Copyright 1994 by Daniel Keys Moran.
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DESCRIPTION: Prolog and first two chapters of the novel "Lord November:
The Man-Spacething War."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lord November:
The Man-Spacething War
A Tale of the Continuing Time
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Prolog:
The Shepherds
2049 Gregorian
On Tuesday, October 5, 2049, a starship of the Zaradin Church
exited Sol System's Second Gate.
Not just <any> starship; this was a Cathedral, one of nine to
be found in the galaxy. Sol's Second Gate lies outside the orbit
of Saturn, and far off the ecliptic; but had the Cathedral stayed
at the Second Gate long enough, darkened though it was, humanity
would have found it in time, through its gravitational
disturbance upon the orbits of the other bodies in the System. It
was <that> large.
The Dalmastran who crewed the Cathedral did not plan to stay
long enough for that to happen. They had more important business
than this minor matter, the collection of a species that had so
recently begun to boast of its existence, pouring radio waves and
television and lasers indiscriminately out into the interstellar
darkness. They did not want their existence known to humanity--
not out of any concern for humanity's reaction, but because they
did not want the sleem empire to know they had passed this way.
And as they had already observed, humans were distressingly
disinclined to keep silent about themselves, or, the Dalmastran
presumed, about those they met.
The Dalmastran's concern about the empire might have been
over-cautious; some in the Church thought so. True, the sleem had
been growing restless, had more than once recently interfered in
the travel of the Church's emissaries. But it was a grand leap,
to go from harassing the servants of the Church, to interfering
with the business of one of the great Cathedrals.
The Dalmastran did not think that the empire would be so
foolish--but the sleem had been disturbingly arrogant of late,
and the Dalmastran had been taught, by the Zaradin themselves, to
avoid confrontation over matters not involving theology.
They studied the Solar System for several days, its
scattering of planets, moons and asteroids and comets; listened
to the broadband echoes of radio and television and InfoNet, and
came to their decision.
A Missionary fell in toward the Sun.
Peter Janssen followed a Hoffman trajectory, heading down to
an orbit some 125,000 kilometers above the cloudy surface of
Jupiter. He was already 240,000 klicks above the clouds, and
dropping; it put him well inside the orbit of all Jupiter's
satellites except Amalthea. His target was an observation buoy he
had dropped into Jupiter�s atmosphere, with seven other buoys, a
week past. This buoy was the only one to successfully blast
itself back up into space, and unless Janssen snagged it on this
pass, the buoy would drop helplessly back into Jupiter's lethal
atmosphere, burning up on re-entry, losing its atmospheric
samples and whatever data had not made it through via telemetry.
He had to pick up the buoy on his first pass because his
margin of delta-V was close to nonexistent. His craft, a modified
Chandler BlackSmith, had heavy radiation shielding to protect him
from Jupiter's deadly and incessant radiation storms. (That was
only one of the dozens of ways that Jupiter duty was different
from the Earth-Luna runs of which Janssen, an ex-SpaceFarer, was
a veteran. Bar the odd sunstorm, cis-Lunar space is largely free
of radiation hazards. Around Earth-Luna, shielding is more a
drawback than an asset. Most solar radiation passes straight
through the human body without damaging it. Moderate shielding is
actually worse than none; cascading secondary radiation from
light shielding is worse for the human body than the primary
solar radiation against which it is designed to protect.)
Because Peter Janssen's slipship was so heavily shielded, his
delta-V was correspondingly reduced; his slipship massed half
again what Chandler Industries had intended.
He whistled tunelessly as he made final approach to the buoy.
They were awaiting him eagerly back at the settlement on Ganymede-
-well, the research scientists were. Or rather, he corrected
himself, the research scientists were eagerly awaiting his return
of their buoy.
Whatever. At least <someone> was looking forward to seeing
him.
He was not a popular man, Peter Janssen. His own moodiness
and irritability contributed to it, he knew. While at St. Peter's
CityState, he had missed Luna; and now that he was at Ganymede,
he missed the CityState. He brooded at times that his life in the
last few years had been a series of increasingly poor decisions,
made increasingly at random. Most of those who knew him these
days had never seen him smile.
Those same people would have been surprised to see the change
that had come over him now. A grin played across his lips; his
eyes drooped closed and he lay slackly in the webbed padding of
the pilot's enclosure.
He <was> the slip.
The ship cameras were his eyes, fed video to his inskin, and
he drifted alone inside a glowing cathedral of stars. For all he
had learned to hate Jupiter, it had the loveliest sky in the
System; Amalthea and Ganymede and Europa hung behind him in the
view from his rear holocams, gray and white and reddish; in his
fore holocams Jupiter covered most of the sky with swirling bands
of scarlet orange. The rockets lay silent now, but soon they
would come alive, pressing Janssen back into his webbing with a
savagery a street racer a hundred years past would have
appreciated.
For a brief while, submerged in the identity of his ship,
Peter Janssen, one of only a dozen or so people of his time who
had managed to get himself exiled from the SpaceFarer's
Collective, was as content as he would ever be in his life.
Something beeped on his radar, almost exactly a hundred and
eighty degrees away from the buoy that should have been the only
large object in close. A frown passed like a ghost across
Janssen's features. He danced commands into the inskin socketed
at his temple, and the slip's rear holocams selected and
telescoped in on the item causing the commotion.
Shining and black and silver came out of nowhere. Janssen had
a brief fragmented impression of a spider web dropping on him
from a great height--
Every instrument in the slipship, every powered system, died.
Terror clawed at Janssen, vast and mortal. The muscles in his
stomach clenched painfully and he thought he would be sick inside
his ship. A Presence touched his awareness, shuffled through his
memories. The Presence withdrew, and for the merest instant
Janssen was empty.
A wordless concept imprinted itself upon Peter Janssen's
mind. He was caught instantly in a vast joy, in a certainty of
<rightness> that he had never known before.
Then the aliens destroyed his ship.
Janssen? Damn it, Peter, are you there? Peter ... <Peter?">
After a long moment, Peaceforcer Evans leaned back in the chair,
gazing blankly at the control panel, at the telemetry that still
glowed on the screens before him.
A spacecraft had approached Janssen's slip at five percent of
the speed of light--and had come to rest relative to the slip in
less than a minute....
...and had destroyed Janssen's slip thirty seconds later.
Adrienne Gordeau, one of the Ganymean colony's two
administrators, was a tall, almost cadaverously thin Frenchwoman;
she could have passed for loonie. She looked at Evans with
troubled eyes. "That's not a human ship, is it?"
Peaceforcer Evans shook his head once, and said quietly, "No,
it's not."
From the diary of Father Michael Wellsmith, Friday October 8,
2049. The inscription on the inside cover is in his sister
Jamie's handwriting: "In nomen Patris, et Filius, et spiritus
Sancti. For Michael on his birthday, July 10, 2038."
The entry is:
"Tomorrow the aliens will receive us aboard their
ship. My Lord, if You do indeed exist, then hear me
now. There is pain within me.
"I hurt.
"This knowledge of pain is not a new thing, but it is
no less easy to bear for its familiarity.
"I <hurt>.
"I do not think the pain shows. Surely to my people I
must seem tranquil; confident in my faith; serene in
the knowledge of my duty. Those who know me well--
Father O'Donnell, my sister Jamie--would see the
uncertainty that has taken me; but with the exception
of Bear Corona I am close to no one here, and Bear is
not the sort to whom one unburdens oneself.
"Father Donnelly is at St. Peter's CityState in the
Belt, Jamie is on Earth, and there is nobody on
Ganymede to hear my confession.
"In three weeks, my Lord, I will observe the
twentieth anniversary of my vows. And I hurt inside and
I have always hurt.
"But until now I had always believed.
"If You do indeed exist, be with me tomorrow."
The voice from the other side of the screen said, "Bless me,
Father, for I have sinned. It has been twenty-two years since my
last confession."
"...Bear?"
"Yeah."
"Are you sure you want to do this?"
"I guess." A dry chuckle came from the other side of the
screen. "You've been after me for most of a year."
"I had hoped for better circumstances."
Silence. "Yeah. Me too." Another chuckle, packed with
cynicism. "You better get comfortable. This is gonna take a
while."
Saturday, October 9, 2049:
The colony on Ganymede, like many other colonies throughout
human history, exists because of politics.
By 2049 all but three of the Belt CityStates have declared
independence from the Unification of Earth. The White Russian
CityStates are two of them; and St. Peter's is the third. At the
moment the Unification's Space Force lacks the ability to
prosecute a successful war against the breakaway CityStates; the
CityStates have threatened to throw asteroids at Earth--and
probably will if pushed to it.
The Ganymede colony is Earth's last attempt to contain the
growing might of the Belt CityStates. Earth and its billions have
not been able to prevent the establishment of free Luna, cheek
and jowl with Unification Luna; have lost Mars and the Belt to
the CityStates; and seem all but helpless in dealing with the
anarchistic SpaceFarer's Collective.
In February of 2048, the Unification made a last desperate
bid to contain the growing strength of its enemies; the Ganymede
colony is the result.
In late 2049, Ganymede is as far as humanity has penetrated
into the deep. The colony is six hundred persons, a beachhead
preparing the facilities that will house and protect the first
wave of true colonists. The six hundred include engineers and
physicists, an even dozen computerists, a dentist, several M.D.s
(and two medbots), two administrators, and one counselor.
Of course, most of the those on Ganymede come from St.
Peter's CityState; and their "counselor," so designated by
ancient U.N. regulations, is in fact a priest of the Roman
Catholic Church.
"They <what?>"
Sheila Moore lowered her voice. "Killed Janssen. That's what
I heard. Blew his slip completely away."
From topside, the beachhead is not impressive. There is a
small cluster of tiny, pressurized buildings. In an octagonal
arrangement at the limits of the cluster, tall monoliths generate
a heavy magnetic field that helps protect the inhabitants beneath
from Jupiter's otherwise lethal radiation storms. It is only the
first of an increasingly complex series of barriers designed to
protect the colonists from that radiation.
An irony, this, and not a subtle one. Once the colony at
Ganymede is no more, humans will not attempt to live near a gas
giant comparable to Jupiter for over a hundred years. The
incidental radiation at Jupiter is inconvenient to the point of
frequent fatalities for humans constrained to work with tools no
better than those of the mid-twenty-first century. Within another
fifty years the problems will be nearing triviality; but by then
the human race will have the tachyon star drive, and much better
real estate than Jupiter to work with.
The irony? The next time humans will make an attempt similar
to this one is in the mid-twenty-second century Gregorian, a
world that orbits a barely subsolar planet named Prometheus.
The world is November.
The colony's surface is not impressive; but like the tip of
an iceberg, like any Lunar city, the surface of the beachhead
only hints at the labyrinths that stretch below. The analogy does
not extend beyond that point: the Ganymean beachhead colonists
are struggling against an environment that is colder and deadlier
than Luna's, colder and <much> deadlier than that of an iceberg.
On that Sunday "morning" in October, the colony's routine has
been disrupted by the presence of the Zaradin ship, some three
hundred meters from the central surface airlock. They know it is
a ship from its behavior, because it moved through space, because
their telescopes watched it approach, and because the humans have
with their own eyes watched it land atop the structures they have
dug into the frozen ground. The ship resembles no vehicle that
has ever been constructed by humans, and when they watch it too
long it gives them headaches.
Tyrel November would have recognized the vehicle--though he
might not have felt it necessary to be polite to the Dalmas
Missionary inside.
That Sunday, on the door to Father Michael Wellsmith's
makeshift church, there is a note.
The note says:
The ten and twelve o'clock services are canceled.
--Father Michael
"Bear."
Bear Corona looked up from his reading tablet at Father
Michael's approach. He was a super-jumbo-sized man wearing jeans
and a sweater that were almost as black as his beard. The
nickname he bore gave him mild amusement; at least he hadn't been
stuck with "Tiny." He was slightly surprised to find Father
Michael up and about. "Little late for you, isn't it?" He glanced
at his reading tablet, tapped for the time: "It's after three."
Father Michael Wellsmith shook his head. A tall, spare man
with clear, pale gray eyes, at that moment he looked as tired as
Bear had ever seen him. The faint wrinkles that were always
visible around his eyes had grown deep. "Can't sleep. Aren't you
<cold> in here?"
Bear glanced around at the lounge. About eighty meters on a
side, it had only a few real (and therefore comfortable) chairs;
the rest being made of memory plastic that withdrew into the
floor when not needed. It was the closest thing to a social
gathering place the colonists had available to them, though it
lacked virtually every amenity such a place would have had on
Earth, and most of those it would have had back at St. Peter's.
Now, late at night, the glowpaint was dimmed to twilight gray, to
help bring out the holofield Bear sat watching. Across one entire
wall of the lounge, the holo of Ganymede's sky shone eerily real.
The steady stars seemed improbably bright and numerous to a pair
of men born and raised to adulthood deep inside Earth's
atmospheric blanket. Jupiter covered a quarter of the sky, a dim
swirl of red and orange and yellow.
Bear shook his head. "No. Is it really any colder here than
in your quarters?"
Father Michael shivered. "It feels so."
Bear gestured to the large thermos resting beside his boots
on the small table. "Get yourself a cup from the bar." Father
Michael did; Bear poured for him. "Got no cream or sugar, unless
you want to go down to the commissary."
Father Michael shook his head. "Black is fine." He seated
himself in the foam chair nearest Bear, cradling the warm cup
between his hands. The coffee wasn't Earth grown, he could smell
that much; but at least it didn't have the acrid tang of Belt
synth. Martian, most likely.
He looked up from his coffee and stared at the ship.
It squatted there in the center of the holo. Looking at it
strained his eyes. Something like it might have been formed by
spinning steel spider webs, fashioning it into the general shape
that was desired, and melting it until most of the surfaces had
fused together. Altogether it seemed not so much constructed as
grown.
Father Michae said without looking away, "I understand our
messages aren't getting through."
Bear shrugged. "Just a guess. I can't imagine how they're
doing it, if they are. We aim lasers inSystem, but we're not
getting any responses back. Not from St. Peter's, not from Earth.
I wouldn't have believed it was possible if I wasn't seeing it.
<Something's> stopping us getting through."
"No further word?"
"From the aliens? Not since you told them to go to Hell."
Bear sipped at his coffee. "May not have been the wisest thing
you could have done, Father."
Father Michael nodded wearily. "Yes...what are you reading?"
Bear took his time answering. He was the only avowed atheist
on Ganymede; their chief engineer, and one of their two
administrators, he was a refugee from Earth who had found status
and security at St. Peter's CityState. He had claimed on
occasion, although never in front of Peaceforcer Evans, to have
been prominent in the American Johnny Rebs before leaving Earth;
the implication being that his very prominence among those rebels
had made the leaving necessary. A thing he did not boast of, but
which Father Michael knew to be true, was that he was the younger
brother of Neil Corona, one of the great American heroes from the
final days of the Unification War. "Uhm," Bear said finally,
"it's a religious text."
Father Michael did not smile. "Indeed."
"An old one."
The Nicene Creed:
I believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Maker of
Heaven and earth, and all things visible and invisible.
And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only-begotten Son
of God, begotten of His Father before all worlds, Light
of Light, Very God of Very God, Begotten, not made,
being of one substance with the Father; by Whom all
things were made.
Who for us men, and for our salvation, came down from
Heaven; and was incarnate by the Holy Ghost of the
Virgin Mary, and was made man.
And was crucified also for us under Pontius Pilate;
He suffered and was buried.
And the third day He rose again according to the
Scriptures.
And ascended into heaven, and sitteth on the right
hand of the Father.
And he shall come again with glory to judge both the
quick and the dead; Whose kingdom shall have no end.
And I believe in the Holy Ghost, the Lord, the Giver
of Life, who Proceedeth from the Father; Who with the
Father and the Son together is worshipped and
glorified; Who spake by the Prophets.
I believe in one Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic
Church.
I acknowledge one Baptism for the remission of sins.
I look for the resurrection of the dead.
And for the life of the world to come.
Amen.
An hour later they had drunk all of Bear's coffee. Father
Michael sat quietly in his chair, arms crossed across his chest,
coat drawn tightly about himself.
"Yesterday," Bear began.
Father Michael nodded.
"When they blessed us--that vicious happy shit scares me
worse than anything that's ever happened to me in my life."
Father Michael said quietly, "It scared me too. But it was
just some form of electric ecstasy, I imagine."
"No. It--" Bear searched for words. "It wasn't electric
ecstasy, Father. I tried juice on an induction helmet; it scared
me and I didn't do it again, but it wasn't anything like this.
The juice is impersonal, Father. It doesn't care about you. But
that damn blessing...could almost make a man believe in God."
"Most of us <want> to believe, Bear. In Something. God the
Father, or the Goddess, Allah or Jehovah or Krishna...you few who
need to be convinced are true rarities."
"It wasn't electric ecstasy, Mike. Whatever it was..."
Corona's voice took on a puzzled note. "It could make a man
believe."
Father Michael nodded. In the last twenty-four hours he'd
told people who asked him, more times now than he could remember,
that the alien blessing had been some sort of broadcast electric
ecstasy, certainly nothing more. But he did not believe it
himself. He remembered that moment, would remember it until his
death, the rolling, thunderous, lasting joy that had seized them
all with the invocation of the alien god Haristi.
Only death itself could erase that memory of joy.
Monday, October 10, 2049: The suiting room was too small for
the number of people that it held, and the ceiling glowpaint was
too bright and too harsh.
Embedded in the east wall of the suiting room, a five-meter
wide window looked out across the dead, cold Ganymean surface.
<The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.>
It seemed more than a bit cliched; but there was comfort in
the words, and he could not think of another psalm that was more
appropriate. He could <see> the Bible in which those words were
printed, Father Donnelly's cracked and faded red leather Bible;
not the one which he held now, the black Bible that he clutched,
closed, in both hands.
<He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he leadeth me
beside the still waters.>
"Final life support checks." Peaceforcer Evan's tone of voice
was bored, the nothing-wrong-here drawl affected by pilots for
more than a century. Evans himself, United Nations Peace Keeping
Force Officer though he was, was a good Catholic who regularly
failed to report his colleague's treasonable talk. Bear Corona
suited up next to him, an Excalibur Series One slung across his
back; Evans bore the same weapon himself. "Sheila, check Father
Michael for me."
<He restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths of
righteousness for his name's sake.>
Standing near the rear of the suiting room, Father Michael
straightened at the sound of his name, and with easy self-control
tucked the Bible that he had been holding into an outer pocket of
his pressure suit. Breaking away from the others, Sheila Moore, a
plump, rather plain molecular biologist with whom Father
Wellsmith often played chess in the evenings, came back to check
his vitals for him. She was with the party because she had taken
a course in exobiology ten years prior: such as it was, that
background made her the closest thing the colony had to an expert
on aliens.
She found the Bible in the outer pocket, and scolded, "You
forgot to seal the pocket. You want to be more careful." At
Ganymean temperatures, even plastipaper grew fragile and
shattered. She clipped his helmet photo diode to his earlobe, and
turned it on; the vampire gauge paused a moment before flickering
to life.
..mark Take text from Ecclesiastes.
She glanced quickly at the Bible before sealing the pocket;
the bookmark was in <Ecclesiastes>. He would be reading the most
depressing book in the damn Bible.
The voice from Control came across the outspeaker: "Sergeant
Evans, Bear, I've got some new stuff. The Zaradin transmitted a
new message to us."
<Yea, though I walk through the Valley of the Shadow of
Death, I will fear no evil.>
"Largely bad news. They're saying that we'd better bring out
our--uh, defiler of truths is how the computer is translating it-
-or we'll be sorry. They said they'd demonstrate how sorry we'd
be. Nothing on that yet."
There was a brief pause before conversation resumed. Bear
Corona said, "Pushy bastards, aren't--"
The landscape outside the window glared in a sudden wash of
light.
Peaceforcer Evans said calmly, locking his gloves into place,
"Control? What is it?"
"--I think--I think they just blew Europa out of the sky."
The large airlock finished cycling. Peaceforcer Evans, Bear
Corona, Sheila Moore, and Father Michael moved forward, onto the
frozen ground, in slow, gliding steps. The stars above shone
bright and hard. The cold sunlight glared down at them; their
faceplates polarized away most of it.
In the southern portion of their sky, about ten degrees from
Jupiter, hung a bright, slowly expanding cloud of debris.
Bear Corona moved next to Father Michael, and sketched "C4"
on Father Michael's faceplate. Father Michael switched to the
sideband.
"Father," he said, "been wondering what your plans are."
"I don't really know, Bear." Behind the polarized faceplate,
drops of sweat gathered on Father Michael's forehead. The inside
of his suit stank with the smell of all old pressure suits, of
ancient human sweat and metallic, recycled air.
They moved forward inexorably toward the alien ship, ground
gliding away beneath their feet.
Bear Corona said patiently, "Are you going to do what they
want you to do? Or are you going to tell them to go to hell
again?"
Father Michael did not take his eyes from the ship. Closer
still. "I don't know. I don't know whatt they want me to do. Bear-
-"
"Yes?"
"I suspect you of having made up some of the sins you
confessed."
Bear laughed aloud. "This old fellow goes running into
Church, ducks into a confessional, and says, �Father, Father, I
just made love to a twenty-year old girl, committed adultery with
her <twice.> And the priest recognizes his voice, says slowly,
�Abie...Abie Martin? Abie, you're not a member of my congregation-
-you're not even <Catholic>. Why are you telling me this?'"
Father Michael joined in with him on the punch line. "Telling
<you>--I'm telling <everyone>."
"You know it."
"If it concerns priests, I've heard it. Usually from another
priest. <Did> you make up those sins?"
Even through the paired layers of partially polarized
faceplates, Father Michael could see Corona hesitate a moment;
then Bear's bushy beard moving from side to side, and Corona said
in a voice gone completely flat, "No."
"I thought you said the debris was going to miss us!"
"It was when we ran the first trajectories. They nudged one
of the rocks." Adrienne Gordeau closed her eyes briefly, looked
wearily around at the people waiting for her to tell them what to
do, wishing that Bear, or Evans, or even the priest, were here to
help her. Finally she said, "Father Michael is outside. I think
we must decide who's going to give final confession."
They stood uncertainly before the ship, watching, waiting for
the emergence of the Dalmas, a Missionary of the Zaradin Church,
who had claimed to be inside.
The Dalmas did not emerge; instead the ship began to glow.
It began as a discreet thing, crawling like a viscous fluid
along the interstices of the hip. Then it went hazy, and flowed
down into the empty vacuum, fountained down like a wave of mist
towards the seven waiting humans. The haze enveloped them, in a
warm, golden fog that penetrated their pressure suits, penetrated
even Peaceforcer Evans armored scalesuit.
"Thy rod and thy staff," whispered Father Michael, "they
comfort me." The warm fog embraced him. "Thou preparest a table
for me in the presence of mine enemies." The golden haze swirled
around them, and a bulkhead broke apart before them. The Presence
drew them forward, pulling them like puppets on a string. "Thou
anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over." He shook
violently, the words coming harshly, without rhythm or beauty.
"Surely--"
Father Michael Wellsmith screamed suddenly, "God!"
For a brief cold second, the warm Presence was gone, and
Father Michael stood straight and alone.
Then It flooded back upon him, smashed him down, and took him
as It had taken the others.
Father Michael stumbled, found himself jerked back to his
feet like a puppet, and he tumbled forward with the rest of them,
half-falling, a clown in Ganymede's gentle gravity. It did not
bother him; nothing bothered him, not the loss of his dignity or
his freedom; not the trembling beneath his feet as the remnants
of a smashed moon came hurtling down to the surface of Ganymede,
nor the darkness in the ship's hold, nor the brief and improbably
gentle acceleration as the alien ship lifted away from Ganymede's
surface, took him and Bear and Sheila and Peaceforcer Evans away
from everything they had ever known.
He was wholly at peace with himself; after more than forty
years as a Catholic, Father Michael Wellsmith was going home.
Transcription of an Underground background interview with
Neil Corona, 2090 Gregorian:
...Jamie Wellsmith and I had both lost family in the
destruction of the Ganymede colony, back in �49; it's
how we met one another. My younger brother Bear, and
her older brother Michael, were members of the party,
sent out from St. Peter's CityState, that was charged
with establishing a beachhead on Ganymede.
Bear and I hadn't spoken in better than fifteen years
at the time. Bear was pretty high up in the Johnny Rebs
at one point; he kept after me to join through most of
the late �20s and early �30s, in a series of
increasingly bitter arguments. In �33 the Peaceforcers
tossed me into a Detention Center for most of a year. I
got the message; in �34 I left America, left Earth.
And went to Halfway. At the time there was no PFK
presence to speak of in space; there were not quite two
million people living off Earth at all, and the
Peaceforcers were busy consolidating the Unification on
Earth; they had no time to bother with an ex-U.S.
Marine who had very obligingly left the planet.
My last conversation with Bear was so bitter that it
took me a couple of years to forgive him. But Bear held
grudges with a vengeance; even after I'd decided to try
and patch things up, he never accepted my calls, and
finally I simply stopped trying. Sometime in the mid-
forties he left Earth himself--that or a firing squad,
as I understood it--ended up at St. Peter's CityState,
out in the Belt. Back in the forties there were still a
couple of CityStates that were, putatively, loyal to
the Unification; St. Peter's was one of them. (As I
recall, it was the next-to-the-last of the CityStates
to break away from the Unification, in �54. Only the
White Russians held out longer; and by �56 even they
could see that remaining as part of the Unification
made no sense for the CityStates.)
I don't know who was responsible for what happened,
if anyone. At the time half the experts swore it was a
natural disaster, tidal stress or something equally
unlikely, that destroying Europa was beyond the
technical capabilities of even the Unification; and the
other half swore that from the little that remained
afterward, it looked as though Europa had been done in
by a monster nuke, perhaps anti-matter, and that it
looked like a shaped charge.
I don't know. All I know is that on October 9, 2049,
Europa blew and Ganymede caught a chunk of it.
After the colony got smashed, Jamie Wellsmith came
looking for me.
I had no idea who she was. Her brother Michael had
been the colony's priest, and apparently Bear and
Michael Wellsmith had grown close. In Michael's last
letter to Judith, he had written at length about his
friend Bear, the atheist Father Michael was attempting
to save. Jamie had looked me up for the sake of the
ending to her brother's very last letter.
I've still got the hardcopy today:
--he's come to realize how his temper has damaged the
people around him, how it's damaged his own life. I've
been after him to come to confession, and I think he's
very near agreeing. I'm not breaking the sanctity of
the confessional by sharing this with you, since it was
said to me while he and I drank together a few nights
ago; apparently Bear's older brother is Neil Corona,
the young man who surrendered at Yorktown. They've been
estranged for fifteen years, and today Bear regrets
their estrangement and feels that it was largely his
fault. I tend to think he's right; in dealing with
Bear, I must often hold my tongue. He takes offense too
easily, realizes it slowly; and as a result spends much
of his time apologizing for incidents that took place a
day or a week or a month prior. In his brother's case
he was deeply hurt (over what I am still not sure) and
it has taken him all the years since to realize how
deeply he, in turn, injured his brother. Bear is a
proud man; today he thinks that, after fifteen years,
his brother must be so offended at him that he would
not appreciate Bear attempting to make contact again. I
understand why Bear feels this way; it's how Bear would
react in similar circumstances. I hope he's wrong. In
any event, we will find out; when we return to St.
Peter's next August, I think I will write to Mr. Neil
Corona, and see what his feelings are toward his
brother, and possibly arrange a reconciliation.
At times I think my calling is a fiction, Jamie;
something I've invented to give my life some meaning.
And other times I know it is not.
I remain, your loving brother,
Michael.
I read it silently; when I was done, Jamie Wellsmith
demanded with tears in her eyes, "Well? Was my brother
right? Did you want to hear from him?"
She stared at me unwaveringly through her tears, and
I said as steadily as I could, "I would have given ten
years of my life to talk to Bear again. He was the last
family I had. He was the last person I ever really let
myself love."
When the rescue ships arrived at Ganymede, weeks too late,
there was nothing left of the beachhead, and little enough left
of the former surface of Ganymede itself on the hemisphere where
the fragments of Europa had struck. The Zaradin ship was gone;
and the Peaceforcers and scientists who swarmed in their dozens
over the wreckage of the first Ganymean settlement found nothing
that would lead them to guess that such beings had ever existed.
The Cathedral left through Sol's First Gate; and six hundred
and twenty-seven years passed.
It is not a large span of time, in the scheme of things. Only
on the human scale does it become significant...a matter of
generations, even for humans who live far longer than those of
the twenty-first century Gregorian: more time separates Tyrel
November from 2049 than separates 2049 from Christopher Columbus'
first voyage to the New World.
The roll call of the Players, down through the centuries, is
immense. The universe is too complex to be told of in any story,
or any collection of stories, or in all stories. Everything is a
summary and a lie. Perhaps I should tell you of the art of Tyrel
November's time, or the technology, or the genetics or the
politics; perhaps I should explain the path of the Exodus, map
the routes humanity has taken through the spacelace tunnels, its
small tentative footholds among the stars: a few thousands of
planets settled, in a galaxy where the stars number a third of a
trillion, in a universe where the Milky Way is one galaxy among
hundreds of billions, when the Continuing Time itself is only one
timeline among the half quadrillion that compose the Great Wheel
of Existence.
We are small beyond understanding; but in the heritage of our
people, in the naming of the Players whose dreams and memories
live on within us, are the seeds of the only meaning we will ever
find.
Across the span of the years, some things stand out:
It has been six hundred and twenty-seven years since the
destruction of the Ganymede colony; six hundred and fourteen
years since the black day in 2062 when the United Nations Peace
Keeping Force, under the command of a man named Mohammed Vance,
destroyed all but two of the Castanaveras telepaths. It has been
five hundred and ninety-six years since Trent the Uncatchable
died, and rose again, and vanished, perhaps forever; and five
hundred and seventy-seven years since the <Dauntless>, the first
tachyon starship in all of history, made its only voyage from Sol
System.
It has been five hundred and forty-six years since the
beginning of the War with the Sleem, the great conflict in which
humanity was nearly exterminated; it has been five hundred and
thirty years since the sleem empire was broken at the Battle of
the Core, by an alliance of human and K'Ailla forces; and five
hundred and twenty-seven years since Daniel November dropped the
city of Starfall onto the surface of the planet November.
It has been four hundred and ninety-six years since the
Platform <Rose from Earth> left Sol System with the Spollant
Caravan, and began the Exodus from Earth. Trentists--members of
the Church of His Return, more commonly called the Exodus Church-
-followed them out among the stars not long after.
It has been four hundred and eighty-four years since Lorn
November published <The Protocols of Anarchy>; four hundred and
eighty-one years since Lorn's brother, Richard, declared himself
the first Lord of the House of November, and the House of
November the planet's governing body. On November today there are
courts and judges and taxes. And Anarchists. Lots of them.
It has been two hundred and eighty-seven years since the
death of Kinderjim of November. The world he helped settle,
Domain, is today, by virtue of Kinderjim's death, the only world
in the explored Continuing Time where humans and K'Aillae live
together in peace.
It has been one hundred and seventy-five years since Ola Blue
died. She is more famous now than when alive, and she was well
known then: <Our Lady of Nightways>, the deadliest human being
who ever lived, or is ever likely to. It is said of Ola Blue that
she was death itself, and sorrow: Ola Blue herself said that if
nightways had not existed, she would have created it.
It has been one hundred and thirty-seven years since Shelomin
Serendip abolished the Regency of United Earth. Today Earth has
no domestic government; no courts and no judges and no police.
What it does have is United Earth Intelligence and its College,
and both institutions are only tools of the Face of Night.
All of these figures--the mere thousands of years that human
civilization itself has existed--are only small fractions of the
near 65 millennia that have passed since the Zaradin ended the
Time Wars, and disappeared; and the Continuing Time began.
The Continuing Time itself is young; the Time Wars raged for
three and a half billion years; and there are events in history
earlier than <that>.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BOOK ONE:
THE MAN-SPACETHING WAR
2676-2681 Asimov
Summer 26, 2676 Asimov.
His heart beat like a drum.
He had attuned himself to the place, to the deliberate rhythm
of the wilderness. Walking alone beneath the blue sky of alien
Earth, through a forest vaster than any on November, Tyrel
November had emptied his mind of analytical thought, and moved
through the wilderness as one who belonged.
By dawn on his third day away from the College Tyrel knew
himself followed.
It shook him out of his reverie, and he resented it near as
much for that as for the danger it posed. He camped that night
without a fire, in that part of the Great North Forest called
Washington, not far south of Canada. He got himself high up in a
spruce pine, gentled his breathing and his heart, cooled the
surface of his skin to the ambient for the surrounding air, and
waited for morning.
High summer, and a gentle wind that held scents whose names
he did not know. On the first day of his trek he had seen a brown
bear, but he had been upwind of it. He could pick out a few
scents, here and there beneath the sharp overlay of the pine;
deer and running water strong among them.
Humans could be found not two hundred and sixty klicks to the
west, if Tyrel felt the need to go to them, clustered in small
cities along the coast of the Pacific Ocean. With Earth's
population down below four billion, people were perhaps rarer
than they had once been--but by the standards of a man from
November, a world where a quarter of Earth's population had
spread itself across three times Earth's land surface, they were
plentiful enough.
He did not feel the need to seek out human company. His
follower, perhaps a night face, knew little woodcraft. It was a
rare art on Earth; and if the forest through which Tyrel traveled
was not the same forest in which he had been raised, well, it was
not very different. Wilderness has its own reason, and the
wilderness of November is, with rare notable exceptions, largely
that of Earth, transplanted four hundred light years.
He knew himself followed, and it was enough.
In the last tenth of light, from his tree Tyrel had picked
out the highest spot around, a bluff overlooking the river; in
the last tenth of darkness he came down from the tree. He left
both his knives, his backpack and his clothes, at the base of the
tree, and covered them with brush and leaves. There was too much
metal in the knives and backpack, and his skin was better
camouflage than the brown hiking clothes. He doubted that his
follower was using deep radar; on many worlds it might have
gotten away with it, but not on Earth itself. The Citadel of the
Regency is located in North America; anyone polluting the
electromagnetic spectrum with military caliber radar would have
the Face of Night to deal with, and promptly. But unlikely was
not impossible, and Tyrel did not take unnecessary chances where
his life was concerned.
He kept the rifle. Its polymer stock and monocrystal barrel
were unlikely to show up even on deep radar; the maglev boost
mechanism, and the projectiles themselves, had small amounts of
metal in them, but it was a chance he would have to take. Without
the rifle the night face, if it was a night face, would kill him.
His skin had been dark brown through most of the trek; it was
the color Tyrel used socially. Now he let his skin and hair go
black, as black as the night around him. He kept to the forest
floor, beneath the trees, to cover that would help shield him
from orbital observation. His follower was not tracking him by
any ordinary means; it barely knew how to keep to cover itself.
Tyrel's best guess was that somewhere in orbit, some commercial
vehicle was watching him with very good optics. Infrared would do
them no good, not now; Tyrel kept his body temperature at the
ambient for his surroundings. But motion analysis is a powerful
tool, and if they did not know where he was to within a kilometer
at any given time Tyrel would have been surprised.
The tree growth grew denser as he approached the river,
became a broad ceiling that blocked the sky. Tyrel took his time,
working up the bluff, keeping to hard ground where possible;
false dawn lit the sky to the east when he had finally reached
his spot. He waited patiently for the light, until he could see
the color of the bluff's stone clearly; a pale white, streaked
here and there with the gray of granite. This next was a risk,
but a risk he would have to take; he let his skin and hair go
pale, holding his hand out in front of him until it came near to
blending into the bluff. He kept his rifle, black and thereby far
more visible from the sky than he was, beneath him, and crept
out, slowly, over the space of a tenth, across the surface of the
bluff until he had reached the spot he wanted, at the edge of a
long stretch of stone, sloping away down toward a drop of some
eighty meters over the river below. A good spot; he would see
trouble coming from a distance.
Tyrel did not know the river's name; as the sun came up he
saw that it ran broad, fast and shallow. Freshwater fish
glittered beneath its surface, quick and silver in the water.
Tyrel lay on his stomach on the cool stone, propped up on his
elbows, with his rifle beneath him, hidden from the sky.
He slowed himself, brought his heart and breath down together
until his heartbeat had reached ten per minute, and his breaths
five.
The rifle spat slivers of magnetized ceramic which fragmented
upon impact into something about the size of a man's fist. A
hunting rifle; its variable speed maglev could be set for muzzle
velocities low enough to pot small game, and high enough to knock
down a grizzly with one shot. Some of the other students back at
College had recommended Tyrel try a variable laser, but energy
weapons are not common along November's Dragonback mountains;
Tyrel had stuck with a weapon he understood. He had been raised
among the poorest of November's people, the Dragonback Castille,
and had been taught to hunt, with a rifle not much different from
the one he held now, before he had been taught to read.
Now, two decades after he had first been shown how to hold a
rifle without getting smacked in the face by it, the skill might
well save his life.
The morning wore along slowly. The mist hung heavy in the air
for the first brief while after sunrise. Sol was cooler than
Lucifer, November's star, even at the equator, and this far north
was cooler still; but it was warm enough to burn off the mist.
Through the course of the long morning Tyrel waited patiently,
Sol's gentle light falling down upon him, warming the air he
breathed.
Tyrel wished briefly that he'd thought to bring along imaging
binoculars, but pushed the thought away quickly. He had come to
hike, to travel and learn the country; there had been no reason
to expect combat, or any sort of trouble. And there was no use
wishing for things to be other than they were.
Toward mid-day he saw the first flicker of movement. Just a
flicker, and then gone, something brown and gray-green moving
through the treeline, perhaps a kilometer downriver. It might
have a bear or a wolf or a deer, wild animals Tyrel had been told
were common to these parts--but wild mammals, at least, rarely
use optical camouflage, and Tyrel, in the brief moment he had
been able to see anything, had seen the patch of brown and gray-
green <slide,> like oil on the water.
Assume the person following him was a night face. Tyrel had
enough to go on for that assumption. If those who had hired his
follower knew who he was, then they knew he had spent the last
six years at the College of United Earth Intelligence, studying
nightways; and they would hardly send someone less skilled than
himself to kill him.
And if they did not know who he was, it was not likely they
they would be following him in the first place.
So a night face was probable. It would be in contact with the
ship in orbit; which meant that it knew by now that the ship had
lost track of Tyrel.
It would be cautious. Moving slowly. They had time, and the
night face might know it; Tyrel would not be missed for several
days, when he did not arrive at the first checkpoint on his
itinerary.
Toward mid-afternoon Tyrel saw it again, the sliding patch of
color moving through the trees toward him. Closer this time--four
hundred and fifty or sixty meters distant, Tyrel judged. Close
enough to take a shot if he got a good sighting.
The afternoon wore on and became evening, and night fell
without Tyrel seeing anything further. He dozed briefly, came
awake to the sounds of distant birds in the night. Around
midnight a wind came up, and Tyrel had occasion to regret the
spot he had chosen; the wind swept across the open face of the
bluff, and even at the height of summer it was chill enough it
left Tyrel cold and stiff.
Morning again.
The second day passed without any suspicious movement that
Tyrel saw.
On Tyrel's third day on the bluff, his sixth day since
leaving Seattle, an aircraft passed overhead, tracked across the
high blue bowl of the sky for most of five minutes while Tyrel
watched it. Too high up, and moving too fast; Tyrel could have
unloaded the entire magazine of his rifle in its direction
without being noticed. He was not considering leaving his
position anyway; but again in the late afternoon he saw motion in
the forest. Further away this time; about seven hundred meters
upstream of his position. That was all he saw, motion; it might,
this time, have been some wild creature.
The hunger was not bad; but by the end of his third day on
the bluff Tyrel's thirst gnawed at him. He could smell water and
see it, but he could not go get it. Even as greatly as he had
slowed himself, some systems were beyond his control. His body
fought to retain its fluids, but toxins built up regardless;
before dawn of the fourth day Tyrel pushed his metabolism back
up, and crept slowly back under the cover of the trees, letting
his skin fade to black as he did so. He stood close to a tree and
urinated against the bark, slowly and quietly, until his bladder
was empty, and then made his way back out to his chosen spot
before the sun had risen.
Tyrel knew himself well, and the systems of which he was
composed, both those he could control and those he could not;
despite his thirst his systolic fluid levels were acceptable. He
was two or three days away yet from being unable to fight. He
pushed back the first traces of real fear, and waited through the
long fourth day on the rock.
The fifth and sixth days came and went and Tyrel found
himself growing lightheaded and dizzy. His elbows throbbed where
they rested against the stone, and his ribs, and the bones in his
hips. At times he found himself coming back to awareness, knowing
that time had passed but not knowing how much. Sol tracked slowly
across the sky; Tyrel had time to appreciate the long line of
genegineers, human and MI, whose work had left him resistant to
sunburn.
Fog crawled in before dawn on the seventh day, white and
misty. Luna hung overhead, nearly full, illuminating the banked
wreaths of fog with an ethereal glow. Tyrel's skin grew damp;
trickles of moisture ran down across the broad muscles in his
back, joined together and pooled like sweat in the small of his
back and the backs of his knees. The rock beneath him became
slick. He imagined he saw shapes in the moonlit fog, found his
finger tightening on the trigger of his rifle, and forced himself
to relax. Tired as he was he found his skin tingling as though an
electric current danced upon its surface. An absurd lightness
touched him, as though he might at any moment float weightless
off the surface of the rock, up into the cool night air. He could
not feel the rifle in his hands, or the stone he lay upon, or
himself.
...her eyes were as green as his own. He did not know her
name, and had never met her before in his life; but he knew that
he looked upon a lord of the House of November, a telepath like
himself.
She sat on a roof, with two men, in the last light of day.
Tyrel did not know the name of the city that surrounded them,
stretching away in one direction as far as the eye could see; in
another direction was a great ocean. She seemed young, Tyrel
thought perhaps fifteen or sixteen; wearing a pair of white
shorts and a thin white blouse, tinged orange by the setting sun.
The men with her were not much older, by appearance eighteen
or twenty. Both were fit, one blond and the other dark; but Tyrel
did not much notice them, for the girl was speaking; had been
speaking.
"...it's why God put us here. To make things better, so that
the people who come after us have a better life than the people
who came before." The girl sat up slowly; her eyes, unfocused and
remote, met Tyrel's. She spoke in a voice distant and gentle:
"They come down out of the mountains, to where the circle of
his fire is burning against the night. And you see the young man
he <speaks> to them then, at the foot of the mountains while the
living diamonds hunt them in the darkness, and tells them that
the old promises will be fulfilled, the old dreams realized, the
old wrongs made right. And then, <together>," the girl said,
looking away from Tyrel and abruptly fixing one of her companions
with a fierce gaze, "together they march back through the
Traveling Waters, and go back together to the city on the hill
and drive out the enemy."
The rooftop faded and vanished; and one of the girl's
companions, the dark-haired man, vanished with it. Tyrel found
himself on a mountainside at night, near what he recognized as
the north end of the Dragonback; the vast bulk of Prometheus,
November's primary, blotted out the stars above them.
The girl stood facing him, with the young blonde man at her
side, and Tyrel knew who they had to be: Denice Castanaveras,
dead near four centuries; and Trent the Uncatchable, who had
vanished from the Continuing Time longer ago than that. Blue fire
flickered across the girl's skin, pulsed around her skull.
Trent the Uncatchable spoke. "Where are we?"
"Watching," said Denice Castanaveras. "Watching the fire
burning out. They forgot to bank Tyrel's fire when they all left
together. It flickers and then the cold kills it, and all that's
left is the--darkness."
In the first light, on the morning of the seventh day, the
searchers came.
At first Tyrel was not certain they were not a hallucination.
They moved slowly, covering roughly the centerline of the heading
Tyrel had left on file at College: five cars, with the blue on
black mandala of United Earth Intelligence emblazoned on them. He
watched them coming, bringing his breathing and heartbeat back to
normal, increasing the flow of blood to his extremities, and
prepared to move.
Tyrel scaled the rifle down to its lowest setting, and when
the nearest car was within range, pinged a shot off its side.
The reaction was what he had expected; the car veered off
wildly, and the four flanking it dropped out of the sky like
stones, down beneath the cover of the trees.
Tyrel waited patiently; if he had learned nothing else at
College, he had learned patience. It is the first axiom of
nightways that there are only necessary actions, and mistakes. By
the reactions of those in the search vehicles he knew them for
shivatad, night faces, and they would know his shot for what it
had been, a warning of danger and not any serious attack.
He heard the first screams of approaching spacecraft only a
few minutes after his warning shot. He let his skin go black,
highlighting himself against the pale bluff; and then for much of
the morning watched the spacecraft track back and forth across
the sky above him. Finally, just before noon, one of the cars
Tyrel had seen earlier made its way up the river, floating only a
few meters above the surface of the running water, and came to a
halt on the near bank. A night face Tyrel did not know got out of
the car, looked up to where Tyrel lay on the bluff, and called
up, "You can come down now."
The night faces searched with no success. Who or whatever had
followed Tyrel was not to be found.
Tyrel consulted the Source. High on the plateau which also
holds the centuries-old ruins of Mexico City, sits the College of
United Earth Intelligence. Tyrel went to the Source's Place
during late afternoon of the day he was rescued; he took time
only to shower and to feed himself.
The Source's Place was a small, empty auditorium. The
doorfield was of modern make; it did not break apart at Tyrel's
approach, but merely shimmered and softened slightly. Tyrel
stepped through the field, and it dragged at him slightly, kept
the hot air outside from entering with him.
Inside, in Mexico City's high summer, it was cooled to a
temperature most humans, and Tyrel, found pleasant. Tyrel was
tapped, but his tap was designed for November's net, not Sol
System's Source; the Source's Place lacked the equipment to
decode the signal from Tyrel's tap, and so, in consulting the
Source, here in the Source's Place, it was required that Tyrel
speak aloud.
The Source spoke Anglic with a Terran accent, in a neutral
voice that might have been male or female. (On the rare occasions
Tyrel had seen the Source assume a body, the body it chose was
human, but genderless.)
Today the Source wore no body; it generated a holo as Tyrel
entered the Place. The holo was of an attractive young man of
Tyrel's apparent age; Tyrel wondered if the choice of gender and
age were politeness on the Source's part. "Ser November."
"Source."
Unlike most humans, the Source wasted no time. "Forty-six
commercial spacecraft, swept thoroughly by InSystem Security,
orbited Earth during the entire period that you lay upon your
rock. Another one hundred and four craft orbited Earth during
some part of the last seven days. One hundred and eight are of
Earth registry; the remainder are variously registered by the
K'Aillae Protectorate, the Zaradin Church, the House of November,
the House of Domain, the Slissi Mutual Trade Protective Society,
and the SpaceFarer's Collective. One ship of a human society that
calls itself the Wu Li, applying to become an Earth protectorate,
has been in geosynchronous orbit for the last twenty-one days.
Finally, the Pristhill Caravan has been orbiting Earth at L-5 for
the last forty-four days."
Tyrel was startled. "You let a Caravan that close to Earth?"
The Source said, "The Face of Night did. I recommended
against it; but the Pristhill fought with humanity during the war
with the sleem. They are one of only three Caravans that did. The
Director consulted the Shivas, and the decision was made."
"One hundred and fifty spacecraft," said Tyrel, "and one
Platformer Caravan. And any one of them might have been in
communication with the being that followed me into the Great
North Forest." He shook his head. "I don't like it."
"Nor would I," the Source observed, "in your skin."
"I'll want everything you have available. The InSystem
Security reports; ship's logs where available--"
The Source said dryly, "They are <all> available. We would
hardly let a craft exit either of Sol System's Gates if it would
not let me scan its log."
Tyrel nodded. "Edit for me, then."
"I would in any regard," said the Source. "You do not process
data quickly enough to assess the available data in any useful
period of time."
Tyrel smiled without amusement. "Isn't that always the case?"
The Source said politely, "For humans."
A day later, Tyrel sat on the beach in Ensenada, watching the
bright blue Pacific roll up onto the beach, and fall back. The
days and nights on the rock had taken their toll; even now,
relaxing in a beach chair with a bottle of brown beer in one
hand, with the hot Mexican sun warming his muscles, Tyrel felt
stiff and uncertain in his movements.
He did not much like Mexican beaches; they were too close to
Mexico City, and the College, and got too many tourists.
(Tourists from elsewhere InSystem, not Out; the Face of Night did
not allow OutSystem tourists on Earth. When mere kilos of
antimatter could devastate a world, the risk was too great.) But
Tyrel was not in the mood for another trip, and Ensenada was the
furthest beach north of Mexico City he could get to without
crossing Southern California's Glass Desert.
(Elsewhere in the Continuing Time, humans speaking of "the
war" generally mean the war with the sleem. InSystem, and
particularly on Earth, this is not true. The sleem never hit
Earth itself. Nearly six hundred years later, Terrans referring
to "the war" usually mean the AI War, and the Revolution that
followed it: humans and the creations of humans caused the vast
Glass Deserts.)
Shiva Enherod, sitting in a beach chair next to Tyrel's,
said, "Who hates you?"
Tyrel shrugged. "Wouldn't know."
Shiva Enherod nodded. Tyrel suspected the older man liked him-
-he had sought out Tyrel's company more than once during Tyrel's
six years at College--but it was hard to tell with night faces.
And Shiva Enherod was not <just> a night face; he was one of six
living Shivas, of fourteen in the history of United Earth
Intelligence. After a moment Enherod said politely, "Home
politics?"
Tyrel felt no inclination to dignify the comment with an
answer.
Enherod nodded as though Tyrel had. Despite his suspicion of
and distaste for it, at times Tyrel appreciated the Source;
unlike humans, it never belabored the obvious--
--Enherod said, "Whoever it was is still out there, Tyrel."
Into a place where nothing lived, and nothing stirred, and
shadows dreamed of death, came a man.
Two thousand light years away from Earth and Tyrel November
and the Face of Night...
...sixteen hundred light years away from November, at the
other end of the twisting long tunnels that linked November to
Eloise, and Eloise to Devnet...
...a human being named Bodhisatva brought his starship, the
<Shivering Bastard>, out of Devnet System's First Gate. The
<Shivering Bastard> entered real space moving at better than
ninety-eight percent of light, the same speed at which she had
entered the spacelace tunnel, back at the Eloisean planetary
system.
Bodhi had missed the Gate at Eloise, his first four tries at
entry. At .98C the insertion beam had to sync the Gate perfectly
on the first try. If he missed, the <Shivering Bastard> would be
a hundred thousand kilometers past the Gate by the time the
insertion beam could be resynchronized.
It did not seem to Bodhi that he was taking excessively long;
time shrank as he approached lightspeed, and in his time only
about ten hours passed as he accelerated to make his pass at the
Gate, and another ten as he missed and decelerated to zero. But
he knew it was not so; in the Continuing Time at large days
passed with each approach, and with each deceleration.
There was a deadline to his attempts; one of the House of
November's precious few tachyon starships, the <Reeny Ihr>, was
en route to Devnet, and was due to arrive there in sixty-eight
days.
It was not until Bodhi's fifth pass, twenty-seven days after
beginning, that Eloise's Third Gate, entryway to the long tunnel
to Devnet, opened at Bodhisatva's approach, and swallowed the
<Shivering Bastard>.
When Devnet fell silent; when ship after ship of the November
Guard failed to return after entering the long tunnel to Devnet;
and when the famous, formidable Wizard refused for reasons of her
own to try and find out what had gone wrong; then P'Rythan,
recently Lord of the House of November, was forced to a choice
she despised.
In truth she had no options. Though the universe is a
dangerous place, the House of November is not prone to
overreacting; but the Luciferean System, which contains November,
is tunneled to Eloise, and Eloise is tunneled to Devnet; and
danger only two Gates away was danger the House of November could
not tolerate.
Had she been younger, or held a different post, P'Rythan
might have gone herself; she was a woman of considerable talents.
But she was also Lord of the House of November; and so, for only
the sixth time since 2294, when it assumed control of the planet
whose name it shared, the House of November sought outside aide.
P'Rythan November sent an envoy to Sol, to Earth, to America, to
California, to the city of Van Nuys, to the headquarters of a
certain ancient organization; and there a Captain of the November
Guard presented P'Rythan's request for the aid of Pinkerton Agent
Bodhisatva.
In a time when some of the living had once been machines, and
some machines had once lived, where the body a being wore might
not have been the sex or the species it was born to, it was known
that Bodhisatva was a man in the old style; born human, male,
genetically unreconstructed. He was of slightly below average
height by modern standards; his eyes and skin were brown and his
hair was black and it was said he could not change the color of
any of them without help from dyes or lenses.
Some things were general knowledge; the Source would tell
you, if you asked it. It was known that Bodhi had never had
biosculpture; and that, though he maintained a form lean and
muscular in the modern style, the maintenance took him an hour a
day working out in high gee on the gravity jungle aboard his
ship. There were a dozen fine immune management nanosystems Bodhi
could have had installed that would have taken over the job of
maintaining his muscles for him; but Bodhi, as he had explained
in a rare public statement forty years prior, did not trust such
systems and saw no reason to deprive himself of workouts he
enjoyed.
It was assumed that he ran one of the better defensive immune
systems; in his line of work it would be critical. But no one
really knew.
Devnet System is notable for two things; and its small colony
of Novembri is not one of them. There are twelve Gates at Devnet,
twelve entry points into the web of spacelace tunnels that link
the stars together. In 2677, over five hundred years after the
end of the war with the sleem, humanity knows of only two larger
clusters: the system in which the planet Domain is located has
thirteen; and a black hole, near the Galactic Core, has thirty-
one.
The other notable thing about Devnet is the tunnel its Third
Gate opens upon. Its Third Gate opens on one of the four
ridiculously long tunnels humanity knows of in the Continuing
Time. Its transit time is eight years, and it connects Devnet
System with a red dwarf on the other side of the Galactic Core,
sixty thousand light years from Earth.
The <Shivering Bastard> broke into real space through Devnet
System's First Gate. Bodhi, awaiting the event in the relative
comfort of the <Bastard's> observation bubble, had an inhumanly
brief impression of impossible glare, and then found himself
enveloped by blackness. The impression of glare had not come from
his organic eyes, but from the tap the <Shivering Bastard> used
to feed him information.
WELL, said Bodhi, THAT WAS INTERESTING.
The <Shivering Bastard> said, YES. WE THINK--
The observation bubble cleared. Bodhi looked upon a universe
shifted blue in one direction, red in another. Though different
stars were visible, and odd patches of space glowed bright blue
with the stepped-up infrared from warm dust clouds, it did not
otherwise look much different from what he was used to; in the
direction of his travel stellar radio waves shifted up into
visible light, and stellar gamma radiation, chasing him from
behind, dropped down into his visible spectrum.
--WE WERE HIT WITH A HELL OF A LASER. The <Bastard> paused,
and then said, OR PERHAPS NOT.
Already two million klicks away from Devnet's First Gate,
heading inSystem at near lightspeed, the <Shivering Bastard>'s
scopes peered backward. Bodhi examined their red-shifted image,
transmitted via his tap directly into his forebrain, with
interest.
Parabolic mirrors....nine of them; Bodhi had no way of
guessing their size.
ABOUT FOUR HUNDRED KLICKS IN DIAMETER, said the <Bastard>. WE
THINK WE KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE SHIPS THE NOVEMBER GUARD SENT
THROUGH.
At the focal points of the nine parabolic mirrors sat
Devnet's First Gate; where the reflections of those mirrors met
was a region hotter than the surface of most stars. A ship coming
through the Gate at the usual velocity of only a few hundred
kilometers per hour...Bodhi shivered at the thought.
The picture came clear slowly, Ship's scopes sought the
positions of the other eleven Gates, and found eleven of the
twelve basking in the warmth of Devnet's mirrored regard. Only
one Gate was not so protected; and Bodhi's instant guess--the
Third Gate, opening on the ridiculously long tunnel--was correct.
YES, said the <Bastard>, perhaps guessing Bodhi's guess; she
knew him well. WHOEVER DID THIS CAME A LONG WAY FOR IT. THE OTHER
SIDE OF THE GALAXY.
PERHAPS, said Bodhi. OR PERHAPS THEY JUST WANT US TO THINK
SO. LET'S PROCEED INSYSTEM FOR NOW. WE STILL DON'T KNOW WHAT'S
HAPPENED TO UGLY.
InSystem, a small Marslike planet, Ugly-On-A-Ball, orbited
Devnet itself at a distance of one hundred and sixty-five million
kilometers. Three centuries of terraforming had not changed Ugly
much. The air was breathable by humans, but just barely; the
House of November had come to Devnet System for its Gates, not
out of any interest in its real estate.
That he had found himself heading generally inSystem pleased
Bodhi; the odds had been somewhat against it. The November Guard
had been unable to tell Bodhi exactly what direction Devnet's
First Gate faced; under ordinary circumstances, when craft
entered or left the Gate at only a few hundred kilometers per
hour, it was hardly relevant. (A desperate search through those
ship's logs the House of November had been able to get hold of,
of ships that had transited Devnet's First Gate in the last few
decades, had produced nothing; it was not the sort of information
that got recorded.)
Aside from the ninety-nine mirrors, the System might never
have been visited by intelligence. The <Shivering Bastard>
monitored no radio, no video, no net; saw no ships. Bodhi sat
cross-legged in free fall, in loose clothing that drifted around
him. In a crystal bubble, surrounded by a bright starry sky, he
ghosted through a System gone silent.
Bodhisatva's thoughts were troubled. The tech necessary to
mount mirrors of this size and number, across the full length of
a solar system, in the brief time since Devnet had fallen silent,
was beyond anything in his experience. He doubted the sleem,
humanity's foes since its discovery of the tachyon star drive,
could have done it. Once perhaps, at the height of their power--
but not today, broken and scattered as they were across the
galaxy.
He consulted the <Alternities Catalog of Intelligent
Spacegoing Species>, and came up with only a few possibilities;
none he liked. The Zaradin Church perhaps had the capability--and
Bodhi's distrust of the Zaradin Church ran deep--but it would be
wildly out of character. Even if it did not drag them into a
general war with humanity, an act like this would make human
governments even more unfriendly to the Church than they already
were, if that was possible. The Tamranni were a possibility of
sorts--but there were Tamranni upon November itself, and while
Bodhi presumed that the ancient Tamranni could have done such a
thing as he saw before him, he doubted very much that they would
have. One of the older and larger Platformer Caravans rounded out
Bodhi's short list of possibles; and again he thought it
unlikely. Though a given Caravan might have managed to set these
mirrors, all the Caravans humanity had ever encountered, taken
together, could not have survived war with the mighty House of
November--
<--and whoever did this>, thought Bodhi with a certain grim
weariness, <is going to have to>.
Unlike planets, Gates are relatively stationary with respect
to the stars to which they are anchored; by a quirk of timing,
Ugly's orbit had taken it to the side of Devnet almost directly
opposite its First Gate. The <Shivering Bastard> climbed up above
the ecliptic and aimed its telescopes in the direction of Ugly.
It took the <Bastard> a moment to find the planet, even knowing
where it was supposed to be; Devnet's First Gate is 8.3 light
hours distant from Devnet itself, nine billion kilometers
distant.
Ugly was a molten rock.
Bodhi exhaled slowly. That he had expected it did not make
seeing it any easier. At the distance, all that was visible was
the planet's heat signature, but that was sufficient; the planet
radiated into space at a temperature of 2,500 degrees Centigrade.
It had never had much of an atmosphere, and now had none.
Ugly it might have been; but within the last ninety days,
less than a quarter past, thirty-four million Novembri, human and
otherwise, had been alive upon its surface.
WE'VE BEEN NOTICED, the <Bastard> announced.
Bodhi did not stir; the image from the scope still trained
upon the unguarded Third Gate came alive in his awareness. Five
craft, of a design unfamiliar to Bodhi, boosted from the Third
Gate, chasing the <Shivering Bastard>. The Third Gate was six
light minutes distant from the First, off to one side of the
<Shivering Bastard>'s inbound vector. Bodhi ran the numbers
quickly: ...the Shivering Bastard's light, leaving the First
Gate, arrives at the Third Gate six minutes later. Automated
equipment at the Third Gate establishes a vector and launches
intercept craft...seven minutes later the image of their launch
reaches us...
It took the <Bastard> a moment to calculate vectors--THEY'LL
HAVE A HARD TIME CATCHING US, said the <Bastard>. A STERN CHASE
IS A LONG CHASE. BUT WE THINK THEY KNOW THAT. WE THINK THEY'RE
TRYING TO MAKE SURE WE DON'T REACH ONE OF THE GATES. The Bastard
paused, analyzing. WE THINK WE'LL MAKE THE SIXTH GATE, BEYOND
UGLY. IF CIRCUMSTANCES ALLOW, WE'LL DECELERATE BEFORE MAKING OUR
PASS AT THE GATE. IF WE MISS THE GATE WE'RE FUCKED. WE'LL HEAD
OUT INTO INTERSTELLAR SPACE, AND THEY'LL SEND MISSILES AFTER US,
AND ONE OF THEM WILL GET US. The <Bastard> paused. OKAY. WE HAVE
A VECTOR FOR THEM. THEY'RE BOOSTING AT 232 GRAVITIES. THEORETICAL
MAX FOR GRAVITY COMPENSATION, FOR SHIPS OF THEIR ESTIMATED MASS,
IS 216 GEES. IF THEIR GRAVITY COMPENSATION IS PERFECTLY
IMPLEMENTED, THEY'RE BOOSTING UNDER SIXTEEN GEES. ASSUMING THEIR
COMPENSATION IS IMPERFECT, BUT BETTER THAN OURS--LIKELY--THEIR
COMPENSATION IS PERHAPS 195 TO 200 GEES, WHICH MEANS THEY'RE
BOOSTING AT THIRTY-TWO TO THIRTY-SEVEN GRAVITIES.
The conclusion was obvious; nothing biological could have
survived such acceleration. THOSE SHIPS ARE BEING PILOTED BY A
MACHINE INTELLIGENCE.
THE REACTION TIME ALONE MADE THAT CLEAR; THEY BOOSTED AFTER
US WITHIN TWELVE SECONDS OF CATCHING OUR LIGHT. THE INTERESTING
THING IS THAT THEIR HARDWARE IS <CONSIDERABLY> BETTER THAN OURS,
said the <Bastard> pointedly. AT THIRTY-TWO GEES SUSTAINED
ACCELERATION, SEVERAL OF THE <SHIVERING BASTARD>'S SYSTEMS WOULD
SUFFER NOTICEABLE DEGRADATION.
IF YOU CAN TELL ME WHERE TO BUY HARDWARE LIKE THEIRS, said
Bodhi mildly, I'LL GET IT FOR YOU.
Suggestion of a smile; she went so far as to tell a joke, an
old one. WE'LL KEEP OUR EYE OPEN.
The Eye That Never Sleeps is the symbol of the Pinkerton
Security Agency, the source of the ancient phrase "private eye."
The Eye itself was displayed on the <Shivering Bastard>'s
hull.
Neither of them mentioned Ugly even once.
Subjectively, it took the <Shivering Bastard> twenty-two
minutes to cross the System. In the outer world, ten hours
passed. Bodhi kept a telescope on the alien craft that followed
him, but aside from that paid them no attention; their tech might
be better than his, but physical law is the same for everyone,
and unless he missed the Sixth Gate on his first approach, they
had no chance of catching him.
He scanned the records for Imhota instead. It was the System
that Devnet's Sixth Gate led to; the Sixth Gate opened on a long
tunnel that ran 812 light years, at nearly right angles to the
galactic plane. The tunnel itself was a twenty-two day transit.
Imhota looked like nothing spectacular; a small human colony,
allied to the House of November and dependent upon it for
protection, though not a November colony proper as Devnet had
been. Bodhi hoped they were still there, and doubted they would
be; Ugly looked like the opening act of war to him. Imhota had
three Gates, all well off the ecliptic; Devnet's Sixth Gate
linked to Imhota's Second. Bodhi accessed records, and was
pleased; most of Imhota's shipping ran through its First and
Third Gates, which were nodes on a minor Platformer Caravan
circuit. It meant that there would probably be relatively few
spacecraft around the Second Gate; which meant that if the
<Shivering Bastard> came blasting out of the Second Gate at near
lightspeed, she would probably survive.
<And if we do hit something>, Bodhi thought, <at least we'll
never know it>.
From Imhota, assuming transit of Imhota System went well--
assuming they got out of Devnet System alive--Bodhi would need to
transit six Gates, five Tunnels and one long tunnel, to reach
November again.
It would take him forty-three days.
There were mirrors focused upon Devnet's Sixth Gate, as upon
all gates except its Third. The <Shivering Bastard> sent missiles
running ahead of her as she decelerated. The mirrors were
designed to collect Devnet's light; they could not be expected to
withstand the onslaught of half a dozen anti-matter missiles.
They did not. When the shock waves of the explosions had
passed they saw that only two of the mirrors still stood. The
<Shivering Bastard> decelerated to the extent that she dared; she
could transit the Gate at a much reduced velocity now, and still
survive the heat of the mirrors. They hit the Gate at .38C--
--and what had taken four tries back at Eloise, took one at
Devnet. They made entry on the first pass and the spacelace
tunnel opened up and swallowed them.
The tunnel's walls pressed in upon the <Shivering Bastard>,
surrounding her like an organic thing. Had Bodhi cleared the
observation bubble for viewing, he would have seen a seething
gray storm of lines and spheres enclosing his starship.
He kept the bubble opaque; he had seen it before, and it was
vaguely disturbing.
The <Shivering Bastard> had dinner with him in the
observation bubble; Bodhi dined on wild rice, saut�ed with
mushrooms and almonds in a spiced wine sauce, and drank two
bottles--actual bottles made of glass--of a black beer brewed
long ago, on a world that was today as much a cinder as Ugly. The
<Shivering Bastard> animated the body of a young human woman whom
Bodhi found attractive; for the evening she spoke in the first
person, and answered to the name of Beyta Arcadia, and pretended
to be someone Bodhi had never met before. If he had known the
<Bastard> had taken the personality from an ancient novel, it
would have lessened his enjoyment in her company, and so she
sensibly did burden him with the information.
She had no particular reaction to the half hour, subjective
time, that they had spent in the Devnet System. They had beaten
the odds once again; some day, she knew with a cold, inhuman
certainty, the odds would beat them.
As for Bodhi himself--well, she observed that he relaxed
noticeably during his second beer. He did not offer to discuss
the near-certain war that would come of the slaughter at Ugly, or
speculate on the identity of those responsible; the Bastard did
not bring it up.
She did not hold Bodhi's reaction against him; he was human,
with human strengths and human weaknesses, including a fear of
death. It did not seem to affect his functioning in a crisis; as
Bodhi himself had once put it to a client, "I'm professionally
incapable of being rattled, my friend." The <Shivering Bastard>
knew that he often told clients that; it seemed to reassure them.
"I am, by damn, a Pinkerton Man."