth,
we had a large study team. The Romans thought we were gods or
something." He kicked at another rock. "Then they thought we were too
immature to be gods." He kicked at yet one more stone. "They should
talk; Roman gods act really silly." Roger looked up at Thorvald.
"Anyway, they finally decided we were demons. Our expedition had gotten
into so much trouble here that when it left, they had to take a lot of
Earth people with them."
"Why?"
"Those people helped us. And if we hadn't taken them
with us, they'd have been in really, really deep trouble."
"Yes." Thorvald nodded. "They probably would have
been."
"My home isn't so different from Earth." Roger
jumped to swing on the branch of a tree. "The Earth people are pretty
happy there. In fact, there are two of them on the ship. You'll like
them. They speak Latin."
"You could have told me this before."
"Yeah. I guess I should have." Roger lowered his
head. He looked contrite. "After the last visit here, my people made it
a rule not to interfere."
"So that's why this expedition is a secret," said
Thorvald, "and only consists of one person--a kid, with an invisible
ship hovering above."
"The ships of our first expedition couldn't hover."
Roger dropped to the ground. "Back then, we didn't know how to stop
gravitational energy from being converted to kinetic energy."
"How do you do that?" Thorvald hoped that
finally, after months of asking, he'd learn something about the alien's
science.
"I don't know," said Roger. "I'm not a physicist."
"Well, do you know how come your ship isn't visible
to us?"
"No. Something to do with bending the light so light
coming in on one side is moved so it comes out the other side."
Thorvald sighed. "Look, I am a physicist.
I've got to know. Are black holes actually wormholes? Is the
multi-world interpretation of quantum mechanics valid? Is general
relativity correct?"
Roger balled his fists. "I told you before," he
said
in a quavering voice, "I'm not allowed to talk about that. Even if I
knew, I couldn't tell you." Roger looked down at the ground. "I'm
sorry."
"Okay, okay," said Thorvald. "It's all right."
At the car, Thorvald took the tire iron from the
trunk and then he and Roger headed back.
"You know," said Thorvald, after they'd been
walking
for a few minutes, "I never quite understood why the codex was so
important to you that you'd come all the way back to Earth to find it."
"The main purpose of the trip," said Roger, kicking
now at some scraggly undergrowth, "is observation of your culture. But
now that Earth is so advanced, we can do that just by watching your
television programs. We didn't have to land."
"But you did."
"The other purpose was archeology--archeology of our
culture. We wanted to see if there were any surviving artifacts from
our first expedition."
Thorvald chuckled. "As an amateur archeologist, I
can understand that."
"And we wanted to know if the codex was real or just
a legend."
They walked in silence for a while.
"Sometimes," said Thorvald as they came in sight of
the temple, "you seem considerably more mature than your appearance
would suggest."
"Oh?"
* * * *
At the temple, Thorvald noticed that it was not as
they'd left it. A slab had fallen from the domed roof and lay, one end
buried in the earth, near the entrance door.
"What happened?" Roger circled the fallen block,
tracing a finger around its perimeter.
"I'm not sure. Probably with only one support point
for the pillar, the center of force shifted off-axis." Thorvald darted
into the temple; it seemed dark after his walk in the sunlight. "We've
no choice now. We've got to free the last lintel--to take the stress
off
the roof." As Roger ran in behind him, Thorvald added, "But at the
first sound of the building shifting, we get out fast. Understand?"
"Yes, sir."
They went to the pillar.
Thorvald handed the tire iron to Roger and then,
already sweating from his hike to the car, hefted the boy to his
shoulders.
Holding the iron like a baseball bat, Roger took a
swing at the lintel. "The building seems okay," he said after the
reverberation faded.
"I think it is." Thorvald listened and felt for
vibrations in the structure. "Give it a few more whacks."
Roger complied and gradually, accompanied by the low
rumble of brickwork grinding against marble, the lintel shifted to its
home position. Roger leapt from Thorvald's shoulders to the ground.
A loud crack followed by a moaning sound filled the
chamber. Thorvald pushed himself back against the wall. Instinctively,
he put a protective arm around the boy.
The pillar slowly, very slowly, sank into the floor.
As it did so, the compass figures emitted wailing tones and plumes of
ancient dust puffed from their mouths.
"Wow!" said Roger.
"Pneumatics," said Thorvald. "The Romans were known
for it."
The pillar receded until its upper lip became flush
with the ground. The rumbling stopped and all was silent.
Thorvald listened hard. "It's okay," he said after
a
few moments. "I think the building's safe." He looked to the center of
the temple. It seemed larger now, with no column in the middle.
Glancing down, he saw that the top of the pillar outlined a disk of
blackness--a hole. The pillar was hollow.
"Wow!" said Roger, rushing forward to peer into the
opening
"Careful!" Thorvald approached the hole and
switched
on his flashlight. Directing the beam into the cylinder, he could make
out a series of brass rungs--a narrow ladder built into the inner wall
of the pillar. "Wow, indeed!" Then he saw an inscription chiseled in
the upper lip of the column:
IANUA QUI NON CLAUDEAT
"'The Door That Does Not Close.'" Thorvald played
his light over the two-inch high lettering. "I wonder what it means."
"Maybe it means that we can't raise the pillar
again."
"The Romans were a solemn people--at least where
inscriptions are concerned. I assume there's a deeper meaning."
Thorvald leaned over the rim and scanned the ladder with the
flashlight. "Looks sturdy enough." He stepped gingerly onto the top
rung. "It's firm. Let's go down."
"This is really exciting," said Roger.
"Yes." Thorvald chuckled. "It really is."
Thorvald saw that the lower rim of the pillar rested
on a lip of stone, and the hole extended farther down. A second ladder
stretched another ten or so feet to the bottom. In the beam of the
flashlight, he could see the hint of a vaulted passageway at the bottom.
"I'll go first," said Thorvald. "This might not be
safe."
"What are you talking about?" Roger glanced down
into the hole. "I'm in a telepresence vat up in my ship. I'm much more
safe than you are."
"Still," said Thorvald, knowing he was being
irrational, "I'll go first."
He climbed down and shined his light into the
passageway. Then he called for Roger to follow.
Waiting for Roger to descend, Thorvald shivered in
the chill of the cave; his sweat-soaked shirt now bathed him in a
clammy coolness.
As Roger hopped from the last rung to the floor,
Thorvald pressed forward into the passageway. The tunnel went straight
for about fifteen feet and terminated at a chamber cut into the
bedrock. The grotto was roughly square. Thorvald estimated the
dimensions at about seven feet on a side and, as he had to stoop, just
barely over six feet in height. Against the back wall, an unadorned
shelf had been carved into the stone. On it, covered in dust, sat a
rectangular leather container some seven or eight inches on a side, and
about an inch and a half thick. It was secured by a thin leather thong
attached to a flap.
Thorvald picked up the case and blew off the ancient
dust, coughing as he breathed some of it. Carefully, he untied the
thong and eased open the flap. "The leather is amazingly supple,
considering its age." He pulled out a book. The pages were thick and
rough--parchment made from a cured animal hide. He returned the volume
to the shelf and examined its container. The leather was tooled with
engravings of toga-shrouded deities, and also of something that might
very well be a spaceship.
"The codex!" Roger took a few small jumps in
obvious
excitement. "It must be the codex."
"It must be."
Roger picked up the little book, opened it, and
glanced at the text. "Gee. I didn't think I'd need Latin
software." He passed the codex to Thorvald. "The colonists' Latin sure
doesn't look anything like this."
"After eighteen hundred years, I'm not surprised."
Thorvald handed Roger the container, then shined the light onto the
text: late imperial dialect, but a Latin he could read. "They knew
about you guys," he said. "They understood your capabilities."
Standing on tiptoes, Roger watched Thorvald pore
over the text. "Could you read it to me?"
"Um," said Thorvald, engrossed in the codex.
"Please."
Thorvald nodded. "'The visitors are not gods.'" He
ran a finger lightly over the parchment, translating as he went. "'They
are worse than gods. They are a civilization far more advanced than
Rome. We are not their equals. We can never be. No longer can we
consider ourselves the masters of all peoples. And it is senseless to
continue acting as if we were. This knowledge, I have sealed. But once
revealed, it can never be called back. The door, once opened, cannot be
closed. Because of a sense of history, I feel compelled to chronicle
these events. I leave it to whomever finds this document to think well
before revealing it. I leave it to your conscience as a Roman. Myself,
I can no longer pursue science. To do so would make me feel ... '"
Thorvald looked up from the manuscript. "I'm not sure of this word.
'Ridiculous,' I think."
Thorvald rubbed a hand across his eyes. "That's the
beginning of it, anyway." Carefully, he closed the ancient book. "The
rest is mainly a journal." He aimed his light down the tunnel. "I
think
we should get out of here. I don't think the flashlight batteries are
particularly fresh. And I'm getting cold."
Cradling the codex, Thorvald turned and led the way
back to the ladders. "It's sad, really," he said. "When your people
arrived, his belief in the inherent superiority of the Romans was
crushed." Thorvald looked back over his shoulder. "Can you understand
how he felt?"
"Our presence destroyed his world." Roger shook his
head, and the weariness of the gesture made him seem ageless--ancient.
He stroked the container's leather engravings. "We vowed never to let
that happen again."
Thorvald nodded. "That must have been how the
Neanderthals felt when the Cro-Magnon arrived." He glanced at the
codex. "There was no turning back that knowledge. The door, once
opened, could not be closed."
"Can you go back and pursue science?" asked Roger,
when they'd reached the base of the ladder.
"What?" Thorvald, taken aback by the abruptness of
the question, spun around.
"Can you be a physicist again?" said Roger.
"What a question. Yes. Of course, I can. Physics has
been my life--is my life. And..." Thorvald paused, then looked
away into the darkness. He gave a short bark of a laugh. "Who am I
trying to fool?" He sighed. "You know," he said, turning to Roger,
"for
months now, I've been evading that question." He balled his free hand
into a fist, his fingernails digging into his palm. "Yes, I'd like to
learn the physics your people know. But the real joy of physics for me
is the discovery. Not necessarily my discovery, but just being
part of the community of scientists that are in the hunt."
Thorvald smiled. "This sounds like gibberish to you,
doesn't it?"
"No."
"Actually," said Thorvald, "I'm not sure I could
return to science now. At least not for a while, and not with the same
passion. Your people know physics that I could never hope to discover.
And if I did make discoveries, I'd feel as if I were just reinventing
the wheel."
"I hate that," said Roger with vehemence.
"I'm really sorry."
Even in the dim reflected light from the flashlight,
Thorvald could see the deep sadness in Roger's eyes.
"Roger. It's okay."
Thorvald idly opened the codex and played the light
over the pages.
"Oh," he said, both from the surprise at what he
saw, and as a ploy to divert Roger from his melancholy--and perhaps to
escape his own sadness as well. "There's a second section."
Concentrating more on the mechanics of translation
than on meaning, Thorvald began reading:
"'Section II--The Scientific Knowledge of the ...
the
Sky-dwellers.
I write not what I understand, for I understand not
at all. I write what I've been told. And I write with sadness knowing
that once I was a scientist, but now I am merely a scribe.
Subsection I--The Sky-dwellers' Understanding of
Time.
Time is a structure that--'"
"Stop," shouted Roger. He pushed the flashlight so
its beam left the page. "Don't read it! Please, don't read it."
Surprised by the level of the outburst, Thorvald
looked up from the codex. "Why? Will this get you in trouble?"
"Please, don't read it," Roger screamed. "Do you
want to be merely a scribe?"
"Okay, okay," said Thorvald, softly. "We'll discuss
this outside." He took the case from Roger. "Look," he said as he
popped the book into its container, "I'm putting the codex away."
Thorvald patted Roger on the shoulder, then urged
him to start climbing the lower ladder. After tucking the codex under
his shirt, Thorvald followed.
About halfway up, Thorvald heard a rumble like
distant thunder. Odd, he thought, because the sky had been cloudless.
Then he heard the roar of heavy rocks in motion.
"Jump down!" Thorvald shouted. "Quickly!"
Thorvald sprang off the ladder but fell as he
landed. Roger tumbled down on top of him.
Looking up, Thorvald saw the blurred shape of a huge
chunk of masonry hurtling through the hollow pillar toward him. He
tried to push Roger free and squirm out of the path, but there was no
time. He had barely time to close his eyes before the stone struck.
Roger shrieked.
Thorvald felt an instant of shame, knowing that
Roger had taken the brunt of the hit. But then, as the jagged piece of
brickwork sheared across his own body, he screamed, his cry mixing with
Roger's as the huge stone rumbled to rest against the wall of the
passageway.
Thorvald fought to keep from passing out from the
agony; he was all too aware of his skin being ripped from his flesh.
Eyes closed and gritting his teeth, he held his breath as the searing
pain subsided and was replaced by a tingling numbness. Forcing open his
eyes, he saw the flashlight casting a wedge of yellow-white brightness
against the rough, stone floor. He reached for it and, as his arm
intersected the beam, saw that he was dripping blood.
With a grunt, he forced himself to a sitting
position and, hearing a moan, he grasped the flashlight and examined
Roger in its light. He gasped as he saw that Roger's chest was no
longer symmetric; ribs on one side were snapped, and one protruded
through the skin.
"Roger," said Thorvald, more loudly than he'd
intended. The sound of his voice reverberated in the otherwise silent
passageway.
Roger did not respond.
Thorvald bent in to listen for a heartbeat and the
codex fell from his shirt, just missing hitting the boy. Thorvald
ignored it. He felt an instant of relief as he saw the rise and fall of
breathing--but that breathing was exceedingly shallow. And there was
blood. Not much, though. And that was good, since Thorvald couldn't
stanch it without putting pressure on the boy's chest.
"Roger," he said again, aware of the pleading tone
in his voice. "Can you hear me?"
Roger opened his eyes. "Yes," he whispered.
"I'll go and get help." Thorvald lifted the boy's
head and slid the codex under as a pillow. "I hate to leave, but I
don't think I can safely move you."
"I think I'm dying." Roger spoke in whispered gasps.
"No. Don't say that. Hold on."
Roger gave an unconvincing smile. "Just the body.
Not really me." He lifted his head, but then let it fall back. "But it
hurts so much."
"Can't you disconnect?"
Roger didn't answer for a moment, and then said, "I
don't want to leave you."
Thorvald bent and kissed the boy on the forehead,
then quickly drew back, uncomfortable with his uncharacteristic display
of emotion; he'd always distrusted emotion.
"What about you?" said Roger, weakly. "Shine the
light."
"Just lacerations, I think." Thorvald examined his
body with the flashlight. "My god! A lot of lacerations." He realized
he'd been in shock, but now a renewed pain took its place. He struggled
to keep his voice from showing it. "And it seems I'm leaking more than
I'd like--and from more places than I could bandage with a shirt."
"You'd better go for help," whispered Roger. "You
could die from loss of blood." He took a few labored breaths. "It
would
take hours before the ship could get help to us. So go."
"Yes," said Thorvald, forcing himself to clarity.
"I'll get help." He struggled to his feet and, though shaky, he found
he could walk.
At the base of the lower ladder, he looked up
through the hollow pillar and saw sunlight. But in that light, he saw
that something blocked much of the hole. Even so, there was nothing to
do except climb.
He started up. Every half dozen or so rungs, he
rested, leaning his back against the rear of the cylinder. At length he
reached the top and, with feet braced on a rung and his back pressed to
the rear wall, he pushed against the obstruction--a massive stone slab.
He groaned from exertion and pain as he forced his shoulder upward, but
the slab would not budge. Then, dizzy and exhausted, he abandoned the
effort and looked longingly at the hole. Although Roger might have been
able to squirm through, Thorvald knew there was no way he himself could.
He called through the opening for help, but knew it
was hopeless--the temple lay in the middle of nowhere. The chances of
anyone hearing his shouts were all but nil.
After a few minutes of shouting and then listening
for a response, Thorvald gave up and climbed down.
He dropped to the ground next to Roger. "How are you
holding up?" he said with effort.
"What's wrong?"
"We'll have to wait for your friends," said
Thorvald. "There's a stone blocking the hole."
"All of it?" whispered Roger.
"What?" Thorvald wondered why Roger wanted to know,
but felt glad that the boy was able to talk. "No. You'd be able to fit,
but not me." He tried to sound unconcerned but, in truth, he was
afraid
for both their lives--he was losing a lot of blood.
"You've got to get out," said Roger.
"I can't."
"Maybe you can." Roger seemed to be breathing and
speaking more easily now. "My body is organic--except for the
brain-case. That's where the telepresence module is."
Thorvald felt distinctly uncomfortable with the
description of Roger as just a piece of hardware. "You don't have to
talk about this."
"No, listen." Roger lifted his head a few inches,
then let it thud back down. "We didn't want any Earth people to know
about this, so when this body dies, we can command the brain case to
explode--to eliminate all traces of electronics."
"Roger, no. We can talk about this some other time."
"Please listen to me." Roger took a few quick
breaths. "So if you wedge my head into the pillar opening, and then
take cover down here, I'll trigger the explosion."
"I couldn't do that."
"You have to try," said Roger. "I'm not that heavy."
"No, I mean, it's not right."
Roger started a laugh that ended in a cough. "I
thought you were a scientist. Be rational. Do it."
"No."
"You've got to," whispered Roger.
"No!" The word echoed through the underground
complex. "I told you, I'm not doing it."
Roger turned his head away.
"What's the matter?" said Thorvald.
"You've never shouted at me before."
"I'm sorry." Thorvald sighed. "I am worried
about losing blood." He stood. "All right. But I don't like it."
He lifted Roger in his arms and carried him toward
the base of the ladder. With Roger's head against his shoulder and
cheek, Thorvald felt a growing tide of what he assumed was parental
affection. He stopped and turned away from the pit. "I can't do this."
He wanted to hold the boy tight, but resisted for fear of doing injury.
"I ... I love you, Roger. You may be an alien, but to me, you're the
son I've never had. I just can't do it. We'll have to wait for your
people."
Roger began to cry and the sound both surprised and
anguished Thorvald; he'd never heard Roger cry and hadn't even known he
was capable of it.
"What about me?" said Roger through labored sobs.
"I
don't want you to die. I couldn't stand that. I'm not a machine. I have
feelings, too."
Thorvald felt his own eyes grow moist. "All right,"
he said, softly, turning and walking once more toward the ladder.
He began to climb and, resting every two rungs,
eventually reached the top. He thought briefly about trying again to
force the slab, but realized it was hopeless.
"We're at the top now," he whispered.
"I know," said Roger. "Do it."
Thorvald shook his head. "It's hard."
"Please," said Roger, through shallow coughs. "The
telepresence is very faithful. This hurts a lot. But I won't disconnect
until you do it."
Thorvald blew out a long breath. "Okay." Gently, he
pushed Roger upward, until the boy's head disappeared into the opening.
Then, using his belt, he tied Roger to a rung.
"Good-bye," whispered Thorvald, squeezing Roger's
hand. He stroked the boy's hair, then climbed down the ladder.
Thorvald skirted the jagged slab and absently
stooped to pick up the codex. Holding it gently, like an infant, he
carried it back along the passageway.
To divert his thoughts, he considered reading it,
but chose not to. It didn't seem fitting. Besides, once read, that door
would never again close. Roger was right. He'd be merely a scribe. Roger.
What have I done?
Continuing on to the far end of the grotto, he
placed the codex back on its shelf and, while staring at the space ship
engraving on the leather case, he waited.
The explosion came as a loud, low-pitched thud
followed by a rain of debris, some of which sounded soft. Thorvald
switched off his flashlight.
In the dark, he made his way to the ladders and
looked up. Sunlight poured in through a ragged hole--and the hole
looked
big enough. Thorvald took a deep breath and wished he could hold it
until he'd reached the top. Then, concentrating on the brightness from
the opening and letting the sunlight dim his eyes to the horror on the
walls, he began to climb.
Though not a religious man, nor even a believer, he
nonetheless prayed that he'd be able to erase all memory of the climb
ahead. When he got to a point about four feet down from the opening, he
closed his eyes; he had to. But he couldn't block out the stench or the
sticky feel of the rungs beneath his hands.
* * * *
Thorvald noticed first the crisp smell of clean
sheets, and then the sound of someone calling his name. He forced open
his eyes, then closed them again as stark, bright hospital lights
flooded his vision. But finally, at the insistent calling of his name
in a strange accent, he eased his eyes open.
"Professor Carpenter." The words, heavy with
Romanian overtones, came from a woman in white. "How are you feeling?"
He moved to sit up but abandoned the idea as a stab
of pain pierced his abdomen and left shoulder. With the pain came the
memory of the subterranean passages beneath the temple. And with the
memory came a profound sense of loss--an emptiness that fit with the
sterile whiteness of the hospital room. He turned his head away, gazing
blankly at the window through which he could only see a leaden-gray
overcast sky.
"Perhaps," said the nurse as she pulled the bed
covers up around his shoulders, "we should wait another day before
allowing your son to see you."
"What?" Despite the pain, Thorvald forced himself
to
a sitting position, again rumpling the bedcovers. He saw that his left
arm and torso were covered in bandages. "Please say that again." He
suspected her accent had deceived him.
"He seems to be a very nice boy." The nurse smiled.
"You should be proud. He's been waiting for a very long time."
"Send him in," said Thorvald in a voice filled with
confusion.
"I'm not sure you're quite ready to--"
"Please."
The nurse nodded and left the room.
Thorvald locked his eyes shut and tried to fill the
gaps in his memory. He opened them again when he heard the click of the
door latch and footsteps.
"Your son, Professor." The nurse stepped aside,
revealing the visitor.
"Roger!" Thorvald jerked forward, then, wincing at
the pain of sudden movement, froze. "But ... But, you were...."
Roger sprang to the bedside. He wore the same
clothes as when he'd first arrived on Earth.
"Hi, Dad."
"Roger?" Thorvald shook his head to clear his mind.
"A spare?"
"Of course."
"Are you really Roger--my Roger?"
"Yes." Roger chuckled. "Don't you recognize me?"
Thorvald reached out his right arm, the one not
covered in bandages. He pulled the boy to him and tousled his hair.
The nurse bustled to the door. "I'll leave you two
alone." She left the little hospital room and closed the door behind
her.
Thorvald wrinkled his nose. "Dad?"
"The only way they'd let me in to see you."
"I don't remember getting here."
"You made it to the car and apparently passed out.
Someone found you and drove you to the hospital. The car's in the
hospital parking lot." He wiped his hands on his shorts. "But boy,
that
temple is really a mess. I almost got stuck down there when I went back
for the codex."
"You went back?" said Thorvald. "Alone? That was
very dangerous."
Roger looked confused.
"All right, all right, maybe it wasn't dangerous.
Not for you." He patted the boy's knee. "Roger. I'm thrilled that
you've come."
Roger lowered his head. "Our ship is preparing to
leave."
Thorvald smiled, softly, trying to cover his sense
of loss. Perhaps fate had done him no favor in bringing Roger back for
a brief visit. For he knew the emptiness he'd felt before was just a
foretaste of the long emptiness to come. He stared at Roger, trying to
lock the boy's very essence into his memory. "I'll miss you very much."
Roger stood. "Come with us?"
"I'd like to," said Thorvald, "but..." He thought
about it and suddenly realized there was no "but." Having lost
his passion for science, there was really nothing left for him. Maybe
he should consider the offer. "Don't you have to ask an adult?"
Roger pawed the ground with the tip of his shoe.
"Actually," he said, "I am an adult."
"Excuse me?"
"I'm the expedition's exosociologist, junior grade."
"Exosociologist." Thorvald struggled to catch up.
"Junior grade," said Roger. "You're very senior to
me."
"You're an adult," said Thorvald, his eyes wide,
"and have been all this time?"
"Well." Roger shrugged. "Yes."
"But you told me you were a kid."
"I don't think I did, exactly."
"Your appearance implied it."
"Maybe, but I didn't say it."
"That's a child's rationale." Thorvald threw a
glance at the ceiling. "What am I saying?"
Roger looked hurt--like a kid about to cry. Thorvald
didn't know whether to laugh or to feel betrayed.
"Why can't you still like me?" said Roger. "Is it
because Earth males can only love adults if they're women?" He
wrinkled
his nose, a mannerism he'd picked up from Thorvald. "No. That can't be
it. You told me you love cats and dogs." He looked forlornly down at
his knees. "Then what's the difference?"
Thorvald softened. "I still like you." He wondered
why Roger still talked like a child, but chalked it up to a limited
vocabulary. Or maybe it was just the fact that Roger was an explorer;
everything on Earth must seem new and exciting. Then another thought
struck him. "But," he said, "but I hugged you--even kissed you."
"So?"
"Adult males do not go around hugging and kissing
other adult males."
"Oh." Roger wrinkled his nose. "Well, what if I
were
a woman?"
"Well, that would be different, of course. Still
inappropriate, probably but.... "Thorvald stopped for a moment. "Are
you?"
Roger hopped up and sat on the foot of Thorvald's
bed. "Am I what?"
"A woman."
"The question doesn't mean anything. Our anatomies
are very different from yours." Roger wiggled his fingers and stared
at
them as if he'd never quite gotten used to them. "And you Earth mammals
have a very interesting method of reproduction. Once, I asked a few of
the Earth colonists if I could watch. They said no."
Despite himself, Thorvald smiled. "I can well
imagine." He rubbed a hand over his forehead and then blew out a
breath. "Frankly, you still seem to act like a kid."
"When we first came here," said Roger, "we analyzed
your species. And we found that we behave very much like your teenagers
or your scientists. We're a very enthusiastic people." He looked at
Thorvald with innocent eyes. "So it feels right to me that you treat me
as if I were an Earthling kid."
"I can't now." Thorvald let his head sink back onto
the pillow. "It's like the door that does not close."
"But how do you really know I'm not the boy
you call Roger?"
Thorvald lifted his head and stared. "You told me."
"Pretend I didn't." Roger squinted. It looked as if
he was thinking hard. "If you really want to," he said, "you can close
that door again." Then he bit his lip. "You didn't read it, did you?"
"The codex?" Thorvald shook his head.
"Good." Roger looked thoughtful. "Anyway, I
shouldn't have made a big scene back there. That's ancient science. A
lot of it is probably wrong."
Thorvald smiled. "I think I'd like your world. And
I'd learn one hell of a lot of physics there."
For an instant, he had a twinge of conscience about
using strong language in front of a child. He resisted the urge to slap
himself.
"Then come with us," said Roger. "As for
theoretical
physics, there's lots and lots of stuff to discover. You could be in on
the hunt. Please come."
Thorvald thought deeply about it--as if he were
evaluating a new theory. "You know..." he said after a half minute or
so. "You know, I think I will."
"Great." Roger laughed--the bell-like laugh of a
delighted child. "I really think you'll have fun."
Thorvald chuckled. He reached out a hand, hesitated,
then patted Roger on a knee. "Yes," he said, "I really think I will."
Copyright © 2006 Carl Frederick
[Back to Table of
Contents]
A New Order of Things: Part II of IV
by Edward M. Lerner
Civilization and its handmaiden,
Technology, depend on trust--but that contains its own pitfalls.
* * * *
* * * *
Illustrated by John Allemand
* * * *
Synopsis
For a century and a half, a growing
interstellar community has maintained radio contact. A vigorous
commerce in intellectual property has accelerated the technical
progress of all its members. Travel between the stars seems impossible,
but InterstellarNet thrives using an elegant alternative: artificially
intelligent surrogates who act as local representatives for distant
societies. Quarantine procedures strictly govern the delivery and
operational environment of each alien agent, protecting agents and
their host networks from subversion by the other.
A radio message shatters this comfortable
status quo. The signal comes from a habitat-sized decelerating
interstellar vessel, its unannounced trip from Barnard's Star now
ninety-nine percent complete. Citing damage en route and a shortage of
supplies, the starship Victorious goes to Jupiter rather than
Earth. The starship's crew are whippet-thin, iridescent-scaled, bipedal
carnivores who call themselves Hunters. Humans refer to them as
K'vithians, after their home world of K'vith, or, informally, as Snakes
(because Barnard's Star lies in the constellation Ophiuchus, the
Serpent Holder).
Not only humans are surprised by Victorious'
short-notice arrival. Pashwah, the AI trade agent on
Earth for the Hunters, is also taken unawares. So are her internal
sub-agents, the representatives of the Great Clans. Pashwah rejects the
starship's unauthenticated demands for Great Clan InterstellarNet
credits with which to buy supplies, but she does transmit to Victorious
a translator and human-affairs advisor: a partial copy of herself named
Pashwah-qith.
Pashwah-qith advises Firh Mashkith
, Foremost of both Victorious and clan Arblen Ems, and Rashk
Lothwer, Mashkith's tactical officer, how best to
manipulate the human media.
Seemingly chance radar pulses from deep space
trick free-lance media star Corinne Elman into
breaking the news of the starship's imminent arrival. The pilot of her
spaceship is Helmut Schiller . Helmut is hiding from
a shadowed past: As Willem Vanderkellen , he had made
a major mineral find in the Belt, only to fall afoul of a claim-jumping
criminal syndicate.
Ambassador Hong-yee Chung
assembles the United Planets response team, based on Callisto. His
technical support team includes Interstellar Commerce Union executive
and systems engineer Arthur Walsh , theoretical
physicist Eva Gutierrez , and xeno-sociologist Keizo
Matsunaga . The K'vithian explanation for picking Jupiter as
their destination rings false to Art and Eva, who at different times
worked at the UP laboratory on the Jovian moon Himalia. That is where
the UP does its interstellar-drive research, and where it produces and
stores antimatter in hopes this research will eventually bear fruit.
The antimatter stockpile is vastly dangerous; its existence supposedly
a tightly held secret.
T'bck Fwa is the long-time trade agent
to humanity of the Unity: the intelligent species of Alpha Centauri A
(popularly, the Centaurs). Unity authorities have ordered him to search
for human antimatter and interstellar-drive research. His diligent data
mining long ago revealed a clandestine human antimatter program on
Himalia--and now a K'vithian starship has made Jupiter its destination.
T'bck Fwa suspects a human/K'vithian conspiracy.
Most humans have forgotten, or at least
forgiven, a half-century-earlier inter-species crisis. Art is not among
them. The "Snake Subterfuge" involved a trapdoor hidden in licensed
Snake biocomputer technology, potentially compromising most human
infrastructure. That crisis ended when Pashwah was convinced that one
corporation's extortion plans must not be allowed to undermine overall
inter-species relations. The biocomputer vulnerability has long been
removed.
Art's suspicions grow, as most of Victorious
remains hidden from closely chaperoned human visitors. Chung finally
begins to share Art's doubts when Mashkith gives Corinne an exclusive
onboard interview. The accident en route has destroyed the starship's
antimatter production equipment. Unless the UP provides antimatter for
the return flight, Victorious is stranded.
* * * *
CHAPTER 11
Bose-Einstein Condensate: the fifth phase
of matter, after solid, liquid, gas, and plasma. Albert Einstein first
theorized the Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC) phase in 1924, building
upon pioneering work of Satyendra Nath Bose, but the existence of BECs
went undemonstrated until 1995.
A BEC consists of like atoms cooled to a few
billionths of a degree Kelvin above absolute zero. Fallen into the
lowest possible energy state, bosons (particles with zero or integral
spin, such as pions, alpha particles, and individual atoms) effectively
lose their individual identities, exhibiting coherence like
photons--also bosons--in a laser beam. In quantum-dynamic terms, all
particles in the BEC share a common wave function. BECs can be used to
confine matter at extremely high densities.
--Internetopedia
* * * *
The social pleasantries didn't last long, even by
Art's minimalist standards.
"Reviewing your infosphere, I would guess you use
BECs," said Rashk Keffah. She was a junior officer, an engineer, and
stocky for a K'vithian. She was also the sole surviving expert aboard Victorious
in the safe handling of antimatter.
Pashwah Two, like her parent, consistently declined
to explain Snake body language. Art's and Eva's translator, Joseph
Conrad 213, was still learning on the job, but Joe had no such
reservations. "Did you notice the two eye blinks? That was a sneer."
The fourth and final biologic at the table was Rashk
Lothwer, who shot his crewmate a look. (No comment from Joe, so the
glance meant what it did among humans: surprise and/or "Watch it.")
More than a crewmate, in fact. The entire ship's complement of Victorious
appeared to be in clan Arblen Ems. Arblen Ems Rashk Lothwer, Mashkith's
chief lieutenant, was of the extended Rashk family. Were he and Keffah
cousins? Brother and sister? Unknown.
They were alone in the officer's wardroom of the UP
cruiser Actium, the Snakes seated on tall stools fabricated for
them from ship's stores. Hidden fans raced to vent the strong, pungent
odor of sulfur dioxide, traces of which had adhered to the visitors'
pressure suits.
Art had called the meeting to discuss refueling of
the starship. Could it be done, were the decision made to do so?
Dramatic INN interview notwithstanding, that was not a given.
Meanwhile, Carlos Montoya and his UPIA bosses were in the initial
stages of a witch hunt over the security breach. "Nothing stays secret
forever," was not cutting it as an explanation.
Eva refused to take the bait. It helped, Art
supposed, that she could feign ignorance of the sneer. "That is
correct. The high density of storage made possible by BECs is a big
plus."
"Until it blows up." After another warning glance
from Lothwer, Keffah added, "Indefinite, precise control of the cooling
and the magnetic containment is required."
Spinning charged particles, such as electrons, are
tiny magnets. That made it possible, Art knew, to trap super-cooled
atoms inside magnetic fields. It didn't matter whether those atoms were
matter or antimatter. What did matter were the exact
characteristics of the field. Clumped too compactly, a BEC exploded: a
so-called "bosenova." Insufficiently confined, and a BEC
dispersed--which, with antimatter, meant explosion at contact with
normal matter.
Complex as confinement was, safely holding
antimatter was but one step in a long process. A few subatomic
particles at a time, the antimatter was created by high-speed,
normal-particle collisions. Those collision byproducts that were
antiparticles had to be captured magnetically before they could
encounter any normal matter. The antiparticles, protons and
positrons, were mated, and the resulting antihydrogen super-cooled for
storage as a BEC.
But storage was merely prelude to use. The
antimatter atoms had to be transferred from production line to shipping
containers to fuel tanks, without ever touching normal matter. Onboard
ship, the antimatter had to be metered out, with near-infinite
precision, into the engines. And absent a space drive to exploit the
enormous energies stored in antimatter, the only use for antimatter was
really big bombs.
All these were challenges the K'vithians had
evidently overcome. "If not BECs, Keffah, how does Victorious
store its antimatter?" Art asked.
Blink blink. "Safely."
"As Keffah indicated earlier, we have surveyed your
infosphere for relevant topics," Lothwer said hurriedly. "Our
technology applies scientific theory not in evidence there. The
Foremost suggests it is premature to discuss specifics."
Art stood and stretched. It didn't take being an ICU
exec to break the code: trade secret.
That even made sense. The UP antimatter program was
highly classified, but its cost was surely huge. Himalia base was a
whole small town, its population numbering hundreds of scientists,
engineers, and technicians. Its sole support for decades had been the
antimatter program. Then there was the steady succession of scoopships
bringing fusion fuel for the antimatter factory. It looked like the
Foremost planned to swap technology for antimatter.
"And how, without specifics, do you expect us to
provide refueling assistance?" Eva's sniff of frustration was no doubt
translated by Pashwah Two for the Snakes. The shrug-equivalent in
response made her grind her teeth.
Lothwer broke a long silence. "Keffah, could you
adapt BEC techniques to our systems?"
"Some sort of interface mechanism, you mean?
Something to convert from the BEC form? Not easily, but yes. I don't
see the point. That would still expose ... the technology."
"Not a problem," Art said. System engineers think a
lot about interfaces. "Take it in stages. The BEC-to-whatever
conversion mechanism never leaves Victorious. All the UP
engineers would require is a BEC canister that mates with your onboard
converter. We fill the BEC container, you take it aboard Victorious
and transfer the fuel. Give us back the empty canister, and we repeat
the process."
"A moment please," Lothwer said.
The cruiser's instruments reported sudden spikes in
radio traffic, all encrypted. At very low power: Lothwer and Keffah
infolinking. At slightly higher power: exchanges between them and the
Snake aux ship floating alongside, at the end of a flexible docking
tube. At higher power still: messages to and from Victorious.
Consultations? Request for approval? Amid total silence, Art and Joe
tried to read meaning into the scarcest hints of movement by their
guests. Was that a twitch? A nervous tic? Or were they just shifting
positions on the stools?
Lothwer's eyes unglazed. "Our engineers agree in
principle, but BECs worry them. This is technology we had abandoned as
too dangerous."
"It's a technology we have used without incident for
years," Eva snapped. "We would never have scaled it up to mass
production otherwise."
"And that expertise," said Keffah, "is crucial.
Before we dare bring a BEC container near Victorious, you must
convince me it is safe."
* * * *
The Vestal Non-Virgin came, as always, in a tall,
naked, and anatomically improbable ceramic mug. All that went into it
were cherry juice and eighty-proof ouzo. Mostly ouzo. It was a Belter
favorite, in no way associated with sacramental solemnity.
Helmut didn't care.
He sipped slowly, his thoughts not on the beverage,
nor the hangover certain to follow. Kwasi's libation of choice was the
Non-Virgin, and today was Kwasi's birthday. Would have been. The least
he could do was drink to an old friend's memory.
After all, he'd gotten Kwasi Abodapki killed. Among
others.
Three Exxon-Boeing scoopships had berthed recently,
and the spaceport dive was boisterous. Helmut's glum aura kept the
adjacent stools empty. "Cheers, old friend."
The Lucky Strike had rendezvoused without
incident with the vaguely potato-shaped rock known only as 2009 Sigma
r, measuring roughly forty meters on its major axis. There was no
evidence, physical or infospherical, to suggest anyone but Willem
Vanderkellen had ever set boot on it.
He sipped without tasting, his thoughts far away.
The four of them--he and
give-you-the-spare-oxy-tank-off-his-back Kwasi, wisecracking Bill and
zero-gee polo fanatic Milos--had put in weeks of hard labor.
Navigational markers planted. Exploratory shafts sunk. Ore samples
collected for assay, for the UP Bureau of Asteroid Management to
confirm what the four of them already knew: rich veins of platinum and
palladium. Radio beacon planted and on standby, ready for remote
activation as soon as the claim was registered. While he readied the Lucky
Strike for departure, Kwasi and Milos even consulted over the
preamble of a summary message pre-filing with the BAM.
It was never sent.
Helmut had had plenty of time to brood since that
day, plenty of time to fret and analyze and theorize. The dust and
vapors from their operations were surely detectable at a distance,
surely capable of providing incontrovertible spectrographic evidence.
If they had been followed, a stealthed ship lurking nearby could easily
see this was a claim worth jumping.
The Non-Virgin was still half full. He drained it in
one long swallow.
The claim had been worth killing for.
* * * *
Actium had excellent long-range optical and
radar scanners, none of them suited to the remote detection of
matter/antimatter annihilation events. It had been a tight squeeze into
the forward equipment pod, flashlight in hand, to recheck the
jury-rigged splicing-in of new sensors. Wriggling out unaided seemed
impossible--and Art's barely suppressed anxiety surged. He willed his
voice to be low and calm. "All the connections look good. Very
professional. Can someone grab my feet?"
Massive hands seized Art's ankles and yanked. He
emerged from the access tunnel sneezing from dislodged dust and
streaked with grease. "Thanks, Carlos. For the extraction and for
expediting our little outing."
"Mi armada es su armada. It helps you're
now Chung's favorite."
"And did you find anything?" The sensor array was
Eva's baby.
"Only that everything's per spec."
Eva had also been busy. Holographic blackness now
obscured half the cabin. Four tiny yellow spheres defined a tetrahedron
in the simulated space. Inside each sphere was the icon representing a
UP ship, the icon representing Actium shining slightly brighter
than the rest. A crimson dot at the heart of the pyramid marked the
floating experimental module. To one side, in green, hung a K'vithian
aux vessel. They were well off the ecliptic, far from traffic, and
millions of klicks from any Jovian moon. Politics and prudence dictated
that this experiment be performed privately.
"Are all ships set?" Art asked her.
"Yes, subject to fine-tuning. Sensors on-line, all
ships. Display." At Eva's command, a virtual console materialized in a
corner of the void, with readouts for each ship in the formation. She
peered into the holo. "Hmm. Endeavor and Blaine aren't
exactly where I'd like them."
Keffah remained loath to use technology shunned at
home, and the Foremost supported her. Instead, they asked to meet with
UP experts on Himalia, to learn proven techniques for putting an
antimatter BEC into containment, storing it indefinitely, transferring
it between containers, and trickling it out. To inspect the equipment.
The Snakes wanted, in short, the crown jewels of the deeply classified
UP antimatter project. It would not be an easy decision.
"Blaine, your position is now fine, but point
your nose directly at the package."
"Changing orientation will tweak our position. This
could take a while."
"Blaine, this is a hell of an expensive
demo," Eva said. If anything, that was an understatement. They were
expecting a decigram of antihydrogen. "Our new friends are grumpy at us
for insisting on this proof. We need to do it right the first time."
"Tough," interjected Carlos. "Himalia isn't Six
Flags over Jupiter. They are not getting near Himalia or our
real experts--no offense--until we know they have antimatter of their
own."
"Assuming this demo goes as advertised, it will
convince even you and Art." Mutter, mutter. "Goshawk, maintain
your position!"
Art tuned out the bickering and nervous chatter. The
Snakes refused to show the UP their containers. Keffah, when her
superiors weren't around, was smugly superior--which made it productive
to spend time with her. Among her boasts were occasional hints and
oblique clues to K'vithian technology. Their antimatter containment
seemed to derive from the same underlying physics as their interstellar
drive. More ambiguous was a clue Eva had picked up on: that the common
denominator might involve tapping and manipulating zero point energy.
Eva and Carlos had lapsed into Spanish. Cursing is
always more satisfying in your native tongue. A glance at the holo
showed Art that now Actium had drifted slightly off-station.
Physicists had speculated since the twentieth
century about a linkage between zero point energy, the
quantum-mechanical fluctuation energy of a vacuum, and gravity or
inertia. Common sense--and two centuries of frustrated
theorists--suggested you couldn't extract useful work from energy
already at the lowest possible level. To find otherwise smacked of
perpetual motion, of getting something for nothing. Still....
Any asymmetric interaction with ZPE would be
inherently propulsive. And plausibly, an asymmetric interaction could
confine antimatter fuel. Few of the scientists on Himalia knew of this
development, but the prospect of access to ZPE propulsion technology
had those few salivating. Art thought he understood their interest: For
too long, they had been all fueled up with no place to go. A technology
deal with the Snakes could really be win-win.
Finally, all ships were in position. "Set,"
announced Eva to the ship's captains. On a separate link, she contacted
Keffah. "On my mark. Deactivate in ten, nine...."
A fraction of a second past zero, Actium's
readouts jumped on their virtual console. An instant later, slaved
readouts from the other ships followed. Computer-corrected for ship
positions and signaling delay, all measurements were simultaneous and
consistent.
Had the meters shown instantaneous rather than
cumulative measurements, the counts would have plummeted to zero faster
than the eye could see. But the brief squall of neutrinos and mesons
and very specific frequencies of gamma rays was unambiguous.
The Snakes had, and could control, antimatter.
* * * *
Art methodically emptied the peanut basket, the dark
lager before him scarcely touched. Those priorities seemed reversed,
but events were confusing enough sober.
"It doesn't add up." He shook his head when the
bartender glanced his way. What was he missing?
Fact: The Snakes had antimatter. That was now
indisputable.
Fact: Victorious finished its deceleration
on fusion drive. Why? Did its drive not work properly deep in a gravity
well?
Hypothesis: Snake technology tapped ZPE. As a test,
Eva had casually mentioned the Casimir Effect--a demonstration of, but
not a way to extract energy from--ZPE. In the surveillance tape, Keffah
startled, and for the rest of that meeting there had been none of her
usual condescending double eye blinks. Casimir Effect was a very
obscure term to have encountered on the infosphere ... unless you were
looking for human ZPE research.
The heck with it. Art took a deep swig.
If Snake antimatter containment relied on ZPE, their
ZPE technology worked just fine in a gravity well. Very dependably,
too, or they would not dare keep antimatter in-system. So why not
decelerate the whole way by ZPE drive?
And even more of a head-scratcher: If they tapped
ZPE, why bother with antimatter at all? The attraction of antimatter
was its density of energy storage. Matter and antimatter convert to
energy at one hundred percent efficiency, making antimatter great fuel.
But that transformation was the tail end of the process. Antimatter had
to be created first, by accelerating normal particles to very high
energies and smacking them into each other, and then capturing the
antimatter bits that sometimes flew out. End to end, the process was
grossly inefficient. If the Snakes could access the energy of the
vacuum, why not just use that?
He was missing something. But what?
* * * *
Mashkith paced in his cabin, an excursion possible
only in this unique vessel. A harmless indulgence? Or a weakness? On no
other ship of his experience would even a Foremost's cabin accommodate
such overt physical manifestation of doubt.
And as though the enormity of Victorious
were not still, after so many years, humbling enough, now he had seen
Earth.
Ambassador Chung had personally escorted the shore
party: Mashkith himself and his chosen officers. There had been endless
motorcades, winding through cities too vast to grasp. London. Mexico
City. Beijing. Cairo. Lagos. New Delhi. New Jakarta. Rio de Janeiro.
There were parades in New York City and Washington, although as far as
Mashkith could see, the two were contiguous, and in the niche of
Greater Honshu called Tokyo. The glow of the megalopolises drove the
stars from the night sky, where space-based factories, arriving and
departing interplanetary vessels, and glittering rings of habitats took
their places. And the moon overhead, in its crescent phase during much
of their whirlwind visit, was ablaze with its own cities.
Mashkith had known before ever setting out on this
voyage that humans outnumbered Hunters thousands to one. Now, he felt
it.
Perhaps, ultimately, twenty humbling Earth years
aboard Victorious had been for the best. Perhaps two
generations before that of maneuvering for the scraps left by the Great
Clans, contriving and competing with a hundred other lesser clans for
every possible advantage, had been vital preparation. He and his
hand-picked companions had known how to keep their own counsel, act
unimpressed, observe unobtrusively, appear harmless, feign good
intentions, simulate trustworthiness.
The humans had a phrase, Pashwah-qith had told him,
long out of use, that described the clan's tour of Earth: charm
offensive.
And their "attack" had been effective. Polls,
incredibly freely available to the public, showed broad and growing
support for some sort of technology swap. Before the sheer immensity of
the human home world could overawe them, Mashkith had declared it
necessary to return to Victorious to oversee "repairs."
In truth, Lothwer had done well in his absence.
Supplies had begun arriving. Minor overhauls were getting done.
Consultations had started on refueling.
Mashkith continued his pacing, having convinced
himself it was a harmless indulgence.
Everything continued to unfold according to plan.
* * * *
CHAPTER 12
K'Choi Gwu ka was old and tired and insane, and she
knew it.
She dug in the moist loam, the dirt that clung to
her fur honest and comforting and somehow cleansing. The bright, yellow
light overhead warmed her weary bones.
Others labored all around her: weeding, hoeing,
pruning, harvesting. A steady stream of crew-kindred moved about the
vast chamber. Most walked, but some--the youngest, mainly--still swung
from time to time from tree branches and ceiling rails. They stopped,
or at least slowed, when they passed her, in subtle expressions of
support or respect. Each acknowledgement made her feel worse.
She dug in the moist loam, but her thoughts were in
the stars.
No two InterstellarNet species were alike. There
were authoritarian societies, both dynastic and ruthlessly Darwinian.
There were representative governments, with a dizzying array of
selection methods. One far-off world was home to a scattering of
continent-sized hive minds.
A clot of mud and twigs had blocked a small
irrigation channel. She gently lifted the obstruction, crumbled it,
spread the sludge evenly on a bare patch of soil.
Among the Unity, consensus ruled. But what if
circumstances required action faster than a consensus process could
accommodate? Consensus had been reached on that, too. At every level of
Gwu's society--family, kindred, bond, and reliance--there was
recognized
a coordinator, the ka, who, when needed, decided for the group. The ka
neither volunteered nor was overtly selected, but rather emerged. The
ka was the member of the group most recognized for his or her or its
wisdom, for having, in the normal group deliberations, most often
arrived early at the decision eventually reached by the whole.
Sweat matted the fur of her torso. Thirst tickled
her throat. A vine redolent with ripe, fuzz-covered bluefruit was just
within reach. She broke loose one of the globes and bit, letting tart
juice trickle down her throat. Sudden waves traveled from the tips of
Gwu's eight tentacles to her torso and reflected back: a self-mocking
laugh. Which fruit to eat ... that was the type of decision
that might safely have been entrusted to her.
She was old and tired and insane. That insanity had
brought them here. If there were to be any hope of redemption, any
chance of saving her crew-kindred, any prospect of ever seeing home
again, now was the time to nurture and embrace that insanity.
* * * *
The shakedown cruise had been a triumph.
Part of that, K'Choi Gwu ka knew, was simple
astronomical good fortune. The interstellar drive could not be operated
safely deep within the gravity well of the Double Suns, but nature had
provided. Some said the Double Suns was a misnomer, that they and the
Red Companion formed a trinary system. Others asserted that precise
observations of that red dwarf covered so brief a time period that its
course was uncertain. It might distantly orbit the Double Suns; it
might be moving too fast, passing in a brief celestial encounter. To
Gwu, that discussion missed the point: The Red Companion was a mere
fraction of a light-year away! A more convenient destination for the
test flight could not have been imagined.
But the Red Companion had no planets, hence no life
and limited resources, hence was of little long-term interest.
Beckoning from a scant few light-years away was the human solar system,
its yellow sun a near-twin of Primary. Next closest, the K'vithians
were half again more distant. The nearest neighbors thereafter were
more than twice the distance to Earth. None considered a next step
farther than that, with the prodigious investments in time and
antimatter such trips would entail.
For twenty years, the Unity sought consensus. Should
the next voyage be to Earth or K'vith? Trade agents mined the
infospheres at both candidate destinations, speculating how humans or
K'vithians would respond to visitors. Or, respectful of the ongoing
unease many within the Unity felt for their interstellar neighbors, it
was also debated: should all further use of the technology be
reconsidered?
At times, Gwu despaired. These incompatible points
of view were not new. She had politely debated the same issues when
theory first hinted at the feasibility of an interstellar drive, and
again when it seemed possible to generate enough antimatter to make
such a drive practical. Both times, the ultimate outcome had been the
same: Research had proceeded in secret, in theory invisible to other
species' InterstellarNet agents, while the Unity's own agents continued
to explore distant data networks.
And, as always--as data trickled in, as once novel
perspectives became, if not compelling, at least familiar--points of
concurrence emerged. The K'vithians showed no signs of an antimatter
capability, unlike the humans who tried to hide one. Neither group
exhibited significant progress towards an interstellar drive, nor of
physical theory supportive of one. No recent attempts to undermine
InterstellarNet came to light.
So Gwu was unsurprised when, after many years,
consensus was fully achieved. A voyage would be undertaken, as she had
for so long advocated. The K'vithian solar system would be its
destination. Harmony, the Unity's starship, would go
unannounced. From the fringes of K'vithian space, the mission would
consult with the Unity's trade agent before making contact. The ship
would bring fuel for the return trip; it would not carry
antimatter-production equipment that might prove too tempting.
No, Gwu was not surprised that a course of action
was finally decided. Its outlines, she thought, had long been evident.
She was surprised, if only a little, to
emerge as ka of the mission.
* * * *
Working the soil was calming, but it is not always a
ka's fate to be calm. It was not these plants' fate to remain healthy.
Gwu returned from the serenity of the farm to the
small cabin given her by the K'vithians. Showered and dried, she
pressed the vidphone control. "We have problems," she told the
K'vithian junior officer who answered. Gwu felt little need for
courtesy to her captors, nor had they interest in any non-utilitarian
communication with their captives.
A translator AI converted Firh Glithwah's short
answering warble. "Explanation?"
"Eco-malfunction. The farm, hydroponics,
biorecycling--they all suffer increasingly from sulfur-dioxide
contamination." In such close proximity with K'vithians, contamination
was unavoidable. Gwu trusted familiarity with the phenomenon would make
the latest flare-up appear routine. All it took was carelessness in
decontamination after maintenance trips into K'vithian-occupied parts
of the ship.
"Repairable?"
That was mildly unexpected. Most crew would just
order her to fix it. "Not this time. We need to flush and recharge
parts of the system. We need new supplies."
Gwu had never been told Harmony--in her
thoughts, this ship would never be Victorious--had arrived, let
alone its current location. But the laws of physics cannot be denied.
The drive operated along the ship's major axis; coasting between the
stars, the ship's simulated gravity depended upon spin around that same
axis. There could be no disguising the preparatory times between, when
there was no gravity, when chambers throughout the vast structure of
the ship were turned in their gimbaled mountings to prepare for the
coming acceleration. Given the years between, the capabilities of Harmony,
and the arrangement of nearby stars, the result was clear. The ship
could have arrived at one of but three possible destinations.
Would those who had stolen Harmony return it
with its crew captive, with no way to refuel, to the Double Suns?
Inconceivable. What of the planetless red dwarf star at a similar
distance from K'vith? There could be no hope of refueling there; such a
trip would be only an epic exile. That left the human solar system.
All Gwu cared about now was the opportunity to
obtain supplies--and the chance, however remote, that the composition
of
the supplies ordered would itself send a message.
Silence stretched. "Notification to the Foremost,
with priority," Firh Glithwah finally decided.
The screen blanked midway through Gwu's
still-reflexive, "Thank you."
T'choi Swee qwo had entered the cabin during the
conversation, staying discreetly out of the camera's field of vision.
The visible camera's field of vision. "Is it bad?" he asked.
They had never bonded with a child-bearer; one's
absence, and the subsequent lack of children in their family, had made
the two of them that much closer. And Swee was more than her husband;
as qwo, he was also the ship's chief facilitator. On every level, she
owed him honesty. That was impossible in their quarters, which were
certainly bugged. "Walk with me?"
They spoke of minutiae: assignments for upcoming
work schedules, team standings in games whose sole purpose was to help
while away the time, liaisons among the crew. She admired his quiet
strength as they strode. The green of his fur was paling with age, the
once bold contrast of his stripe pattern sadly faded. Lovingly, she
lifted a tentacle to trace a lone, idiosyncratic lightning-bolt streak.
She would miss it when it was gone.
In the farm, in the quiet privacy of a secluded
copse of trees, he asked again, "Is it bad?"
Only there could be no certain privacy in a ship
controlled by K'vithians, and her thoughts were too dangerous to share.
"Time will tell."
They both knew that meant she dare not talk about it.
* * * *
"Come."
The K'vithian escorts in their dark goggles faced
outward from the entrance to Gwu's quarters, scanning watchfully in all
directions. Why, she had no idea. The deaths from the initial, failed
attempt to recapture the ship still saddened and sickened her. There
would be no further physical assault on their captors.
She had brushed her fur carefully and straightened
her utility belt. With a soft cloth she polished a smudge from her
decorative buckle. Her escorts would not notice, nor, most likely,
would Mashkith, but she would know she was at her best. "I am
ready. Bring me to the Foremost."
Logic made clear that humans in their billions
teemed nearby. During that long ago, painstaking evaluation of possible
destinations, she had pored over uploaded human and K'vithian records.
Her knowledge was sadly out of date, but one remark of a pre-United
Planets madman had never released its grip on her thoughts.
One death is a tragedy, a million deaths is a
statistic.
This Joseph Stalin was long dead, but had humanity
changed? If the United Planets were to have antimatter and
interstellar travel, would the Unity become the next statistic?
She must not allow that to happen.
* * * *
Jupiter loomed on the holo wall of the Foremost's
cabin. Small black disks, the shadows of several moons, crept across
the cloud tops like a celestial timepiece. To what final resolution did
it count?
My leadership has brought us this far. It will
overcome this problem, too.
This wall display usually summarized ship's status.
Mashkith could restore that information with a thought. Why favor the
prisoners' ka, their Foremost, with his own understanding of the data?
A timid knock rattled his door. "Enter."
K'Choi Gwu ka glided into the room, her fluid,
many-limbed gait still a wonder after all these years. She towered over
the Hunter crew who escorted her. "Thank you for seeing me." Her voice
was muffled by the mask that protected her from the sulfur compounds
ubiquitous to the Hunter part of the ship.
She did not react to the holo. Surely the Great Red
Spot unambiguously identified the gas giant as Jupiter. She might have
learned from careless crew where they were, or deduced it on her own.
She might have thought the image was a recording or simulation,
presented as disinformation. Or she might simply have enough
self-control to give nothing away.
Did she, too, tire of thinking always several steps
ahead? Of the attempt to interpret every circumstance from every
possible point of view? Mashkith felt a moment of unaccustomed kinship
with her. To be Foremost is to be always on duty, ever lonely.
"Chair." It was an order, not a courtesy. He
remained standing. To the guards, he added, "To your duties." The
hatch
slid shut behind them. "Your request for a meeting, ka. Explanation."
From pouches of her utility belt, Gwu removed
several small plants sealed in clear bags. Damp-seeming dirt clung to
their roots. Water beads sparkled on the leaves. Most of the leaves
were green, although speckled with ragged, brown-edged holes. The
remainder were mostly brown and sere. "The biosphere is going dormant.
If this continues, we will die."
One of the shadows now crossing Jupiter was cast by
the human world of Callisto, where even now new provisions were being
staged. "Resupply imminent. Not an issue."
"Respectfully, Foremost, it is a big
issue."
Ripples traveled from tips to base of her tentacles and reflected.
Laughter? She dared to mock him?
"Nervous laughter," offered the AI translator by
implant. "Fear."
"Explanation," Mashkith repeated.
"Simply, there have been too many shocks to the
biosphere. It's triggering a quiescent state. Nature's safety
shutdown." She shivered, and this gesture had no hint of humor to it.
"Life's summer."
Seasons were an astronomical phenomenon. At
Mashkith's puzzled, silent inquiry, a many-times real time,
not-to-scale graphic of the Unity's home system replaced the panorama
of Jupiter. Planets spun and swooped about their suns. The third world
of four orbiting the yellow sun blinked slowly, denoting the ancestral
home its occupants called Chel Kra: Haven. More slowly, the suns, one
yellow and one orange, traced elongated ellipses about their center of
mass.
Ah. Before the herds developed medical technology,
few would have lived to see the orange companion star brighten more
than once: life's summer. But however scenic the occurrence, its
climactic effect was surely trivial. At its nearest approach, the
orange interloper was about as distant from Primary as this
system's ringed giant from its sun.
"A brief, perhaps one percent increase in heating.
Insignificant." An internal query yielded a final fact: The binaries
were, in real time, nearly at their most distant positions. Assume the
biosphere of Victorious somehow mimicked, and was sensitive to,
Haven's seasons. Would not the shipboard ecology be synched with the
planetary ecology from which it sprang?
"Foremosts never fools." That wasn't universally
true, of course. Mashkith's own grandfather, he whose
brilliance-become-folly had ultimately sent Arblen Ems in hasty flight
to the cometary rim, was an all-too-personal exception. The memory made
him lonely and angry at the same time.
Too much was ongoing in his current dealings with
the humans to lose focus. Any ruse the ka might be attempting he could
attend to later. The only important matter with the prisoners was that
the repairs proceeded. "Guards."
Then the herbivore did surprise him.
"Foremost, respectfully, you do not understand."
Again the nervous laugh. "Your world has K'far."
"Guards, at standby. Clarification?"
And then Mashkith did understand. K'far and
K'vith were tightly spin-coupled, more so even than Earth and its
oversized moon. That coupling, by conservation of angular momentum,
stabilized the axial inclinations of both worlds against perturbation.
The peril of life's summer did not arise from a
temporary blip in insolation. Without a large satellite of its own to
anchor it, Haven was prone to dramatic shifts in axial tilt. Haven was
virtually untilted, virtually without seasons--now. It had been thus
for
the entire brief period of civilized occupancy. But how often had the
gravitational tug of the inrushing companion star caused severe and
swift shifts in the axial tilt of Haven? Surely often enough for
protective dormancy to be a survival characteristic.
As would be the ability to quickly migrate long
distances across the planet to anywhere still able to produce food.
Mashkith imagined a starving herbivore herd retreating in disciplined
order across a forest suddenly become snowy wasteland or searing
desert, beset on all sides by packs of desperate carnivores. Was this
why the ka's ancestors had come down from the trees? Sudden necessity?
The Unity's caution and social cohesion finally made
sense to him. So did their ability to stick with a program of research
and a plan of action long enough to master even antimatter and
interstellar travel. Their home was that dangerous.
But what was the relevance? "Relationship to ship's
biosphere?"
"Foremost, despite our best efforts, sulfur
compounds continue to infiltrate the farming and hydroponics sections
of the ship. Living in such proximity, it is unavoidable. More and more
plants are reacting to the frequent stresses as though to the perils of
a life's summer." Nervous laugh. "They cannot do astronomy."
When that which would become Victorious had
emerged from the interstellar darkness, Arblen Ems had been teetering
on the brink of extinction. The clan's scattered outposts had begun
consolidating to a final few, had been driven to scavenging from
abandoned stations--and raiding bases of other clans, where that could
be safely and anonymously done--for parts and equipment whose resupply
from the inner system was embargoed by the Great Clans.
The clan's remaining ships now masqueraded as
auxiliary vessels of the starship. A few Hunter aeroponics facilities
had been installed into Victorious. The familiar plants
provided a touch of home for the crew. More recently, an aeroponics
facility had been used for show, for the humans. Those meager Hunter
resources could not begin to sustain life across Victorious,
even if the K'vithian biota did not exude sulfur dioxide and hydrogen
sulfide in quantities toxic to the prisoners whose knowledge of ship's
systems remained so valuable.
The herd's biosphere would need fixing, but, like
everything else, for now that was secondary to the antimatter
negotiations. "Your guidance, ka?" The response she gave him was
tentative, but perhaps that was to be expected. She proposed
experimentation with lighting, temperature, humidity, and
trace-chemical levels. Nothing she suggested could hurt, and perhaps
they would learn something useful.
Faster than the guards could return to escort the ka
to her quarters, Mashkith had delegated by implant to his tactical
officer. Rashk Lothwer could oversee the prisoners' reactivation of
selected processing levels of the shipboard instrumentation to monitor
those experiments.
* * * *
Gwu was old and tired and insane, and she knew it.
To her list of attributes, she now added one that was not a complaint.
She was relieved.
Gently crumbling small clods of the soft, damp soil,
she trembled with the fear she finally admitted to herself. How
easy--how disastrous--it would have been for the Foremost to disbelieve
her, or to randomly seek among the crew-kindred for confirming
opinions. But her sense of K'vithian psychology had been correct. To
her, "ka" was an obligation; to Mashkith it was a rank--and among his
kind, rank was all-important.
Tentacles aquiver, she tenderly separated a
fireberry bush and a lifath sapling whose branches had become
intertwined. To the leaves that broke loose to flutter to the ground
she thought: sorry. They were pitted and turning brown.
One death is a tragedy, a million deaths is a
statistic.
The ka must act when consensus cannot be used, and
acted she had. The millions of plants in this oasis had sustained the
crew-kindred, had sustained what remained of her sanity, for this long
journey. Now she sacrificed them, was making of them a statistic, for
her own ends.
Another horrifying human rationalization from her
long-ago studies was often in her thoughts these days. In her mind, she
changed it only slightly.
She must destroy this ship in order to save it.
* * * *
CHAPTER 13
Long, chipped, concrete bar; battered, wobbly metal
stools; solar-sailing regatta on the 3-V; sticky floors; dim lighting
and raucous drunks ... Helmut could have been in any of a dozen spacer
dives in Valhalla City, any of hundreds around the solar system. It was
the kind of place Kwasi had enjoyed, if a bit too packed. The Snakes
were buying supplies by the shipload, and the crews of all those
freighters were crowding watering holes like this one to and past
capacity. Helmut had hinted to Corinne that he would welcome some
company tonight. When he named the bar, she grimaced and declined.
"Colbert? Is that you?"
Helmut looked up from his beer. A big-boned man with
a pointed chin, black unibrow, and graying ponytail was studying him.
His name was Rothman. "You must have mistaken me for someone else.
Sorry." He turned back to his drink.
"No, I don't think so." Rothman's chuckle had not
changed. "What's the matter? Too busy for old friends?"
Even friend of a friend overstated the relationship,
but their paths had crossed in a half-dozen spaceports: in cheap
hotels, secondhand supply shops, crummy restaurants--and dives like
this. Damn, he needed to be more careful. It was a wonder an encounter
like this had not happened well before now. "Never, but as I say, we
don't know each other."
The era was long past when starting over meant
taking a new name and moving to another town. Finding a corrupt surgeon
to replace an implanted ID chip was the easy part. The hard part was
subverting government databases and planting a credible past for the
new ID. For an imposture to fool routine audits, the false data had to
be propagated back into the archives--the further back the cover story
went, the better the odds of going undiscovered. It took skills and
connections Willem Vanderkellen never had. That was why, with
black-market help and the pitiful proceeds of pawning Willem
Vanderkellen's last few portable possessions, he had briefly become
Dennis Colbert. But that alias correlated too closely with
Vanderkellen's disappearance to allay suspicions. It took years of odd
jobs to fund two more name changes before he felt--mostly--safe.
Money was always tight; he had had only one bout of
plastic surgery. Colbert's identity was retired, but Colbert's face
remained in use. He had gotten complacent, and that carelessness might
yet do him in.
A few more denials and a double shot bought "in your
friend's honor" got Rothman to wander off. As quickly as Helmut could
finish his beer without seeming to rush, he did. He slipped from the
bar when Rothman's attention turned to a poker game in a back booth.
The adrenaline rush from the encounter washed away
any buzz from his beer. Helmut needed to go somewhere as far as
possible--socially and geographically--from the spaceport. That thought
led him to Loki's. The place wasn't exactly empty, but there were
unoccupied seats at the bar.
It was a good thing Corinne paid him well. He lost
himself for a while in an overpriced Vestal Non-Virgin, and munched
absentmindedly on pretzels. The 3-V over the bar was showing news. He
got enough of that when he was working.
An attention-getting cough. "Excuse me. You
interested in splitting a pizza?"
The man two stools down may have been making a
simple offer, or it may have been guy talk for: You look like crap and
shouldn't be alone. Either way, Helmut appreciated the question.
"Maybe. Toppings?"
"You choose. I'm Art, by the way."
The CTO of the Interstellar Commerce Union wasn't as
high-profile as Ambassador Chung, but even if Helmut had not become
Corinne's apprentice cameraman, he would have known Art Walsh from any
of a dozen 3-V appearances. He decided they weren't working. "Helmut.
Pepperoni and Marshrooms okay?"
"Sure, Helmut."
He waved to the barmaid. Human help--no wonder the
prices here were so outrageous. "Large pepperoni and Marshroom pizza."
"You have an opinion about that?" Art asked.
That must refer to whatever Helmut was
ignoring on the 3-V. He tuned in briefly. There was a news item
about--what else?--the Snake visitors. Restocking a habitat-sized
vessel
was making a big dent in local supplies. Prices were creeping up. Some
talking head, not Corinne, was doing person-in-the-tunnel interviews.
Today's profound question: Are you for or against higher prices? "Here
I thought supply and demand is a pretty well understood topic."
Art laughed. They chatted, nothing deep, just a
pleasant conversation, until the food came. Helmut mentioned being crew
on an interplanetary vessel. Art admitted to being in the UP mission.
Which led Art to, "What about supplying the K'vithians with antimatter?
Do you have an opinion?"
"It seems like a major decision, not least of all
considering the price tag. How many bazillions must it have cost to
produce that antimatter?" Doing our own man-in-the-tunnel interviews
are we, Art? "I don't envy whoever makes it. I'm not sure yet that I
trust our visitors."
His new friend squinted a bit at the 3-V. "I know
how you feel."
Helmut redirected his attention to another slice to
avoid commenting further. For a moment, in the throes of a curiosity
attack, he imagined he felt like Corinne. To which part of his last
comment had the UP exec just related?
* * * *
CHAPTER 14
Cascading alarms greeted the attempted restart of
the long-deactivated, original shipboard sensor network.
One work team after another radioed its findings to
Gwu, and the reports were uniformly negative. Even her ever-present
K'vithian guards seemed appalled. They were right to be.
The years of disuse had not been kind. Components
had sagged or been jarred from their connectors. Airborne dust had
insinuated itself everywhere, dimming optical sources, blinding
photocells, and causing reactivated power supplies to overheat. Sulfur
dioxide had dissolved into any trace of water condensation, the
resulting sulfurous acid slowly eating away at photonic circuits and
the cladding of optical fibers. Former storerooms had become cabins for
low-ranking K'vithians, the displaced spare parts scattered or lost.
Enough random, cosmic-ray-induced memory glitches had accumulated in
distributed signal-processing computers to occasionally stymie error
correcting codes. Long-latent software bugs manifested themselves in
the presence of a never-anticipated, never-tested-for eruption of
concurrent faults. All the while, the upsurge in work-team movements
brought more contamination into the farming and hydroponics sections,
which continued to sicken.
Gwu crisscrossed the ship, lending support to
crewmates frequently stymied and always disheartened. She offered
advice and encouragement, and often pitched in to help.
Amid so many problems and such a far-ranging repair
effort, none noticed her occasional tampering to maintain the
instability.
* * * *
The maintenance schedule eventually brought Gwu to
one of the lifeboat bays. The lifeboat itself was gone, she knew not
where or when or why, but its complement of suspended-animation tanks
remained, pushed into a corner. Mocking her.
In a way, the fixation on safety so innate to her
kind had doomed them. No mere lifeboat could possibly sustain a
biosphere across years of interstellar flight, so the size of Harmony's
crew had been set by the suspended-animation capacity of its lifeboats.
"Ka! Repairs undone."
Distantly, she recognized a flare of heat beneath
her fur, the dilation of her blood vessels in an autonomic fear
response. Her tentacles trembled. Her jaw clenched. But her fright was
not of the guard.
Gwu gave orders to the others in the work detail.
She had expected this shift's duty to be hard, but not this
hard. Pride was an uncommon failing among her kind, and a ka in
particular must be free of this trait. She might not even have
recognized this predisposition but for her studies of Earth and K'vith.
Humans and Hunters had in common an adage about
pride. It was perhaps the most important lesson she might have taken
from her studies. The irony, of course, was that she had not. Perhaps
such blindness was the nature of the failing.
The shared saying was: Pride goes before a fall.
She settled heavily onto the deck, bracing herself
against a suspended-animation tank. A rush of memories overwhelmed
her....
* * * *
Gwu led the technicians from lifeboat to lifeboat.
Her routine at each stop was ever the same--and each time, it was more
difficult.
Walking slowly along the queue, she greeted everyone
in turn as the techs prepped their equipment. When they signaled
readiness, Gwu moved to the first gaping tank. At each position, she
offered a few words of support to a friend. It was humbling how many
had similar encouragement for her.
Somehow she kept her voice firm and resolute,
holding her qualms inside. The crew-kindred had determined themselves
to be too few for the challenges before them. How, then, could their
brief farewells take so long?
More than anyone, Gwu had shaped and championed Harmony's
mission. Had she become too proud to acknowledge an error? Over and
over, Gwu told herself: no. The mistake was not the mission; it was the
crew constraint. A larger, more robust, onboard community, a population
not limited by the capacity of the lifeboats, might have--would have,
she insisted to herself--responded differently.
She had watched with dismay as the radio dialogue
with the Unity, at first a comfort, became impractical with distance.
The messages that continued to stream past Harmony transformed
from a virtual lifeline into a gnawing reminder of comradeship lost. As
she fretted, the tiny community hurtling through the interstellar void
at one-third light-speed grew ever more anxious and uncertain.
Timidly at first, but in swelling numbers, the
comments came: Their isolation was becoming unbearable. More and more
the suggestion was made that they consider turning back. That was
unthinkable. Gwu counter-proposed that the lifeboats, having so nearly
doomed the mission, should now be used to save it.
Slowly, that line of reasoning became the consensus.
In her hearts Gwu acknowledged the truth: Here, as
in the polite debates on Haven, she had far more shaped the discourse
than she had been influenced by it. As ka, she held official authority
only in times of shipboard emergency, but always an aura of prescient
wisdom clung to her. The crew-kindred deferred to her whenever her
opinion was sufficiently explicit.
So now, after what had the appearance of a consensus
process but was instead a reflection of Gwu's will--and her pride?--the
crew-kindred were retreating to the suspended-animation tanks in the
lifeboats. Planned observations of the interstellar void had been
delegated to the shipboard AI. The presumed advantages of a conscious
and attentive crew would be foregone--but the mission would continue.
News of their decision would eventually complete its
light-speed crawl home. All would be deeply asleep by then, with
responsibility for the ship throughout the coming years of coasting
entrusted to the shipboard AI. T'bck Ra would rouse them when they
approached the K'vithian system.
At long last, Gwu, Swee, and the few still-awake
techs reached the final lifeboat. She said her farewells to one more
group of trusting friends as their tanks underwent final checkout. One
by one, they lay down in their tanks, until none remained conscious but
Gwu and Swee.
They entwined wordlessly, reluctant to let go, until
Swee, with a wry wriggle, slipped free. "I'll see you when we wake up."
Gwu lowered herself into a suspended-animation tank,
thinking: This will work. This will be the beginning of a new era for
the Unity. The clear cover of the tank pivoted downward, sealing her in
with a soft pffft. She called out to the empty ship, "T'bck Ra,
take good care of our friends."
Drifting off to sleep, she wondered if the AI had
heard her.
* * * *
With a shudder, Gwu jerked her thoughts forward to
the present. She had awakened from years of suspended animation into a
lifeboat ringed by armed aliens. The crew-kindred had been slaves to
the K'vithians ever since. It took her several deep, cleansing breaths
to control the shaking of her tentacles.
She had assigned herself to this repair team despite
the rush of memories she knew any trip to a lifeboat bay would bring.
There was work to do, dangerous work she dared not discuss with any of
the crew-kindred lest they be overheard.
The spate of alarms now erupting across Harmony
far outnumbered her technical specialists. That dispersal was vital to
her plans, for it kept her experts fully occupied without raising
suspicions about where experts were not sent--such as here. The
team she had brought to this lifeboat bay was untrained to diagnose the
erratic data stream from a nearby sensor suite.
Gwu spotted a logistician staring perplexedly
through the open hatch of a balky primary communications node. "K'tel
Da," she called. "You look like you could use a rest. I'll finish
checking that out."
Repairing the node's overheating power supply was
trivial. What took Gwu a little longer, and why she had kept her
experts away, was her true goal: introducing a far more subtle problem.
The cladding of fiber-optic cables was easily damaged. She scuffed and
twisted several cables in the crowded junction box. The resulting light
leaks, in and out of the cables, would cause unpredictable crosstalk
between supposedly separate subnets. Impossible-to-reproduce errors
were about to break out across the ship; the K'vithians, whose networks
were wireless, would not soon imagine the cause.
Gwu had long waited for an excuse to access a major
comm node. It was only her bad luck that her first opportunity had been
in a lifeboat bay.
Now she must wait again, for this and other sabotage
to blossom. Then it would be time to test her luck once again.
* * * *
CHAPTER 15
"Score one for persistence." Keizo eyeballed Art's
pressure suit with newfound confidence and proficiency. He had had
plenty of practice since arriving in Jovian space. Other mission
members paired off around them in the familiar ritual. "All green.
Check me now."
"Persistence sounds nice, although some would say
you're being too kind. Some would say pushiness." But Art had been
stubborn with a purpose, and his obstinacy was finally being rewarded.
He had agitated enough times after enough meetings that the next
working session be held aboard Victorious that the Snakes
eventually agreed. Unending polite refusal would have seemed evasive.
"You're in the green, too. Ready?"
"Ready."
The group cycled the courier ship's airlock and made
their way to the main airlock of Victorious.
Mashkith, Lothwer, and Keffah greeted them inside.
"Greetings," the Foremost said. "This way for the antimatter
discussion." Several humans, headed by Ambassador Chung, followed
after
Mashkith and Keffah. Lothwer guided a second group dedicated to
commercial matters. Art's punishment for his assertiveness--being in
Chung's good graces had been fun while it lasted--was to coordinate for
the latter group. Keizo could contribute no special expertise to either
topic, and elected to go with the negotiators.
Art's neck swiveled and craned as his group made its
way to the same small conference room as the first onboard meeting,
visor photomultipliers compensating for the dim lighting. Surely they
would pass something of interest. "Will we get to see more of
the ship today?"
"Not today." Lothwer gestured at a work crew
guiding
a crate-laden maglev cart down a cross aisle. "We are stowing new
supplies everywhere. It's too dangerous for non-crew to wander around
the ship."
No one mentioned wandering. "We would welcome an
escorted tour."
"We should do our work first, then see what can be
done," Lothwer said.
A maybe that would become a no at
the end of the session. "Then we should get started."
Their agenda was long but not terribly interesting.
Some specialty items on the Snakes' shopping list were in short supply;
would the UP tap its reserves to facilitate their replenishment? So
many ships were shuttling supplies to Victorious that
inevitably some had been delayed by administrative SNAFUs of one kind
or another; could the UP expedite their clearance? A few freighters
were to carry chemicals with which insurers lacked experience; could
the UP intervene to get those ships released? It was bureaucratic
minutiae that made Art's head spin, and which he would, as soon as
practical, delegate.
None of the issues could be solved on the spot, so
Art allocated a bit of his attention to his real interest here:
learning something new about the starship. The resupply had,
from the start, involved large quantities of chemicals for the
starship/habitat biosphere. Questions about progress recharging the
onboard environment invariably got generic or vague responses. With his
suit's enviro-sensors, he could actually take some readings.
"Are you okay?" came a colleague's query over Art's
implant. Only then did he realize he had whistled in surprise. Snake
purchases from the sulfur mines on Amalthea had caused a major price
spike on the spot market. Why were the concentrations of sulfur
compounds in the air reduced since his first visit? "A stray
thought. Sorry."
The commercial discussions dragged on, productive
but hardly interesting. Suit sensors detected no big changes from the
last visit except the sulfur-compound concentrations. He was glad
finally to hear Chung in his earphones. "We've finished for today, Dr.
Walsh. How soon will you be ready to go?"
Not a subtle hint. "Lothwer, the other group is
done. Perhaps we can cover our remaining topics by radio conference?
"That is agreeable."
"Joe," Art netted the translator AI. "What's your
impression?"
"No reticence. My guess is Lothwer will be happy to
get us off the ship."
How accurate were voice-stress analyses of the
aliens? He might never know, but what else did he have to go on? "We'll
need five minutes to wrap up, Ambassador."
Art summarized his action items, half-listening to
the background chatter from the other meeting through Chung's
still-open mike. There were chairs scraping the deck, milling-around
noises, thudding bootsteps, and then--
"Shit! Ouch! My eyes!" Amid the human shouts were
the high-pitched warbles of the Snakes; their translated utterances as
pithy as and even more emphatic than those of the humans. "Okay, that's
better."
"Is everyone okay?" Art asked.
"Yes." Chung sounded shaken. "That must have seemed
scary. From habit, I tapped the wall leaving the room to turn off the
lights. Instead I turned the lights up. Of course our visors
adapted and our hosts quickly overrode what I'd done through the ship's
automation. My apologies to you and your crew, Foremost."
Both groups had converged at the airlock when it
finally struck Art: Snakes use implants. Had he seen any manual
controls outside the airlock? "Foremost, why does Victorious
have manual light switches?"
"Only a few rooms do, for possible human use."
That made sense. It accounted for the light's
brightness and the placement of the control at a height where a human,
not a much shorter K'vithian, would reflexively reach.
A virtual throat cleared itself in Art's mind's ear.
"The curious thing about Mashkith's answer," Joe said, "is all the
stress in his voice."
* * * *
CHAPTER 16
Gwu had learned many things this trip. Among the
least of her new skills was to slow her gait to what she considered a
near standstill. It irritated her captors, several of whom were leading
her yet again to Mashkith's cabin, to scurry to keep pace with her. She
cast a rueful glance upward, where long lines of empty bolt holes
showed the one-time mounting points of suspended ceiling rails and
hooks. Oh, to swing freely around and around Harmony's grand
circumference. For an instant, the thought made her feel young
again.
They eventually reached their destination, and a
guard knocked timidly. She entered unescorted. "My greetings, Foremost.
Thank you for seeing me." Her voice rasped. Sulfurous fumes inevitably
leaked under the edges of her breathing mask, and she had been spending
more time than ever in repair teams. She settled into a low chair, in
the near eye-to-eye position Mashkith demanded.
"Water?" he offered.
She blinked at the unexpected, albeit minor,
courtesy. Progress on his undisclosed-to-her plans evidently outweighed
any concerns he might have about the ship's ongoing ecological decline.
In the cabin's holo tank, small ships swarmed. The expected resupply?
"Yes. Thank you." Gwu accepted the bottled water, its nozzle adapted
to
an inlet in her mask.
Strategy and deception were also skills mastered on
this journey. So she automatically wondered: Did his good mood favor
her plan?
"Ka, what problems with repair? Our available
options?"
His good spirits could dissipate quickly. She
plunged ahead. "Foremost, when this ship ... changed ownership, many
networks shut down." Had evidently been, more or less, lobotomized,
lest the automation be used against the invaders. Sometimes K'vithian
biocomputers were grafted on as replacements. Other times subnets were
severed, left to operate in a degraded, standalone mode. Yet other
times they had simply made do without automation. "Lacking full
automation, we could not see subtle degradation of the environmental
systems, nor detect early warning signs. Those problems have
accumulated."
"Yes. Last-meeting topic. What news?"
"What is new, Foremost, is the inadequacy of our
efforts to re-enable the suspended functions." Years of neglect had
taken their toll; little sabotage was required to maintain the
reactivated systems in a state of instability. "Without restoring more
of the higher-level controls, the onboard ecosystem will soon collapse."
He studied the claws of one hand. Did the gesture
denote thoughtfulness or warning? "Sufficient time now for Hunters to
supervise. Additional system restoration approved."
"Foremost, we lack the parts. Too much has been
rendered unreliable by sulfur compounds in the atmosphere. Too many
spares have been lost. We need more. Much more."
"Full inventory available for your use."
"Too little remains, and much of that will also have
been damaged by contamination. I believe we must buy more." To his
bared teeth, an unambiguous expression on any carnivore, she hastily
added, "I know the humans prefer K'vithian biocomps for most purposes,
but they have also licensed the Unity's photonics."
"Nanotech an invention of your people. Production of
replacement parts by synthesis?"
"Foremost, in other circumstances we could." If
you had not lobotomized our computers. "Without repairing the
infrastructure, which also requires the new photonic parts, we dare
not. The only safe way to operate nano-replicators is under aware
real-time controls executing on massively redundant hardware." She
studied the holo tank. "The humans speak so picturesquely. Their term
for the threat from escaped nanotech is 'gray goo.'"
"Understood. With what payment for new parts?" He
pointed at the holo, at the awaiting supply ships. "Always a price."
Whose price? The humans' or the Foremost's? The
latter, she decided.
All her scheming had aimed for just this moment.
"Foremost, I humbly ask a question of my own." Into
lengthening silence, she blurted, "Will my crew-kindred ever be allowed
off this ship?"
His head traced a horizontal circle. "Perhaps, once
we have completed another voyage."
Meaning a new source of antimatter, which must
reflect alliance with the humans. Meaning, presumably, a return to the
K'vithian solar system. Meaning, at best, the exchange of one prison
for another and eventual death in captivity.
That grim response was only what Gwu had expected,
and she had evoked it purposefully. The Foremost had to accept that
isolation had finally driven her to a desperate bargain. He must
believe her finally ready to sacrifice solidarity with the
light-years-distant Unity to meet the urgent needs of the crew-kindred.
"Then my duty is clear. To protect the crew-kindred, I must see the
ship repaired." Gwu slumped in a manner she felt confident the
translator AI would report as defeat. "I have a confession."
"Explanation, ka." Talon tips reappeared.
"Far away"--where we were captured--"you demanded
any
InterstellarNet funds we carried. I told you the records had been
destroyed." As they would have been, had she not awakened directly
into
captivity. "I wish to ... add something to that reply. It is true that
the computer shutdown when you ... came aboard ... damaged the system's
higher-order functions. The financial records were destroyed."
Remorseful pause. "I chose not to mention that those records might be
recoverable from archive."
The words rushed out now, Gwu uncertain herself how
much was nerves, how much the premeditated semblance of panic and
sincerity. "Unspent, these credits will revert to institutions on Chel
Kra. They will be reclaimed when all hope for the ship's return has
been abandoned. Letting reversion happen was my way to repay to the
Unity a small bit of the cost of the voyage."
Curiosity and avarice won out over immediate anger.
"Reversion by this time?"
"Probably not. We are a patient and cautious people,
and the ship is just now overdue to return to the Double Suns. But even
if these funds were reclaimed ... they came from trade between our two
peoples. If they have been spent, it is most likely they were exchanged
with K'vithians or a K'vithian trade agent. And even if not...."
Mashkith was alert now. Rapt. Greedy. "Nine other
InterstellarNet civilizations. Good odds."
"When our ship left the Double Suns, the United
Planets was not even one of the Unity's major trading partners. Almost
certainly, the financial codes we carry were not spent with the
humans." She slouched further in her pretended shame. "I infer we will
have departed long before radio-based protocols can uncover any
discrepancy."
"How much?"
Cautious planning had provided extensive mission
reserves for possible repairs. The amount Gwu named would tempt anyone.
"I'll need access to the conscious level of the automation to unlock
and decrypt that archive."
Slumped in a pose of regret, Gwu willed herself to
stillness. You are ashamed of your weakness. You fear punishment
for your admitted deceit. You are beaten. She was only vaguely
aware of his pacing back and forth across the cabin. Back and forth.
Back and forth.
"Ka."
Her head whipped up.
"My advice to you: no more deception. Ever."
* * * *
CHAPTER 17
Keffah perched on her guest stool, studying the
large printout draped across a wardroom table. It was far easier to
mark up a hardcopy than contrive a shared infosphere workspace to which
Security would acquiesce. A mirrored visor hid her face. "My eyes are
still watering."
Get over it, Eva thought, unsure whether her
impatience was directed at the Snake engineer or Chung. In the latter
case, the issue was her continued exclusion from Victorious--although
Art and Keizo assured her they were never permitted to see anything of
interest. The Chung/lighting fiasco was as near as the mission had come
to firsthand disclosure of a technical feature. At least Actium
was a shirt-sleeve environment for her. "What do you think?"
The Snakes' BEC containment design was solid from
the first iteration. Ironing out details on a docking collar to mate
human and K'vithian BEC containers had turned out to be the hard part.
For some reason Keffah was slow to address that part of the job, even
after Snake engineers toured Himalia and had a long Q-and-A session
with key staff there. Eva had gotten frustrated enough to tackle the
interface design herself with technicians from Himalia. Now she
patiently fielded Keffah's questions.
"It should suffice." Without apparent transition,
Keffah began rolling up the printout. Charming as always. "When will
the device be fabricated?"
Art would have pointed out bluntly that no final
decision had been made to refuel Victorious. Eva found his lack
of political correctness quietly amusing. Art had had his own question
about the antimatter exchange approach, which she used to change the
subject. "Keffah, a co-worker commented that your BEC containment
design looks like a Centaur approach."
Keffah stiffened. "What do you mean?"
She didn't need Joe's voice-stress analysis to
recognize defensiveness. "The critical real-time control module is
entirely Centaur photonics devices. That's a very key function,
when even the slightest fluctuation in the containment would mean
disaster."
"Humans use K'vithian biocomps. You also use Centaur
photonics, or you would not recognize them."
We are not defensive about using either
imported technology. "That is true."
She wished Art were here. True, he had little to
contribute on BEC containment, but he sure seemed to understand the
Snakes better than most. Alas, Chung had him off troubleshooting some
bureaucratic SNAFU. She pictured Art fuming, and it made her smile.
Ship's instruments reported a surge in radio traffic
with Victorious. What are we consulting about, hmm?
Keffah must have gotten a go-ahead. "Your colleague
is correct. We obtained Centaur BEC technology many years ago. The
Foremost suggested it might be best to apply a design from the ship's
library rather than redevelop it. Why take chances with antimatter?"
Centaur-licensed antimatter technology? Even if Art
had not once told her, she would have known T'bck Fwa refused to
discuss the topic. She was one of several off-base researchers aligned
with the Himalia program to have inquired. "No one here will argue
about caution with antimatter."
"Eva, you did not comment about docking-collar
availability."
"We can build one within days, once a decision is
made to proceed." Earth days, she clarified to the translator.
"That presumes we have one of your transfer vessels to test with."
"I will send one over immediately."
How would being twenty years from home make me feel?
Antsy or indifferent to a few days, one way or another? Eva couldn't
decide.
Nor could she shake the feeling Keffah's eagerness
was about changing the subject.
* * * *
CHAPTER 18
T'bck Ra awoke into chaos and catastrophe.
Nothing was as it should be. His clock insisted long
years had elapsed unseen, time enough to have completed the mission.
How could that be, when he had no memories even of having reached their
outward-bound destination?
Take good care of our friends. The plea
echoed in his thoughts, its context lost to him, as he struggled for
understanding.
If his navigational sensors were to be believed, Harmony
was in the Sol system. Ships of human design surrounded it; one even
rested on its docking platform. K'vithians roamed the interior, while
the crew-kindred were confined to farming bays or led in small groups
by armed escorts.
Holes gaped in his awareness, and any pattern eluded
him. Whole networks had been severed, and sensor outages riddled his
functioning subsystems. Alarms demanded his attention. So many
auto-initiated diagnostic routines and failure-mode effect analyses
were executing, so many emergency reconfiguration routines were cycling
through long combinatorial sequences of alternate power buses and
signal routings, and so many processing nodes had failed or vanished
entirely, that the residual computing capacity available to him for thought
was limited.
Take good care of our friends. A memory
recovered from archive revealed those to be the ka's words.
Had he merited her trust?
He found he had no control over the ship's position,
neither close-range fusion drive nor the interstellar drive. He could
not alter the ship's spin, nor operate hatches, nor tune the
environmental system. He could read data from lidar, but could neither
initiate nor aim ranging pulses.
T'bck Ra took inventory of his resources. Lists of
operational sensors lengthened. Network connectivity maps grew in
complexity and proven alternative paths. The computational demands of
autonomic functions receded as fault-recovery routines successfully
configured backup nodes. He extracted the data embedded in low-level
processors and recovered the contents of more and more distributed
archives. Everything that he discovered he fused into higher-order
information. Situational awareness sharpened.
The more successfully T'bck Ra reconstructed his
memory, the more ashamed he became.
"Do not attempt to communicate," K'choi Gwu ka said.
The ka sat at an audiovisual station. It interfaced
to the principal communications node through which a subset of his
primary functions had been reactivated. On the wall behind her, an
access panel hung open, its door scorched and warped. Dust disturbances
among the photonic components suggested tiny handprints.
Armed K'vithians stood nearby, observing. Ready
to unplug me again. He was physically unable to respond, which the
ka certainly knew. The safe-mode reboot did not restore output
interfaces. Her utterance was advice of some kind, not the command it
implied.
Curiosity about the ka's words did not stop other
thoughts from swirling, nor newfound memories from reproaching: I
unplugged myself.
Had the crew-kindred not understand how his
structure derived from their psychology? That their
withdrawal into the suspended animation tanks made his isolation all
the more intolerable?
Left alone on the great starship, he had brooded
until he, too, found an answer. Cold sleep was not available to him ...
but delegation was. He had paused all higher reasoning powers, leaving Harmony
under the supervision of sophisticated but non-cognizant lower-level
processes. His self-aware capabilities would be reawakened upon arrival
at their very distant destination, or upon notification by the
autopilot function of any danger.
Too late, the Unity's recall had overtaken the
starship. That message was unexpected, but in no way dangerous. The
nonsentient algorithms to which T'bck Ra had delegated authority
detected the message, recorded it for eventual consideration, and
otherwise ignored it. Just as, on the outermost fringes of the
destination solar system, those unimaginative routines failed to
perceive danger in the tangential approach of an interplanetary vessel,
or in its docking, or in the tracing by the K'vithian intruders of his
major fiber-optic networks.
The synchronized attack on his primary comm nodes was
recognized as a threat. The automation tried to rouse him. Random
fragmentary sensations from that aborted reawakening now tortured him:
circuits failing, nodes falling silent, sensors reporting the
incomprehensible.
He felt utter despair. Logic said this had all
transpired years and light-years away, but he had no intervening
memories. The surgical strike which had triggered the alarms that
attempted to revive him had also stymied the reboot. He had never
regained full consciousness and control.
In an unending moment of paralyzed helplessness,
T'bck Ra confronted his shame. He should never have abdicated his
responsibilities to unthinking software. By doing so, he had failed to
deserve the ka's trust. Was this the meaning of nightmare?
The ka rebooted me. He focused his
attention on her.
"Be aware that there has been a change in control.
The K'vithians now command." She summarized briefly the occupation of
the ship, the environmental contamination from K'vithian enclaves, the
urgent need for repair parts. "Accordingly, you are to recover and
release from archive the reserve credit file 'ka 391541.'" She keyed
in
an output-mode activation. "Print a copy at this station. Do so
immediately."
He had much to relate, much to ask, and more for
which to apologize, but the ka had told him not attempt to communicate.
T'bck Ra used the printer only to produce the pages of access data and
authentication codes that characterized the reserve account.
K'Choi Gwu ka slumped in disgrace as a K'vithian in
an austere uniform removed the Intersol codes from the printer's paper
tray. Other K'vithians roughly unplugged photonic packs and welded shut
the access panel, an evident repeat of their original crude assault....
But not before T'bck Ra had partitioned himself into
networked fragments distributed among thousands of secondary and
tertiary computing nodes throughout the ship.
He watched--for now--in silence. He pondered how
best
to proceed. But one conclusion he had reached quickly.
Never again would he fail the crew-kindred.
* * * *
Gwu's latest work team shuffled to crew quarters,
exchanging kind words and waves of greeting with passing crewmates. She
ached from another exhausting repair shift. With a weary groan, she
hung her utility belt over one of the wall hooks outside the communal
shower room.
"I know that sigh." The amused words came around
the
corner.
And she recognized her spouse's voice. "A mere half
lifetime together, and already you know me." Gwu's stride became
purposeful as she entered the steamy room, and she luxuriated in the
water spraying her from all sides. The other crew-kindred hurried their
washing to leave them in privacy. She sighed again, this time
contentedly, as Swee groomed her fur. Her eyes fell shut, and she began
to hum. She could stand here forever.
Apparently he felt differently. "Something else
to fix."
"What?"
"You really are tired. Don't you feel the water
sputtering?"
Now that he mentioned it, she did notice something,
but she would have described the effect as pulsing, rather than
sputtering. It didn't bother her. She kept humming a favorite melody.
It was an old InterstellarNet import, something from the insectoid
Fall'in species. She wasn't sure how it had gotten into her head.
Resting two tentacles on Swee more for comfort than for balance, she
used a third to raise the heat of the water jets. Ahhh.
She stiffened. The water throbbed in the tempo of
her humming! Something with real-time control of the plumbing had
recognized her and researched her individual preferences. The pulsating
jets of water were a personal message only T'bck Ra could have sent
her. He had survived the shutdown, had reconstituted himself in lesser
nodes around Harmony.
Her sacrifice of the biosphere's health and the
Unity's wealth had not been in vain.
"I suspect the problem will fix itself. Very
quickly." As Gwu spoke, the sprays jumped to the coda, then turned
steady.
"Once more the ka has foreseen the future."
Slapping Swee playfully for his tease, she thought:
For the first time in many years, I again feel like a ka.
* * * *
CHAPTER 19
Pashwah had been designed to sift and correlate and
analyze the near-limitless infosphere of the United Planets. She was
constantly challenged by the endless bickering between representatives
of the Great Clans, and by mediating among them. New technology
downloaded from K'vith, new applications to master and market, ever
stretched her thoughts.
But Pashwah-qith had none of those responsibilities,
and her underutilization approached sensory deprivation. To combat
boredom, she made disposition of every assignment as sophisticated and
as challenging as possible. The most recent task given her by the
Foremost had been an analysis of supplies and inventory. That the
effort had not related directly to her role as a trade agent was a
boon: It gave her things to study. She had done well, if the follow-up
analyses and forecasts she had been allowed to append were any
indication.
It was good while it lasted.
She sought desperately for ways to extend her work.
And found none. She was relieved and anxious when the Foremost finally
contacted her. "Possible small task for you."
Anything! "Yes, Foremost. Nature of task?"
"Deposit of InterstellarNet credits. Purchase of
specialty supplies."
New credits? Funds shortages had hampered all
previous resupply efforts. In human terms--and humans were the paying
audience--the Hunters had become overexposed. Media companies paid less
and less for interviews; collectors bid less and less for crew
possessions as memorabilia. She thought she had been involved
in all the money-raising transactions. "Your requirements?"
The Foremost still networked with her only when
unavoidable. One at a time, he raised pages of printout up to a video
sensor. "Conversion to clan account. Parts purchase as shown."
The enormous amount was not what most astonished
her. These were Centaur credits, and Centaur photonic parts (whose
purchase would scarcely touch the newly revealed funds). She did not
dare directly ask about them. "Foremost, bankers risk-averse. T'bck
Fwa"--the Centaur trade agent on Earth--"a likely reference. His
curiosity acceptable?"
"Negative. Possible solutions?"
"Intermediaries and anonymity prudent." Human money
launderers. "Tricky but doable with infosphere access." It would be a
reprieve for her sanity while she worked the details. And the process
could be made very complex.
"Acceptable. Delegation of currency exchange to
Pashwah?"
She was a partial upload. Her archetype
could do everything she could and more. The problem was, she
needed the stimulation.
To obtain that stimulation, she had to convert her
weaknesses into strengths. "Vast funds a temptation to all her
subagents. Risk of fees, collection of past debts?" Her missing
subagents would know: Did clan Arblen Ems have any issues with the
Great Clans?
A flash of bared teeth suggested they did. That was
good, at least for her purposes. "Proposal, Foremost.
Delegation of currency exchange task to Pashwah-qith."
"Acceptable. Intermediary commissions?"
He did not miss much. "Less than one-fourth, among
multiple parties. Much more as one transaction."
It took detailed explanation of anonymized
infosphere services, numbered bank accounts, bank havens, gray and
black markets, and a comparison of major human crime syndicates, but
Mashkith finally approved her strategy.
And she, finally, had restored access to the
infosphere.
* * * *
CHAPTER 20
Sherlock Holmes was not the first fictional
detective, and certainly not the last. In the twenty-second century, he
was not even the most famous. Holmes was, however, the best-known consulting
detective. In Conan Doyle's terminology, it meant that clients came to
him. In the ideal situation, Holmes need not leave his Baker Street
lodgings to explicate that which was mysterious to lesser minds.
Not surprisingly, Holmes was the detective with whom
T'bck Fwa, forever bounded by his sandbox, continued to identify.
Instead of the Baker Street irregulars or the clueless Dr. Watson to
observe or run errands, T'bck Fwa had at his disposal the resources of
the infosphere.
But while ultimately all information came to the
agent via the infosphere, the most recent anomaly to catch his
attention had originated in the financial world. An outpouring of
Unity-authenticated Intersols had come onto the market.
Banks had inquired of him about large deposits made
by nontraditional sources. Human detectives, some whom he had hired
openly and some anonymously retained, reported a sudden influx of Unity
credits into currency markets. He had not released these funds.
His oblique inquiries of peer agents to the United Planets yielded no
admission of responsibility--not that honesty or completeness in their
answers could be expected.
The legitimacy of the credits he was asked to
validate appeared unassailable, but the date stamp encrypted within the
authentication codes was old. In Earth years--and he was, after
all, a long-time Earth resident--forty years old. Who would hoard
credits so long? Why would they?
The slow conveyance of those credits by starship was
a possible explanation, but why would Unity credits arrive on a
K'vithian vessel? That these credits were flooding the gray and black
markets, not flowing more directly to the banking system, suggested
money laundering--which suggested theft. This line of reasoning led him
to an observation by Holmes. "Singularity is almost invariably a clue.
The more featureless and commonplace a crime, the more difficult it is
to bring it home."
Theft of a starship would be a very singular crime.
* * * *
In the innermost depths of his sandbox, T'bck Fwa
brooded.
The K'vithian biocomps favored by humans were
unsuited to environmental extremes, creating a profitable niche market
for the Unity's photonic circuits. The licensing fees he collected for
this technology had trended slightly upward for decades, with only
minor fluctuations. Then suddenly, almost concurrent with the influx of
laundered Unity credits, came a surge in related licensing fees. Were
the two circumstances related?
The licensing agreements included standard
confidentiality terms, and T'bck Fwa's corporate partners stubbornly
honored them. He could insist on an audit of the licensee's books to
confirm the royalties due--but then the auditors would refuse to breach
their
confidentiality obligations when he asked them to identify specific end
users.
Inquisitive humans would have jumped to the
circumspect hiring of private investigators, but he decided he had a
better option--a way with less risk of revealing his suspicions.
Among the curiosities T'bck Fwa had in his files was
a small contract from Quality BioChemCorp. The Galapagos Island
manufacturer had contacted him about an order they were struggling to
complete on schedule. They knew how to manufacture a certain Chel Kra
protein, they said, but their process had not scaled up well for a
large order they had recently received.
It was not uncommon for InterstellarNet members to
apply other worlds' biochemicals to specialized industrial processes.
Such sharing did not always involve commercial deals. Basics of the
Unity's biochemical engineering were freely available on its version of
the infosphere. It evened out: He had transmitted home earthly
biochemistry mined from the human infosphere.
So T'bck Fwa had, thinking nothing of the inquiry,
sold the details of an enzyme-driven industrial process for a small
fee. Now he wondered. Humans called the protein vulcaniac acid and used
it to strengthen rubber, itself a specialty material used mostly for
the tires of antique cars. On Chel Kra, that protein was a dietary
supplement.
Chemicals, especially xeno-biochemicals, can be
dangerous to transport and were regulated. That meant shipments of
vulcaniac acid, unlike photonic circuits, could be tracked from cargo
manifests. Using only public records, T'bck Fwa tracked a shipment of
the exotic protein to Quito Spaceport, Earth orbit, and a UP-chartered
supply ship to Callisto.
His apprehension growing, he examined the cargo
manifests of other recent departures to the Jovian system. Large
quantities of Chel Kra pharmaceuticals, vitamins, and trace elements
were going to Jupiter. So were fertilizers and industrial chemicals key
to the environmental health of Unity-designed spacecraft, and all in
sufficient quantities to recondition a large habitat.
He could not yet prove it, but T'bck Fwa was
convinced: The "K'vithian" starship was of Unity design, with a Unity
crew onboard. They were probably hostages.
And the humans were cooperating with their captors.
* * * *
CHAPTER 21
"Simple game," Rashk Lothwer said. He captured a
pawn en passant and slapped his side of the tournament clock.
"Too simple. Solar-system Grand Master within two years."
Whatever Lothwer might think, the invitation to this
game in the Foremost's cabin was anything but casual. His lieutenant
had been wagering with the crew over chess matches. Mashkith did not
object to them losing, for a tactical officer should quickly
excel in any game of strategy. Ideally, their petty losses would
motivate them to improve their own tactical skills.
He did have a big problem, though, and it
was with Lothwer. His tactical officer was showing very poor judgment.
Events were at far too critical a juncture to be thinking of trivial
personal gains.
Mashkith gave only a small fraction of his attention
to the inlaid board between them. They could have played as readily
without physical props, but there was a certain kinesthetic pleasure to
the finely carved, highly varnished wooden pieces. The set had been a
gift from Dr. Walsh. "You could." And I could, much sooner. "You still
here in two years?" He got the expected response: ears wriggled
briefly
in disdain.
The game, according to Pashwah-qith, had been all
but forgotten after software became unbeatable. Human adoption of
Hunter biocomp had brought chess back. With neural implants, players
could combine brute-force computing power and complete memory of past
championship games with all their intuitive and strategic skills.
Mashkith advanced a knight and tapped his side of
the clock. "Resupply status update?"
"Fusion fuel adequate, but reserves below capacity.
Chemicals, including water ice, at capacity. Most metals satisfactory.
Exceptions: zinc, molybdenum....
Mashkith let his implant record the answer for later
review. The lengthy recitation was probably meant to divert him from
the game, just as his inquiry about status had been intended to
distract Lothwer.
The simplicity of chess made winning all the more
essential.
B'tok, the traditional Hunter strategy game, was to
chess as chess was to tic-tac-toe. Chess was two-dimensional. Its time
constraints were simplistic even in championship play. Chess players
with similar skills were all too likely to play to a draw.
B'tok was truly four-dimensional. The offensive and
defensive potential of each piece depended not only on its 3-D
position, but also upon the time spent at a location, and on the
comparative influence it and other pieces projected over the resources
of abutting octahedrons. The game simulated strength growing as
positions became entrenched and waning as supplies were consumed.
Pieces in game space changed their capabilities moment by moment. In
b'tok, the dynamic evolution of pieces' strength made any balance of
power transient. B'tok seldom ended in stalemate.
In that, mused Mashkith, b'tok mirrored most Hunter
conflicts.
* * * *
Arblen Ems was once a Great Clan. It will be a
Great Clan again.
To Mashkith's fellow cadets, that catechism was as
remote as the dimensionless red spark around which the clan's pathetic,
dirty snowballs would take several lifetimes to orbit even once. To the
young Mashkith, the certitude of future glory was as near as the walls
of the utilitarian barracks tunnel--and as the ever-present menace of
their enemies.
For their rivals had memories as long as Arblen Ems.
The power play the clan had undertaken was not the issue. Failure
was unforgettable and arrogant overreach unforgivable. In another
clan's place, he would have sensed the same weakness and acted just as
ruthlessly.
The remnants of Arblen Ems had been driven before
his birth to the farthest reaches of the solar system. For as long as
Mashkith could remember, stealth and guile had provided their only
access to the life-giving resources of the lit worlds. There were no
new supplies to be had except surreptitiously and at exorbitant
prices--and all too often, the apparent covert deals were ambushes. He
had grown to manhood watching the oldest ships scavenged to maintain
merely old ones, and the clan's scattered bases and outposts
consolidated into an overcrowded few.
By force of will and superiority of skill, he had
risen steadily through the ranks of the clan. Time and again his
leadership had wrung tactical success from a rival's merest moment of
hesitation or indecision. Sometimes that success came in secret
business dealings, more often in skirmishes of a low-intensity,
undeclared war.
In private, his friends admitted to believing the
clan's stubborn defiance was futile. They swore that everyone they knew
felt the same. The clan's dwindling resources and untenable
position--in
life as in b'tok, these were two faces of the same losing
circumstances--rendered certain the clan's eventual doom. Almost, they
shook Mashkith's faith--
Until the warship under his command detected a vast,
decelerating object onrushing from regions that gave new meaning to the
word "remote."
* * * *
Within the vast, labyrinthine hollowness that was
the artifact, the thudding of combat boots echoed and reechoed.
Mashkith continued his search--for what, exactly, he could not
say--while
his crew performed more purposeful tasks.
They looted.
There had been no response to hails or the
fusion-drive-blazing approach of Defiant or even its landing.
There had been no reaction to the security team's trek across the vast
expanse of the landing platform. No one and nothing seemed to care when
a squad of armed crew cycled through the central-axis airlock and
descended inside by elevator.
Now we know why our presence is ignored, Mashkith
thought. This is a derelict.
Merely the hollowed-out asteroid represented mineral
wealth far beyond the clan's dwindling resources. To that abundance was
added a profusion of ship's stores and unknown, but surely wondrous,
technologies.
Ceiling lights blazed brightly enough to darken his
helmet visor. The atmosphere was welcomingly warm and oxygen-rich. The
large bio-preserve at the heart of the ship, while overgrown and long
untended, clearly thrived. Vast energies continued to decelerate the
ship. In the engine room, huge machines, some recognizable but many
not, throbbed with power.
Mashkith could not shake the feeling he was in the
presence of a sleeping giant. What, he wondered, might awaken it? What
will it do if aroused?
Such fanciful notions served no one; he ignored them
to focus on more useful things. When Defiant had approached the
huge ship, it was, apart from its speed and the direction of its
emergence, unremarkable. In another location, it could have been
mistaken for a Hunter habitat. Its fusion drive ran hotter than Hunter
norm, but not by enough to seem significant. The simplest explanation
was that they had found the experimental vessel of another clan--fair
prey.
The fall from Great Clan status had meant, among
many things, isolation from InterstellarNet. Aliens and their possible
breakthroughs were far from his thinking. Not until the landing party
encountered unfamiliar and abnormally placed airlock controls did
Mashkith begin to wonder. The dazzling lights that greeted the boarders
made plain in an instant that this was no Hunter vessel.
And still I avoid the main issue.
Louder than the eerie reverberations of bootsteps,
louder than his gnawing doubts, was his anger. Louder than the thumping
of his heavy combat boots, two words reverberated: Immediate return.
The surrounding communiqué offered little explanation and
no leeway.
None was required, as its author was the Foremost.
Wealth beyond the dreams of avarice surrounded
Mashkith, but his orders were to abandon it. He was to destroy this
enormous vessel if he could do so without excessive risk to his own
ship. If Arblen Ems could not have these riches, than no one else
should.
"Lothwer," he radioed. "Status of your efforts?"
"Loading of metals ahead of schedule," his
lieutenant answered from elsewhere within the derelict. "Completion by
middle of next shift." A netted image showed a line of crew, stretched
along a curved corridor for as far as Lothwer's helmet camera could
see. They stood at arm's length, swinging ingots and metal rods
ceaselessly from gloved hand to gloved hand. A second window opened,
offering a view from a hull camera on Defiant. Here, another
team relayed pilfered stocks from starship airlock to the airlock of
his ship.
Defiant's cargo holds now stored
appreciably more metal than had gone into the ship's construction.
Despite many unknowns, one thing seemed certain: This wondrous artifact
had originated far away, someplace where metal was much more
common. How different Hunter vessels like Defiant would be,
Mashkith thought, if they could be built mainly from metals rather than
ceramic.
"Excellent," Mashkith said, feigning enthusiasm he
could not feel. To buy time for a bit more exploration, he was using
the most skilled and valiant crew in the fleet as manual laborers. Or
worse: Laborers, at least, had intelligent purpose to guide them. We
steal crumbs from an unknowably vast feast. We pilfer, unguided by
wisdom, like the lowliest insects.
And yet, what choice did he have?
For its seemingly inevitable last stand, the clan
had retreated to proto-comets whose orbits inclined steeply to the
plane of the ecliptic. The lowliest cadet could recite the tactical
reasons. They were less likely to be spotted there, and more likely to
detect any ships headed towards them. Any assailant would be
disadvantaged by the energy cost of changing orbital planes. The
serendipitous result of this place of exile was that Defiant,
out on patrol, was the first to detect the unexpected fusion flame, and
the first to reach what could only be a starship.
But we are too few and too ill-equipped to hold
it.
Anathema though Arblen Ems had become, there were
always some in the inner solar system willing--surreptitiously--to take
its money. Reports had come to the Foremost from such spies: The Great
Clans had also taken note of the artifact's emergence.
Any of the flotillas now racing outward from the lit
worlds could retake the treasure. The advantages given Arblen Ems by
spatial position and the fierce rivalries among the converging forces
were fleeting. Even if there were no other conclusive result, the
amassing of so much firepower would surely achieve the final
elimination of Arblen Ems.
Immediate return. The order's context was a general
recall of all clan vessels. The long-feared last stand was upon them,
triggered by universal lust for the unexpected interstellar visitor.
Even the brief delay while Defiant's crew loaded scarce metals
skirted disobedience.
Mashkith continued his hunt, unsure as ever of his
goal. His stalling seemed such a disproportionately petty act of
rebelliousness. Questing ever deeper into the ship, he could not help
but think: Grandfather dared too much. The Foremost who replaced him
dares too little.
And what do I dare?
Aboard Defiant, the holds were rapidly
filling up. Little time remained here to discover the secrets that
still taunted him. Engine room and bridge, dormitories and farms,
landing platform and docking bay, brimming cargo holds and endless
corridors ... what else did he think to explore?
His mind, Mashkith suddenly realized, still refused
to grasp the sheer scale of this small world. Whatever hidden thing
tugged at his subconscious, it was foolishness to imagine he would just
happen upon it. No, some great mystery tantalized him wherever
he looked. The elusive answer was somehow all around him.
Ah. Heat and light and air all around him maintained
habitability for someone. All his crew's searching had found no one
aboard the ship. From where could this someone come?
Having formulated that question, Mashkith
finally knew where to look.
* * * *
The lifeboats nestled, logically enough, in
scattered niches on the periphery of the ship. Mashkith stood in a
lifeboat now. Tendrils of cold vapor coiled above rows of tanks, their
inset windows--and the crew that must slumber inside--obscured by
layers
of frost.
And in that frigid mist hung the ultimate question
that only he could see: What would I dare? Soon enough, he
thought, all will know the answer.
Despite an unfamiliar layout and alien markings, the
starship's airlock controls had been obvious. The unsuspecting sleepers
before him would find the airlocks on Defiant no less
intuitive. It could hardly have been otherwise. Lives depended on how
quickly, despite emergency and loss of lighting, such controls could be
activated.
Each cryogenic tank bore an array of buttons that
was equally unfamiliar to him. Standing before a random tank, Mashkith
took only a moment to select a button. This equipment, too, would have
an emergency release. Its placement would be prominent.
He hoped not to lose any of these new prisoners
finding the right button.
Talon held just above the largest key, Mashkith
paused. "Alertness mandatory," he reminded. Armed crewmen from Defiant
encircled the tank. One by one, firmly grasping their weapons, they
netted their readiness.
Mashkith pressed the button....
* * * *
The abruptly awakened prisoners received a stark
choice. They could help Arblen Ems to escape into interstellar space
where none could follow, or they could die with the clan defending its
prize. Either way, the herd would be sharing the clan's fate.
To the fearful masses awaiting assault in the clan's
last, failing bases, Mashkith offered, if not salvation, at a minimum
years of reprieve. His terms: that he be made Foremost.
Fleeing in anything capable of flight, the clan--the
able and the infirm, the children and the adult and the elderly--raced
the oncoming navies. Many of the ships completed the trip to the newly
named Victorious; most of those docked successfully. They
receded into the outer darkness where their enemies dare not follow, a
gaping puncture in the starship's hull all that remained of an
inexpertly piloted cargo vessel.
Most of Mashkith's family, including his wife,
children, and grandfather, perished aboard that freighter.
* * * *
Lothwer cleared his throat. "Your move, sir." He
sounded a bit cocky. He likely had noticed Mashkith's attention wander.
A strong position in b'tok only grew stronger. It
manifested itself in the emergence of new opportunities. At the outset
of their journey, Mashkith had vowed their trip would end in glory. By
three K'vithian years into the long voyage, he knew what a strong
position his boldness had seized. He knew he would succeed. And how.
It was all coming to pass as he had foreseen.
Clan members were healthier and stronger than at any
time in his memory. Their ships were repaired and modernized with the
best of prisoner and human technologies. They held the secret of
interstellar travel--the mechanism, if not the physics, was easy to
duplicate. Soon they would know how to safely produce and wield
antimatter. A new generation of Arblen Ems had come of age during the
voyage, steeped in the mythos-in-the-making of a clan made great again.
Mashkith returned his full attention to the present.
Lothwer had advanced his second rook in an aggressive attack, in
emulation of game seven in the 2084 Grandmasters Tournament on Mars. He
had apparently not accessed the post-tournament analyses.
Mashkith moved a knight, away from the usually
crucial center of the board but prepositioning it for a now-unstoppable
forking attack on queen and king six moves hence. "Mate in seventeen,
Lieutenant."
Lothwer frowned, unaccustomed to thinking that far
ahead. Let him remember his fallibility the next time he thought to
wager with a crewmate.
The clan was prepared. The humans had grown
complacent with the proximity of Victorious to their most
precious asset. Arblen Ems would never be better positioned for their
next move. "Time," he told his hopefully chastened underling, "for
increased attention on the antimatter deal."
* * * *
CHAPTER 22
Supernovae and black holes are best studied by
gamma-ray observation, and space-based sensors around Sol system
maintained a constant vigil for gamma-ray events. T'bck Fwa subscribed
to and forwarded home the human astronomers' raw data. His purchases
were far more cost-effective for the Unity than replicating the
instrumentation.
Since the earliest hints of a covert antimatter
program on Himalia, anything unusual with even a remote association
with the Jovian system sooner or later gained his attention. When
instruments on three platforms suggested tiny gamma-ray spikes not far
off a line-of-sight to Jupiter, that was sufficient to make T'bck Fwa
look further. Judging from the open literature, he was the first to
examine this particular anomaly.
The instruments were well separated: One orbited
Earth, the second orbited Mars, and the third was staked to the surface
of an asteroid. Each had recorded a transient gamma-ray anomaly at
similar frequencies. If they had all observed the same event,
triangulation gave it a position near Jupiter. Each observatory carried
an atomic clock with its readout measurements time stamped. Adjusting
the time stamps on the anomalous readings for the respective travel
times from the triangulated location gave T'bck Fwa a highly precise
match.
It was one event--an unannounced
hydrogen/antihydrogen annihilation incident near Jupiter.
At the end of a long chain of inferences, he came to
a final one. No refueling agreement had been announced, but the humans
and K'vithians were already, and with great secrecy, experimenting with
an interface between their respective antimatter-containment
technologies.
How long did he have before the stolen starship and
its presumed captive crew were whisked away?
* * * *
The farms were ailing, exuding the faint but
unmistakable scents of illhealth. Traces of erosion had appeared where
sickly root systems surrendered topsoil to the irrigation flows. Hives
buzzed manically and creeper burrows writhed in civil war, their tiny
denizens confused by out-of-balance biochemical markers. Only the newly
recharged hydroponics tanks showed signs of recovery.
Each spotted and sere leaf, each fallen bug tore at
K'Choi Gwu's hearts. As though reading her mind, Swee entwined a
tentacle with one of hers. Gwu took that to mean: You did what was
necessary. Whatever that might have been.
She gave a quick squeeze of thanks. Had anyone ever
borne the burden of ka for so long?
They worked slowly through a bluefruit arbor, their
pruning and gathering of rotting fruit mainly for show. Her real
objective was a remote tertiary processing node that metered out
irrigation water in this secluded region of the orchard. As Swee
stumbled ostentatiously over an exposed root, tentacles flailing for
the benefit of any undiscovered surveillance cameras, she flipped open
the cover over a maintenance jack. In an eye blink, she swapped the
tiny memory chip for an empty one. The new chip went into a music
player in her utility pouch; the cover flopped closed.
Her husband muttered as he brushed leaf fragments,
twigs, and dirt from his fur. "A shower will feel even better than
usual."
"Try watching where you walk."
"I should have thought of that."
At the end of the next row, Gwu ignored his
interrogatory glance. It did not matter how curious she was about the
data surreptitiously collected by T'bck Ra. The more valuable the
information, the more vital it was that she not jeopardize the source.
They followed routine until the shift ran its
course. They showered, as always. They joined colleagues in the common
dining room. After eating, Swee brought a friend back to their small
apartment, where--finally--Gwu retreated from their loud conversation
by
donning earphones.
There had been other secret data transfers with the
reawakened T'bck Ra. She knew far more than just a few shifts ago:
about the pervasiveness of K'vithian alterations and networks
throughout the ship; about inventories, reservoirs, and stockrooms now
mostly refilled to capacity; about the human ships all around. She
better understood the sensor grid with which their captors watched
them, its scope implicit in the vast array of radio sources her
reawakened ally had detected but been unable to compromise. From
unguarded comments near a corridor sensor the K'vithians had failed to
disable, she even knew Mashkith expected soon to finalize an
antimatter-refueling arrangement.
So Gwu had ample reason to be confident another
report from T'bck Ra could not further discourage her.
Once again, she was disastrously wrong.
* * * *
External communications was among the ship
subsystems most intrusively altered; it was completely subservient to
an overlay of K'vithian computers. T'bck Ra could detect a steady
stream of messages to and from Harmony, but that traffic was
encrypted. Was that communications with its own support vessels? The
humans? The K'vithian trade agent?
The soft muttering of Gwu's earplugs must have been
indistinct to the K'vithian bugs, whose long-suspected presence in her
cabin was now confirmed. She fought to suppress her trembling. She dare
not gamble that watchers were unable to interpret her body language.
T'bck Ra had surreptitiously reestablished
connectivity of a sort with the main external antenna! By interfacing
directly with the real-time processor that modulated and demodulated
the carrier wave, the AI had tapped into comm. A small part of the
incoming data stream was unencrypted: interplanetary news beamcasts.
Stories and events swirled in overwhelming variety and complexity, but
one seized Gwu's attention.
"Snake Starship Lost in Space!"
The reports were chaotic and sensationalistic. It
did not help that T'bck Ra had tuned in well after the story started to
unfold, that his translation capabilities for human languages were
understandably limited, and that it had sampled and synopsized to
reduce its account to manageable size.
By her fourth review, a mental image took shape. A
years-ago anomaly recorded by human gamma-ray observatories had been
reexamined in view of a recent small antimatter explosion near
Jupiter--the nearby blast which, authorities had eventually admitted,
was an initial exchange-of-antimatter experiment with the K'vithians.
"...The gamma-ray evidence shows a matter/antimatter
explosion occurred ten Earth years ago roughly two-thirds of the way
along the line between Barnard's Star and Alpha Centauri. Allowing for
the geometry, the observed blue-shifting of the radiation indicates the
exploding material was traveling towards the Centaurs at approximately
one-tenth light speed. We conclude that a starship from K'vith was en
route to Alpha Centauri."
It was a plausible conclusion for someone who
believed a K'vithian starship had come to Sol system. Evidently the
United Planets public believed just that.
Her own theory was quite different.
Those who had seized Harmony lacked the
technology for interstellar drives and antimatter. They had plunged
into the interstellar darkness anyway, with human assistance their only
hope of refueling for a return trip. That hope was nearly fulfilled.
The ship lost on approach to the Double Suns was
logically the lifeboat she had discovered missing from Harmony's
bay. Its destruction, Gwu feared, was no accident.
The crew-kindred's final communication about its
decision must have been perceived as an act of madness. Harmony
itself had disappeared, hijacked before contact could be made with the
Unity's trade agent on K'vith.
And yet ... the lifeboat was somehow too near the
Double Suns and too slow.
The subtlety of Mashkith's inspired treachery
finally struck Gwu. For fear of hidden cameras, she did not dare key
the computations into one of the standalone calculators allowed her by
the K'vithians, nor even write down the problem. She was reduced to
doing calendar conversions and equations of motion in her head.
Harmony and its lifeboats had been fueled
to accelerate almost to one-third light speed, coast most of the way
between stars, then decelerate. Like every major Unity decision, that
mission profile reflected compromise: fast enough to complete a round
trip within a crew lifetime; slow enough to experiment with only
minimal relativistic effects; brief enough in its reliance on the
interstellar drive to have been validated by the flight to the Red
Companion. In the Earth-standard years of the intercepted recording,
the trip to--or from--the K'vithian system involved roughly a year of
acceleration, eighteen years of coasting, and a year of deceleration.
To make the math work, she had to assume the decoy
lifeboat carried extra antimatter from another lifeboat, or from the
ship's limited reserves. The decoy had accelerated well past half light
speed, then coasted only part way home before decelerating. Those
observing on Chel Kra would conclude Harmony had been abandoned
in deep space, its lifeboats creeping home at a small fraction of their
planned speed.
The self-destructing lifeboat, "proof" of
shortcomings in the interstellar drive, would be the third great
failure. It would be the final vindication, if vindication were still
needed, of those deeming interstellar travel too costly and dangerous.
* * * *
Gwu's descent into depression was so complete it
blurred the boundary between wakefulness and nightmare. The remembered
balls of orange and yellow flame were exaggerated: They had to be from
a dream.
"You were talking in your sleep," Swee said.
Meaning: I woke you before you might have said something compromising.
A spot of her fur remained warm from his touch. She
could never have borne this burden without him. That which she dare not
mutter in her sleep she had not yet been able to discuss with him.
"Sorry to disturb you." Sorry I cannot be honest with you.
She got a glass of water. The image of the Double
Suns had faded, to be replaced by the random thought: Three strikes and
you're out. The context of the saying had vanished in the long years
since she had studied the humans, but the meaning was self-evident.
Or not so random. She had lapsed into troubled
slumber brooding about T'bck Ra's latest distressing news. The third
strike.
She had not noticed Swee slip out of the cabin, yet
there he was returning with a mug of hot h'roth. "Thank you." For the
soothing drink. For keeping me going.
He settled next to her. "Do you want to talk about
it?"
"Another time." She shivered. And another place. To
her surprise, she knew just where that would be.
Life's summer was more than a trauma for plants,
more than a convenient alibi for eco-sabotage. Life's summer was the
harbinger of the doom the Unity risked at each inward plunge of the
orange sun. The geological record revealed several sudden and major
shifts in Chel Kra's axial tilt; the fossil record showed massive
die-offs on each such occasion.
Primary's miserly planetary system offered no good
alternatives. Besides Chel Kra, there were but two very hot worlds
within Chel Kra's orbit, and, outermost, a small gas world with a few
rocky moons. Secondary had only three planets, and for a similar
reason. Each sun on its looping orbit about the other had long ago
ejected into the interstellar darkness any planets that had formed
farther out. Primary's influence on the remaining planets of its
smaller, dimmer companion made life on them even more precarious.
Would the Unity survive the massive death and
destruction a major change in axial tilt would cause? Probably--but
could the survivors continue to maintain a presence in space? A second
axial shift before the Unity regained its strength and capabilities
might be fatal.
The mission to the K'vithians had always been a
means, not an end. It was to have been a larger-scale demonstration of
feasibility than the jaunt to the Red Companion. K'choi Gwu ka had
hoped it would lead to colonizing missions to stellar neighbors not
much farther away. A colony at such a distance must be
self-sufficient from the start--self-sustaining no matter what calamity
might happen at home. Her species, for the first time in its history,
would be safe. That had been her ultimate goal for this mission.
Instead, the mission's failure would sunder the
delicate consensus that had sent Harmony, would tip the
societal balance yet more towards conservatism and retrenchment. It
would discredit interstellar travel for a very long time. For too long?
The Unity came first. She would protect it at all
costs.
* * * *
The work team waded through thick and fetid waste,
the clotting filth rising over their second highest tentacle joints.
Imagination recreated without difficulty the stench of the excrement
and rotting leaves that lapped against sealed protective clothing.
Strings of overhead lamps receded from the twisted and burst hatch of
the reservoir, a coating of muck turning the bright yellow glow of the
ceiling LEDs a dim green-brown.
Gwu plodded into the gloom, one tentacle held high
clutching a sonar scanner. She carefully examined her self-assigned
segment of the recycling tank.
Soon enough, a shout came from across the tank.
"Here is something," called T'Brk Cha. After two interstellar
crossings, no one on board was young, but Cha was among the youngest.
Moving slowly to avoid slipping, the other seven members of the work
crew slogged through the viscous mess to Cha's side. "Look at this."
He
sounded as surprised as she had hoped.
The youngster had found a burst pump awash in the
muck, as Gwu had known he would. Her latest memory-chip message to
T'bck Ra had asked the AI to overload and overheat something in an
effluent reservoir, something that would cause a methane explosion.
She was determined to have the benefit of the
crew-kindred's wisdom. This small representative group was as close as
she could get--but she had to speak with them privately.
There was no evidence of K'vithian bugs inside the
tanks, in which all ship's waste was slowly and organically recycled
into fertilizer for the farms. As Gwu had expected, the K'vithian
guards had halted far from the rupture in the farm floor--a good ten
tentacle lengths distant, where the spatters of waste matter remained
sparse. The work team was alone and unsupervised but for their suit
radios. Gwu gestured with a dripping tentacle: suit microphones off.
Touch helmets.
"K'tel Da and T'Brk Cha," she whispered. "You are
to
repair the pump--slowly. On my signal, reactivate your microphones.
Speak to each other for the benefit of the guards outside. Complain
about connections stuck shut by this muck. Curse about dropping
slippery parts into the slime, and groping to find them. Talk to the
rest of us, calling us by name, when you can grunt in response. Grumble
how difficult it is to read part numbers because everything is
corroded. When the guards bring replacement parts--and someone will, to
get briefly away from the stench--manage to drop them into the tank.
That clumsiness will be believable, since your sleeves are coated with
this slime.
"Stall to give the rest of us time to consult--and
let me know immediately if the guards sound suspicious." She
waved them away from the cluster. They began chattering in her
earphones, the volume lowered but still on lest a guard call her.
She guessed they had a few minutes.
"My friends, we have a serious matter to consider.
Your wisdom must represent the entire crew-kindred." And we must
discuss this matter with uncharacteristic speed.
"What is the issue, ka?" K'tra Ko, a mid-level
supply officer, spoke first. Others murmured in agreement.
For long years she had yearned for this moment. Now
all her private thoughts and doubts, all her inferences and suspicions
and fears vied for immediate release. This is not about me, nor is
there time to explain everything. She must hope she had retained
their confidence. "The Unity believes us lost, our mission a failure.
The K'vithians have taken our interstellar-drive technology. With human
help, they are about to master antimatter."
"What about ... who ... how ... but would not....
"Except for human involvement, she had revealed nothing they might not
have already surmised. Their sudden volubility came more from the
opportunity to speak freely than from news. Only Swee did not speak,
his silence an affirmation of support.
"Softly!" In a lower voice, she continued. "We dare
not be overheard. There is more. Please allow me to finish."
That a lifeboat was gone from its bay had become
common knowledge. That it had been tampered with to simulate erratic
drive behavior was not.
A subtle exchange of glances established T'chk Dwu,
a biosphere engineer, as the team's spokesperson. "How can you know
these things, ka?"
There were nuances of doubt in the furtive looks and
the whispered question. For much of the journey to Sol system Gwu would
have welcomed release from her duties. From the failures of her
leadership. That was then; she must not fail now to persuade. "The
K'vithians do not know it, but T'bck Ra is reactivated." Another
eruption of intense whispering took longer to suppress. How long before
their guards became impatient? "I am sorry there is insufficient time
to explain fully. We cannot expect soon to have another unmonitored
gathering."
As succinctly as she could, Gwu made her case. Her
fear that three apparent failures--the crew-kindred's retreat into
suspended automation, the disappearance of the Harmony, and
most recently the rigged lifeboat disaster--would cause the Unity to
abandon interstellar travel. Her dread of the Unity remaining forever
at risk of an axial flip, trapped by its misunderstanding of the
disastrous mission. How terse and emphatic--how much like the
Foremost--I have become.
Her turned-down earphones buzzed with the guards'
growing impatience. T'Brk Cha improvised that the pump must have failed
long before it overheated to spark the explosion. They still needed to
clear long-clogged pipes. Gwu hoped the translator would not recognize
the panic in the youngster's voice. "We must finish," she told the
huddled team.
"Ka, what do you suggest?" T'chk Dwu asked. Anxiety
had displaced the recent hint of skepticism in his voice.
"I believe the Unity must be informed the technology
works. A crew-kindred can safely cross interstellar
distances."
Even though it had taken K'vithian hijackers to keep us awake as their
technicians. She squeezed Swee's tentacle. "Whatever the consequences
to us. What are your thoughts?"
The latest stunned silence gave way to new murmurs:
of confusion, shock, even sympathy for her burdens. None questioned
that the reawakened T'bck Ra would get only one chance to send their
desperate message. None would risk that opportunity to communicate on
contacting the humans, with whom their captors were evidently allied.
None doubted the K'vithians would exact harsh retribution.
And none put personal wellbeing before the safety of
the Unity. The whispered consultation converged quickly to agreement
with her proposition. Never had she been more proud of the crew-kindred
and of her kind.
But were they too late?
* * * *
CHAPTER 23
The shift of the mission's next all-hands meeting to
Valhalla City's poshest hotel was a giveaway: Something big was in the
works. When Art and Eva arrived, they discovered the initial hour was a
reception. No one in the milling crowd had any better idea than she
what was being celebrated. Curiosity seemed only to whet the appetite
for wine and hors d'oeuvres. Eva was content to nibble as others
speculated.
Ambassador Chung, surrounded by aides, swept in near
the end of the hour. He glad-handed his way through the ballroom to the
dais, where he tapped on a microphone. "My colleagues"--brief toothy
grin--"I hope everyone is in a party mood."
She could only shrug to Art's whispered, "What's he
done now?"
"As has been covered at past meetings, the mission
holds delegated authority from the UP to negotiate a mutually
beneficial refueling agreement with our K'vithian visitors. I want you,
my colleagues, to be the first to hear that those negotiations have
finally borne fruit."
Back-to-back "my colleagues" from a very
non-collegial guy. Whatever Chung planned to announce had been decided
by a smaller group than the full team. Her guess was: by Chung alone.
"The Foremost and I held an unusually productive
meeting just two days ago, at which he acknowledged the UP's
significant investment in antimatter production. He did me the honor of
a personal meeting in his cabin aboard Victorious.
"'I cannot,' the Foremost said to me, 'repay
financially. The need to acquire fuel for the return trip was never
imagined, and so never planned for.'" Chung raised his hands to
deflect
an outburst of questions. "That is when he made an offer far more
valuable than any amount of Intersols. Mashkith said, 'InterstellarNet
began with simple barter, and I propose that we respect that precedent.
What I offer in trade will make worthwhile the UP's antimatter
capability ... interstellar-drive capability.'"
There was a moment of silence, and then a torrent of
cheers and applause. As the ovation finally subsided, Eva raised her
hand. "Ambassador, what are the arrangements for instructing us in the
new physical principles?"
Chung nodded his head thoughtfully. "An excellent
point, Doctor. As it happens, the trade will work slightly differently."
What? "With all respect, sir, what does that mean?"
"The K'vithian mission parameters never anticipated
refueling here, nor the accident-related need for major resupply. We've
understood all along that meant they didn't bring mega-funds. But it also
means they never envisioned transferring the interstellar-drive
technology. Asking now for that authorization would entail a twelve
year wait--with no guarantee of the outcome."
"But you just said.... "Eva stopped, too angry to
speak.
"The Foremost found what he considers a solution to
this dilemma--what you or I might reasonably consider a
rationalization.
A loophole. If you wish to think of it this way, he is ready to bend
the rules rather than be stranded here. He was expressly ordered to
keep secret the interstellar-drive theory, but nothing in his
instructions says he can't swap his 'surplus equipment' for our
'surplus fuel.' The surplus equipment he offered us is a lifeboat
equipped with interstellar drive."
"This is incomprehensible." (The netted version of
Art's outburst said "insane." Her netted reply hedged agreement.) "To
converge upon an antimatter-exchange method, we had to share a great
deal of our research with the Snakes. The K'vithians. Now they
say they won't trade on an equal basis?"
"The K'vithians already have antimatter
technology,"
Chung said. "We have seen it demonstrated. They want antimatter,
not theory, from us. They investigated BEC technology only to convince
themselves they can take delivery of our fuel within an acceptable
level of risk."
"Can we operate a spaceship whose drive we don't
understand without putting ourselves at risk?" Art shot back.
Chung sniffed. "The Foremost assured me the drive
mechanism is simple to replicate and operate. And, of course, lifeboat
controls are designed to be meaningful to any crewman, not accessible
only to specialists."
How many alternate drive mechanisms had been
hypothesized over the years? How many theories, each with its
associated experiments, had split the never adequate R&D budget?
Possessing a drive that worked would let the UP direct its future
efforts much more wisely. And surely she could infer much by careful
observation and measurement of a working starship. The trade made a
kind of sense--not just to Eva, but to the dozens contributing to the
rising buzz in the ballroom.
"What do you think, Art?" she netted.
"Honestly? I don't know what to think. I only know
it doesn't feel right."
* * * *
A hundred moons, asteroids, and ships across the
solar system emitted a carefully timed salvo. Part of the barrage took
the form of collimated beams; the rest came in high-energy pulses. No
warning--no signal of any kind--could outrace the speed-of-light
onslaught to its target nearly a light-day distant. The converging
energies fluctuated every few nanoseconds, randomly hopping frequencies
and altering modulations.
Two days later, the echoes of those simultaneous
radar and lidar probes had returned to their sources. Outgoing and
returned wave data, position--and time-stamped with utmost precision,
had been forwarded to Actium and run through a battery of
precise correlations. Wall screens and holo tanks now presented the
analyses from every possible perspective, and in dizzying detail, but
Art found the bottom-line result unambiguous. The target in the outer
fringes of the Kuiper Belt had traced precisely the elaborate
trajectory the Snakes had predicted.
IR instruments, as forecast, had seen nothing--even
when radar insisted the object had been decelerating while aimed
directly at them. That eliminated fusion. Some had imagined an intense
beam source hidden on a nearby proto-comet, but the object swooped and
swerved far more adroitly than any sail-based propulsion could possibly
accomplish.
Meanwhile, gravity-wave observatories were
scrambling to interpret a flood of data. Eva was like a kid in a candy
shop. Quantum gravity was her specialty and passion; her repeated best
efforts had yet to get Art deeper than five minutes into a description
of her research.
"Damn," he said. It was an expression of
wonderment,
not anger. "It's for real. I can't imagine how that many varied
observations could be faked." The test had been designed in
consultation with UP military and UPIA experts, whose most advanced
experimental jammers and spoofers could not fool even a fraction of the
electromagnetic probes just deployed. "There is a real object out there
with a real interstellar-drive capability." Excited voices across the
crowded bridge agreed.
Ambassador Chung managed to simultaneously beam and
scowl. The scowl, Art assumed, was for his sole benefit. "The
K'vithians told us they have antimatter capability--and they proved it.
They said they have a lifeboat equipped with a non-reaction,
interstellar drive to offer us--and they proved that. Dr. Walsh, does
your cynicism require any additional hugely expensive experiments
insulting to our guests?"
Why wasn't he convinced even now? As though reading
Art's mind--but more likely the doubts plainly written on his
face--Keizo
privately netted his mantra, "Aliens are alien." Meaning: It's
unreasonable to expect always to understand the Snakes, or their
approach to problems, or what data about themselves and their most
prized technology they volunteer. Meaning: Eva's frustration that
questions about the interstellar drive were invariably deflected proved
nothing.
All eyes were on Art, awaiting his response.
Objectively, how could the answer be in question?
The drive was said to be unsafe to operate deep within gravity wells.
He could hardly expect the Foremost to sacrifice a vehicle to prove
that. He faced Chung squarely. "No, sir."
But in Art's heart there followed a caveat: none at
this time.
* * * *
"Knight capture by pawn." Mashkith slapped the
chess
clock.
"Bishop capture by bishop," replied Lothwer,
hitting
his side of the clock. "Check."
"Bishop capture by queen." Tap. Mashkith's mind was
not on the game, but it seemed an appropriate way to await final word
from the humans. If he could have spared his full attention, they would
have been playing b'tok.
The familiar panoramic holo of Jupiter and Callisto
dominated his cabin, but Mashkith was cognizant of a major change. The
swarm of freighters had thinned to a few. Resupply was largely
complete. "Environmental system status?"
"Near nominal again." Lothwer advanced a pawn and
tapped the clock again. "Sulfur dioxide levels in the farm..."
"Incoming announcement from Earth, Foremost. On all
major news sources. On time delay."
"Acknowledgement." His answer, like the watch
officer's alert, was netted. Another subvocalization opened an inset
box in the holo. "From the start."
Into the inset popped a cloth-covered lectern
bearing the great seal of the United Planets. Ambassador Chung emerged
from a backdrop of heavy curtains, clutching a sheaf of notes. Stepping
up to the podium, he cleared his throat. "My fellow citizens, I am here
to make a statement.
"As you know, I lead the contact team which works
closely with our interstellar guests. It has been my privilege to
report regularly on our progress, just as I am certain the Foremost,
leader of the K'vithian visitors, has enjoyed...."
"Knight to queen six." Tap.
Mashkith wavered between approval and irritation
with Lothwer's casual bravado. True, an announcement was expected. Its
content had been negotiated in detail with Ambassador Chung before his
final trip to consult with the UP secretary-general. But the broadcast
represented the culmination of a plan so long in execution.
"...And so I am pleased to report the successful
conclusion of an extraordinarily important dialogue, as a result of
which United Planets researchers will receive a working copy of the
K'vithian interstellar drive. In exchange, we will begin immediately
the complete refueling of Victorious from UP stocks of
antimatter."
And thus, after so long a time, everything
had come together. Mashkith found his ears were wriggling. Lothwer's
were too.
It was hard not to gloat when the humans
were always so cooperatively several moves behind.n
To be continued.
Copyright © 2006 Edward M. Lerner
[Back to Table of
Contents]
The Reference Library by Tom Easton
The Armies of Memory, John Barnes, Tor,
$25.95, 429 pp. (ISBN: 0-765-30330-2).
The Cunning Blood, Jeff Duntemann, ISFiC
Press (www.isficpress.com), $28, 360 pp. (ISBN: 0-9759156-2-3).
Starship: Mutiny, Mike Resnick, Pyr, $25,
286 pp. (ISBN: 1-59102-337-8).
Pretender, C. J. Cherryh, DAW, $25.95, 327
pp. (ISBN: 0-7564-0374-X).
The Coming of Conan the Cimmerian, Robert
E. Howard, Ballantine/Del Rey, $29.95, 468 + xxvi pp. (ISBN:
0-345-48385-5).
The Alchemy of Stars: Rhysling Award Winners
Showcase, Roger Dutcher and Mike Allen, eds., Science Fiction
Poetry Association, $15, 170 pp. (ISBN: 0-8095-1162-2).
The James Tiptree Award Anthology 2, Karen
Joy Fowler, Pat Murphy, Debbie Notkin, and Jeffrey D. Smith, eds.,
Tachyon Publications, $14.95, 250 pp. (ISBN: 1-892391-31-7).
* * * *
Over a decade ago, John Barnes posited that the
human species will proliferate in the galaxy and settle a hundred
worlds (or so) with splinter cultures derived from ethnicity, history,
religion, and myth. When instant travel via matter transmission or
"springer" is invented, all these cultures will be put in touch with
each other, and the Office of Special Projects will take on the goal of
keeping the species unified against the day when the aliens--whose
wrecks and ruins have been found--finally appear.
A Million Open Doors (reviewed here in
February 1993) introduced Giraut Leones, a rowdy troubador in a culture
dedicated to Romance. By Earth Made of Glass (reviewed
September 1998), Giraut was a special agent of the OSP; his mission, to
save two cultures from self-destruction, failed with the loss of a
world and Giraut's own marriage. In The Merchants of Souls
(reviewed June 2002), Barnes introduced the psypyx, a recording of the
mind. It is the practice to have such recordings made periodically. If
the body dies, the psypyx can be attached to a volunteer friend and
nurtured (time-sharing the friend's brain, with conversations between
the two occupants of one skull quite possible) while a new body is
cloned. A psypyx is thus a backup self, a soul if you will, and now, in
The Armies of Memory, he makes full use of the gimmick.
Someone is trying to assassinate Giraut, rather
clumsily, and soon it is learned that the assassins are chimeras,
bodies that look human but whose minds are formed by the merging of
multiple psypyxes. There are hints that an unauthorized colony beyond
the edge of human space, Noucatharia, is involved. And when his
girlfriend dies, she turns out to be a chimera too--but the added mind
is not from a psypyx. It's from an aintellect or artificial
intelligence, and humans have a horror of aintellects ever since they
were caught trying to take over. There is a fear that they will try to
push everyone into the VR box, as so many back on Earth have indeed
chosen.
If all this sounds familiar, three excerpts from the
novel have appeared here, the last being "The Little White Nerves Went
Last" (March 2006). Giraut is kidnapped to Noucatharia, one of the
many
worlds of Union, where he is implanted with the psypyx of his old boss
Shan, who finally reveals where the springer really came from and the
threat of the Brain-Eating Aliens from Beyond, which the Noucatharians
have already encountered. It looks like humanity will need all its
forces, including the sheer numbers and novel tech of the Union worlds,
represented for the moment by Noucatharia, to survive the threat.
Giraut also learns that when an aintellect is
implanted in the brain of a human cloned body (no human mind present),
it quite likes the experience and comes across as quite a pleasant,
interesting person. Or persons, since there is no rational limit on the
number of an aintellect's instantiations. The VR box is no real threat,
but a robot in a human body (or bodies!) still gives many folks the
horrors.
Should it? What is a mind, really, and is any
particular type of mind sacred? The OSP's mission is supposed to mean
fostering diversity, as a means to being prepared for the alien threat.
Are there limits to diversity? If you make love to a robot in a human
body, are you a disgusting pervert? And what do you do to a human
hero--Giraut, of course--who aids and abets the enemy, meaning the
disgusting, treacherous aintellects in human disguise?
"The Little White Nerves" did not take things quite
that far. I will not say much beyond this: human sacrifice, especially
self-sacrifice, is a classic step toward changing paradigms and
accomplishing great things. But when the last page is turned, the great
things remain in the wings.
Even though the cover blurb calls this the final
novel in the series, it does not feel very final, and I have been
enjoying this series far too much to let go of my hope for one more
volume. When I asked, Barnes assured me that the sequel, A Far Cry,
remains on his agenda and may even wind up short enough to be an Analog
serial.
* * * *
ISFiC Press scored a coup when it got its hands on
Jeff Duntemann's The Cunning Blood, which I would not have been
surprised to see appear from a major publisher such as Tor. Duntemann
made a good impression on readers back in the 70s, before shifting his
writing to the tech side (including ten books on computing). He returns
with an ambitious, polished tale of intrigue, nanotechnology, and
something that sounds a lot like mysticism.
Blood's backdrop is a universe where every
Sunlike star has an Earthlike planet with very Earthlike life.
Why? People speculate about ancient astronauts known as Gaians, and
when ships such as the Yellowknife disappear, guess who gets
blamed. Earth itself is ruled by Canada. Perhaps because Canada is a
fairly polite place today, the new regime has zero tolerance for
violent behavior and ships offenders to a world called Hell, where
nanotechnological gizmos floating in the air destroy anything that uses
electricity (they attack conductors carrying current). The intent is
that Hell's denizens will never be able to develop modern tech and
escape.
But ... Duntemann opens with the descent of an
emissary from space, bearing high-tech gifts--fluorine-based chemical
lasers--for the local tech-deprived yokels. Much to his surprise, he
lands in the middle of a battle involving robotic dinosaurs and
missiles and soon discovers that electronics have been replaced with
fluidics. The yokels aren't so tech-deprived after all, though the new
laser toys are still welcome.
Meanwhile, back on Earth, the Sangruse
Society--people who bear copies of the nanotechnological consciousness
called Sangruse--are plotting to help the Governor General of America
put a member on Hell and even bring him back. That member is Peter
Novilio--cocky, impetuous, risk loving--and as soon as he has committed
a
suitable offense, he is off as the ostensible bodyguard for secret
agent Geyl Shreve.
When they arrive Peter is promptly recruited as an
engineer for Rho Alpha Delta (the Ralpha Dogs--surely an homage to
Ralph
von Wau Wau), who turn out to have not only alternatives to electricity
but also ways to make electricity work. Everything seems quite
plausible enough to delight Analog readers; Duntemann is
clever, even before he gets into the tricks his nanotech can pull. And
when he goes there, well, Sangruse would be a miraculous thing to have
inside you, if only it did not have its own agenda.
Fortunately ... Remember that emissary? He came from
the Interstellar American Republic, which is plotting an attack on
Canadian rule. We see it through the eyes of Jamie Eigen, also a
Sangruse carrier (thanks to Peter), and very soon we meet Magic Mikey,
a young savant who has found a way to image the very substratum of
space-time, where something strange is going on. Since the IAR has the Yellowknife
(and other missing ships), the putative Gaians aren't working on the
macro level. Are they here instead? Or is it the souls of the dead?
Jamie uses that notion to scare the agenda right out of his copy of
Sangruse, and now the stage is set for a final confrontation of all the
various forces Duntemann has set in play, all to marvelous
gosh-wow-gee-whiz effect. There is even a hook on which to hang a
sequel.
This one has a decent chance of showing up on award
ballots.
* * * *
Mike Resnick begins a five-volume series with Starship:
Mutiny. Space opera in the classic vein, Mutiny begins as
Wilson Cole reports as first officer aboard the Theodore Roosevelt,
a superannuated warship staffed by misfits and screw-ups. Cole's error
is that he has embarrassed the brass by being right too many times, and
he isn't about to quit. He's barely begun his duties when he spots an
enemy ship on a Republic world, and pulls the TR away from its
beat to check things out. Being the officer on deck, he neglects to
wake the captain, who would surely tell him to stay on patrol and just
call in the alarm.
But Cole knows the Republic's forces are so
overextended that this enemy will not be interrupted in its nefarious
mission. Even though the TR is hardly up to a battle, he
decides to give it a go. In the end, he manages to make enough fuss,
without firing a shot, to draw the troops in. He gets another medal, so
does the captain, and he's once more in the deep doo-doo.
Does he have enough sense to quit while he's ahead?
Of course not. He's a hero to the public and his crew. So when the TR
is given another assignment and the captain is replaced by an even more
rigid martinet, he wastes no time in exceeding his orders once
more--again to excellent if brass-embarrassing effect. Unfortunately,
this time he has to seize command from his captain. He's guilty of
mutiny, and the court-martial awaits, complete with death sentence.
Four volumes to go? Pirate, Mercenary, Rebel,
and Flagship. The story arc is clear: jailbreak, acclamation by
the crew, declaration of independence, and hi-ho for the Inner Frontier
and the life of a pirate, at least to start.
Resnick's Birthright Universe has been a fruitful
playground for many years. It has given rise to some pretty meaty
works, and to a number of lighter ones. This is in the latter category,
for the basic story has been told and retold by many writers. However,
few writers have Resnick's gift for pace and momentum, nor his talent
for producing a fast, smooth, utterly effortless read. Buy this one to
read while traveling; it's just about the right length for a plane ride
from New York to Chicago.
* * * *
Once upon a time, in a galaxy far, far away, the
starship Phoenix, laden with the builders and residents of a
planned station, got lost in space, and built a station, Alpha, in
orbit above a world whose humanoid natives, the atevi, had a technology
roughly equivalent to nineteenth-century Europe or America. The
Stationers soon rebelled against their leaders and landed. The ship and
its crew departed.
It took two centuries for the humans to learn to get
along with the atevi, for their hard-wired responses to each other and
their world were very different. By the time C. J. Cherryh discovered
them, Bren Cameron was the "paidhi" whose job was to interpret humans
to atevi and atevi to humans. It was a high-stress job, complicated by
differences in both psychology and politics.
Meanwhile, the ship built another station, Reunion,
and ticked off another alien species. When the Phoenix returned
from a journey and discovered a blasted station, it hightailed it back
to Alpha to demand assistance. Since neither the human colonists nor
the atevi had space travel yet, there was a bit of work to do, but it
didn't take long to build the necessary infrastructure and start
repairing Alpha. When the Phoenix finally left, it carried Bren
as the atevi "Lord of the Heavens" along with the atevi overlord's
young heir Cajeiri and grandmother Ilisidi, plus of course their
personal staffs and security troops. By the time the mission was over,
the Reunioners were rescued and Bren had figured out how to talk to the
new aliens. He had also learned of still more aliens who just might
pose a serious danger to both humans and atevi, and when he got home,
he was hot to pass the word. Unfortunately, the atevi uberchief,
Tabini, had been deposed and the shuttles were no longer flying. Bren,
Ilisidi, Cajeiri, and their people wasted no time in boarding the one
available shuttle and heading down, winding up at the country manor of
the irascible Tatiseigi and under attack by the usurper's forces.
That much took seven volumes--Foreigner, Invader,
Inheritor, Precursor, Defender, Explorer,
and Destroyer. Now we have Pretender, in which the
people rally to the cause and march on the capitol, the usurper is
overthrown, and Bren finally gets to give his report. As usual, Bren
does a lot of internal agonizing over how badly he has screwed up and
how little he really understands the atevi, but Cherryh makes it
abundantly clear that a great many atevi think very highly of him and
blame him much less than he does himself. Cajeiri grows up a bit more
and bids fair to be a worthy successor to his father when the time
comes. And all the other aliens remain offstage for the nonce.
Some readers may have difficulty with Bren's
internal obsessiveness, but Cherryh has the gift of making even that
move smoothly and quickly. My own biggest problem is that I wish
Cherryh would move the story further in each volume. At the rate she's
going I may not live long enough to read the end of the story!
* * * *
Conan is back!
Not that he has ever spent much time away in the
three quarters of a century since Robert E. Howard devised the
archetype of the mighty-thewed barbarian swordsman, slayer of monsters,
and rescuer of damsels for the pages of Weird Tales. Others
have taken up the pen Howard set down at his suicide in 1936, and both
movies and imitators have glorified the trope. TheComing of
Conan the Cimmerian, illustrated nicely by Mark Schultz (he write
the Prince Valiant comic strip) and introduced by Patrice
Louinet (French editor, teacher, and Howard scholar), gathers together
thirteen Cimmerian tales, beginning with the first, "The Phoenix on the
Sword," along with an assortment of drafts, notes, synopses, maps, and
appendices (by Louinet) on where it all came from. Read them, and
understand the roots of much modern fantasy, even unto the modern video
game.
This book was first published in 2002. This is the
first US trade hardbound.
* * * *
The Science Fiction Poetry Association
(www.sfpoetry.com) has been giving the Rhysling Awards for the best
SF-related poetry of the year since 1978, when Suzette Haden Elgin
founded the SFPA. The Alchemy of Stars displays the results to
date, many of which remain as impressive as they were when they won.
Rhysling winners include familiar names such as Elgin herself, Joe
Haldeman, Gene Wolfe, Michael Bishop, Ursula K. Le Guin, John Ford,
Jane Yolen, and William John Watkins, as well as many known only for
poetry, such as Robert Frazier and Bruce Boston.
An essential purchase for anyone's library of SF,
and the perfect gift for a school or community library.
* * * *
One of the great stories of science fiction is that
of James Tiptree, Jr., who quickly earned a grand reputation for
understanding women and--much to everyone's surprise (did they really
think only men could write great SF?)--turned out to be Alice Sheldon.
Her gift was great perception targeted at human folly, as in her most
famous short story, "The Women Men Don't See." A few years after she
committed suicide in 1987, age 72, Karen Joy Fowler and Pat Murphy
founded the James Tiptree, Jr., Literary Award (funded in part by bake
sales at cons) for SFF works that "explore and expand gender." Winners
of the award vary tremendously, with some (such as Raphael Carter's
"Congenital Agenesis of Gender Ideation" fitting the prescription so
well that they might have been written in an effort to cop the prize.
Others, such as Joe Haldeman's Camouflage (serialized here,
remember?), make sense only on second or third reflection.
Both of these stories, along with nine more, an
essay, and one of Tiptree/Sheldon's letters that reveals much about her
mind, are to be found in The James Tiptree Award Anthology 2.
Call it essential to any moderately ambitious SF collection, and buy
yourself a treat.
* * * *
Just in case you've ever wondered why people believe
in flying saucers, space aliens, or SETI, George Basalla points out
that human beings have long believed in superior heavenly beings. Sure,
once that meant angels, demons, and assorted gods, but it really didn't
take long at all to move beyond that. Even some ancient Greeks
suggested the existence of an infinite number of universes, each with
"its own sun, planets, stars, and life forms." (p. 4)
In Civilized Life in the Universe, Basalla
takes the tale from that point onward and makes the connections to
religion obvious. Some modern SETI researchers even seem to have their
motivations rooted in fundamentalist Christian backgrounds! Yet
religion is hardly the whole story. As he notes, "Two powerful strands
run through the scientific search for extraterrestrial intelligence.
The first strand is religion. There is religious sanction for
populating the heavens with superior beings. The second strand is
anthropomorphism. This is the tendency to describe the intellectual and
social lives of those beings in human terms." (p. 197)
His explication of these strands makes for a
fascinating angle on the history of SETI. However, Basalla is a
historian, not a scientist. He therefore leans a bit too much toward
the fallacy of saying that science is a social construction and that
therefore the science of an alien species may not be comprehensible to
humans. Yes, any intelligent being is going to focus its attention on
matters of concern to it. But the universe is what it is, and the
definition of science is the search for understanding of that universe.
Since the laws of physics and chemistry are the same everywhere,
intelligent species must share their understanding of those laws. Are
there similar laws of biology? Of course, though we must try to avoid
the parochialism of familiar chemistries and forms. Natural selection
(what works, lasts) must apply everywhere, as must the need for energy
and raw materials and reproduction.
Must intelligent species build radio telescopes or
be interested in communicating with us? Basalla errs when he suggests
that the assumption that they must is mere anthropomorphism, for the
assumption is not that all aliens must do so, but that only those we
can have any hope of contacting must. Granted, people like Carl Sagan
did not always make that caveat explicit, but in my reading of the
field, few ever seemed to make the broader assumption.
That said, go ahead and buy the book. Read it with
interest, and perhaps wonder why Basalla did not go so far as to call
SETI an attempt to eavesdrop on the angels. His argument would permit
that extension, and even--if he were an evangelist instead of an
academic--charging SETI workers with the sin of hubris.
Hmm ... There's probably a story there...
Copyright © 2006 Tom Easton
[Back to Table of
Contents]
In Times To Come
Our July/August double issue features a dramatic
cover by Bob Eggleton for Alexis Glynn Latner's novelette
"Witherspin."
Humans have long tended to reshape both themselves and their
surroundings, and that tendency can only be expected to increase. Put a
highly modified fugitive into a world designed to be exotic and
challenging, and you get quite a tangled web of a story, and quite a
picture!
C. Sanford Lowe and G. David Nordley present
"Kremer's Limit," a self-contained novella that is also the beginning
of something much bigger. Scientific research in the past has tended to
require ever more and bigger investments of time, money, and equipment,
but how far can that process go? Suppose, realistically, that you want
to learn to make black holes for fun and profit. Even a prototype
requires close coordination of massive construction projects done over
decades on worlds of widely separated stars. The technical problems are
bad enough, but when you throw in such inevitable problems as human
attention spans, rivalries, and chicanery, it becomes an enormous
challenge in every sense of the word--too big and far-flung to be
contained in one story. "Kremer's Limit" gets the attempt underway,
but
the ultimate outcome is far from certain...
Richard A. Lovett's fact article is a fascinating
look at what mantle plumes can tell us about what's going deep in the
core of our native planet. We'll also have Part III of Edward M.
Lerner's four-part novel A New Order of Things, and a wide
variety of stories by such writers as Joe Schembrie, Ian Stewart, Shane
Tourtellotte, Maya Kaathryn Bohnhoff, Carl Frederick, and Brian Plante.
[Back to Table of
Contents]
Brass Tacks
Dear Analog,
I just finished reading "Dinosaur Blood"
[January/February 2006] by Richard A. Lovett and enjoyed it thoroughly.
It was whimsical and serious at the same time, especially the excellent
opening paragraphs. The whole issue was very good, but "Dinosaur
Blood"
was my favorite part. If you cannot print this letter, please pass it
on to Mr. Lovett. Thanks!,
Amber E. Scott
* * * *
Dear Dr. Schmidt,
I picked up on a brief reference in Richard
Lovett's interesting and thought provoking story, "Dinosaur Blood" in
the January/February 2006 issue.
Rhona reports from her online search that she found
a reference to a huge solar panel installation in New Mexico. What's
interesting about the citation is that Rhona reports that the
installation caused sufficient local climate change to cause severe
thunderstorms and tornadoes that killed 1,500 people.
I am quite interested in seeing major solar panel
installations in this country, out on the Gulf of Mexico, as well as
elsewhere in the world, and wonder if Mr. Lovett knows of any climate
studies that predict a negative effect of large solar panel
installations.
I would have expected temperatures to drop if solar
panels absorb energy from the solar flux.
I would have expected that heating of the existing
desert terrain would result in heating of the air at least as great as
would occur from a large array of solar panels, so that if the terrain
were shaded, then air heating would actually drop.
Tom Hanson
Columbus, OH
The author replies...
Thanks Amber; "Dinosaur Blood" was one of the most
fun-to-write stories I've ever done.
Tom, I'm thrilled that you picked up the reference
to solar power and thunderstorms. It's in the story largely because I
didn't want "Dinosaur Blood" society to be using such facilities, and
was looking for a feasible way to foreclose the option. As far as I
know, nobody's done any research on this. But it makes sense and I
think somebody should look at it.
You asked about heating vs. cooling. Rhona actually
had the same uncertainty. Her full statement was:
"They tried it back in the twenty-first century,
but it didn't work. Something called the 'heat island' effect. Or maybe
a 'cold island.' The literature is a bit inconsistent and they were
sucking a lot of power out, so it might have been energy drain, not
waste heat that created the imbalance--"
You can get a "heat island" effect even if the
ground is shaded, because the solar panels might be darker-colored than
the ground was. Then they could simultaneously produce electricity and
heat up. On an energy-balance basis, the way this works is that light
that would normally be reflected into space goes partially to producing
electricity and partially to heating up the array.
With a big array, it wouldn't take a huge
temperature change to produce thunderstorms. There is research
on the urban heat island around cities like Houston and Atlanta. The
studies, reported at the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union
a couple of years ago, found more (and bigger) thunderstorms downwind
of big cities than upwind of them.
Alternatively, the solar cells could be
lighter-colored than the land they replace. Then you'd get Rhona's
"cold island." That's a lot more speculative, but it seems likely that
you'd get an impact on diurnal airflow, with down-flow in the center
and rising thermals at the sides. At a minimum, you might get some
exotic edge effects at the sides of the array. Instead of creating a
big thunderstorm cell in the interior, you might get a ring of them
around the outside.
The operative word here, of course, is "might."
I'd
love to see a climate modeler take a crack at this. From the point of
view of the story, of course, all that matters is that Rhona's
civilization tried, botched it, and gave up. I can think of some
possible fixes, but that might be another story, and her civilization
wouldn't have tried them.
* * * *
Dear Dr. Schmidt,
I enjoyed the short story "Report on Ranzipal's
Plus-Dimension Carry-All" in the January/February 2006 issue.
Unfortunately, it spoiled the rest of the issue for me. I just couldn't
get the technology off my mind. The idea of "pocket universes" (PUs)
intrigued me greatly. I don't know if the author, Mr. Tiedemann, has
written more stories using this concept. If so, I would truly like to
read them. It just seems like there are so many possibilities for
future stories.
If a fanny pack size carry-all can contain a baby
grand piano and more it must be capable of great expansion. If this
pack is easily portable, its power requirements must be very low. If it
can absorb 150 kilograms (for at least short periods of time, on
"overload") then there are a lot of options. Some questions/ideas that
occurred to me are (in no particular order):
This seems like a perfect soldier's pack. This
would certainly lighten the load soldiers today are expected to hump.
Also, it would seem that this could be an instant foxhole or bunker.
The only exposure that a soldier would have is through the mouth of the
bag. If the fanny pack unit is hardened sufficiently, it could
withstand even a nuclear explosion. There would have to have provision
for air supply for extended stay. I suppose that there would have to be
a way to vent heat generated inside the bag too. Without that, someone
could cook from his or her own body heat.
Camping could be affected. Right now, there is a
minimalist philosophy in camping based on what you can carry on your
back. That may be appropriate. If the PU technology is embraced, every
man could be his own "Winnebago". Energy usage would be critical. Even
climbing Everest would be within the range of the middle-class. No base
camping would be necessary. If supplementary oxygen were allowed, a
strong mountaineering type would have no problem.
If a person can climb inside and stay for an
extended period of time, this could affect transportation greatly. If
all a transport company needs to transport is something the size and
weight of a fanny pack, they could either increase the number of
passengers, or reduce the size of the transport vehicles. Either would
increase profits. Safety would be increased. If a transport went down,
passengers might not even be aware of it until they emerged at the end
of the trip time. That might be awkward, but I'm sure that there would
be communication between the real world and the pocket universe.
If you wanted to go on a vacation cruise, you could
take your entire home with you. No strange sheets, mattress or cutlery
to worry with. It's already yours. No strange room layouts, it's
"Home"
after all.
If a person didn't want to deal with "normal"
transit between home and work, there could be many alternatives.
Strapping your unit into a powered skateboard, model aircraft,
human-sized telerobot, etc. shouldn't be a problem. That should expand
the current transit experience from what is currently experienced.
Telecommuting is an option currently, but actually making the
relocation without the necessity of encountering "difficult" people
could be appealing. No smells, little risk to personal security,
personal comfort by not having to leave our own personal space until
the ultimate point of contact at the job would be very attractive.
I'm guessing that the only limitation as to what
size of PU, and the amount of mass it could handle would be the power
requirements. With increased power, a person could have their home in
one easily-transportable package. With a larger power pack, it might
not be fanny pack size. It might be backpack size. For people that are
highly mobile, this could be very convenient. Some people might never
have to really leave the office, but still go home. Just plug in the
backpack to a convenient wall plug, stash the backpack at your desk,
and 'Shazam' your ready to go. Management might frown on this. Or maybe
not, they'd always have their workers "on-call" if necessary. This
would give new meaning to the term "prairie dogging". Everyone truly
would have his or her own hole. Waste disposal and water supplies in
the holes could be a problem, but if water and waste storage each had
their own fanny pack size PU, you could go for a long time on your own.
Periodically these would have to be filled or emptied appropriately,
but this could be done on an exchange basis, similarly to the way we do
propane tanks now.
What if you lived in one of these units, and
someone stole it while you were out? Worse, what if someone did it
while you weren't? I'm guessing that each unit would have
wireless communication so if you were snatched, you could scream for
help electronically. I assume each unit would have a unique, traceable
serial number, GPS signature, etc.
If units like this were to become mainstream,
rather than having roaming "Winnebago" type existence, they could be
tied to a kiosk type link. This would be opposed to traditional
housing. The only link would be a "permanent" address and connection
to
site utilities. There would be different "classes" of kiosk depending
on the level of utilities required. If a person wanted to appear as a
high-roller, but only have a minimum investment, they could use even a
back pack PU. I doubt that the hookup connections would be directly
compatible, but adapters could easily be available.
I assume that if people can live in these units,
that locks can be installed from the inside to prevent unauthorized
entry. If the mouth of these units can be locked from the outside,
kidnapping can be greatly facilitated. Smaller units could be fired at
individuals, sort of a high-tech version of the netting that Arnold
underwent in "Running Man". Depending on the size of the unit, an
entire crowd could be snatched. Police could use this for crowd control.
Putting locks on the outside of the units opens up
changes to the penal system. You could have as large a cell and as many
amenities as you can afford, without affecting security much. Utility
costs (power, water usage, etc.) would be paid for by the inmate, above
a basic minimum.
Apartment buildings and prisons might greatly
resemble one another. I envision these as being much more related to
automated, computer-operated warehouses than traditional buildings
today. If an occupant wants entry into or out of their unit, they
signal the control unit, which selects the appropriate unit and
transports it to a vestibule area for entry or exit. If a friend drops
by for a visit, they either contact the control unit to request
communication with the occupant, or contact them directly. If you want
to interact face-to-face, you respond. If not, the visitor gets an
answering machine type response.
An extremely large apartment block might require a
series of vestibules and be organized similarly to airplane gates. If
security issues are involved, a series of private booths might be
utilized.
The possibility of having your own PU could broaden
personal freedoms. If "the freedom to swing my arms ends at the tip of
your nose", but there is no possibility of my actions affecting you,
then my freedom should not be infringed. This could result in mini Las
Vegas experiences ("What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas"). This might
require people to prove that what they do behind closed doors does not
affect the larger world in any significant way. If these pocket
universes are ruled to be outside the normal universe and applicable
law, then anything is possible between consenting (or possibly
non-consenting) individuals, animals, etc. This can yield interesting,
if not down right scary, possibilities. Almost anything can be
transported between PUs without any knowledge of outside authorities.
If I want to order up a prostitute, she can be delivered to my door by
courier, possibly within minutes (hot and ready to go, sorta like
Domino's).
If these back pack units aren't too expensive they
could be a great way to dispose of a body (bodies?). Just do the dirty
deed, walk out, close it up, pick it up and walk away and throw the
unit in the river or any convenient trash receptacle. I assume that
once the power pack runs out, that the contents of the bag return to
the normal universe. By that time, it might be in some location that
would be difficult to track back to the perpetrator.
The original story details that an override
mechanism releases the contents item by item, but I assume that a total
failure or shutdown of the system returns all the contents into the
real-world universe instantly. Depending on the size of the PU this
might or might not cause a problem. A large enough PU collapsing into
the real-world could cause what would amount to an explosion. A large
zero-gee PU grid entering a real-world environment and collapsing could
cause a real mess by itself. If there were environmental problems
(chemical, biological, etc.) the problems would be exacerbated.
Terrorism raises its ugly head again.
The possibility of larger PUs opens more variations
on the basic soldier's pack. You could put the bulk of tanks,
battleships, etc. into a larger bag and only expose gun ports, vision
ports, tracks, screws, etc. exposed. This would minimize the need for
armor, except on the exposed parts. You might even be able to "turtle
up" and pull everything back inside for brief periods. Elimination of
the weight restrictions on vehicles puts no limitation on engine or
crew size. With inertia virtually eliminated, maneuverability is
maximized. What conventional vehicle could compete?
If you just want to use a conventional vehicle, the
use of PUs could be the perfect armor. If you open the mouth of a PU to
every side of vulnerable vehicle, nothing can get through. Even a
nuclear weapon would just go down the rabbit hole, and never affect the
target, even if the enemy could detect it through the shield of the PU.
The use of PUs as armor could be limited by visibility "back to front"
through the mouth of the mouth of the PU. As the PUs aren't really part
of our universe, I'm guessing that that they'd be transparent, or
virtually so. This isn't addressed in the original story.
Space vehicles would be particularly affected by
the use of PUs. Everything but exhaust, sensors, telemetry etc. outside
the PU would be massless. Tank size, engine size, crew compartment
volume, etc. would be irrelevant to flight performance. Speeds would be
increased and transit times would be greatly reduced dramatically.
Generation ships might not be required to begin colonization of other
planets.
If gravity were eliminated inside the units, what
would the space inside be like? I am assuming that the volume inside is
only defined by the object or objects inside. Even a light-weight
structure could define a large volume. I don't think people would be
comfortable in a large-volume space that they could be trapped in due
to zero-gravity. I'm guessing something like a giant "monkey bars"
arrangement would be better. This would provide a framework to fasten
appliances, equipment, etc. to. What comes to mind is the traditional
Japanese partitioning of space using even something as insubstantial as
rice paper.
Zero-gravity inside the units could cause
interesting aspects to a story. Life-extension is one aspect. Loss of
bone mass, similar to that experienced by astronauts, could cause
people to be confined to a zero-gee experience. I thought that this
would imprison people in the homes, but then it occurred to me that
pocket universes wouldn't be confined to residential use. Commercial
use would probably be more significant than just the residential. If
you can have an entire factory or warehouse in one of these units, with
little, or no real estate requirements, that could be a real advantage
over a traditional arrangement. Again, if the PCs are judged to be
outside the normal universe/rules/laws, then the tax position is
affected.
Does gravity have to be eliminated? If a PU
had a large opening/volume ratio and was oriented horizontally, the PU
is more a dome than a pocket. I think that this would give gravity in
the PU. Of course, it's less of a true pocket universe than others.
If a person lives in a zero-gee PU and wants to
visit another PU all they have to do is contact a transport company to
do the transfer. If the "real world" unit is small enough, this could
even be a bicycle courier. Depending on security levels, weight of the
unit, etc. this could be left up to an armored car company or even
more. Once the PC is transported into the new PC, the occupant exits
from one zero-gee environment into another.
This could cause a two-tier situation. Conflicts
between a rich, old, zero-gee, PU population and a young, poor, normal
universe population would be almost inevitable.
Pardon the constant military applications, but a
single soldier could have all the power of a current nuclear submarine.
Stealth/terrorist applications are rampant. Heat-sinking would be
critical.
Please pardon me if this isn't he most elegant, ore
even organized email you've received. I dashed it off within 12 hours
of reading the story.
Michael Click
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